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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Law of Hemlock Mountain, by Hugh Lundsford
+
+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: The Law of Hemlock Mountain
+
+Author: Hugh Lundsford
+
+Illustrator: Douglas Duer
+
+Release Date: November 4, 2010 [EBook #34208]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAW OF HEMLOCK MOUNTAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Katherine Ward, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LAW OF HEMLOCK MOUNTAIN
+
+BY HUGH LUNDSFORD
+
+Frontispiece by DOUGLAS DUER
+
+
+ New York
+ W. J. Watt & Company
+ PUBLISHERS
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
+ W. J. WATT & COMPANY
+
+ PRESS OF
+ BRAUNWORTH & CO.
+ BOOK MANUFACTURERS
+ BROOKLYN, N.Y.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "I am sorry," declared Spurrier, humbly. "I didn't know
+they were pets. They behaved very much like wild birds."]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The officer whose collar ornaments were the winged staff and serpents
+of the medical branch, held what was left of the deck in his right
+hand and moistened the tip of his thumb against the tip of his
+tongue.
+
+"Reënforcements, major?" he inquired with a glance to the man at his
+left, and the poker face of the gentleman so addressed remained
+impervious to expression as the answer was given back:
+
+"No, I'll stand by what I've got here."
+
+If the utterance hung on a quarter second of indecision it was a
+circumstance that went unnoted, save possibly by a young man with the
+single bars of a lieutenant on his shoulder straps--and Spurrier gave
+no flicker of recognition of what had escaped the others.
+
+Between the whitewashed walls of the room where the little group of
+officers sat at cards the Philippine night breeze stirred faintly with
+a fevered breath that scarcely disturbed the jalousies.
+
+The pile of poker chips had grown to a bulkiness and value out of
+just proportion to the means of army officers below field rank--and
+except for the battalion, commander and the surgeon none there held
+higher grade than a captaincy. This jungle-hot weather made men
+irresponsible.
+
+One or two of the faces were excitedly flushed; several others were
+morosely dark. The lights guttered with a jaundiced yellow and sweat
+beaded the temples of the players. Sweat, too, made slippery the
+enameled surfaces of the pasteboards. Sweat seemed to ooze and simmer
+in their brains like the oil from overheated asphalt.
+
+These men had been forced into a companionship of monotony in a
+climate of unhealth until their studied politeness, even their forced
+jocularity was rather the effort of toleration than the easy play of
+comradeship. Their arduously wooed excitement of draw-poker, which had
+run improvidently out of bounds, was not a pleasure so much as an
+expedient against the boredom that had rubbed their tempers threadbare
+and put an edgy sharpness on their nerves.
+
+Captain Comyn, upon whose call for cards the dealer now waited, was
+thinking of Private Grant out there under guard in the improvised
+hospital. The islands had "gotten to" Private Grant and "locoed" him,
+and he had breathed sulphurous maledictions against Captain Comyn's
+life--but it was not those threats that now disturbed the company
+commander.
+
+Of late Captain Comyn had been lying awake at night and wondering if
+he, too, were not going the same way as the unfortunate file. Horribly
+quiet fears had been stealing poisonously into his mind--a mind not
+given to timidities--and the word "melancholia" had assumed for him a
+morbid and irresistible compulsion. No one save the captain's self
+knew of these secret hauntings, born of climate and smoldering fever,
+and he would not have revealed them on the torture rack. For them he
+entertained the same shame as that of a boy grown too large for such
+weakness, who shudders with an unconfessed fear of the dark. But he
+could no more shake them loose and be free of them than could the
+Ancient Mariner rid himself of the bird of ill-omen tied about his
+neck. Now he pulled himself together and tossed away a single card.
+
+"I'll take one in the place of that," he commented with studied
+carelessness, and Lieutenant John Spurrier, with that infectious smile
+which came readily to his lips, pointed a contrast with the captain's
+abstraction by the snappy quickness of his announcement:
+
+"If I'm going to trail along, I'll need three. Yes, three, please,
+major."
+
+"When Spurrier sits in the game," commented a player who, with a
+dolorous glance at the booty before him, threw down his hands, "we at
+least get action. Myself, I'm out of it."
+
+The battalion commander studied the ceiling with a troubled furrow
+between his brows which was not brought there by the hazards of luck.
+He was reflecting that whenever a game was organized it was Spurrier
+who quickened its tempo from innocuous amusement to reckless
+extravagance. Spurrier, fitted for his life with so many soldierly
+qualities, was still, above all else, a plunger. That spirit seemed a
+passion that filled and overflowed him. Temperate in other habits, he
+played like a nabob. The major remembered hearing that even at West
+Point Jack Spurrier had narrowly, escaped dismissal for gambling in
+quarters, though his class standing had been distinguished and his
+gridiron record had become a tradition.
+
+This sort of game with "the roof off and deuces wild," was not good
+for the _morale_ of his junior officers, mused the major. It was like
+spiking whisky with absinthe. Yes, to-morrow he would have Spurrier at
+his quarters and talk to him like a Dutch uncle.
+
+There were three left battling for the often sweetened pot now, with
+three more who had dropped out, looking on, and a tensity enveloped
+the long-drawn climax of the evening's session.
+
+Captain Comyn's cheek bones had reddened and his irascible frown lines
+deepened. For the moment his fears of melancholia had been swallowed
+up in a fitful fury against Spurrier and his smiling face.
+
+At last came the decisive moment of the final call and the show-down,
+and through the dead silence of the moment sounded the distant
+sing-song of a sentry:
+
+"Corporal of the guard, number one, relief!"
+
+Over the window sill a tiny green lizard slithered quietly and
+hesitated, pressing itself flat against the whitewash.
+
+Then the major's cards came down face upward--and showed a queen-high
+straight.
+
+"Not quite good enough, major," announced Comyn brusquely as his
+breath broke from him with a sort of gasp and he spread out a heart
+flush.
+
+But Spurrier, who had drawn three cards, echoed the captain's words:
+"Not quite good enough." He laid down two aces and two deuces, which
+under the cutthroat rule of "deuces wild" he was privileged to call
+four aces.
+
+Comyn came to his feet and pushed back his chair, but he stood
+unsteadily. The fever in his bones was playing queer pranks with his
+brain. He, whose courtesy had always been marked in its punctilio,
+blazed volcano-fashion into the eruption that had been gathering
+through these abnormal days and nights.
+
+Yet even now the long habit of decorum held waveringly for a little
+before its breaking, and he began with a queer strain in his voice:
+
+"You'll have to take my IOU. I've lost more than I can pay on the
+peg."
+
+"That's all right, Comyn," began the victor, "Pay when----" but before
+he could finish the other interrupted with a frenzy of anger:
+
+"No, by God, it's not all right! It's all wrong, and this is the last
+game I sit in where they deal a hand to you."
+
+Spurrier's smiling lips tightened instantly out of their infectious
+amiability into a forbidding straightness. He pushed aside the chips
+he had been stacking and rose stiffly.
+
+"That's a statement, Captain Comyn," he said with a warning note in
+his level voice, "which requires some explaining."
+
+The abrupt bursting of the tempest had left the others in a tableau of
+amazement, but now the authoritative voice of Major Withers broke in
+upon the dialogue.
+
+"Gentlemen, this is an army post, and I am in command here. I will
+tolerate no quarrels."
+
+Without shifting the gaze of eyes that held those of the captain,
+Spurrier answered insistently:
+
+"I have every respect, major, for the requirements of discipline--but
+Captain Comyn must finish telling why he will no longer play cards
+with me."
+
+"And I'll tell you _pronto_," came the truculent response. "I won't
+play with you because you are too damned lucky."
+
+"Oh!" Spurrier's tensity of expression relaxed into something like
+amusement for the anticlimax. "That accusation can be stomached, I
+suppose."
+
+"Too damned lucky," went on the other with a gathering momentum of
+rancor, "and too continuously lucky for a game that's not professional.
+When a man is so proficient--or lucky if you prefer--that the card table
+pays him more than the government thinks he's worth, it's time----"
+
+Spurrier stepped forward.
+
+"It's time for you to stop," he cautioned sharply. "I give you the
+fairest warning!"
+
+But Comyn, riding the flood tide of his passion--a passion of
+distempered nerves--was beyond the reach of warnings and his words
+came in a bitter outpouring:
+
+"I dare say it was only luck that let you bankrupt young Tillsdale,
+but it was as fatal to him as if it bore an uglier name."
+
+The sound in Spurrier's throat was incoherent and his bodily impulse
+swift beyond interference. His flat palm smote Captain Comyn's cheek,
+to come away leaving a red welt behind it, and as the others swept
+forward to intervene the two men grappled.
+
+They were torn apart, still struggling, as Major Withers, unaccustomed
+to the brooking of such mutinies, interposed between them the bulk of
+his body and the moral force of his indignantly blazing eyes.
+
+"I will have no more of this," he thundered. "I am not a prize-fight
+referee, that I must break my officers out of clinches! Go to your
+quarters, Comyn! You, too, Spurrier. You are under arrest. I shall
+prefer charges against you both. I mean to make an example of this
+matter."
+
+But with a strange abruptness the fury died out of Comyn's face. It
+left his passion-distorted features so instantly that the effect of
+transformation was uncanny. In a breathing space he seemed older and
+his eyes held the dark dejection of utter misery. His anger had flared
+and died before that grimmer emotion which secretly haunted him--the
+fear that he was going the way of climate-crazed Private Grant.
+
+When they released him he turned dispiritedly and left the room in
+docile silence. He was not thinking of the charges to be preferred.
+They belonged to to-morrow. To-night was nearer, and to-night he must
+face those hours of sleeplessness that he dreaded more than all the
+penalties enunciated by the Articles of War.
+
+Spurrier, too, bowed stiffly and left the room.
+
+Though it was late when Captain Comyn entered his own quarters, he did
+not at once throw himself on the army cot that stood against the
+whitewashed wall.
+
+For him the cot held no invitation--only the threat of insomnia and
+tossing. His taut nerves had lost the gracious art of relaxation, and
+before his thoughts paraded hideously grotesque memories of the few
+faces he had ever seen marred by the dethronement of reason.
+
+Already he had forgotten the violent and discreditable scene with
+Spurrier, and presently he dropped himself inertly into the camp chair
+beside the table at the room's center and opened its drawer.
+
+Slowly his hand came out clutching a service revolver, and his eyes
+smoldered unnaturally as they dwelt on it. But after a little he
+resolutely shook his head and thrust the thing aside.
+
+He sat in a cold sweat, surrounded by the silence of the Eastern
+night, a comprehensive silence which weighed upon him and oppressed
+him.
+
+In the thatching of the single-storied adobe building he heard the
+rustling of a house snake, and from without, where moonlight seemed to
+gush and spill against the cobalt shadows, shrilled the small voice
+from a lizard's inflated, crimson throat.
+
+It was all crazing him, and his nails bit into his palms as he sat
+there, silent and heavy-breathed. Then he heard footsteps nearer and
+louder than those of the pacing sentries, followed by a low rapping of
+knuckles on his own door. Perhaps it was Doctor James. He had the
+kindly habit of besetting men who looked fagged with the offer of some
+innocuous bromide. As if bromides could soothe a brain in which
+something had gone _malo_!
+
+"Come in," he growled, and into the room stepped not Major James, but
+Lieutenant Spurrier.
+
+Slowly and with an infinite weight of weariness, Comyn rose to his
+feet. He might be afraid of lunacy, but not of lieutenants, and his
+lips smiled sneeringly.
+
+"If you've come to ask a retraction," he declared ungraciously, "I've
+none to offer. I meant all I said."
+
+The visitor stood inside the door calmly eyeing the man who was his
+own company commander.
+
+"I didn't come to insist on apologies," he replied after a moment's
+silence with an off-hand easiness of tone. "That can wait till you've
+gotten over your tantrum. It was another thing that brought me."
+
+"I want to be left alone."
+
+"Aside from the uncomplimentary features of your tirade," went on
+Spurrier placidly and he strolled around the table and seated himself
+on the window sill, "there was a germ of truth in what you said. We've
+been playing too steep a game." He paused and the other man who
+remained standing by his table, as though he did not wish to encourage
+his visitor by seating himself, responded only with a short, ironic
+laugh.
+
+"See here, Comyn," Spurrier's voice labored now with evident
+embarrassment. "What I'm getting at is this: I don't want your IOU for
+that game. I simply want you to forget it."
+
+But the captain took an angry step forward.
+
+"Do you think I'm a charity patient?" he demanded, as his temper again
+mounted to storm pressure. "Why, damn your impertinence, I don't want
+to talk to you. I don't want you in my quarters!"
+
+Spurrier slipped from his seat and an angry flush spread to his cheek
+bones.
+
+"You're the hell of a--gentleman!" he exclaimed.
+
+The two stood for a few moments without words, facing each other,
+while the lieutenant could hear the captain's breath rising and
+falling in a panting thickness.
+
+Surgeon James returning from a visit to a colic sufferer was trudging
+sleepily along the empty _calle_ when he noted the light still burning
+in the captain's window, and with an exclamation of remembrance for
+the officer's dark-ringed and sleepless eyes, he wheeled toward the
+door. Just as he neared it, a staccato and heated interchange of
+voices was borne out to him, and he hurried his step, but at the same
+instant a pistol shot bellowed blatantly in the quiet air and into his
+nostrils stole the acrid savor of burned powder.
+
+The door, thrown open, gave him the startling picture of Comyn sagged
+across his own table and lying grotesque in the yellow light; and of
+Spurrier standing, wide-eyed by the window, with the green and cobalt
+background of the tropic night beyond his shoulders. While he gazed
+the lieutenant wheeled and thrust his head through the raised sash,
+under the jalousy.
+
+"Halt!" cried James excitedly, leaping forward to possess himself of
+the pistol which Comyn had taken from his drawer and thrust aside.
+"Halt, Spurrier, or I'll have to fire!"
+
+The other turned back and faced his captor with an expression which it
+was hard to read. Then he shook his shoulders as though to disentangle
+himself from an evil dream and in a cool voice demanded:
+
+"Do you mean to intimate, James, that you suspect me of killing
+Comyn?"
+
+"Do you mean to deny it?" countered the other incredulously.
+
+"Great God! I oughtn't to have to. That shot was fired through the
+window. The bullet whined past my ear while my back was turned. That
+was why I looked out just now. Moreover, I am, as you see, unarmed."
+
+"God grant that you can prove these things, Spurrier, but they will
+need proof." The doctor turned to bend over the prostrate figure, and
+as he did so voices rose from the _calle_ where already had sounded
+the alarm and response of running feet. "Or, perhaps," added the
+doctor with stubborn suggestiveness, "you acted in self-defense."
+
+Presently the door opened and the corporal of the guard entered and
+saluted. His eyes traveled rapidly about the room and he addressed
+Spurrier, since James was not a line officer.
+
+"I picked this revolver up, sir, just outside the window," he said,
+holding out a service pistol. "It was lying in the moonlight and one
+chamber is empty."
+
+Spurrier took the weapon, but when the man had gone James suggested in
+an even voice: "Don't you think you had better hand that gun to me?"
+
+"To you? Why?"
+
+"Because this looks like a case for G. C. M. It will have a better
+aspect if I can testify that, after the gun was brought in, it wasn't
+handled by you except while I saw you?"
+
+"It seems to me"--a belligerent flash darted in the lieutenant's
+eyes--"that you are singularly set on hanging this affair around my
+neck."
+
+"You were with him and no one else was. If I were you, I'd go direct
+to the major and make a statement of facts. He'll be getting reports
+from other sources by now."
+
+"Perhaps you are right. Is _he_ dead?"
+
+The surgeon nodded, and Spurrier turned and closed the door softly
+behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+The situation of John Spurrier, who was Jack Spurrier to every man in
+that command, standing under the monstrous presumption of having
+murdered a brother officer, called for a reaccommodation of the
+battalion's whole habit of thought. It demanded a new and unwelcome
+word in their vocabulary of ideas, and against it argued, with the hot
+advocacy of tested acquaintance, every characteristic of the man
+himself, and every law of probability. For its acceptance spoke only
+one forceful plea--evidence which unpleasantly skirted the actuality
+of demonstration. Short of seeing Spurrier shoot his captain down and
+toss his pistol through the open window, Major James could hardly have
+witnessed a more damaging picture than the hurriedly opened door had
+framed to his vision.
+
+Within the close-drawn cordon of a post, held to military accountability,
+facts were as traceable as entries on a card index--and these facts
+began building to the lieutenant's undoing. They seemed to bring out
+like acid on sympathetic ink the miracle of a Mr. Hyde where his
+comrades had known only a Doctor Jekyll.
+
+The one man out of the two skeleton companies of infantry stationed
+in the interior town who remained seemingly impervious to the
+strangulating force of the tightening net was Spurrier himself.
+
+In another man that insulated and steady-eyed confidence might have
+served as a manifest of innocence and a proclamation of clean
+conscience. But Spurrier wore a nick-name, until now lightly
+considered, to which new conditions had added importance.
+
+They had called him "The Plunger," and now they could not forget the
+nickeled and chrome-hardened gambling nerve which had won for him the
+sobriquet. There had been the _coup_ at Oakland, for example, when a
+stretch finish had stood to ruin him or suddenly enrich him--an
+incident that had gone down in racing history and made café talk.
+
+Through a smother of concealing dust and a thunder of hoofs, the field
+had struggled into the stretch that afternoon, tight-bunched, with its
+snapping silks too closely tangled for easy distinguishing--but the
+cerise cap that proclaimed Spurrier's choice was nowhere in sight. The
+bookmakers pedestalled on their high stools with field glasses glued
+to their eyes had been more excited than the young officer on the
+club-house lawn, who put away his binoculars while the horses were
+still in the back stretch and turned to chat with a girl.
+
+Three lengths from the finish a pair of distended nostrils had thrust
+themselves ahead of the other muzzles to catch the judges' eyes, and
+bending over steaming withers had nodded a cerise cap.
+
+But the lieutenant who had escaped financial disaster and won a
+miniature fortune had gone on talking to the girl.
+
+Might it not be suspected in these circumstances that "Plunger"
+Spurrier's refusal to treat his accusation seriously was only an
+attitude? He was sitting in a game now with his neck at stake and the
+cards running against him. Perhaps he was only bluffing as he had
+never bluffed before. Possibly he was brazening it out.
+
+It was not until the battalion had hiked back through bosque and over
+mountains to Manila that the lieutenant faced his tribunal: a court
+whose simplified methods cut away the maze of technicalities at which
+a man may grasp before a civilian jury of his peers.
+
+If, when he actually sat in the room where the evidence was heard, his
+assurance that he was to emerge clean-shriven began to reel under
+blows more powerful than he had expected, at least his face continued
+to testify for him with an outward serenity of confidence.
+
+Doctor James told his story with an admirable restraint and an
+absolute absence of coloring. He had meant to go to Comyn, because he
+read in his eyes the signs of nerve waste and insomnia; the same
+things that had caused too many suicides among the men whose nervous
+constitutions failed to adapt themselves to the climate.
+
+Before he had carried his purpose to fulfillment--perhaps a half hour
+before--he had gone to look in on the case of Private Grant, who was
+suffering from just such a malady, though in a more serious degree.
+That private, a mountaineer from the Cumberland hills of Kentucky, had
+been to all appearances merely a lunatic, although it was a case which
+would yield to treatment or perhaps come to recovery even if left to
+itself. On this night he had gone to see if Grant needed an opiate,
+but had found the patient apparently sleeping without restlessness,
+and had not roused him. At the door of the place where Grant was
+under guard, he had paused for a word with Private Severance who
+stood there on sentry duty.
+
+It had been a sticky night following a hot day, and in the _calle_
+upon which lay the command in billets of nipa-thatched houses, no one
+but himself and the sentries were astir during the twenty minutes he
+had spent strolling in the moonlight. On rounding a corner he had seen
+a light in Comyn's window, and he had gone around the angle of the
+adobe house, since the door was on the farther side, to offer the
+captain a sleeping potion, too. That was how he chanced on the scene
+of the tragedy, just a moment too late for service.
+
+"You say," began Spurrier's counsel, on cross-examination, "that you
+visited Private Grant about half an hour before Captain Comyn was
+killed and found him apparently resting naturally, although on
+previous nights you had thought morphia necessary to quiet his
+delirium?"
+
+The major nodded, then qualified slowly:
+
+"Grant had not, of course, been continuously out of his head nor had
+he always slept brokenly. There had been lucid periods alternating
+with exhausting storm."
+
+"You are not prepared to swear, though, that this seeming sleep might
+not have been feigned?"
+
+"I am prepared to testify that it is most unlikely."
+
+"Yet that same night he did make his escape and deserted. That is
+true, is it not?"
+
+The major bowed. "He had sought to escape before. That was symptomatic
+of his condition."
+
+"And since then he has not been recaptured, though he was in your
+opinion too ill and deranged to have deceived you by feigning sleep?"
+
+"Quite true."
+
+"Have you ever heard Grant threaten Captain Comyn's life?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Whether he had made such threats to your knowledge or not, he did
+come from that hill county of the Kentucky mountains commonly called
+Bloody Brackton, did he not?"
+
+"I believe so. His enlistment record will answer that."
+
+"You do know, though, that the man on guard duty--the man with whom
+you spoke outside--was Private Severance, also from the so-called
+Kentucky feud belt and a friend of the sick man?"
+
+"I can testify of my own knowledge only that he was Private
+Severance and that he and Grant were of the same platoon--Lieutenant
+Spurrier's."
+
+The defense advocate paused and carefully framed a hypothetical
+question to be answered by the witness as a medical expert.
+
+"I will now ask you to speak from your knowledge of blood tendencies
+as affected or distorted by mental abnormalities. Suppose a man to
+have been born and raised under a code which still adheres to feudal
+violence and the private avenging of personal grievances both real and
+fancied. Suppose such a man to have conceived a bitter hatred against
+his commanding officer and to have brooded over that hatred until it
+had become a fixed idea--a monomania--a determination to kill; suppose
+such a man to have known only the fierce influences of his retarded
+hills until he came into the army and to have encountered there a
+discipline which seemed to him a tyranny. I will ask you whether such
+a man might not be apt to react to a homicidal mania under nervous
+derangement, and whether such a homicidal mania might not develop its
+own craftiness of method?"
+
+"Such," testified the medical officer, "is a conceivable but a highly
+imaginative possibility."
+
+Then Private Severance was called and came into the room, where he
+stood smartly at attention until instructed to take the witness chair.
+This dark-haired private from the Cumberlands looked the soldier from
+crown to sole leather, yet his features seemed to hold under their
+present repose an ancient stamp of sullenness. It was an intangible
+quality rather than an expression, as though it bore less relation to
+his present than to some unconquerable survival from generations that
+had passed on; generations that had been always peering into shadows
+and searching them for lurking perils.
+
+In his speech lingered quaintly remnants of dialect from the laureled
+hills that army life had failed to eradicate, and in his manner one
+could note a wariness of extreme caution. That was easy to understand,
+because Private Severance, too, stood under the charge of having
+permitted a prisoner to escape, and his evidence would confront him
+later when he in turn occupied the dock.
+
+"I didn't have no speech with Bud Grant that night," he testified,
+"but I'd looked in some several times through the window. It was a
+barred window, an' every time I peeked through it I could see Bud
+layin' there asleep. The moon fell acrost his cot so I could see him
+plain."
+
+"When did you see him last?"
+
+"After Major James had been in and come out--a full fifteen minutes
+later. I'm able to swear to that, because I noticed the moon just as
+the major went out, and, when I looked in through the window the last
+time, the moon was a full quarter hour lower down to'rds settin'."
+
+After a moment's pause the witness volunteered in amplification:
+"Where I come from we don't have many clocks or watches. We goes by
+the sun and moon."
+
+"Then you can swear that if Private Grant fired the shot that killed
+Captain Comyn, he must have escaped and eluded your sight; armed
+himself, crossed the plaza; turned the corner; accomplished the act
+and gotten clean away, all within the brief period of five minutes?"
+
+"I can swear to more than that. He didn't get past me till _after_ the
+pistol went off. There wasn't no way out but by the one door, and I
+was right at that door all the time until I left it."
+
+"When did you leave?"
+
+The witness gave response without hesitation, yet with the same
+serious weighing of his words.
+
+"I was standing there, sorter peerin' up at the stars an' beginning to
+feel right smart tired when I heard the shot. I heard the shout of the
+corporal of the guard, too, an' then it was that I made my mistake."
+He paused and went on evenly. "I hadn't ought to have stirred away
+from my post, but it seemed like a sort of a general alarm, an' I went
+runnin' to'rds it. That was the first chanst Bud had to get away.
+When I got back he was gone."
+
+"You are sure he was still there when the shot sounded?"
+
+"As God looks down, I can swear he was!"
+
+Then the defense took the witness.
+
+"When does your enlistment expire?"
+
+"Two months, come Sunday."
+
+"You know to the day, don't you? You are keenly anxious for that day
+to come, aren't you?"
+
+"Why wouldn't I be? I've got folks at home."
+
+"Haven't you and Grant both been malcontents throughout your entire
+period of service?"
+
+"It's news to me, if it's true."
+
+"Haven't you often heard Private Grant swear vengeance against Captain
+Comyn?"
+
+"Not no more than to belly-ache some little."
+
+"Is it not a fact that since you and Grant ran amuck on the transport
+coming over, and Comyn put you both in irons, the two of you had sworn
+vengeance against him; that you had both taken the blood oath to get
+him?"
+
+Severance looked blankly at his questioner and blankly shook his
+head.
+
+"That's all new tidings ter me," he asserted with entire calmness.
+
+"Don't you know that you deliberately let Grant out immediately after
+the visit of Major James and slipped him the pistol with which he
+fired the shot? Didn't you do that, knowing that when the report
+sounded you could make it your excuse for leaving your post, and then
+perjure yourself as to the time?"
+
+"I know full well," asserted the witness with an unshaken composure,
+"that nothing like that didn't happen."
+
+Fact built on fact until even the defendant's counsel found himself
+arguing against a growing and ugly conviction. The pistol had been
+identified as Spurrier's, and his explanation that he had left it
+hanging in his holster at his quarters, whence some unknown person
+might have abstracted it, lacked persuasiveness. The defense built a
+structure of hypothesis based upon the fact that the open door of
+Spurrier's room was visible from the house where Grant had been
+tossing on his cot. The claim was urgently advanced that a skulking
+lunatic might easily have seen the glint of blued steel, and have been
+spurred in his madness by the temptation of such an implement ready to
+his hand. But that, too, was held to be a fantastic claim. So the
+verdict was guilty and the sentence life imprisonment. It must have
+been death, had the case, for all its warp of presumption and woof of
+logic, been other than circumstantial.
+
+The defendant felt that this mitigation of the extreme penalty was a
+misplaced mercy. The disgrace could be no blacker and death would at
+least have brought to its period the hideousness of the nightmare
+which must now stretch endlessly into the future.
+
+It was to a prisoner, sentenced and branded, that Major Withers came
+one afternoon when the court-martial of Lieutenant Spurrier had run
+its course as topic-in-chief for the Officers' Club at Manila. Other
+matters were already crowding it out of the minds it had profoundly
+shocked.
+
+"I want to talk to you, Jack," began the major bluntly. "I want to
+talk to you with a candor that grows out of the affection we all felt
+for you--before this damnable thing upset our little world. My God,
+boy, you had life in your sling. You had every quality that makes the
+soldier; you had every social requisite except wealth. This besetting
+passion for gambling has brought the whole train of disaster--as
+logically as if you had killed him at the card table itself."
+
+"You are overlooking the fact, major," interrupted the prisoner dryly,
+"that I didn't kill him. Moreover, it's too late now for the warning
+to benefit me. I dare say in Leavenworth I shall have no trouble
+curbing my passion for gaming." He paused and added with an irony of
+despairing bitterness: "But I suppose I should thank you and say, like
+the negro standing on the gallows, 'dis hyar is surely g'wine to be a
+great lesson ter me.'" Suddenly the voice broke and the young man
+wheeled to avert his face. "My God," he cried out, "why didn't you let
+them hang me or shoot me? Any man can stiffen his legs and his spine
+for five minutes of dying--even public dying--but back of those walls
+with a convict's number instead of a name----" There he broke off and
+the battalion commander laid a hand on his heaving shoulder.
+
+"I didn't come to rub in preachments while you stood at the edge of
+the scaffold or the jail, Jack. My warning may not be too late, after
+all. We've passed the matter up to the war department with a strong
+recommendation for clemency. We mean to pull every wire that can
+honorably be pulled. We're making the most of your good record
+heretofore and of the conviction being based on circumstantial
+evidence."
+
+He paused a moment and then went on with a trifle of embarrassment in
+his voice:
+
+"You know that Senator Beverly is at the governor general's
+palace--and that his daughter is with him."
+
+Spurrier wheeled at that and stood facing his visitor with eyes that
+had kindled, but in which the light at once faded as he commented
+shortly:
+
+"Neither the senator nor Augusta has made any effort to see me since I
+was brought to Manila."
+
+"Perhaps the senator thought that was best, Jack," argued Withers.
+"For the daughter, of course, I'm not prepared to speak--but I know
+that Beverly has been keeping the cable hot in your behalf. Your name
+has become so familiar to the operators between here and Washington
+that they don't spell it out any more: they only need to rap out Sp.
+now--and if I needed a voice to speak for me on Pennsylvania Avenue or
+on Capitol Hill, there's no man I'd pick before the senator."
+
+When he had gone Spurrier sat alone and to his ears came the distant
+playing of a band in the plaza. Somewhere in that ancient town was the
+girl who had not been to see him, nor written to him, even though,
+just before his battalion had gone into the bosques across the
+mountains, she had let him slip a ring on her finger, and had answered
+"yes" to his question--the most personal question in the world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+There was a more assured light in Major Withers' eyes when he next
+came as a visitor into the prison quarters, and the heartiness of his
+hand clasp was in itself a congratulation.
+
+"The thing was carried up to the president himself," he declared.
+"Washington is sick of you, Spurrier. Because of you miles of red tape
+have been snarled up. Departments have worked overtime until the
+single hope of the United States government is that it may never hear
+of you again. You don't go to prison, after all, my boy."
+
+"You mean I am pardoned?"
+
+Then, remembering that the rose of his bringing carried a sharp thorn
+the senior proceeded with a note of concern sobering his voice.
+
+"The red tape has not only been tangled because of you--but it has
+tangled you in its meshes, too, Spurrier. Yes, you are pardoned. You
+are as free as I am--but 'in view of the gravely convincing evidence,
+et cetera, et cetera'--it seems that some sort of compromise was
+deemed necessary."
+
+Spurrier stood where he had risen from his seat and his eyes held
+those of his informant with a blending of inquiry and suspense.
+
+"What sort of compromise, major?"
+
+"You leave the army with a dishonorable discharge. The world is open
+to you and you've got an equipment for success--but you might as
+well recognize from the start that you're riding with a heavy
+impost in your saddle clothes, my boy." He paused a moment and then,
+dropping his race-track metaphor, went hurriedly on: "For myself, I
+think you're guilty or innocent and you ought to be hanged or
+clean-shriven. I don't get this dubious middle ground of freedom with
+a tarnished name. It's going to crop up to crab things for you just
+when they hang in the balance, and I'm damned if I can see its
+fairness! It will cause men to look askance and to say 'he was saved
+from rope-stretching only by wire-pulling.'"
+
+The major ended somewhat savagely and Spurrier made no answer. He was
+gazing out at the patch of blue that blazed hotly through the high,
+barred window and, seeing there reminders of the bars sinister that
+would henceforth stand between himself and the sky.
+
+The battalion chief interrupted the long pause to suggest:
+
+"The _Empress_ sails on Tuesday. If I were you I'd take passage on
+her. I suppose you will, won't you?"
+
+"That depends," answered the liberated man hesitantly. "I've got to
+thank the senator--and, though she hasn't sent me any message, there's
+a question to ask a girl."
+
+"It's none of my business, of course, Spurrier," came the advising
+voice quietly. "But the Beverlys have engaged passage on the
+_Empress_. If I were you, I'd drop a formal note of gratitude and
+leave the rest until you meet them aboard."
+
+After a moment's thought the other nodded. "I'll follow that
+suggestion. It may be less embarrassing for--them."
+
+"The other fellows are going to send a sort of a hamper down to the
+boat. There won't be any cards, but you'll know that a spirit of
+Godspeed goes with the stirrup cup."
+
+For an instant Spurrier looked puzzled and the major, whose note of
+embarrassment had been growing until it seemed to choke him, now
+spluttered and sought to bury his confusion under a forced paroxysm of
+coughing.
+
+Then impulsively he thrust out his hand and gripped that of the man of
+whom just now he could remember only gallant things; soldierly
+qualities and gently bred charm.
+
+"In a fashion, Jack, you must shake hands with all of them through me.
+I come as their proxy. They can't give you a blowout, you know. They
+can't even come to see you off. I can say what I like now. The papers
+aren't signed up yet, but afterward--well, you know! Damn it, I forget
+the exact words that the Articles of War employ--about an officer who
+goes out--this way."
+
+"Don't bother, major. I get your meaning." Spurrier took the proffered
+hand in both his own. "No officer can give me social recognition. I
+believe the official words are that I shall be 'deemed ignominious.'
+Tell the boys I understand."
+
+On the sailing day John Spurrier, whose engagingly bold eyes had not
+yet learned to evade the challenge of any glance, timed his arrival on
+board almost as surreptitiously as a stowaway. It was from behind the
+closed door of his own stateroom that he listened to the deck
+commotion of laughter and leave-taking and heard, when the whistle had
+shrieked its warning to shore-going visitors, the grind of anchor
+chain on winch and windlass.
+
+That evening he dined in an inconspicuous corner by arrangement with
+the dining-saloon steward, and bolted his meal with nervous haste.
+
+From afar, as he had stood in a companionway, he had glimpsed a
+panama-hatted girl--a girl who did not see him, and who had shown only
+between the shifting heads and shoulders of the crowd. He could not
+have told even had he been closer whether her gloved left hand still
+wore upon its third finger the ring that he had put there--before
+things had happened.
+
+He must face the issue of questioning her and being questioned, and he
+hoped that he might have his first meeting with her alone--free from
+the gaze of other eyes that would torture him, and perhaps mortify
+her.
+
+So when the moon had risen and the band had begun its evening concert
+he slipped out on deck and took up his station alone at the stern
+rail. It was not entirely dark even here, but the light was mercifully
+tempered, and upon the promenaders he turned his back, remaining in a
+seclusion from which, with sidewise glances, he appraised each figure
+that drifted by.
+
+Once his eyes encountered those of a tall and elderly gentleman in
+uniform upon whose shoulder straps glittered the brigadier's single
+star.
+
+For an instant Spurrier forgot the sadly altered color of his status
+and his hand, answering to instinct, rose in salute, while his lips
+parted in a smile.
+
+But the older man, who fortunately was alone, after an embarrassed
+instant went on, pretending an absent-mindedness that ignored the
+salutation. Spurrier could feel that the general was scarcely more
+comfortable than himself.
+
+Slowly, at length, he left his outlook over the phosphorescent wake
+and drifted isolatedly about the decks, giving preference to the spots
+where the shadows lay heaviest. But when his wandering brought him
+again to the place he had abandoned at the stern, he found that it had
+been preëmpted by another. A figure stood there alone and so quiet
+that at first he hardly distinguished it as separate from the black
+contour of a capstan.
+
+But with the realization he recognized a panama hat, from under whose
+brim escaped a breeze-stirred strand of dark hair, and promptly he
+stepped to the rail, his rubber-soled shoes making no sound.
+
+The girl did not hear him, nor did she, as he found himself
+reflecting, feel his presence as lovers do in romances, and turn to
+greet him before he announced himself. But as she stood there in the
+shadow, with moonlight and starlight around her, his pulses quickened
+with an insupportable commotion of mingled hope and fear.
+
+Her beauty was that of the aristocrat. It was this patrician quality
+which had first challenged his interest in her and answered to his own
+inordinate pride of self-confidence.
+
+He had liked the lightness with which her small feet trod the earth
+and the prideful tilt of her exquisitely modeled chin.
+
+After all, he had known her only a short time--and now he realized
+that he did not know her well: certainly not well enough to estimate
+with any surety how they would meet again, after an interval which had
+tarnished the name that had come to him from two generations of
+accrued distinction.
+
+He bent forward, and, in a low voice, spoke her name, and she turned
+without a start so that she stood looking into his eyes.
+
+"I suppose you know," he began, and for once he spoke without
+self-assurance, "that I didn't hunt you out sooner because I wanted to
+spare you embarrassment. I knew you were sailing by this boat--and so
+I took it, too."
+
+She nodded her head, but remained silent. Her eyes met his and
+lingered, but they were like curtained windows and told him nothing.
+It was as if she wished to let him pitch the plane of their meeting
+without interference, and he was grateful.
+
+"I don't suppose," he began, forcing himself to speak with forthright
+directness, "I need protest my innocence to you--and I don't suppose I
+need confess that the stigma will stick to me--that in--some
+quarters--it will mean ostracism. I wanted to meet you the first time
+alone as much for your sake as my own."
+
+"I know----" she agreed faintly, but there was no rush of confidence,
+of sympathy that thought only of the black situation in which he
+stood.
+
+"I know, too," he went on with the same steadiness, "that but for your
+father's efforts I should have had to spend the rest of my life in
+prison. Above all, I know that your father made those efforts because
+you ordained it."
+
+"It was too horrible," she whispered with a little shudder. "It was
+inconceivable."
+
+"It still is," he reminded her. "There is a question, then, to be
+asked--a question for you to answer."
+
+The girl's hands dropped on the rail and her fingers tightened as her
+eyes, deeply pained, went off across the wake. She seemed unable to
+help him, unable to do more than give back monosyllabic responses to
+the things he said.
+
+"Of course, I can't assume that the promise you gave me--before all
+this--still stands, unless you can ratify it. I'm the same man, yet
+quite a different man."
+
+At last she turned, and he saw that her lashes were wet with tears.
+
+"Some day," she suggested almost pleadingly, "some day surely you will
+be able to clear your name--now that you're free to give yourself to
+it."
+
+He shook his head, "That is going to be the purpose of my life," he
+answered. "But God only knows----"
+
+"When you have done that," she impetuously exclaimed, "come back to
+me. I'll wait."
+
+But Spurrier shook his head and stiffened a little, not indignantly,
+but painfully, and his face grew paler than it had yet been.
+
+"That is generous of you," he said slowly. "That is the best I had the
+right to hope for--but it's not enough. It would be a false position
+for you--with a mortgage of doubt on your future. I've got to face
+this thing nakedly. I've got to depend only on those people who don't
+need proof--who simply know that I must be innocent of--of _this_
+because it would be impossible for me to be guilty of it--people," he
+added, his voice rising with just a moment's betrayal of boyish
+passion, "who will take the seeming facts, just as they are, and still
+say, 'Damn the facts!'"
+
+"Can I do that?" She asked the question honestly, with eyes in which
+sincere tears glistened, and at last words came in freshet volume.
+"Can I ignore the fact that father is in public life, where his
+affairs and those of his family are public property? You know he is
+talked of as presidential timber. Can I ask him to move heaven and
+earth to give you back your liberty--and then have his critics say
+that it was all for a member of his own family--a private use of
+public power?"
+
+"Then you want your promise back?" he demanded quietly.
+
+Suddenly the girl carried her hands to her face, a face all the
+lovelier for its distress. "I don't--know what--I want," she gasped.
+
+Her lover stood looking down at her, and his temples grew coldly moist
+where the veins stood out.
+
+"If you don't know what you want, dear, I know one thing that you
+can't do," he said. "Under these circumstances, your only chance of
+happiness would lie in your wanting one thing so much that the rest
+wouldn't count." He paused, and then he, too, moved aside and stood
+with her, leaning on the rail while in the phosphorescent play of the
+water and the broken reflections of the low-hung stars he seemed to
+find a sort of anodyne.
+
+"I said that what you offered was the most I had the right to hope
+for. That was true. Your father's objections are legitimate. I owe you
+both more than I can ever pay--but I won't add to that debt."
+
+"I thought," said the girl miserably, "that I loved you--enough for
+anything. The shock of all this--has made my mind swirl so that
+now--I'm not sure of anything."
+
+"Yes," he said dully, "I understand."
+
+Yet perhaps what he understood, or thought he understood, just then
+was either more or less than implied in the deferential compliance of
+his voice. This girl had given her promise to an officer and a
+gentleman with two generations of gallant army record behind him and a
+promising future ahead. She was talking now to one who, in the words
+of the Articles of War was neither an officer nor a gentleman and who
+had been saved from life imprisonment only by influence of her own
+importuning.
+
+Her own distress of mind and incertitude were so palpable and pathetic
+that the man had spoken with apology in his voice, because through him
+she had been forced into her dilemma. Yet, until now, he had been
+young enough and naïve enough to believe in certain tenets of
+romance--and, in romance, a woman who really loved a man would not be
+weighing at such a time her father's aspirations toward the White
+House. In romance, even had he been as guilty as perdition, he would
+have stood in her eyes, incapable of crime. Palpably life and romance
+followed variant laws and, for a bitter moment, Spurrier wished that
+the senator had kept hands off, and left him to his fate.
+
+He had heard the senator himself characterized as a man cold-bloodedly
+ambitious and contemptuous of others and, having seen only the genial
+side of that prominent gentleman, he had resentfully denied such
+statements and made mental comment of the calumny that attaches to
+celebrity.
+
+Yet, Spurrier argued to himself, the girl was right. Quite probably if
+he had a sister similarly placed, he would be seeking to show her the
+need of curbing impulse with common sense.
+
+From a steamer chair off somewhere at their backs came a low peal of
+laughter, and the orchestra was busy with a fox trot. For perhaps five
+minutes neither of them spoke again, but at last the girl twisted the
+ring from her finger. At least her loyalty had kept it there until she
+could remove it in his presence. She handed it to him and he turned it
+this way and that. The moonlight teased from its setting a jet of cold
+radiance.
+
+Then Spurrier tossed it outward and watched the white arc of its
+bright vanishing. He heard a muffled sob and saw the girl turn and
+start toward the companionway door. Instinctively he took a step
+forward following, then halted and stood where he was.
+
+Later, Spurrier forced himself toward the smoke room where already
+under cigar and cigarette smoke, poker and bridge games were in
+progress, and where in little groups those men who were not playing
+discussed the topics of East and West. He was following no urge of
+personal fancy in entering that place, but rather obeying a resolution
+he had made out there on deck. Now that he had asked his question and
+had his answer there was nothing from which he could afford to hide.
+He knew that he came heralded by the advance agency of gossip and that
+it behooved him from the start to meet and give back glance for
+glance: to declare by his bearing that he had no intention of
+skulking, and no apologies to make.
+
+Yet, having reached the entrance from the deck, he hesitated, and
+while he still stood, with his back to the lighted door of the smoke
+room, he reeled under a sudden impact and was thrown against the rail.
+Recovering himself with an exclamation of anger, Spurrier found
+himself confronting a man rising from his knees, whose awkwardness had
+caused the collision.
+
+But the stumbling person having regained his feet, stood seemingly
+shaken by his fall, and after a moment, during which Spurrier eyed him
+with hostile silence, exclaimed:
+
+"Plunger Spurrier!"
+
+"That is not my name, sir," retorted the ex-officer hotly. "And it's
+not one that I care to have strangers employ."
+
+The man drew back a step, and the light from the doorway fell across a
+face a little beyond middle age; showing a broad forehead and strongly
+chiseled features upon which sat an expression of directness and
+force.
+
+"My apology is, at least, as ready as was my exclamation," declared
+the stranger in a pleasant voice that disarmed hostility. "The term
+was not meant offensively. I saw you at Oakland one day when a race
+was run, and I've heard certain qualities of yours yarned about at
+mess tables in the East. I ask your pardon."
+
+"It's granted," acceded Spurrier of necessity. "And since you've heard
+of me, you doubtless know enough to make allowances for my short
+temper and excuse it."
+
+"I _have_ heard your story," admitted the other man frankly. "My name
+is Snowdon. It's just possible you may have heard of me, too."
+
+"You're not Snowdon the engineer: the Panama Canal man, the Chinese
+railway builder, are you?"
+
+"I had a hand in those enterprises," was the answer, and with a slight
+bow the gentleman went his way.
+
+The spot where the two men had stood talking was far enough aft to
+look down on the space one deck lower and one degree farther astern,
+where, as through a well space, showed the meaner life of the
+steerage. There was a light third-class list on this voyage, and when
+Spurrier moved out of the obscurity which had been thrown over him by
+the life boat's shadow, he stood gazing idly down on an empty
+prospect. He gazed with an interest too moodily self-centered for easy
+inciting.
+
+He himself stood now clear shown under the frosted globe of an
+overhead light and, after a little, roused to a tepid curiosity, he
+fancied he could make out what seemed to be a human figure that clung
+to the blackest of the shadows below him.
+
+He even fancied that in that lower darkness he caught the momentary
+dull glint of metal reflecting some half light, and an impression of
+furtive movement struck in upon him. But after a moment's scrutiny,
+which failed to clarify the picture, he decided that his imagination
+had invented the vague shape out of nothing more tangible than shadow.
+If there had been a man there he seemed to have dissolved now.
+
+So Spurrier turned away.
+
+Had his eyes possessed a nearer kinship to those of the cat, which can
+read the dark, he would have altered his course of action from that
+instant forward. He would, first, have gone to the captain and
+demanded permission to search the steerage for an ex-private of the
+infantry company that had lately been his own; a private against whose
+name on the muster roll stood the entry: "Dead or deserted."
+
+Yet when he turned on his heel and passed from the lighted area he
+unconsciously walked out of range of a revolver aimed at his
+breast--thereby temporarily settling for the man who fingered the
+trigger his question, "to shoot or not to shoot."
+
+For Private Grant, a fleeing deserter, convalescent from fever and
+lunacy, had been casting up the chances of his own life just then and
+debating the dangers and advantages of letting Spurrier live.
+Recognizing his former officer as he himself looked out of his hiding,
+his first impulse had been one of panic terror and in Spurrier he had
+seen a pursuer.
+
+The finger had twitched nervously on the trigger--then while he
+wavered in decision the other had calmly walked out of range. Now, if
+he kept out of sight until they reached Frisco, the deserter told
+himself, a larger territory would spread itself for his escape than
+the confines of a steamer, and he belonged to a race that can bide its
+time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Spurrier entered the smoke room and stood for a moment in its
+threshold.
+
+There were uniforms there, and some men in them whom he had known,
+though now these other-time acquaintances avoided his eye and the
+necessity of an embarrassment which must have come from meeting it.
+
+But from an alcove seat near the door rose a stocky gentleman, well
+groomed and indubitably distinguished of guise, who had been tearing
+the covering from a bridge deck.
+
+"Spurrier, my boy," he exclaimed cordially, "I'm glad to see you. I
+read your name on the list. Won't you join us?"
+
+This was the man who had rolled away the mountains of official inertia
+and saved him from prison; who had stipulated with his daughter that
+she should not write to him in his cell; and who now embraced the
+first opportunity to greet him publicly with cordial words. Here,
+reflected the cashiered soldier, was poise more calculated than his
+own, and he smiled as he shook his head, giving the answer which he
+knew to be expected of him.
+
+"No, thank you, senator." Then he added a request: "But if these
+gentlemen can spare you for a few minutes I would appreciate a word
+with you."
+
+"Certainly, my boy." With a glance about the little company which
+made his excuses, Beverly rose and linked his arm through Spurrier's,
+but when they stood alone on deck that graciousness stiffened
+immediately into manner more austere.
+
+"I've seen Augusta," began the younger man briefly, "and told her I
+wouldn't seek to hold her to her promise. I suppose that meets with
+your approval?"
+
+The public man, whom rumor credited with presidential aspirations,
+nodded. "Under the circumstances it is necessary. I may as well be
+candid. I tried vainly to persuade her to throw you over entirely, but
+I had to end in a compromise. She agreed not to communicate with you
+in any manner until your trial came to its conclusion."
+
+The cashiered officer felt his temples hammering with the surge of
+indignant blood to his forehead. This man who had so studiedly and
+successfully feigned genuine pleasure at seeing him, when other eyes
+were looking on, was telling him now with salamander coolness that he
+had urged upon his daughter the policy of callous desertion. The
+impulse toward resentful retort was almost overpowering, but with it
+came the galling recognition that, except for Beverly's bull-dog
+pertinacity, Spurrier himself would have been a life-termer, and that
+now humility became him better than anger.
+
+"Did you seek to have Augusta throw me over, without even a
+farewell--because you believed me guilty, sir?" His inquiry came
+quietly and the older man shook a noncommittal head.
+
+"It's not so much what I think as what the world will think," he made
+even response. "To put it in the kindest words, Spurrier, you rest
+under a cloud."
+
+"Senator," said the other in measured syllables, "I rest, also, under
+a great weight of obligation to you, but, there were times, sir, when
+for a note from her I'd willingly have accepted the death penalty."
+
+"I won't pretend that I fail to understand--even to sympathize with
+you," came the answer. "You must see none the less that I had no
+alternative. Augusta's husband must be--well, like Cæsar's wife."
+
+"There is nothing more to be said, I think," admitted Spurrier, and
+the senator held out his hand.
+
+"In every other matter, I feel only as your friend. It will be better
+if to other eyes our relations remain cordial. Otherwise my efforts on
+your behalf would give the busy-bodies food for gossip. That's what we
+are both seeking to avoid."
+
+Spurrier bowed and watched the well-groomed figure disappear.
+
+The cloudless days and the brilliant nights of low-hung stars and
+phosphor waters were times of memorable opportunity and paradise for
+other lovers on that steamer. For Spurrier they were purgatorial and
+when he realized Augusta Beverly's clearly indicated wish that he
+should leave her free from the embarrassment of any tete-a-tete, he
+knew definitely that her silence was as final as words could have made
+it. The familiar panama hat seen at intervals and the curve of the
+cheek that he had once been privileged to kiss seemed now to belong to
+an orbit of life remote from his own with an utterness of distance no
+less actual because intangible.
+
+The young soldier's nature, which had been prodigally generous, began
+to harden into a new and unlovely bitterness. Once he passed her as
+she leaned on the rail with a young lieutenant who was going to the
+States on his first leave from Island duty, and when the girl met his
+eyes and nodded, the cub of an officer looked up--and cut him dead
+with needless ostentation.
+
+For the old general, who had pretended not to see him, Jack Spurrier
+had felt only the sympathy due to a man bound and embarrassed by a
+severe code of etiquette, but with this cocksure young martinet, his
+hands itched for chastisement.
+
+Throughout the trying voyage Spurrier felt that Snowdon, the engineer,
+was holding him under an interested sort of observation, and this
+surveillance he mildly resented, though the entire politeness of the
+other left him helpless to make his feeling outspoken. But when they
+had stood off from Honolulu and brought near to completion the last
+leg of the Pacific voyage, Snowdon invited him into his own stateroom
+and with candid directness spoke his mind.
+
+"Spurrier," he began, "I'd like to have a straight talk with you if
+you will accept my assurance of the most friendly motive."
+
+Spurrier was not immediately receptive. He sat eying the other for a
+little while with a slight frown between his eyes, but in the end he
+nodded.
+
+"I should dislike to seem churlish," he answered slowly. "But I've had
+my nerves rubbed raw of late, and they haven't yet grown callous."
+
+"You see, it's rather in my line," suggested Snowdon by way of
+preface, "to assay the minerals of character in men and to gauge the
+percentage of pay-dirt that lies in the lodes of their natures. So
+I've watched you, and if you care to have the results of my
+superficial research, I'm ready to report. No man knows himself until
+introduced to himself by another, because one can't see one's self at
+sufficient distance to gain perspective."
+
+Spurrier smiled. "So you're like the announcer at a boxing match," he
+suggested. "You're ready to say, 'Plunger Spurrier, shake hands with
+Jack Spurrier--both members of this club.'"
+
+"Precisely," assented Snowdon as naturally as though there had been no
+element of facetiousness in the suggestion. "And now in the first
+place, what do you mean to do with yourself?"
+
+"I have no idea."
+
+"I suppose you have thought of the possibilities open to a West Point
+man--as a soldier of fortune?"
+
+"Yes," the answer was unenthusiastic. "Thought of them and discarded
+them."
+
+"Why?"
+
+The voice laughed and then spoke contemptuously.
+
+"A man's sword belongs to his flag. It can no more be honorably hired
+out than a woman's love. I can see in either only a form of
+prostitution."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed Snowdon heartily. "I couldn't have coached you to a
+better answer. Are you financially independent?"
+
+"On the contrary, I have nothing. Until now there was my pay and----"
+He paused there but went on again with a dogged self-forcing. "I might
+as well confess that the gaming table has always left a balance on my
+side of the ledger."
+
+"I haven't seen you playing since you came aboard."
+
+"No. I've cut that out----"
+
+"Good again--and that brings us to where I stop eliciting information
+about yourself and begin giving it. I had heard of your gambling
+exploits before I saw you. I found that you had that cold quality of
+nerve which a few gamblers have, fewer than are credited with it, by
+far! Incidentally, it's precisely the same quality that makes notable
+generals--and adroit diplomats--if they have the other qualities to
+support it. It's sublimated self-control and boldness. You were using
+it badly, but it was because you were seeking an outlet through the
+wrong channels. So I studied you, quite impersonally. Your situation
+on board wasn't easy or enviable. You knew that eyes followed you and
+tongues wagged about you with a morbid interest. You saw chatting
+groups fall abruptly silent when you approached them and officers you
+had once fraternized with look hurriedly elsewhere. In short, my young
+friend, you have faced an acid test of ordeal, and you have borne
+yourself with neither the defiance of braggadocio, nor the visible
+hint of flinching. If I were looking for a certain type of specialized
+ability, I should say you had qualified."
+
+A flush spread on the face of the listener.
+
+"You are indeed introducing me to some one I haven't known," he said.
+
+"I know, too," went on Snowdon, "that there has been a girl--and," he
+hastened to add as his companion stiffened, "I mention her only to
+show you that my observations have not been _too_ superficial. Those
+qualities which I have catalogued have engaged my attention, because
+they are rare--rare enough to be profitably capitalized."
+
+"All this is parable to me, sir."
+
+"Quite probably. I mean to construe it. There are men who originate or
+discover great opportunities of industry--and they need capital to
+bring their plans to fruition--but capital can be approached only
+through envoys and will receive only ambassadors who can compel
+recognition. The man who can hope to be successfully accredited to the
+court of Big Money must possess uncommon attributes. Pinch-beck
+promoters and plausible charlatans have made cynics of our lords of
+wealth."
+
+"What would such a man accomplish," inquired Spurrier, "aside from a
+sort of non-resident membership in the association of plutocrats?"
+
+"He would," declared Snowdon promptly, "help bridge the chasm between
+the world's unfinanced achievers, and its unachieving finances."
+
+"That," conceded the ex-soldier, "would be worth the doing."
+
+"John Law at twenty-one built a scheme of finance for Great Britain,"
+the engineer reminded him. "He could come into the presence of a king
+and in five minutes the king would urge him to stay. Force and
+presence can make such an ambassador, and those things are the veins
+of human ore I've assayed in you in paying quantities."
+
+Spurrier looked across at the strange companion whom chance had thrown
+across his path with a commotion of pulses which his face in no wise
+mirrored into outward expression. It had begun to occur to him that if
+a man is born for an adventurous life even the Articles of War cannot
+cancel his destiny.
+
+"It would seem," he suggested casually enough, "that this need of
+which you speak is for fellows, in finance, who can carry the message
+to Garcia, as it were. Isn't that it?"
+
+"That's it, and messengers to Garcia don't tramp on each other's
+heels. Yet I have spoken of only one phase of the career I'm
+outlining. It has another side to it as well, if one man is going to
+unite in himself the whole of the possibility."
+
+Snowdon broke off there a moment and seemed to be distracted by some
+thought of his own, but presently he began again.
+
+"My hypothetical man would act largely as a free lance, knocking about
+the world on a sort of constantly renewed exploration. He would be the
+prospector hunting gold and the explorer searching for new continents
+of industrial development, only instead of being just the one or the
+other he would be a sort of sublimation. His job would sometimes call
+him into the wildernesses, but more often, I think, his discoveries
+would lie under the noses of crowds, passed by every day by clever
+folk who never saw them--clever folk who are not quite clever
+enough."
+
+"It would seem to me that those discoveries," demurred Spurrier
+thoughtfully, "would come each time to some highly trained technician
+in some particular line."
+
+Snowdon shook his head again. "That's why they have come slowly
+heretofore," he declared with conviction. "That man I have in mind is
+one with a sure nose for the trail and a power of absorbing readily
+and rapidly what he requires of the other man's technical knowledge.
+It's the policy that Japan has followed as a nation. They let others
+work the problems out over there--then they appropriate the results.
+I'm not commending it as a national trait, but for this work it's the
+first essential. Having made his discovery, this new type of business
+man will enlist for it the needful financial support." He paused again
+and Spurrier, lighting a fresh cigarette, regarded him through eyes
+slit-narrowed against the flare of the match.
+
+"He must be a sort of opportunity hound," continued Snowdon smilingly.
+"He would go baying across the world in full cry and come back to the
+kennel at the end of each chase."
+
+Spurrier laughed. "If you'll pardon me, sir," he hazarded, "you make a
+very bad metaphor. I should fancy that the opportunity hound would do
+the stillest sort of still hunting."
+
+The older man smiled and bowed his head affirmatively.
+
+"I accept the amendment. The point is, do I give you the concept of
+the work?"
+
+"In a broad, extremely sketchy way, I think I get the picture,"
+replied Spurrier. "But could you give me some sort of illustration
+that would make it a shade more concrete?"
+
+His companion sat considering the question for a while and at last
+inquired: "Do you know anything about oil? I mean about its
+production?"
+
+"I've been on the Pennsylvania Railroad, coming west," testified the
+former lieutenant. "And I've run through ragged hills where on every
+side, stood clumsy, timber affairs like overgrown windmills from which
+some victorious Don Quizote had knocked off the whirligigs. Then I've
+read a little of Ida Tarbell."
+
+"Even that will serve for a sort of background. Now, people in general
+think of striking oil as they might think of finding money on the
+sidewalk or of lightning striking a particular spire--as a matter of
+purest chance. To some extent that idea is correct enough, but the
+brains of oil production are less haphazard. In the office of a few
+gentlemen who hold dominion over oil and gas hangs a map drawn by the
+intelligence department of their general staff. On that map are traced
+lines not unlike those showing ocean currents, but their arrows point
+instead to currents far under ground, where runs the crude petroleum,
+discovered--and undiscovered."
+
+"Undiscovered?" Spurrier's brows were lifted in polite incredulity,
+but his companion nodded decisively.
+
+"Discovered and undiscovered," he repeated. "Geological surveys told
+the mapmakers how certain lines and structures ran in tendency. Where
+went a particular formation of Nature's masonry, there in probability
+would go oil. The method was not absolute, I grant you, but neither
+was it haphazard. Sitting in an office in Pittsburgh a certain man
+drew on his chart what has since been recognized as the line of the
+forty-second degree, running definitely from the Pennsylvania fields
+down through Ohio and into the Appalachian hills of Kentucky--thence
+west and south. Study your fields in Oklahoma, in old Mexico, and you
+will find that, widely separated as they are, each of them is marked
+by a cross on that map, and that each of them lies along the current
+trend which the Pittsburgh man traced before many of them were touched
+by a drill."
+
+"That, surely," argued Spurrier, "testifies for the highly skilled
+technician, doesn't it?"
+
+"So far. I now come to the chance of the opportunity hound. The
+present fields are spots of production here and there. Between them
+lie others, virgin to pump or rig. Much of that ground is, of course,
+barren territory, for even on an acre of proven location dry holes may
+lie close to gushers; one man's farm may be a 'duster' while his
+neighbor's spouts black wealth. But along that charted line run the
+probabilities."
+
+Into Spurrier's eyes stole the gleam of the adventuring spirit that
+was strong in him.
+
+"It sounds like Robert Louis Stevenson and buried treasure," he
+declared with unconcealed enthusiasm, but Snowdon only smiled.
+
+"Remember," he cautioned, "I'm illustrating--nothing more. Now in the
+foothills of the Kentucky Cumberlands, for example, some years ago men
+began finding oil. It lay for the most part in a country where the
+roads were creek beds--remote from railway facilities. It was an
+expensive sort of proposition to develop, but the cry of 'Oil! Oil!'
+has never failed to set the pack a-running, and it ran."
+
+"I don't remember hearing of that rush," admitted Spurrier.
+
+"No, I dare say you didn't. It was a flare-up and a die-down. The men
+who rushed in, plodded dejectedly out again, poorer by the time they
+had spent."
+
+"Then the boom collapsed?"
+
+"It collapsed--but why? Because the gentlemen who hold dominion over
+oil and gas caucussed and so ordained. They gathered around their map
+and stuck pins here and there. They said, 'This oil can come out in
+two ways only: by pipe line or tank cars. We will stand aloof and
+develop where the cost is less and the profit greater--and without us,
+it cannot succeed.'"
+
+"Were there no independent concerns to bring the stuff to market?"
+
+Snowdon laughed. "The gentlemen who hold dominion have their own
+defenses against competition. You may have heard of a certain dog in
+the manger? Well, they said as they sat about their table on which the
+map was spread, 'Some day other fields may run out. Some day something
+may set oil soaring until even this yield may be well worth our
+attention. We will therefore hold this card in reserve against that
+day and that contingency.' So quietly, inconspicuously, yet with a
+power that strangled competition, lobbies operated in State
+legislatures. The independents failed to secure needful charters--the
+lines were never laid. Those particular fields starved, and now the
+ignorant mountaineers who woke for a while to dreams of wealth, laugh
+at the man who says 'oil' to them. Yet at some properly, or improperly
+designated day, those failure fields will flash on the astonished
+world as something risen from the dead, and fortunes will blossom for
+the lucky."
+
+"Yes?" prompted the listener.
+
+"Now let us suppose our opportunity hound as willing to go
+unostentatiously into that country; as willing to spend part of each
+year there for a term of years; nipping options here and there,
+waiting patiently and watching his chance to slip a charter through
+one of those bound and gagged legislatures in some moment of relaxed
+vigilance. Such a man might find himself ultimately standing with the
+key to the situation in his own hand. It's just a story, but perhaps
+it serves to give you my meaning."
+
+"Did I understand you to suggest," inquired Spurrier with a forced
+calmness, "that you fancy you see in me the qualities of your
+opportunity hound?"
+
+"Our own concern," said Snowdon quietly, "is fortunate enough to have
+passed through the period of cooling its heels in the anterooms of
+capital, but we can still use a man such as I have described. There's
+a place for you with us if you want it."
+
+"When do I go to work?" demanded the former lieutenant rising from his
+seat, and Snowdon countered:
+
+"When will you be ready to begin?"
+
+"When we dock at 'Frisco," came the immediate response, "provided I be
+allowed time for an affair of my own, two months from now. A certain
+private in my old company will be discharged from the service then. I
+fancy he'll land there, and I want to be waiting for him when he steps
+ashore."
+
+"A reprisal?" inquired Snowdon in a disappointed tone, but the other
+shook his head.
+
+"He is the one man through whom there's a chance of clearing my name,"
+Spurrier said slowly. "I hope it won't call for violence."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Private Grant had been bred of the blood of hatred and suckled in
+vindictiveness. He had come into being out of the heritage of feud
+fighting "foreparents," and he thought in the terms of his ancestry.
+
+When he had fled into the jungle beyond the island village, though he
+had been demented and enfeebled, the instinct of a race that had often
+"hidden out" guided him. That instinct and chance had led him to a
+native house where his disloyalty gave him a welcome, and there he had
+found sanctuary until his fever subsided and he emerged cadaverous,
+but free. Word had filtered through to him there of Spurrier's
+court-martial and its result.
+
+In the course of time, fever-wasted yet restored out of his
+semi-lunacy, he had made his way furtively but successfully toward
+Manila and there he had supplemented the sketchy fragments of
+information with which his disloyal native friends had been able to
+provide him.
+
+He knew now that the accused officer had pitched his defense upon an
+accusation of the deserter and the refugee's eyes smoldered as he
+learned that he himself had been charged with prefacing his flight
+with murder. He knew what that meant. The disgraced officer would move
+heaven and earth to clear his smirched name, and the condition
+precedent would be the capture of Private Grant and the placing of him
+in the prisoner's dock. To be wanted for desertion was grave enough.
+To be wanted both for desertion and the assassination of his company
+commander was infinitely worse, and to stand in that position and
+face, as he believed he would have to, a conspiracy of class feeling,
+was intolerable.
+
+Haunting the shadowy places about Manila, Grant had been almost crazed
+by his fears but with the lifting of the steamer's anchor, a great
+spirit of hope had brightened in him, feeding on the solace of the
+thought that, once more in the States, he could lose himself from
+pursuit and vigilance.
+
+Then he had seen, on the same ship, the face of the man whom, above
+all others, he had occasion to fear!
+
+For their joint lives the world was not large enough. One of them must
+die, and in the passion that swept over him with the dread of
+discovery. Grant had skirted a relapse into his recent mania.
+
+At that moment when Spurrier had looked down and he had looked up, the
+deserter had seen only one way out, and that was to kill. But when the
+other had moved away, seemingly without recognition, his thoughts had
+moved more lucidly again.
+
+Until he had tried soldiering he had known only the isolated life of
+forested mountains and here on a ship at sea he felt surrounded and
+helpless--almost timid. When he landed at San Francisco, if his luck
+held him undiscovered that long, he would have dry land under him and
+space into which to flee.
+
+The refugee had hated Comyn. Now Comyn was dead and Grant transferred
+his hatred from the dead captain to the living lieutenant, resolving
+that he also must die.
+
+The moment to which he looked forward with the most harrowing
+apprehension was that when the vessel docked and put her passengers
+ashore. Here at sea a comforting isolation lay between first and
+third cabin passengers and one could remain unseen from those deck
+levels that lay forward and above. But with the arrangements for
+disembarkation, he was unfamiliar, and for all he knew, the steerage
+people might be herded along under the eyes of those who traveled
+more luxuriously. He might have to march in such a procession,
+willy-nilly, over a gang-plank swept by a watchful eye.
+
+So Private Grant brooded deeply and his thoughts were not pretty. Also
+he kept his pistol near him and when the hour for debarkation arrived
+he was ripe for trouble.
+
+It happened that a group of steerage passengers, including himself,
+were gathered together much as he had feared they might be, and
+Grant's face paled and hardened as he saw, leaning with his elbows on
+a rail above him and a pipe in his mouth, the officer whom he
+dreaded.
+
+Grant's hand slipped unobtrusively under his coat and his eyes
+narrowed as his heart tightened and became resolved.
+
+Spurrier had not yet seen him but at any moment he might do so. There
+was nothing to prevent the wandering and casual glance from alighting
+on the spot where the deserter stood, and when it did so the
+mountaineer would draw and fire.
+
+But as the ex-officer's eyes went absently here and there a girl
+passed at his back and perhaps she spoke as she passed. At all events
+the officer straightened and stiffened. Across his face flashed
+swiftly such an expression as might have come from a sudden and
+stinging blow, and then, losing all interest in the bustle of the
+lower decks, the man turned on his heel and walked rapidly away.
+
+The deserter's hand stole away from the pistol grip and his breath ran
+out in a long, sibilant gasp of relief and reaction. When later he had
+landed safely and unmolested, he turned in flight toward the mountains
+that he knew over there across the continent--mountains where only
+bloodhounds could run him to earth.
+
+Beyond the rims of those forest-tangled peaks he had never looked out
+until he had joined the army, and once back in them, though he dare
+not go, for a while, to his own home county, he could shake off his
+palsy of fear.
+
+He traveled as a hobo, moneyless, ignorant, and unprepossessing of
+appearance, yet before the leaves began to fall he was at last
+tramping slopes where the air tasted sweeter to his nostrils, and the
+speech of mankind fell on his ear with the music of the accustomed.
+
+The name of Bud Grant no longer went with him. That, since it carried
+certain unfulfilled duties to an oath of allegiance, he generously
+ceded to the United States Army, and contented himself with the random
+substitute of Sim Colby.
+
+Now he tramped swingingly along a bowlder-broken creek bed which by
+local euphemism was called a road. When his way led him over the
+backbone of a ridge he could see, almost merged with the blue of the
+horizon, the smoky purple of a sugar loaf peak, which marked his
+objective.
+
+When he passed that he would be in territory where his journeying
+might end. To reach it he must transverse the present vicinity in
+which a collateral branch of his large family still dwelt, and where
+he himself preferred to walk softly, wary of possible recognition.
+
+To the man whose terror had seen in every casual eye that rested on
+him while he crossed a continent, a gleam of accusation, it was as
+though he had reached sanctuary. The shoulders that he had forced into
+a hang-dog slough to disguise the soldierly bearing which had become
+habitual in uniform, came back into a more buoyant and upright swing.
+The face that had been sullen with fear now looked out with something
+of the bravado of earlier days, and the whole experience of the
+immediate past; of months and even years, took on the unreality of a
+nightmare from which he was waking.
+
+The utmost of caution was still required, but the long flight was
+reaching a goal where substantial safety lay like a land of promise.
+It was a land of promise broken with ragged ranges and it was fiercely
+austere; the Cumberland mountains reared themselves like a colossal
+and inhospitable wall of isolation between the abundant richness of
+lowland Kentucky to the west, and Virginia's slope seaward to the
+east.
+
+But isolation spelled refuge and the taciturn silences of the men who
+dwelt there, asking few questions and answering fewer, gave promise of
+unmolested days.
+
+These hills were a world in themselves; a world that had stood,
+marking time for a hundred and fifty years, while to east and west
+life had changed and developed and marched with the march of the
+years. Sequestered by broken steeps of granite and sand stone, the
+human life that had come to the coves and valleys in days when the
+pioneers pushed westward, had stagnated and remained unaltered.
+
+Illiteracy and ignorance had sprung chokingly into weed-like
+prevalence. The blood-feud still survived among men who fiercely
+insisted upon being laws unto themselves. Speech fell in quaint
+uncouthness that belonged to another century, and the tides of progress
+that had risen on either hand, left untouched and uninfluenced the
+men and women of mountain blood, who called their lowland brethren
+"furriners" and who distrusted all that was "new-fangled" or
+"fotched-on."
+
+Habitations were widely separated cabins. Roads were creekbeds. Life
+was meager and stern, and in the labyrinths of honeycombed and
+forest-tangled wilds, men who were "hidin' out" from sheriffs, from
+revenuers, from personal enemies, had a sentimental claim on the
+sympathy of the native-born.
+
+This was the life from which the deserter had sprung. It was the life
+to which with eager impatience he was returning; a life of countless
+hiding places and of no undue disposition to goad a man with
+questioning.
+
+Through the billowing richness of the Bluegrass lowlands, he had
+hurried with a homing throb in his pulses. As the foothills began to
+break out of the fallow meadows and the brush to tangle at the fringe
+of the smoothness, his breath had come deeper and more satisfying.
+When the foothills rose in steepness until low, wet streamers of cloud
+trailed their slopes like shrapnel smoke, and the timber thickened and
+he saw an eagle on the wing, something like song broke into being in
+his heart.
+
+He was home. Home in the wild mountains where air and the water had
+zest and life instead of the staleness that had made him sick in the
+flat world from which he came. He was home in the mountains where
+others were like him and he was not a barbarian any longer among
+contemptuous strangers.
+
+He plodded along the shale-bottomed water course for a little way and
+halted. As his woodsman's eye took bearings he muttered to himself:
+"Hit's a right slavish way through them la'rel hills, but hit's a
+cut-off," and, suiting his course to his decision, he turned upward
+into the thickets and began to climb.
+
+An hour later he had covered the "hitherside" and "yon side" of a
+small mountain, and when he came to the highway again he found himself
+confronted by a half dozen armed horsemen whose appearance gave him
+apprehensive pause, because at once he recognized in them the
+officialdom of the law. The mounted travelers drew rein, and he halted
+at the roadside, nodding his greeting in affected unconcern.
+
+The man who had been riding at the fore held in his left hand the
+halter line of a led horse, and now he looked down at the pedestrian
+and spoke in the familiar phrase of wayside amenity.
+
+"Howdy, stranger, what mout yore name be?"
+
+"Sim Colby from acrost Hemlock Mountain ways, but I've done been west
+fer a year gone by, though, an' I'm jest broguein' along to'rds
+home."
+
+The questioner, a long, gaunt man with a face that had been scarred,
+but never altered out of its obstinate set, eyed him for a moment,
+then shot out the question:
+
+"Did ye ever hear tell of Sam Mosebury over thet-away?"
+
+It was lucky that the fugitive had given as his home a territory with
+which he had some familiarity. Now his reply came promptly.
+
+"Yes, I knows him when I sees him. Some folks used ter give him a
+right hard name over thar, but I reckon he's all right ef a man don't
+aim ter crowd him too fur."
+
+"I don't know how fur he mout of been crowded," brusquely replied the
+man with the extra horse, "but he kilt a man in Rattletown yestiddy
+noon an' tuck ter ther woods. I'm after him."
+
+The foot traveler expressed an appropriate interest, then added:
+
+"Howsomever, hit ain't none of my affair, an' seein' thet I've got a
+right far journey ahead of me, I'll hike along."
+
+But the leader of the mounted group shook his head.
+
+"One of my men got horse flung back thar an' broke a bone inside him.
+I'm ther high sheriff of this hyar county, an' I hereby summons ye ter
+go along with me an' ack as a member of my possy."
+
+Under his tan Private Grant paled a little. This mischance carried a
+triple menace to his safety. It involved riding back to the county
+seat where some man might remember his face, and recall that two
+years ago he had gone away on a three years' enlistment. But even if
+he escaped that contingency, it meant tarrying in this neighborhood
+through which he had meant to pass inconspicuously and rapidly. To be
+attached to a _posse comitatus_ riding the hills on a man hunt meant
+to challenge every passing eye with an interest beyond the casual.
+
+Finally, though he might well have forgotten him, the man whose trail
+he was now called to take in pursuit had once known him slightly, and
+if they met under such hostile auspices, might recognize and denounce
+him.
+
+But the sheriff sat enthroned in his saddle and robed in the color of
+authority. At his back sat five other men with rifles across their
+pommels, and with such a situation there was no argument. The law's
+officer threw the bridle rein of the empty-saddled mount to the man in
+the road.
+
+"Get up on this critter," he commanded tersely, "and don't let him git
+his head down too low. He follers buck-jumpin'."
+
+When Grant, alias Colby, found that the men riding with him were more
+disposed to somber silence than to inquisitiveness or loquacity, he
+breathed easier. He even made a shrewd guess that there were others in
+that small group who answered the call of the law as reluctantly as
+he.
+
+Sam Mosebury was accounted as dangerous as a rattlesnake, and Bud
+doubted whether even the high sheriff himself would make more than a
+perfunctory effort to come to grips with him in his present
+desperation.
+
+When the posse had ridden several hours, and had come to a spot in the
+forest where the trail forked diversely, a halt was called. They had
+traveled steep ways and floundered through many belly-deep fords. Dust
+lay gray upon them and spattered mud overlaid the dust.
+
+"We've done come ter a pass, now," declared the sheriff, "where hit
+ain't goin' ter profit us no longer ter go trailin' in one bunch. We
+hev need ter split up an' turkey tail out along different routes."
+
+The sun had long crossed the meridian and dyed the steep horizon with
+burning orange and violet when Bud Grant and Mose Biggerstaff, with
+whom he had been paired off, drew rein to let their horses blow in a
+gorge between beetling walls of cliff.
+
+"Me, I ain't got no master relish for this task, no-how," declared
+Mose morosely as he spat at the black loam of rotting leaves. "No man
+ain't jedgmatically proved ter me, yit, thet ther feller Sam kilt
+didn't need killin'."
+
+Bud nodded a solemn concurrence in the sentiment. Then abruptly the
+two of them started as though at the intrusion of a ghost and, of
+instinct, their hands swept holsterward, but stopped halfway.
+
+This sudden galvanizing of their apathy into life was effected by the
+sight of a figure which had materialized without warning and in
+uncanny silence in a fissure where the rocks dripped from reeking moss
+on either side.
+
+It stood with a cocked repeating rifle held easily at the ready, and
+it was a figure that required no heralding of its identity or menace.
+
+"Were ye lookin' fer me, boys?" drawled Sam Mosebury with a palpable
+enjoyment of the situation, not unlike that which brightens the eyes
+of a cat as it plays with a mouse already crippled.
+
+With swift apprehension the eyes of the two deputies met and effected
+an understanding. Mose Biggerstaff licked his bearded lips until their
+stiffness relaxed enough for speech.
+
+"Me an' Sim Colby hyar," he protested, "got summoned by ther high
+sheriff. We didn't hev no rather erbout hit one way ner t'other. All
+we've got ter go on air ther _dee_scription thet war give ter us--an'
+we don't see no resemblance atween ye an' ther feller we're atter."
+
+The murderer stood eying them with an amused contempt, and one could
+recognize the qualities of dominance which, despite his infamies, had
+won him both fear and admiration.
+
+"Ef ye thinks ye'd ought ter take me along an' show me ter yore high
+sheriff," he suggested, and the finger toyed with the trigger, "I'm
+right hyar."
+
+"Afore God, no!" It was Bud who spoke now contradicting his colleague.
+"I've seed Sam Mosebury often times--an' ye don't no fashion faver
+him."
+
+Sam laughed. "I've seed ye afore, too, I reckon," he commented dryly.
+"But ef ye don't know me, I reckon I don't need ter know _you_,
+nuther."
+
+The two sat atremble in their saddles until the apparition had
+disappeared in the laurel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gray-templed and seamed of face, Dyke Cappeze entered the courthouse
+at Carnettsville one day a few months later and paused for a moment,
+his battered law books under his threadbare elbow, to gaze around the
+murky hall of which his memory needed no refreshing.
+
+About the stained walls hung fly-specked notices of sheriff's sales,
+and between them stamped long-haired, lean-visaged men drawn in by
+litigation or jury service from branchwater and remote valley.
+
+Out where the sun lay mellow on the town square was the brick
+pavement, on which Cappeze's law partner had fallen dead ten
+years ago, because he dared to prosecute too vigorously. Across
+the way stood the general store upon which one could still see the
+pock-marking of bullets reminiscent of that day when the Heatons
+and the Blacks made war, and terrorized the county seat.
+
+Dyke Cappeze looked over it all with a deep melancholy in his eyes. He
+knew his mountains and loved his people whose virtues were more
+numerous, if less conspicuous, than their sins. In his heart burned a
+militant insurgency. These hills cried out for development, and
+development demanded a conception of law broader gauged and more
+serious than obtained. It needed fearless courts, unterrified juries,
+intrepid lawyers.
+
+He had been such a lawyer, and when he had applied for life insurance
+he had been adjudged a prohibitive risk. To-day the career of three
+decades was to end, and as the bell in the teetering cupola began to
+clang its summons he shook his head--and pressed tight the straight
+lips that slashed his rugged face.
+
+On the bench sat the circuit-riding judge of that district; a man to
+whom, save when he addressed him as "your honor," Dyke Cappeze had not
+spoken in three years. They were implacable enemies, because too
+often the lawyer had complained that justice waited here on
+expediency.
+
+Cappeze looked at the windows bleared with their residue of dust and
+out through them at the hills mantling to an autumnal glory. Then he
+heard that suave--to himself he said hypocritical--voice from the
+bench.
+
+"Gentlemen of the bar, any motions?"
+
+Wearily the thin, tall-framed lawyer came to his feet and stood erect
+and silent for a moment in his long, black coat, corroding into the
+green of dilapidation.
+
+"May it please your honor," he grimly declared. "I hardly know whether
+my statement may be properly called a motion or not. It's more a
+valedictory."
+
+He drew from his breast pocket a bit of coarse, lined writing paper
+and waved it in his talon-like hand.
+
+"I was retained by the widow Sales, whose husband was shot down by Sam
+Mosebury, to assist the prosecution in bringing the assassin to
+punishment. The grand jury has failed to indict this defendant. The
+sheriff has failed to arrest him. The court has failed to produce
+those witnesses whom I have subpoenaed. The machinery of the law which
+is created for the sole purpose of protecting the weak against the
+encroachments of the malevolent has failed."
+
+He paused, and through the crowded room the shuffling feet fell silent
+and heads bent excitedly forward. Then Cappeze lifted the paper in his
+hand and went on:
+
+"I hold here an unsigned letter that threatens me with death if I
+persist with this prosecution. It came to me two weeks ago, and since
+receiving it I have redoubled my energy. When this grand jury was
+impaneled and charged, such a note also reached each of its members. I
+know not what temper of soul actuates those men who have sworn to
+perform the duties of grand jurors. I know not whether these threats
+have affected their deliberations, but I know that they have failed to
+return a true bill against Sam Mosebury!"
+
+The judge fingering his gavel frowned gravely. "Does counsel mean to
+charge that the court has proven lax?"
+
+"I mean to say," declared the lawyer in a voice that suddenly mounted
+and rung like a trumpeted challenge, "that in these hills of Kentucky
+the militant spirit of the law seems paralyzed! I mean to say that
+terrorism towers higher than the people's safeguards! For a lifetime I
+have battled here to put the law above the feud--and I have failed. In
+this courthouse my partner fought for a recognition of justice and at
+its door he paid the penalty with his life. I wish to make no charges
+other than to state the facts. I am growing old, and I have lost heart
+in a vain fight. I wish to withdraw from this case as associate
+commonwealth counsel, because I can do nothing more than I have done,
+and that is enough. I wish to state publicly that to-day I shall take
+down my shingle and withdraw from the practice of law, because law
+among us seems to me a misnomer and a futile semblance."
+
+In a dead silence the elderly attorney came to his period and gathered
+up again under his threadbare elbow his two or three battered books.
+Turning, he walked down the center aisle toward the door, and as he
+went his head sagged dejectedly forward on his chest.
+
+He heard the instruction of his enemy on the bench, still suave:
+
+"Mr. Clerk, let the order be entered striking the name of Mr. Cappeze
+from the record as associate counsel for the commonwealth."
+
+It was early forenoon when the elderly attorney left the dingy law
+office which he was closing, and the sunset fires were dying when he
+swung himself down from the saddle at his own stile in the hills and
+walked between the bee-gums and bird boxes to his door. But before he
+reached it the stern pain in his eyes yielded to a brightening
+thought, and as if responsive to that thought the door swung open and
+in it stood a slim girl with eyes violet deep, and a beauty so
+alluring and so wildly natural that her father felt as if youth had
+met him again, when he had begun to think of all life as musty and
+decrepit with age.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+Except in that narrow circle of American life which follows the doings
+and interests of the army and navy, the world had forgotten, in the
+several years since its happening, the court-martial and disgrace of
+John Spurrier--but Spurrier himself had not been able to forget.
+
+His name had become forcefully identified with other things and, in
+the employ of Snowdon's company, he had been into those parts of the
+world which call to a man of energy and constructive ability of major
+calibre. But the joy of seeing mine fields open to the rush where
+there had been only desert before: of seeing chasms bridged into
+roadways had not been enough to banish the brooding which sprung from
+the old stigma. In remote places he had encountered occasional army
+men to remind him that he was no longer one of them and, though he was
+often doing worthier things than they, they were bound by regulations
+which branded him.
+
+So Spurrier had hardened, not into outward crustiness of admitted
+chagrin, but with an inner congealing of spirit which made him look on
+life as a somewhat merciless fight and what he could wrest from life
+as the booty of conquest.
+
+One day, in Snowdon's office after a more than usually difficult
+task had reached accomplishment, the chief candidly proclaimed
+justification for his first estimate of his aide, and Spurrier
+smiled.
+
+"It's generous of you to speak so, sir," he said slowly, "and I'm glad
+to leave you with that impression--because with many regrets I _am_
+leaving you."
+
+The older man raised his brows in surprise.
+
+"I had hoped our association would be permanent," he responded. "I
+suppose, though, you have an opening to a broader horizon. If so it
+comes as recognition well earned."
+
+"It's an offer from Martin Harrison, sir," came the reply in slowly
+weighed words. "There are objections, of course, but the man who gains
+Harrison's confidence stands in the temple of big money."
+
+"Yes. Of course Harrison's name needs no amplification." The man who
+had opened a door for Spurrier in what had seemed a blank wall, sat
+for a moment silent then broke out with more than his customary
+emphasis of expression. "Objection from me may seem self-interested
+because I am losing a valuable assistant. But--damn it all, Harrison
+is a pirate!"
+
+Spurrier's tanned cheeks flushed a shade darker but he nodded his
+head. His fine eyes took on that glint of hardness which, in former
+times, had never marred their engaging candor.
+
+"I'd like to have you understand me, sir. I owe you that much and a
+great deal more. I know that Harrison and his ilk of big money
+operators are none too scrupulous--but they have power and opportunity
+and those are things I must gain."
+
+"I had supposed," suggested Snowdon deliberately, "that you wanted two
+things above all else. First to establish your innocence to the
+world, and secondly, even if you failed in that, to make your name so
+substantially respected that you could bear--the other."
+
+"Until recently I had no other thought." The young man rose and stood
+with his fine body erect and as full of disciplined strength as that
+of a Praxiteles athlete. Then he took several restless turns across
+the floor and halted tensely before his benefactor.
+
+"I have let no grass grow under my feet. You know how I have run
+down every conceivable clue and how I stand as uncleared as the day
+the verdict was brought at Manila. I've begun to despair of
+vindication.... I am not by nature a beast of prey.... I prefer
+fair play and the courtesies of sportsmanlike conflict."
+
+He paused, then went forward again in a hardening voice: "But in this
+land of ours there are two aristocracies and only two--and I want to
+be an aristocrat of sorts."
+
+"I didn't realize we had even so much variety as that," observed
+Snowdon and the younger man continued.
+
+"The real aristocracy is that of gentle blood and ideals. Our little
+army is its true nucleus and there a man doesn't have to be rich. I
+was born to that and reared to it as to a deep religion--but I've been
+cast out, unfrocked, cashiered. I can't go back. One class is still
+open to me; the brazen, arrogant circles of wealth into which a
+double-fisted achiever can bruise his way. I don't love them. I don't
+revere them, but they offer power and I mean to take my place on their
+tawdry eminence. It's all that's left."
+
+"I'm not preaching humility," persisted Snowdon quietly. "I started
+you along the paths of financial combat and I see no fault in your
+continuing, but may I be candid to the point of bluntness?"
+
+He paused for permission and Spurrier prompted: "Yes, please go on."
+
+"Then," finished Snowdon, "since you've been with me I've watched you
+grow--and you _have_ grown. But I've also seen a fine chivalric sense
+gradually blunting; a generous predisposition hardening out of
+flexibility into something more implacable, less gracious. It's a
+pity--and Martin Harrison won't soften you."
+
+For a while Spurrier stood meditatively silent, then he smiled and
+once more nodded his head.
+
+"There isn't a thing you've said that isn't true, Mr. Snowdon,
+and you're the one man who could say it without any touch of
+offensiveness. I've counted the costs. God knows if I could go back
+to the army to-morrow with a shriven record, I'd rather have my
+lieutenant's pay than all the success that could ever come from
+moneyed buccaneers! But I can't do that. I can't think of myself
+as a fighting man under my own flag whose largest pay is his
+contentment and his honor. Very well, I have accepted Hobson's
+choice. I will join that group which fights with power, for power;
+the group that's strong enough to defy the approval they can't
+successfully court. I _have_ hardened but I've needed to. I hope I
+shan't become so flagrant, however, that you'll have to regret
+sponsoring me."
+
+Snowdon laughed.
+
+"I'm not afraid of that," he made hasty assurance. "And my friendliest
+wishes go with you."
+
+Since that day John Spurrier had come to a place of confidence in the
+counsels over which Harrison presided with despotic authority.
+
+The man in the street, deriving his information from news print, would
+have accorded Martin Harrison a place on the steering committee of the
+country's wealth and affairs, and in such a classification he would
+have been both right and wrong.
+
+There were exclusive coteries of money manipulation to which Harrison
+was denied an entree. These combinations were few but mighty, and
+until he won the sesame of admission to their supreme circle his
+ambition must chafe, unsatisfied: his power, greater than that of many
+kings, must seem to himself too weak.
+
+It must not be inferred that Harrison was embittered by the wormwood
+of failure. His trophies of success were numerous and tangible enough
+for every purpose except his own contentment.
+
+To-night he was smiling with baronial graciousness while he stood
+welcoming a group of dinner guests in his own house, and as his butler
+passed the tray of canapes and cocktail glasses the latest arrival
+presented himself.
+
+The host nodded. "Spurrier," he said, "I think you know every one
+here, don't you?"
+
+The young man who had just come was perfectly tailored and self-confident
+of bearing, and as vigorous of bodily strength as a wrestler in training.
+The time that had passed over him since he had left Snowdon's company for
+wider and more independent fields had wrought changes in him, and in so
+far as the observer could estimate values from the externals of life,
+every development had been upward toward improvement. Yet, between the
+man's impressive surface and his soul lay an acquired coat of cynicism and
+a shell of cultivated selfishness.
+
+John Spurrier, who had renounced the gaming table, was more
+passionately and coldly than ever the plunger, dedicated to the single
+religion of ambition. He had failed to remove the blot of the
+court-martial from his name, and, denied the soldier's ethical place,
+he had become a sort of moss-trooper of finance.
+
+Backed only by his personal qualifications, he had won his way into a
+circle of active wealth, and though he seemed no more a stranger there
+than a duckling in a pool, he himself knew that another simile would
+more truly describe his status.
+
+He was like an exhibition skater whose eye-filling feats are
+watched with admiration and bated breath. His evolutions and dizzy
+pirouettings were performed with an adroit ease and grace, but he
+could feel the swaying of the thin ice under him and could never
+forget that only the swift smoothness of his flight stood between
+himself and disaster.
+
+He must live on a lavish scale or lose step with the fast-moving
+procession. He must maintain appearances in keeping with his
+associations--or drop downscale to meaner opportunities and paltrier
+prizes. The wealth which would establish him firmly seemed always just
+a shade farther away than the reach of his outstretched grasp.
+
+"We were just talking about Trabue, Spurrier," his host enlightened
+him as he looked across the rim of his lifted glass, with eyes
+hardening at the mention of that name.
+
+Spurrier did not ask what had been said about Trabue, but he guessed
+that it savored of anathema. For Trabue, whose name rarely appeared in
+the public announcements of American Oil and Gas, was none the less
+the white-hot power and genius of that organization--its unheralded
+chief of staff. Just as A. O. and G. dominated the world of finance,
+so he dominated A. O. and G.
+
+Harrison laughed. "I'm not a vindictive man," he declared in humorous
+self-defense, "but I want his scalp as Salome wanted the head of John
+the Baptist."
+
+The newly arrived guest smiled quietly.
+
+"That's a large order, Mr. Harrison," he suggested, "and yet it's in
+line with a matter I want to take up with you. My conspiracy won't
+exactly separate O. H. Trabue from his scalp lock, but it may pull
+some pet feathers out of his war bonnet. I'm leaving to-morrow on a
+mission of reconnaissance--and when I come back----"
+
+The eyes of the elder and younger engaged with a quiet interchange of
+understanding, and Spurrier knew that into Martin's mind, as crowded
+with activities as a busy harbor, an idea had fallen which would grow
+into interest.
+
+When dinner was announced, the adventurer de luxe--for it was so that
+he recognized himself in the confessional of his own mind--took in the
+daughter of his host, and this mark of distinction did not escape the
+notice of several men.
+
+Spurrier himself was gravely listening to some low-voiced aside from
+the girl who nibbled at an olive, and who merited his attention.
+
+She was tall and undeniably handsome, and if her mentality sparkled
+with a cool and brilliant light rather than a warm and appealing glow,
+that was because she had inherited the pattern of her father's mind.
+
+If, notwithstanding her wealth and position, she was still unmarried
+three seasons after her coming-out, it was her own affair and
+possibly his good fortune. For when the Jack Spurrier of these days
+contemplated marriage at all, he thought of it as an aid to his career
+rather than a sentimental adventure.
+
+"I'm leaving in the morning," he was saying in a low voice, "for the
+Kentucky Cumberlands, where I'm told life hasn't changed much since
+the pioneers crossed over their divide. It's the Land of Do-Without."
+
+"The Land of Do-Without?" she repeated after him. "It's an expressive
+phrase, Jack. Is it your own or should there be quotation marks?"
+
+Spurrier laughed as he admitted: "I claim no credit; I merely quote,
+but the land down there in the steeps is one, from all I hear, to stir
+the imagination into terms more or less poetic."
+
+He leaned forward a little and his engaging face mirrored his own
+interest so that the girl found herself murmuring: "Tell me something
+about it, then."
+
+"It is," he assured her, "a stretch of unaltered mediævalism entirely
+surrounded by modernity--yet holding aloof. Though the country has
+spread to the Pacific and it lies within three hundred miles of
+Atlantic tidewater, it is still our one frontier where pioneers live
+under the conditions that obtained in the days of the Indian."
+
+"That seems difficult to grasp," she demurred, and he nodded his
+head, abstractedly sketching lines on the damask cloth with his oyster
+fork.
+
+"When the nation was born," he enlightened, "and the questing spirit
+of the overland voyagers asserted itself, the bulk of its human tide
+flowed west along the Wilderness Road. Through Cumberland Gap lay
+their one discovered gate in the wall that nature had built to the sky
+across their path. It was a wall more ancient than that of the Alps
+and between the ridges many of them were stranded."
+
+"How?" she demanded, arrested by the vibrant interest of his own
+voice, and he continued with a shrug of the shoulder.
+
+"Many reasons. A pack mule fallen lame--a broken wagon-wheel; small
+things were enough in such times of hardship to make a family settle
+where it found itself balked. The more fortunate won through to 'take
+the west with the axe and hold it with the rifle.' Then came railroads
+and steamboats, going other ways, and the ridges were swallowed again
+by the wilderness. The stranded brethren remained stranded and they
+did not alter or progress. They remained self-willed, fiercely
+independent and dedicated to the creed 'Leave us alone.' Their life
+to-day is the life of two centuries ago."
+
+The girl lifted the brows that were dark enough to require no
+penciling.
+
+"That was the speech of a dreamer and a poet, Jack, and I thought you
+the most practical of men. What calls you into a land of poverty? I
+didn't know you ever ran on cold trails." She spoke with a delicately
+shaded irony, as though for the materialism of his own viewpoint, yet
+he knew that her interest in him would survive no failure of worldly
+attainment.
+
+He did not repeat to her the story told him so long ago by Snowdon,
+the engineer, nor confide to her that ever since then his mind had
+harked back insistently to that topic and its possibilities. Now he
+only smiled with diplomatic suavity.
+
+"Pearls," he said, "don't feed oysters into robustness. They make
+'em most uncomfortable. The poverty-stricken illiterates in these
+hills, where I'm going, might starve for centuries over buried
+treasure--which some one else might find."
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"In the stories," she answered, though she did not seem disturbed at
+the thought, "the stranger in the Cumberlands always arouses the ire
+of some whiskered moonshiner and falls in a creek bed pierced by a
+shot from the laurel."
+
+Spurrier grinned.
+
+"Or he falls in love with a barefoot Diana and teaches her to adore
+him in return."
+
+Miss Harrison made a satirical little grimace. "At least teach her to
+eat with a fork, too, Jack," she begged him. "It will contribute to
+your fastidious comfort when you come back here to sell your pearls at
+Tiffany's or in Maiden Lane, or wherever it is that one wholesales his
+treasure-trove."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If John Spurrier had presented the picture of a man to the manner born
+as he sat with Martin Harrison's daughter at Martin Harrison's table,
+he fitted into the ensemble, too, a week later, as he crossed the
+hard-tramped dirt of the street from the railway station at Waterfall
+and entered the shabby tavern over the way--for the opportunity hound
+must be adaptable.
+
+Here he would leave the end of the rails and travel by mule into a
+wilder country, for on the geological survey maps that he carried with
+him he had made tracings of underground currents which it had not been
+easy to procure.
+
+These red-inkings were exact miniatures of a huge wall chart in the
+headquarters of American Oil and Gas, and to others than a trusted few
+they were not readily accessible. How Spurrier had achieved his
+purpose is a separate story and one over which he smiled inwardly,
+though it may have involved features that were not nicely ethical.
+
+The tavern had been built in the days when Waterfall had attracted men
+answering the challenge of oil discovery. Now it had fallen wretchedly
+into decay, and over it brooded the depression of hopes and dreams
+long dead. Gladly Spurrier had left that town behind him.
+
+Now, on a crisp afternoon, when the hill slopes were all garbed in the
+rugged splendor of the autumn's high color, he was tramping with a
+shotgun on his elbow and a borrowed dog at his heels. He had crossed
+Hemlock Mountain and struck into the hinterland at its back.
+
+Until now he had thought of Hemlock Mountain as a single peak, but he
+had discovered it to be, instead, an unbroken range beginning at
+Hell's Door and ending at Praise the Lord, which zigzagged for a
+hundred miles and arched its bristling backbone two thousand feet into
+the sky. Along this entire length it offered only a few passes over
+which a traveler could cross except on foot or horseback.
+
+He had found entertainment overnight at a clay-chinked log-cabin,
+where he had shared the single room with six human beings and two
+dogs. This census takes no account of a razor-back pig which was
+segregated in a box under the dining table, where its feeding with
+scraps simplified the problem of stock raising.
+
+His present objective was the house of Dyke Cappeze, the retired
+lawyer, whose name had drifted into talk at every town in which he had
+stopped along the railroad.
+
+Cappeze was a "queer fellow," a recluse who had quit the villages and
+drawn far back into the hills themselves. He was one who could neither
+win nor stop fighting; who wanted to change the unalterable, and,
+having failed, sulked like Achilles in his tent. But whoever spoke of
+Cappeze credited him with being a positive and unique personality, and
+Spurrier meant to know him.
+
+So he pretended to hunt quail--in a country where a covey rose and
+scattered beyond gorges over which neither dog nor man could follow.
+One excuse served as well as another so long as he seemed sufficiently
+careless of the things which were really the core and center of his
+interest. And now Cappeze's place ought to be near by.
+
+Off to one side of the ragged way stretched a brown patch of stubble,
+and suddenly the dog stopped at its edge, lifted his muzzle with
+distended nostrils delicately aquiver, and then went streaking away
+into the rattling weed stalks, eagerly quartering the bare field.
+
+Spurrier followed, growling skeptically to himself: "He's made a stand
+on a rabbit. That dog's a liar and the truth is not in him!"
+
+But the setter had come to a halt and held motionless, his statuesque
+pose with one foreleg uplifted as rigid as a piece of bronze save for
+the black muzzle sensitively alert and tremulous.
+
+Then as the man walked in there came that startling little thunder of
+whirring wings with which quail break cover.
+
+The ground seemed to burst with a tiny drumming eruption of up-surging
+feathery shapes, and Spurrier's gun spoke rapidly from both barrels.
+Save for the two he had downed, the covey crossed a little rise beyond
+a thicket of blackberry brier where he marked them by the tips of a
+few gnarled trees, and the man nodded his head in satisfaction as the
+dog he had libeled neatly retrieved his dead birds and cast off again
+toward the hummock's ridge.
+
+Spurrier, following more slowly, lost sight of his setter and, before
+he had caught up, he heard a whimpering of fright and pain. Puzzled,
+he hastened forward until from a slight elevation, which commanded a
+burial ground, choked with a tangle of brambles and twisted fox
+grapes, he found himself looking on a picture for which he was
+entirely unprepared.
+
+His dog was crouching and crawling in supplication, while above him,
+with eyes that snapped lightning jets of fury, stood a slender girl
+with a hickory switch tightly clenched in a small but merciless hand.
+
+As the gunner came into sight she stood her ground, a little startled
+but obdurately determined, and her expression appeared to transfer
+her anger from the animal she had whipped to the master, until he
+almost wondered whether she might not likewise use the hickory upon
+him.
+
+He tried not to let the vivid and unexpected beauty of the apparition
+cloud his just indignation, and his voice was stern with offended
+dignity as he demanded:
+
+"Would you mind telling me why you're mistreating my dog? He's the
+gentlest beast I ever knew."
+
+The girl was straight and slim and as colorful as the landscape which
+the autumn had painted with crimson and violet, but in her eyes flamed
+a war fire.
+
+"What's that a-bulgin' out yore coat pocket, thar?" she demanded
+breathlessly. "You an' yore dog air both murderers! Ye've been
+shootin' into my gang of pet pa'tridges."
+
+"Pet--partridges?" He repeated the words in a mystified manner, as
+under the compulsion of her gaze he drew out the incriminating bodies
+of the lifeless victims.
+
+The girl snatched the dead birds from him and laid their soft breasts
+against her cheek, crooning sorrowfully over them.
+
+"They trusted me ter hold 'em safe," she declared in a grief-stricken
+tone. "I'd kept all the gunners from harmin' 'em--an' now they've done
+been betrayed--an' murdered."
+
+"I'm sorry," declared Spurrier humbly. "I didn't know they were pets.
+They behaved very much like wild birds."
+
+The dog rose from his cowering position and came over to shelter
+himself behind Spurrier, who just then heard the underbrush stir
+at his back and wheeled to find himself facing an elderly man with a
+ruggedly chiseled face and a mane of gray hair. It was a face that
+one could not see without feeling a spirit force behind it, and when
+the man spoke his sonorous voice, too, carried a quality of
+impressiveness.
+
+"He didn't have no way of knowin', Glory," he said placatingly to the
+girl. "Bob Whites are mostly wild, you know." Then turning back to the
+man again he courteously explained: "She fed this gang through last
+winter when the snows were heavy. They'd come up to the door yard an'
+peck 'round with the chickens. She's gifted with the knack of gentlin'
+wild things." He paused, then added with a grim touch of irony. "It's
+a lesson that it would have profited me to learn--but I never could
+master it. You're a furriner hereabouts, ain't you?"
+
+"My name is John Spurrier," said the stranger. "I was looking for Dyke
+Cappeze."
+
+"I'm Dyke Cappeze," said the elderly man, "an' this is my daughter,
+Glory. Come inside. Yore welcome needs some mendin', I reckon."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+As John Spurrier followed his host between rhododendron thickets that
+rose above their heads, he found himself wondering what had become of
+the girl, but when they drew near to an old house whose stamp of
+orderly neatness proclaimed its contrast to the scattering hovels of
+widely separated neighbors, he caught a flash of blue gingham by the
+open door and realized that the Valkyrie had taken a short cut.
+
+The dog, too, had arrived there ahead of its master and was
+fawning now on the girl, who leaned impulsively over to take the
+gentle-pointed muzzle between her palms.
+
+"I'm sorry I whopped ye," she declared in a silver-voiced contrition
+that made the man think of thrush notes. "Hit wasn't _yore_ fault
+no-how. Hit was thet--thet stuck-up furriner. I _hates_ him!"
+
+The setter waved its plumed tail in forgiveness and contentment, and
+the girl, discovering with an upward glance that she had been
+overheard, rose and stood for a moment defiantly facing the object of
+her denunciation, then, as embarrassment flooded her cheeks with
+color, fled into the house.
+
+The sense of having stepped back into an older century had been
+growing on John Spurrier ever since he had turned away from the town
+of Waterfall, and now it possessed him with a singular fascination.
+
+Here was a different world, somber under its shadow of frugality, and
+breathing out the heavy atmosphere of isolation. The spirit of this
+strange life looked out from the wearied eyes of Dyke Cappeze as he
+sat filling his pipe across the hearth, a little later, and it sounded
+in his voice when he announced slowly:
+
+"It's not for me to withhold hospitality in a land where a ready
+welcome is about all we have to offer, and yet you could hardly have
+picked a worse house to come to between the Virginia border and the
+Kaintuck ridges."
+
+Spurrier raised his brows interrogatively, and at the same moment he
+noticed matters hitherto overlooked. The windows were heavily
+shuttered and his host sat beyond the line of vision from the open
+door--with a rifle leaning an arm's length away.
+
+"Coming as a stranger," continued Cappeze, "you start without
+enmities--with a clean page. You might spend your life here and find a
+sincere welcome everywhere--so long as you avoided other men's
+controversies. But you come to me and that, sir, is a bad beginning--a
+very bad beginning."
+
+A contemplative cloud of smoke went up from the pipe, and the voice
+finished in a tone of bitterness.
+
+"I'm the most hated man in this region where hatreds grow like
+weeds."
+
+"You mean because you have stood out for the enforcement of law?"
+
+The other nodded, "It has taken me a lifetime," he observed, "to learn
+that the mountains are stronger, if not more obstinate, than I."
+
+"Is that the only reason they hate you?" inquired the visitor, and the
+lawyer, removing the pipe stem from his teeth, regarded him for a
+space in silence. Then he commented quietly:
+
+"If you knew this country better, you wouldn't have to ask that
+question. In Athens, I believe, they ostracized Aristides because he
+was 'too just a man.'"
+
+"Nonetheless, I'm glad I came to you."
+
+Cappeze smiled gravely. He had a rude sort of dignity which Spurrier
+found beguiling; a politeness that sprang from a deeper rooting than
+mere formula.
+
+"Merely coming to see me--once in a while--won't damn you, I reckon. A
+man has a license to be interested in freaks. But take my advice, and
+I sha'n't be offended. Tell every one that you hold no brief for me
+and listen with an open mind when they blackguard me."
+
+Spurrier laughed. "In a place where assassination is said to come
+cheap, you have at least been able to take care of yourself, sir."
+
+"That," said the other slowly, "is as it happens. My partner was less
+lucky. My own luck may break some day."
+
+"And yet you go on living here when you'd be safe enough anywhere
+else."
+
+"Yes, I go on living here. It's a land where a man's mind starves and
+where the great marching song of the world's progress is silent--and
+yet----" Again he paused to draw in and exhale a cloud of pipe smoke.
+"Yet there's something in the winds that blow here, in the air one
+breathes, that 'is native to my blood.' Elsewhere I should be
+miserable, sir, and my daughter----"
+
+He came to an abrupt stop and Spurrier took him up quickly. "She
+seems young and vital enough to crave all of life's variety."
+
+"But she is contented, sir." The elderly man spoke eagerly as though
+to convince himself and quiet troubling doubts. "She, too, would
+rather be here. We know this life and take it as we find it."
+
+Spurrier felt that the conversation was tending into channels too
+personal for the participation of a chance acquaintance, and he guided
+it to a less intimate subject.
+
+"I understand, Mr. Cappeze, that in the campaign just ended, you
+stumped this district whole-heartedly in behalf of one of the
+candidates for the circuit judgeship."
+
+Again the hawk-keen blaze flared in the eyes of his host.
+
+"You are mistaken, sir," he declared with heated emphasis. "It was
+less _for_ a candidate than _against_ one that I worked. The man whom
+circumstances compelled me to support was a poor thing, but he was
+better than his adversary."
+
+"Was it party spirit that prompted you, then?" inquired the guest,
+feeling that politeness called for some show of interest.
+
+"Sometimes I think," said the lawyer with a grim smile, "that from
+some men God withholds the blessed power of riding life's waves. All
+they can do is to buffet and fight and wear themselves out. Perhaps
+I'm that sort. The man who won--who succeeded himself on the bench--is
+an expedientist. So long as he presides, timid juries will return
+timid verdicts and the law will falter. I took the stump to brand him
+before the people as an apostate to his oath. I knew he would win,
+but I meant to make him wear his trade-mark of cowardice along with
+his smirk of self-righteousness!"
+
+As Spurrier listened, not to a feudist but to a man who had worn
+himself out fighting feudism, there came to him like a revelation an
+appreciation of the bitterness which runs in the grim undertow of this
+blood.
+
+"I believe," he suggested, glancing sidewise at the door beyond which
+he heard the thrushlike voice of the girl, "that you made an issue of
+a murder case which collapsed--a case in which you had been employed
+to prosecute."
+
+"Yes," Cappeze told him. "Because I believe it to be one in which the
+officers of the court lay down and quit like dogs. The defendant was a
+red-handed bully, generally feared--and the law was in timid keeping.
+I am still trying to have the grand jury call before it the
+prosecutor, the sheriff, and every deputy who served on that posse. I
+want to make them tell, on oath, just how hard they sought to
+apprehend the assassin--who still walks boldly and freely among
+us--unwhipped of justice."
+
+Spurrier rose, deeply impressed by the headstrong, willful courage of
+this old insurgent, whose daughter's eyes were so full of spring
+gentleness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Far up the dwindling thread of a small water course, where the forest
+was jungle-thick, a log cabin hung perched to a rocky cornfield that
+tilted like a steep roof, and under its shingles Sim Colby dwelt
+alone. Since his coming here he had been assimilated into the
+commonplace life of the neighborhood and the question of his
+origin was no longer discussed. The time had gone by when even an
+acquaintance of other days would be apt to calculate that his term of
+enlistment in the army had not run its full course. Moreover, there
+were no such acquaintances here; none who had known him before he
+changed his name from Grant to Colby. The shadow of dread which had
+once obsessed him had gradually and imperceptibly lightened until
+for weeks together he forgot how poignantly it had once haunted him.
+He had painstakingly established a reputation exemplary beyond the
+tendencies of his nature in this new habitat--since trouble might
+cause closed pages to reopen.
+
+Now on a November afternoon a deputy sheriff, serving summonses in
+that neighborhood dismounted at the door where Sim stood with his hand
+resting on the jamb, and the two mulled over what sparse gossip the
+uneventful neighborhood afforded.
+
+"Old Cappeze, he's a-seekin' ter rake up hell afresh an' brew more
+pestilence fer everybody," announced the deputy glumly.
+
+"What's he projeckin' at now?" asked Sim.
+
+"He's seekin' ter warm over thet ancient Sam Mosebury case afore ther
+grand jury. Come ter think of hit, Sim, ye rid with ther high sheriff
+yoreself thet time, didn't ye?"
+
+Moodily the other nodded. That was a matter he preferred to leave
+buried.
+
+"Waal, Cappeze is claimin' now thet ther possy didn't make no master
+effort ter lay hands on Sam. He aims ter hev all ye boys tell ther
+grand jury what ye knows erbout ther matter."
+
+The deputy turned away, but in afterthought he paused, thrashing idly
+with his switch at the weed stalks, as he retailed an almost forgotten
+item of news.
+
+"A furriner come ter town yistidday, an' sot out straightway acrost
+Hemlock Mountain fer old Cappeze's dwellin' house."
+
+"What manner of man war he, Joe?" Sim's interest was perfunctory. Had
+he been haled into the grand-jury room in those earlier days, the
+prospect would have bristled with apprehensions, but now he had behind
+him the background of respectability and Mose Biggerstaff, who alone
+knew of his craven behavior as a member of the posse, was dead. Sim
+felt secure in his mantle of virtue.
+
+"He war a right upstandin' sort of feller--ther furriner," enlightened
+the deputy. "He goes under ther name of Spurrier--John Spurrier."
+
+As though an electric wire of high tension had broken and brushed him
+in falling, Sim Colby's attitude stiffened and every muscle grew taut
+from neck to ankles as his jaw sagged.
+
+The deputy, with his foot already in the stirrup, missed the terror
+spasms of the face gone suddenly putty gray. He missed the gasp that
+contracted the throat and caused its breath to wheeze, and when he
+glanced back again from his saddle, the other had, with an effort of
+sheer desperation, regained his outward semblance of composure. He
+still leaned indolently against the door frame, but now he needed its
+support, because all his nerves jumped and a confusion like the
+swarming of angry bees filled his brain.
+
+Afterward he groped his way inside and dropped down into a low chair
+by the hearth. For a long time he sat there breathing stertorously
+while the untended fire died away to ashen dreariness. The sun went
+down beyond the pine tops and still he sat dully with his hands
+hanging over his knees, their fingers twitching in panic aimlessness.
+
+Out of a past that he had cut away from the present had arisen a ghost
+of hideous menace. Here into the laurel which had promised sanctuary
+his Nemesis had pursued him.
+
+Two men with the guilt of a murder standing between them had come into
+a radius too small to contain them both. It was as if they had met on
+a narrow log spanning a chasm where only one could pass and the other
+must fall.
+
+If old Cappeze dragged him to the courthouse now, he would be
+delivered over to Spurrier, waiting there to identify him, as a fox in
+a trap is delivered to the skinning knife. That must be the meaning of
+the stranger's visit to the lawyer.
+
+Sim Colby went to an ancient and dilapidated bureau and from a
+creaking drawer took out a memento which, for some reason, he had
+preserved from times not treasured in memory. He carried it to the
+open door and stood looking at it as it lay on the palm of his hand
+with the light glinting upon it.
+
+It was a sharpshooter's medal, for, whatever his military shortcomings,
+Private Grant had been an efficient rifleman, and as he looked at it
+now his lips twisted into a grim smile. Then he took his rifle from its
+corner and, sitting on the doorstep, polished it with a fond
+particularity, oiling its mechanism and burnishing its bore.
+
+Already Spurrier had made arrangements to ensconce himself under the
+roof of a house he had rented. Already the faces that he met in the
+road were, for the most part, familiar, and without exception they
+were friendly. Quick on the heels of his first disgust for the squalor
+of this lapsed and retarded life, had succeeded an exhilaration born
+of the wine-like sparkle of the air and the majestic breadth of vistas
+across ridge and valley. As he watched mile-wide shadows creep between
+sky-high lines of peaks, his dreams borrowed something of their
+vastness.
+
+Through half-closed lids imagination looked out until the range-broken
+spaces altered to its vision. Spurrier saw white roads and the glitter
+of rails running off into gossamer webs of distance. Where now stood
+virgin forests of hard wood he visualized the shaftings of oil
+derricks, the red iron sheeting of tanks, the belching stacks of
+refineries, and in that defaced landscape he read the triumph of
+conquest; the guerdon of wealth; the satisfaction of power.
+
+One afternoon Spurrier started over to the house he had rented, but
+into which he had not yet moved. The way lay for a furlong or more
+through a gorge deeply and somberly shaded. Even now, at midday, the
+sunlight of the upper places left it cloistered and the bowlders
+trooped along in ferny dampness, where the little waters whispered.
+
+Beside a bulky hummock of green-corroded sandstone the man halted and
+stood musingly, with eyes downcast and thoughts uplifted--uplifted
+to the worship of his one god: Ambition. At his feet was an oily
+sediment along the water's edge and the gravel was thick with
+"sand blossom"--tiny fossil formations that are prima facie evidence
+of oil. Then, without warning, he felt a light sting along his
+cheek and the rock-walled fissure reverberated under what seemed a
+volley of musketry.
+
+But the magnified and crumbling effect of the echo struck him with a
+less poignant realization than a slighter sound and a sharper one. As
+if a taut piano wire had been sharply struck, came the clear whang
+that he recognized as the flight song of a rifle bullet, and, whatever
+its origin it called for a prompt taking of cover.
+
+Spurrier side-stepped as quickly as a boxer, and stood, for the moment
+at least, bulwarked behind the rock that was so providentially close.
+
+"I'm John Spurrier--a stranger in these parts," he sung out in a
+confident voice of forced boldness and cheerfulness. "I reckon you've
+made a mistake in your man."
+
+There was no answer and Spurrier cautiously raised his hat on the end
+of a stick with the same deliberation that might have marked his
+action had it been his own head emerging from cover.
+
+Instantly the hidden rifle spoke again and the hat came down pierced
+through its band, while the rocks once more reverberated to multiplied
+detonations.
+
+"It would seem," the man told himself grimly, "that after all there
+was no mistake."
+
+He was unarmed and in no position to pursue investigations of the
+mystery, but by crawling along on his belly he could keep his body
+shielded behind the litter of broken stone that edged the brook until
+he reached the end of the gorge itself and came to safer territory.
+
+Slowly, Spurrier traveled out of his precarious position, flattening
+himself when he paused to rest and listen, as he had made his men
+flatten themselves over there in the islands when they were going
+forward without cover under the fire of snipers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Spurrier was not frightened, but he was deeply mystified, and when he
+reached the cabin which he was preparing for occupancy he sat down on
+the old millstone that served as a doorstep and sought enlightenment
+from reflection and the companionship of an ancient pipe.
+
+In an hour or two "Uncle Jimmy" Litchfield, under whose smoky roof he
+was being temporarily sheltered, would arrive with a jolt wagon and
+yoke of oxen, teaming over the household goods that Spurrier meant to
+install. Already the new tenant had swept and whitewashed his cabin
+interior and had let the clear winds rake away the mildew of its long
+vacancy. Now he sat smoking with a perplexity-drawn brow, while a
+tuneful sky seemed to laugh mockingly at the absurd idea of riflemen
+in ambush.
+
+Every neighbor had manifested a spirit of cordiality toward him. To
+many of them he was indebted for small and voluntary kindnesses, and
+he had maintained a diplomatic neutrality in all local affairs that
+bore a controversial aspect.
+
+Certainly, he could not flatter himself that as yet any premonition of
+danger had percolated to those distant centers of industry against
+which he was devising a campaign of surprise. One explanation only
+presented itself with any color of plausibility.
+
+That trickle of water might come to the gorge from a spot back in the
+laurel where, under the shelter of a felled hemlock top, some one
+tended a small "blockade" distillery; some one who resented an
+invasion of his privacy.
+
+Yet even that inference was not satisfactory. Only yesterday a man had
+offered him moonshine whisky, declaring quite unsuspiciously: "Ef
+ye're vouched fer by Uncle Jimmy, I ain't a'skeered of ye none. I made
+thet licker myself--drink hearty."
+
+Of the real truth no ghostly glimmer of suspicion came in even the
+most shadowy fashion to his mind.
+
+His efforts to trace to definite result some filament of fact that
+might prove the court-martial to have reached a conclusion at variance
+with the truth, had all ended in failure. That the matter was hopeless
+was an admission which he could not afford to make and which he
+doggedly denied, but with waning confidence.
+
+This state of mind prevented him from suspecting any connection
+between this present and mysterious enmity and those things which had
+happened across the Pacific.
+
+He had kept himself informed as to the movements of Private Severance
+and when that time-expired man had stepped ashore at San Francisco,
+John Spurrier had been waiting to confront him, even though it
+involved facing men who had once been brother officers and who could
+no longer speak to him as an equal.
+
+From the former soldier, who brought a flush to his cheeks by saluting
+him and calling him "Lieutenant," he had learned nothing. There had
+been no reason to hope for much. It was unlikely that he would be
+able to shake into a damaging admission of complicity--and any
+statement of value must have amounted to that--the witness who had
+come unscathed out of the cross-examination of two courts-martial.
+
+Indeed Spurrier had expected to encounter unveiled hostility in the
+attitude of the mountaineer, who had been doing sentry duty at the
+door through which the prisoner, Grant, had escaped. It might have
+followed logically upon the officer's defense, which had sought to
+involve that sentinel as an accomplice in the fugitive's flight, and
+even in the murder itself.
+
+But Severance had greeted him without rancor and with the disarming
+guise of candid friendliness.
+
+"I'd be full willin' ter help ye, Lieutenant--ef so be I could," he
+had protested. "I knows full well yore lawyers was plum obliged ter
+seek ter hang ther blame wharsoever they was able, an' I ain't
+harborin' no grudge because I happened ter be one they sought ter
+hurt. But I don't know nothin' that kin aid ye."
+
+"Do you think Grant escaped alive?" demanded Spurrier, and the other
+shook his head.
+
+"I feels so plum, dead sartain he died," came the prompt response,
+"thet when I gits back home I'm goin' ter tell his folks he did. Bud
+Grant was a friend of mine, but when he went out inter thet jungle he
+was too weakly ter keer fer hisself an' ef he'd lived they would hev
+done found him an' brought him back."
+
+Spurrier had come to embrace that belief himself. The one man whose
+admission, wrung from him by persuasion or compulsion, could give him
+back his clean name, must have perished there in the _bijuca_
+tangles. The hope of meeting the runaway in life had died in the
+ex-officer's heart and consequently it did not now occur to him to
+think of the deserter as a living menace.
+
+At length he rose and stood against the shadowy background of his
+door, which was an oblong of darkness behind the golden outer
+clarity.
+
+Off in the tangle of oak and poplar and pine a ruffed grouse drummed
+and a "cock of the woods" rapped its tattoo on a sycamore top.
+
+Once he fancied he heard a stirring in the rhododendron where its
+large waxen leaves banked themselves thickly a hundred yards distant,
+and his eyes turned that way seeking to pierce the impenetrable
+screen--but unavailingly. Perhaps some small, wild thing had moved
+there.
+
+Then, as had happened before that afternoon, the stillness broke to a
+rifle shot--this time clean and sharp, unclogged by echoes.
+
+Spurrier stood for an instant while a surprised expression showed in
+his out-staring eyes, then he swayed on his feet. His hands came up
+and clutched spasmodically at his left breast, and with a sudden
+collapse he dropped heavily backward, and lay full length, swallowed
+in the darkness that hung beyond the door.
+
+Over the rhododendron thicket quiet settled drowsily again, but
+through the toughness of interlaced branches stole upward and outward
+an acrid powder smell and a barely perceptible trickle of smoke.
+
+Crouched there, his neutral-hued clothing merging into the earth tones
+about him, a man peered out, but he did not rise to go forward and
+inspect his work. Instead, he opened the breech block of his piece
+and with unhurried care blew through the barrel--cleansing it of its
+vapors.
+
+"I reckon thar ain't no needcessity to go over thar an' look at him,"
+he reflected. "When they draps down _thet_-away, they don't git up no
+more--an' some person from afar mout spy me crossin' ther dooryard."
+
+So he edged backward into the tangle, moving like a crawfish and
+noiselessly took up his homeward journey.
+
+When the slow plodding ox team came at last to the dooryard and Uncle
+Billy stood shouting outside the house, Sim Colby, holding to tangles
+where he would meet no chance wayfarer, was already miles away and
+hurrying to establish his alibi against suspicion, in his own
+neighborhood--where no one knew he had been absent.
+
+Though it be an evil thing and shameful to confess, ex-private Bud
+Grant, alias Sim Colby, traveled light-heartedly, roweled by no
+tortures of conscience, but blithe in the assurance of a ghost laid,
+and a peril averted.
+
+He would have been both amazed and chagrined had he remained peering
+from his ambuscade, for when Uncle Billy's shadow fell through the
+open door the man to whom he had come rose from a chair to meet him,
+and he presented no mangled or blood-stained breast to the eyes of his
+visitors.
+
+"Ye ain't jest a-quippin' with me, be ye?" demanded the old
+mountaineer incredulously when he had heard the story in all its
+detail. "This hyar's a right serious-soundin' matter--an' ye ain't
+got no enemies amongst us thet I've heered tell of."
+
+Spurrier pointed out the spot in the newly whitewashed wall where the
+bullet lay imbedded with its glint of freshly flattened lead.
+
+"After the first experience," he explained, "I'd had some time to
+think. I was standing in the door so I fell down--and played dead." He
+added after a pause quietly: "I've seen men shot to death, and I
+happened to know how a man drops when it's a heart hit. I fell inside
+where I'd be out of sight, because I was unarmed, and all I could do
+was to wait for you. I watched through the door, but the fellow never
+showed himself."
+
+"Come on, boys," commanded the old mountaineer in a determined voice.
+"Let's beat thet la'rel while ther tracks is still fresh. Mebby we
+mout l'arn somethin' of this hyar monstrous matter."
+
+But they learned nothing. Sim Colby had spent painstaking thought upon
+his effort and he had left no evidence written in the mold of the
+forest.
+
+"Hit beats all hell," declared the nonplussed Uncle Billy at last.
+"I ain't got ther power ter fathom hit. Ef I war you I wouldn't
+talk erbout this ter no man save only me an' old Dyke Cappeze.
+Still-huntin' lands more game then blowin' a fox horn." And
+Spurrier nodded his head.
+
+Though Spurrier for a few days after that slipped through the gorge
+with the stealth of a sharpshooter, covering himself behind rocks as
+he went, he heard no sound there more alarming than the chatter of
+squirrels or the grunt of a strayed razor-back rooting among the
+acorns. Gradually he relaxed his vigilance as a man will if his
+nature is bold and his dreams too sweeping to be forever hobbled by
+petty precautions.
+
+The purpose which he privately served called for ranging the country
+with a trained eye, and with him went the contour maps upon which were
+traced red lines.
+
+One day he came, somewhat winded from a stiff climb, to an eminence
+that spread the earth below him and made of it a panorama. The bright
+carnival of the autumn was spending itself to its end, but among trees
+already naked stood others that clung to a gorgeousness of color the
+more brilliant in the face of death. Overhead was flawless blue, and
+there was a dreamy violet where it merged mistily with the skyline
+ridges.
+
+"All that it needs," mused the man whimsically and aloud, "is the
+music of Pan's pipes--and perhaps a small chorus of dryads."
+
+Then he heard a laugh and, wheeling suddenly, discovered Glory Cappeze
+regarding him from the cap of a towering rock where, until he had
+reached this level, she had been hidden from view. Now she flushed
+shyly as the man strode over and confronted her.
+
+"Do you still hate me?" he inquired.
+
+"I reckon thet don't make no master differ ter ye, does hit?" The
+musical voice was painfully diffident, and he remembered that she had
+always been shy with him except on that first meeting when the leaping
+anger in her eyes had burned away self-consciousness.
+
+"You know," he gravely reminded her, "when I first saw you, you were
+on the point of thrashing me. You had me cowed and timid. Since then
+I've come to think of you as the shooting star."
+
+He paused, waiting for her to demand an elucidation of that somewhat
+obscure statement, but she said nothing. She only sat gazing over his
+head toward the horizon, and her cheeks were excitedly flushed from
+the delicate pink of apple bloom to the warmer color of peach
+blossom.
+
+"Since you don't ask what I mean," he continued easily, "I shall tell
+you. I've been to your house perhaps four or five times. From afar,
+each time, I've seen a scrap of color. Sometimes it has been blue,
+sometimes red, but always it has vanished with the swiftness of a
+shooting star. It is a flash and it is gone. Sometimes from beyond a
+door I also hear a voice singing."
+
+He leaned his elbows on the rock at her feet and stood gazing into the
+eyes that would not meet his own, and still she favored him with no
+response. After a little silence the man altered his tone and spoke
+argumentatively:
+
+"You forgave the dog, you know--why not the man?"
+
+That question carried her thoughts back to the murdered quail and a
+gusty back-flash of resentment conquered her diffidence. Her sternness
+of tone and the thrushlike softness of her voice, mingled with the
+piquancy of paradox.
+
+"A dawg don't know no better."
+
+"Some dogs are very wise," he assured her. "And some men very
+foolish."
+
+"The dawg," she went on still unplacated, "got right down on his
+stomach and asked my pardon. I _hed_ ter fergive him, when he humbled
+hisself like that."
+
+"I'm willing," John Spurrier amiably assured her, "to get right down
+on my stomach, too."
+
+Then she laughed, and though she sought to retreat again into her
+aloofness, the spell was broken.
+
+"Am I forgiven?" he demanded, and she shook her head doubtfully though
+no longer with conviction.
+
+"No," she told him; then she added with a startlingly exact mimicry of
+her father's most legalistic manner: "No. The co'te will take the case
+under advisement an' defer jedgment."
+
+"I forgot," he said, "that you are a lawyer's daughter. What were you
+looking at across there--so fascinatedly?"
+
+"Them hills," she enlightened succinctly.
+
+Spurrier studied her. Her deep eyes had held a glow of almost
+prayerful enchantment for which her laconic words seemed inadequate.
+
+Watching her out of the tail of his eye he fell into borrowed phrases:
+"'Violet peaks uplifted through the crystal evening air.'"
+
+She shot a glance at him suddenly, eagerly; then at once the lids
+lowered, masking the eyes again as she inquired:
+
+"Thet thar's poetry, ain't hit?"
+
+"I'm prepared to go to the mat with any critic who holds the
+contrary," he assured her.
+
+"Hit's comin' on ter be night. I've got ter start home," she
+irrelevantly announced, as she slid from her rough throne, and the man
+fell boldly in step at her side.
+
+"When your honor rules on the matter under advisement," he said
+humbly before their paths separated, "please remember that the
+defendant was a poor wretch who didn't know he was breaking the law."
+
+For the first time their glances engaged fully and without avoidance,
+and a twinkle flashed in the girl's pupils.
+
+"_Ignorantia legis neminem excusat_," she serenely responded, and
+Spurrier gasped. Here was a girl who could not steer her English
+around the shoals of illiteracy, giving him his retort in Latin:
+"Ignorance of the law excuses no one." Of course, it meant only that
+her quick memory had appropriated and was parroting legal phrases
+learned from her father, but it struck the chord of contrasts, and to
+the man's imagination it dramatized her so that when she had gone on
+with the lissome grace of her light stride, he stood looking after
+her.
+
+Rather abruptly after that the autumn fires of splendor burned out to
+the ashes of coming winter, and then it was that Spurrier went north.
+As his train carried him seaward he had the feeling that it was also
+transporting him from an older to a younger century, and that while
+his mind dwelt on the stalwart and unsophisticated folk with whom he
+had been brushing shoulders, the life resolved itself into an austere
+picture against which the image of Glory stood out with the quick
+vividness of a red cardinal flitting among somber pine branches.
+
+Because she was so far removed from his own orbit he could think of
+her impersonally and enjoy the thought as though it were of a new type
+of flower or bird, recognizing her attractive qualities in a detached
+fashion.
+
+As Spurrier gave himself up to the relaxation of reminiscence with
+that abandon of train travel which admits of no sustained effort, he
+began comparing this life, left over from another era, with that he
+had known against more cultivated and complex backgrounds.
+
+Then in analytical mood he reviewed his own past, looking with a
+lengthening of perspective on the love affair that had been broken by
+his court-martial. His adoration of the Beverly girl had been youthful
+enough to surround itself with young illusions.
+
+That was why it had all hurt so bitterly, perhaps, with its ripping
+away of his faith in romantic conceptions of love-loyalty.
+
+He wondered now if he had not borne himself with the Quixotic
+martyrdom of callowness. He had sought to shield the girl from even
+the realization that her lack of confidence was ungenerous. He had
+sought to take all the pain and spare her from sharing it. But she had
+solaced herself with a swift recovery and a new lover, and had he been
+guilty she could not have abandoned him more cavalierly. Well, that
+softness belonged to an out-grown stage of development.
+
+He had seen himself then as obeying the dictates of chivalry. He
+thought of it now as inexperienced folly--perhaps, so far as she was
+concerned, as a lucky escape. His amours of the present were not so
+naively conducted. To Vivian he had paid his attentions with an eye
+watchful of material advantages. They belonged to a sophisticated
+circle which seasoned life's fare rather with the salt of cynicism
+than with the sugar of romanticism. Yet the thought of Vivian caused
+no pulse to flutter excitedly.
+
+The glimpse of Glory had been refreshing because she was so honest and
+sincere that she disquieted one's acquired cynicism of viewpoint. One
+might as well spout world-wisdom to a lilac bush as to Glory! Yet
+there was a sureness about her which argued for her creed of
+wholesome, simple things and old half-forgotten faiths which one would
+like to keep alive--if one could.
+
+Snow drifted in the air and made a nimbus about each arc light as
+Spurrier's taxi, turning between the collonade pillars of the
+Pennsylvania Station, gave him his first returning glimpse of New
+York. He had come East in obedience to a wired summons from Martin
+Harrison, brief to curtness as were all business messages from that
+man of few and trenchant words. The telegram had been slow crossing
+the mountain, but Spurrier had been prompt in his response.
+
+A tempered glare hung mistily above the Longacre Square district
+through the snow flurries to the north, and the rumbled voice of the
+town, after these months in quiet places, was to the returned pilgrim
+like the heavy breathing of a monster sleeping out a fever.
+
+At the room that he kept at his club in Fifth Avenue--for that was a
+part of the pretentious display of affluence made necessary by his
+ambitious scheme of things--he called up a number from memory. It was
+a number not included in the telephone directory, and, recognizing the
+voice that answered him, he said briefly:
+
+"Manners, this is Mr. Spurrier. Will you tell Mr. Harrison I'm on the
+wire?"
+
+"Hello, Spurrier," boomed a deep voice after an interval. "We're
+dining out this evening and we go to the opera afterward, but I want a
+word with you to-night. In fact, I want you to start for Russia on
+Wednesday. Drop into our box, and drive home with me for a few minutes
+afterward."
+
+Russia on Wednesday! Spurrier's unoccupied hand clenched in
+irritation, but his voice was as unruffled as if he had been asked to
+make ready for a journey to Hoboken. He knew enough of Harrison's
+methods to ask no questions. If they could have been answered over the
+phone Harrison could have found many men to send to Russia. It was
+because they were for his ear alone that he had been called to New
+York.
+
+That evening he listened to "Otello" with thoughts that wandered from
+the voices of the singers. They refused even to be chained by the
+novelty of a slender tenor as a new Russian star held the spotlight.
+He was studying the almost too regular beauty of Vivian Harrison's
+profile as she sat serene and self-confident with the horseshoe of the
+Metropolitan beyond her.
+
+At midnight Spurrier sat with Harrison in his study and listened to a
+crisp summarizing of the Russian scheme. It proved to be a project
+boldly conceived on a broad scale and requiring an ambassador
+dependable enough and resourceful enough to decide large matters as
+they arose, without cabling for instructions.
+
+In turn Spurrier talked of his own past doings, and through their
+cigar smoke the seeming idleness of those weeks assayed a wealth of
+exact information and stood revealed as the incubation period of a
+large conception. Keenly formulated plans emerged from his recitals so
+simply and convincingly that the greater financier leaned forward and
+let his cigar die.
+
+Then Harrison rose and paced the room.
+
+"You know something about me, Spurrier," he began. "When I came East
+they laughed at me--if they deigned to notice me at all. They said:
+'Here comes a bushleaguer who thinks he's good enough for the big
+game. It's one more lamb to the shearing shed.' That's the East,
+Spurrier! That's cocksure New York! They sneer at a Western-bred
+horse--or a Western-trained prize fighter--and when the newcomer licks
+the best they've got they straightway let out a holler that they
+taught him all he knows. Why, New York would die of lassitude and
+anæmia if it wasn't for blood infusions from the provinces!"
+
+Spurrier gazed interestedly at the tall figure of the man with
+the sandy red mustache, and the snapping eyes, who for all his
+impeccability of evening dress, might have taken a shovel or
+pick from a section hand and taught him how to level a road bed.
+Harrison laughed shortly.
+
+"They haven't inhaled me so far. I brought only a million with me to
+this town, and I've got--well, I've got plenty, but I can't call it a
+day quite yet. There's one buccaneer to be settled with first! He's
+got to go to the mat with me and come up bloody enough to admit that
+he's been in a ruction. He chooses to pretend that I'm nonexistent,
+and I won't stand being ignored! I want to leave my mark on that man,
+and with God's help--and yours--I'm going to do it!"
+
+"You mean Trabue?" asked Spurrier, and Harrison's head gave a decisive
+jerk of affirmation while the hot glow of his eyes made his companion
+think of smelting furnaces.
+
+"That's why this thing of yours interests me. That's why I'm willing
+to get behind you and back you to the hilt," the big fellow of finance
+went on. "A. O. and G. are trying to hold others out of this Kentucky
+field. That proves that they think enough of it to be hurt by having
+it torn from their teeth. All I need to know is what will hurt them!
+If you can take some teeth along with the bone, so much the better."
+He paused, then in a voice that had altered to cold steadiness,
+commanded: "Now, give me your facts."
+
+"At present prices of oil," summarized Spurrier, "the development
+back of Hemlock Mountain wouldn't pay. With higher market values, it
+_would_ pay, but less handsomely than other fields A. O. and G. can
+work. Once the initial cost is laid out, the profit will be
+constant. The A. O. and G. idea is to hold it in reserve and await
+developments--meanwhile keeping up the 'no trespass' sign."
+
+"Doesn't the range practically prohibit railroading?"
+
+"Possibly--but it doesn't prohibit pipe lines."
+
+Spurrier opened the packet he had brought in his overcoat pocket and
+spread a map under the flooding light of a table lamp.
+
+"I have traced there what seems to me a practical piping route," he
+explained. "I call it the neck of the bottle. There is a sort of gap
+through the hills and a porous formation caused by a chain of
+caverns. Nature is willing to help with some ready-made tunnels."
+
+"Why haven't they discovered that?"
+
+"The oil development of fifteen years ago never crossed Hemlock
+Mountain. It came the other way."
+
+Harrison stood thinking for a time, then demanded tersely: "Have you
+secured any land or options?"
+
+"Not an acre, nor an inch," laughed Spurrier. "This is a waiting game.
+I don't mean to appear interested. If any man offered to give me a
+farm I should say it wasn't worth State taxes."
+
+"How do we get the property into our hands then?"
+
+"The buying must be gradual and through men with whom we appear to
+have no connection."
+
+"And the State charter--how about that?"
+
+"There lies the chief problem," admitted Spurrier. "The charter must
+come from a legislature that A. O. and G. can, at present, control."
+
+"What," Harrison shot the question out like a cross-examiner, "is the
+present attitude of the natives toward oil and oil men?"
+
+"Indifference and skepticism." The reply was prompt but the
+amplification more deliberate. "Once they saw wealth ahead--then the
+boom collapsed, and they have no longer any faith in the magic of the
+word 'oil.'"
+
+"I presume," suggested Harrison, "you are encouraging that disbelief?"
+
+Spurrier's face clouded, but only for a moment. "I am the most
+skeptical of all the skeptics," he assented, "and yet I'm sorry that
+they can't be gainers. They are an honest, upstanding folk and they
+have always felt the pinch of privation. After all they are the
+rightful owners and development of their country ought to benefit
+them. Of course, though, to forecast the possibilities would kill the
+game. We can't take them into our confidence without sounding a
+warning to the enemy."
+
+"Growing sentimental?" queried Harrison dryly, and the younger man
+shook his head.
+
+"No," he responded slowly, "I can't afford that--yet."
+
+"And see that you don't," admonished the chief sharply. "Bear in mind,
+as you have in the past, that we don't want to depend on men of
+brittle resolution and temperamental squeamishness. We are in this
+thing toward a definite end and not as humanitarian dreamers.
+However----" He broke off abruptly and added in a milder voice, "I
+don't have to caution you. You understand the proposition."
+
+For some minutes the cigar smoke floated in a silent room, while
+Martin Harrison sat with the knitted brows of concentrated thought.
+Spurrier did not interrupt the mental process which he knew had the
+heat and power of an ore smelter, reducing to fluid amenability the
+hard metal of a stubborn proposition. He knew, too, that the fuel
+which fed the fire was his principal's animosity against Trabue,
+rather than the possibilities or extent of the loot. This, no less
+than the mountain vendetta, was, in last analysis, a personal feud and
+in the parlance of the Cumberlands a "war was in ther b'ilin'."
+
+At last Harrison straightened up and tossed away his cigar.
+
+"You are ambitious, Spurrier," he said. "Put this thing over and I
+should say that all your ambitions can come to realization."
+
+While he sat waiting Spurrier had lifted from the table a photograph
+of Vivien, appropriately framed in silver. He had taken it up idly
+because it was a new portrait and one that he had not before seen, but
+into the gesture the father read a deeper significance. It was as if
+Spurrier had asked "All my ambitions?" and had emphasized his question
+by laying his hands on the picture of the girl. That, thought
+Harrison, was an audacious suggestion, but it was Spurrier's audacity
+that recommended him.
+
+Slowly the capitalist's eyes lighted into an amused smile as their
+glance traveled from the younger face to the framed photograph, and
+slowly he nodded his head.
+
+"_All_ your ambitions," he repeated meaningly, then with the electric
+snap of warning in his voice he added an admonition: "But don't
+underestimate the difficulties of your undertaking. You are bucking
+the strongest and most relentless piracy in finance. You will incur
+enmities that will stop nowhere, and you must operate in a country
+where murderers are for 'hire.'"
+
+The threat of personal danger just at that moment disquieted John
+Spurrier less than the other curtailment of freedom implied in
+Harrison's words; the tacit acceptance of him as Vivien's suitor. It
+came to him abruptly that he did not love Vivien; that he wished to
+remain untrammeled. Heretofore, he had always postponed matrimonial
+thoughts for the misty future. Now they became embarrassingly near and
+tangible.
+
+But quick on this realization followed another. Here was an offered
+alliance of tremendous advantage and one not to be ignored. To be
+Vivien's husband might fail of rapture, but to be Martin Harrison's
+son-in-law meant triumph. It meant his own nomination as heir apparent
+and successor in that position of cardinal importance to which he had
+looked upward as to a throne.
+
+There was no trace of dubiety in his voice as he answered:
+
+"I have counted the handicaps, sir. I'm taking my chance with open
+eyes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+Sim Colby, after that day when he had slipped through the laurel, had
+gone back to his own house and waited for the talk of John Spurrier's
+mysterious death to drift along the waterways where news is the only
+speedy traveler.
+
+There had been no such gossip and he had dared betray his interest by
+no inquiry, but he knew it could have only one meaning; that he had
+failed.
+
+Spurrier was alive, and obviously he was holding his counsel
+concerning his narrow escape. This silence seemed to Sim Colby an
+ominous thing indicative of some crafty purpose--as if the intended
+victim were stalking grimly as well as being stalked. Sim came of a
+race that knows how to bide its time and that can keep bright the edge
+of hatred against long-delayed reprisals. It was certainly to be
+presumed that Spurrier had taken some of his friends into his
+confidence and that under the mantle of silence over on Little Turkey
+Tail, these friends were now watchfully alert. The enterprise that had
+once failed could not be reundertaken at once. Sim must wait for the
+vigilance to "blow over," and while he waited the rancor of his hatred
+must fester with the thorn-prickings of a thousand doubts and
+apprehensions.
+
+Then he heard one day that Spurrier had left the mountains, and on
+another day the news was brought that the grand jury had declined to
+reopen the old issues of the murder case in which Mosebury had
+escaped justice. Both these things were comforting in themselves, but
+they failed of complete reassurance for the deserter.
+
+Men said that Spurrier was coming back again, so the day of reckoning
+was only deferred--not escaped.
+
+The determination with which Sim had set out on his mission of death
+had largely preëmpted his field of thought. Now, after weeks and
+months of brooding reflection, he himself had become only a sort of
+human garment worn by the sinister spirit of resolve.
+
+So all that winter while John Spurrier was away as the ambassador,
+practicing in Moscow and Odessa the adroit arts of financial
+diplomacy, the fixed idea of his assassination was festering in the
+mind of the man who lived, under an assumed name, at the head of
+Little Quicksand.
+
+That obsession took fantastic shapes and wove webs of grotesque
+patterns of hate as Colby, who had been Grant, sat brooding before his
+untidy hearth while the winter winds wailed about the eaves and lashed
+the mountain world into forlorn bleakness.
+
+And while Colby meditated unendingly on the absentee and built ugly
+plans against his return, so in another house and in another spirit,
+the ex-officer was also remembered.
+
+Winter in these well-nigh roadless hills meant a blockade and a siege
+with loneliness and stagnation as the impregnably intrenched
+attackers. The victims could only wait and endure until the rescue
+forces of spring should come to raise the chill and sodden barricade,
+with a flaunting of blossom-banners and the whispered song of warm
+victory.
+
+Glory Cappeze, for the first time in her life, suffered from
+loneliness. She had thought herself too used to it to mind it much,
+but John Spurrier had brought a new element to her existence and left
+behind him a void. She had been hardly more than an onlooker to his
+occasional visits with her father, but she had been a very interested
+onlooker. When he talked a vigorous mind had spoken and had brought
+the greater, unknown, outer world to her door. The striking face with
+its square jaw; the ingrained graces and courtesies of his bearing;
+the quickness of his understanding--all these things had been a light
+in the gray mediocrity of uneventful days and a flame that had fired
+her imagination to a splendid disquiet.
+
+The infectious smile and force of personality that had been a
+challenge to more critical women, had been almost dazzling qualities
+to the mountain girl of strangled opportunities.
+
+But it was that last meeting in which he had thawed her shyness into
+friendliness that Glory remembered most eagerly. That had seemed to
+make of Spurrier not only a hero admired from a distance but a hero
+who was also a friend, and she was hungry for friends.
+
+So it came to pass that to these two widely variant welcomes, neither
+of which he suspected, John Spurrier was returning from Russia when
+spring had lightly brushed the Cumberland slopes with delicate
+fragrance and the color of blossoming.
+
+In Louisville, in Frankfort, and in other Kentucky towns along his way
+the returning man had made stops and investigations, to the end that
+he came primed with certain information of an ex-cathedra sort.
+
+The fruits of this research included an abstract of the personnel of
+the legislature and the trend of oil influences in State politics, and
+he studied his notebook as he traveled from the rolling, almost
+voluptuous fertility of the bluegrass section to the piedmont where
+the foothills began to break the sky.
+
+On the porch of the dilapidated hotel at Waterfall a sparse crowd
+centered about a seated figure, and when he had reached the spot
+Spurrier paused, challenged by a sense of the medieval, that gripped
+him as tangibly as a hand clapped upon his shoulder.
+
+The seated man was blind and shabby, with a beggar's cup strapped to
+his knee, and a "fiddle" nestling close to the stubbled chin of a
+disfigured face. He sang in a weird falsetto, with minors that rose
+thin and dolorous, but he was in every essential the ballad singer who
+improvised his lays upon topical themes, as did Scott's last
+minstrel--a survival of antiquity.
+
+Now he was whining out a personal plaint in the words of his "song
+ballet."
+
+ "I used ter hev ther sight ter see ther hills so high an' green,
+ I used ter work a standard rig an' drill fer kero_sene_."
+
+The singer's lugubrious pathos appeared to be received with attentive
+and uncritical interest. Beyond doubt he took himself seriously and
+sadly.
+
+ "I used ter know a woman's love, an' read a woman's eyes,
+ An' look into my baby's face an' dwell in paradise,
+ Until a comp'ny foreman, plum' heedless in his mind
+ Let nitroglycer_een_ explode an' made me go stone blind."
+
+Spurrier, half-turning, saw a traveling salesman standing at his elbow
+with a repressed grin of amusement struggling in his glance.
+
+"Queer card, that," whispered the drummer. "I've seen him before; one
+of the wrecks left over from the oil-boom days. A 'go-devil' let loose
+too soon and blinded him." He paused, then added as though by way of
+apology for his seeming callousness: "Some people say the old boy is a
+sort of a miser and has a snug pile salted away."
+
+Spurrier nodded and went on into the office, but later in the day he
+sought out the blind fiddler and engaged him in conversation. The
+man's blinding had left him a legacy of hate for all oil operators,
+and from such relics as this of the active days Spurrier knew how to
+evoke scraps of available information. It was not until later that it
+occurred to him that he had answered questions as well as asked
+them--but, of course, he had not been indiscreet.
+
+With John Spurrier, riding across hills afoam with dogwood blossom and
+tenderly vivid with young green, went persistently the thought of the
+blind beggar who seemed almost epic in his symbolism of human wreckage
+adrift in the wake of the boom. Yet he was honest enough to admit
+inwardly that should victory fall to his banners there would be
+flotsam in the wake of his triumph, too; simple folk despoiled of
+their birthright. He came as no altruist to fight for the native
+born. He, no less than A. O. and G., sought to exploit them.
+
+When he went to the house of Dyke Cappeze he did not admit the
+curiosity, amounting to positive anxiety, to see again the little
+barbarian, who slurred consonants, doubled her negatives, split her
+infinitives and retorted in the Latin of Blackstone. Yet when Glory
+did not at once appear, he found himself unaccountably disappointed.
+
+"There's been another stranger in here since you went away," the old
+man smilingly told him. "What is he doing here? That's the one burning
+question debated along the highways when men 'meet and make their
+manners.'"
+
+"Well," laughed Spurrier, "what _is_ he doing here?"
+
+Cappeze shrugged his bent shoulders as he knocked the rubble from his
+pipe and a quizzical twinkle came into his eyes.
+
+"So far as I can make out, sir, he's as much a gentleman of leisure as
+you are yourself."
+
+Spurrier knew what an excellent subterfuge may sometimes lie in
+frankness, and now he had recourse to its concealment.
+
+"Good heavens, Mr. Cappeze, I'm no idler!" he declared. "I'm
+associated with capitalists who work me like a mule. Since I saw you,
+for example, I've been in Russia and I've been hard-driven. That's why
+I come here. If I couldn't get absolutely away from it all now and
+then, I'd soon be ready for a madhouse. Here I can forget all that and
+keep fit."
+
+Cappeze nodded. "That's just about the way I sized you up. At first,
+folks pondered about you, too, but now they take you on faith."
+
+"I hope so--and this new man? Has he stepped on anybody's toes?"
+
+"Not yet. He hasn't even bought any land, but there have been some
+several transfers of property, in other names, since he came. He _may_
+be some man's silent partner."
+
+"What sort of partnership would it be?"
+
+"God knows." For an instant the shrewd eyes leaped into a glint of
+feeling. "These poor benighted devils suspect the Greeks bearing
+gifts. Civilization has always come here only to leave its scar. They
+have been stung once--over oil. God pity the man who seeks to sting
+them again."
+
+"You think," Spurrier responded lightly, as one without personal
+interest, "they wouldn't take it kindly?"
+
+Once again the sonorous and kindly voice mounted abruptly to
+vehemence.
+
+"As kindly, sir, as a wolf bitch robbed, the second time, of her
+whelps. It's all a wolf bitch has."
+
+That evening as he walked slowly homeward with a neighbor whom he had
+met by the way, Spurrier came face to face with Wharton, the other
+stranger, and the mountaineer performed the offices of introduction.
+
+The two men from the outer world eyed each other incuriously and
+parted after an exchange of commonplaces.
+
+When Spurrier separated from his chance companion, the hillsman
+drawled: "Folks _says_ thet feller's buyin' land. God knows what fer
+he wants hit, but ef he _does_ hone fer hit, hit's kinderly probable
+thet hit's wuth holdin' on to."
+
+When the brook trout began to leap and flash Cappeze delegated Glory
+to act for him as Spurrier's guide, and as the girl led the way to the
+likeliest pools, the young, straight-growing trees were not more
+gracefully slender.
+
+The fragrance from the pink-hearted laurel and the locust bloom had no
+delicacy more subtle or provocative than that of her cheeks and hair.
+The breeze in the nodding poplar tops seemed scarcely freer or lighter
+than her movements. Like the season she was young and in blossom and
+like the hills she was wild of beauty.
+
+Spurrier admitted to himself that, were he free to respond to the
+pagan and vital promptings of impulse, instead of standing pledged to
+rigid and austere purposes, this girl would have made something ring
+within him as a tuning fork rings to its note.
+
+Since the days of Augusta Beverly's ascendency, he had never felt the
+need of raising any sort of defense between himself and a woman. At
+first he had believed himself, with youthful resentment, a woman-hater
+and more latterly he had become in this, as in other affairs, an
+expedientist. Augusta had proven weak in loyalty, under stress, and
+Vivian had been indifferent to the ostracism of his former comrades so
+long as her own aristocracy of money accepted him. Both had been snobs
+in a sense, and in a sense he too was a snob.
+
+But because this girl was of a simplicity that regarded all things in
+their primary colors and nothing in the shaded half-tones of politer
+usage, it was needful to guard against her mistaking his proffered
+comradeship for the attitude of the lover--and that would have been
+most disastrous. It would have made necessary awkward explanations
+that would wound her, embarrass him and arouse the old man's just ire.
+For people, he was learning, may be elementally uncouth and yet
+prouder than Lucifer, and except when he was here on their own ground
+there was no common meeting place between their standards of living.
+
+Yet Glory's presence was like a gypsy-song to his senses; rich and
+lyrical with a touch of the plaintive. Glory, he knew, would have
+believed in him when Augusta Beverly had doubted, and would have stood
+fast when Augusta had cut loose.
+
+This was the sort of thought with which it was dangerous to dally--and
+perhaps that was precisely why, under this tuneful sky, it pleased him
+to humor it. Certainly, whatever the cause, the sight of her made him
+step more elastically as she went on ahead.
+
+When they had whipped the streams for trout until hunger clamored,
+Spurrier sat, with a sandwich in his hand in grass that waved
+knee-high, and through half closed lids watched Glory as she moved
+about crooning an old ballad, and seemingly unconscious of himself,
+herself and all but the sunlit spirit of the early summer day.
+
+"Glory," he said suddenly, calling her by her given name for the first
+time and in a mood of experiment.
+
+As naturally as though she had not noted his lapsed formality, she
+turned toward him and answered in kind.
+
+"What air hit, Jack?"
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"What fer?"
+
+"For calling me Jack."
+
+Then her cheeks colored deeply and she wheeled to her work again. But
+after a little she faced him once more to say half angrily:
+
+"I called ye Jack because ye called me Glory. You've always put a Miss
+afore hit till now, an' I 'lowed ye'd done made up yore mind ter be
+friendly at last."
+
+"I've always wanted to be friendly," he assured her. "It was you who
+began with a hickory switch and went on with hard words in Latin."
+
+The girl laughed, and the peal of her mirth transmuted their status
+and dispelled her self-consciousness. She came over and stood looking
+down at him with violet eyes mischievously a-sparkle.
+
+"The co'te," she announced, "hes carefully weighed there evidence in
+ther case of Jack Spurrier, charged with ther willful murder of Bob
+White, and is ready to enter jedgment. Jack Spurrier, stand up ter be
+sentenced!"
+
+The man rose to his feet and stood with such well-feigned abjectness
+of suspense that she had to fight back the laughter from her eyes to
+preserve her own pose of judicial gravity.
+
+"It is well established by the evidence befo' ther co'te," she went
+solemnly on, "thet ther defendant is guilty on every count contained
+in the indictment." She checked off upon the fingers of the left hand
+the roster of his crime as she summarized it.
+
+"He entered inter an unlawful conspiracy with the codefendant Rover, a
+setter dawg. He made a felonious assault without provocation. He
+committed murder in the first degree with malice prepense."
+
+Spurrier's head sank low in mock despair, until Glory came to her
+peroration and sentence.
+
+"Yet since the defendant is amply proved to be a poor, ignorant
+wanderer upon the face of the earth, unpossessed of ordinary
+knowledge, the court is constrained to hold him incapable of
+discrimination between right an' wrong. Hence he is not fully
+responsible for his acts of violence. Mercy as well as justice lies in
+the province of the law, twins of a sacred parentage and equal before
+the throne."
+
+She broke off in a laugh, and so sudden was the transition from
+absolute mimicry that the man forgot to laugh with her.
+
+"Glory," he demanded somewhat breathlessly, "have you ever been to a
+theater in your life? Have you ever seen a real actress?"
+
+"No. Why?"
+
+"Because you _are_ one. Does this life satisfy you? Isn't there
+anything off there beyond the hills that ever calls you?"
+
+The dancing eyes grew abruptly grave, almost pained, and the response
+came slowly.
+
+"_Everything_ down thar calls ter me. I craves hit all!"
+
+Spurrier suddenly recalled old Cappeze's half-frightened vehemence
+when the recluse had inveighed against the awakening of vain longings
+in his daughter. Now he changed his manner as he asked:
+
+"I wonder if I'd offend you if I put a question. I don't want to."
+
+"Ye mout try an' see. I ain't got no power ter answer twell I hears
+hit."
+
+"All right. I'll risk it. Your father doesn't talk mountain dialect.
+His English is pure--and you were raised close to him. Why do _you_
+use--the other kind?"
+
+She did not at once reply and, when she did, the astonishingly
+adaptable creature no longer employed vernacular, though she spoke
+slowly and guardedly as one might who ventured into a foreign tongue.
+
+"My father has lived down below as well as here. He's a gentleman, but
+he aims--I mean he intends--to live here now till he dies."
+
+As she paused Spurrier prompted her.
+
+"Yes--and you?"
+
+"My father thinks that while I _do_ live here, I'd better fit into the
+life and talk in the phrases that don't seem high-falutin' to my
+neighbors."
+
+"I dare say," he assured her with forced conviction, "that your father
+is right."
+
+There was a brief silence between them while the warm stillness of the
+woods breathed its incense and its langour, then the girl broke out
+impulsively:
+
+"I want to see and hear and taste everything, out there!"
+
+Her hands swept outward with an all-embracing gesture toward the whole
+of the unknown. "There aren't any words to tell how I want it! What do
+you want more than anything else, Jack?"
+
+The man remained silent for a little, studying her under half-lowered
+lids while a smile hovered at the corners of his lips. But the smile
+died abruptly and it was with deep seriousness that he answered.
+
+"I think, more than anything else, I want a clean name and a
+vindicated reputation."
+
+Glory's eyes widened so that their violet depths became pools of
+wondering color and her lips parted in surprise.
+
+"A clean name!" she echoed incredulously. "What blight have you got on
+it, Jack?" Then catching herself up abruptly she flushed crimson and
+said apologetically: "That's a question I haven't any license to put
+to you, though. Only you broached the subject yourself."
+
+"And having broached it, I am willing to pursue it," he assured her
+evenly. "I was an army officer until I was charged with unprovoked
+murder--and court-martialed; dishonorably discharged from the service
+in which my father and grandfather had lived and died."
+
+For a moment or two she made no answer but her quick expressiveness of
+lip and eye did not, even for a startled interval, betray any shock of
+horror. When she did speak it was in a voice so soft and compassionate
+that the man thought of its quality before he realized its words.
+
+"Did the man that--that was _really_ guilty go scot free, whilst you
+had to shoulder his blame?"
+
+There had been no question of evidence; no waiting for any denial of
+guilt. She had assumed his innocence with the same certainty that her
+eye assumed the flawlessness of the overheard blue. Her interest was
+all for his wronging and not at all for his alleged wrong.
+
+The man started with surprise; the surprise of one who had trained
+himself into an unnatural callousness as a defense against what had
+seemed a universal proneness to convict. He had told himself that
+Glory would see with a straighter and more intuitive eye. He had told
+her baldly of the thing which he seldom mentioned out of an
+inquisitiveness to test her reaction to the revelation, but he was
+unprepared for such unhesitant belief.
+
+"I think you are the first human being, Glory," he said quietly but
+with unaccustomed feeling in his voice, "who ever heard that much and
+gave me a clean bill of health without hearing a good bit more. Why
+didn't you ask whether or not I was guilty?"
+
+"I didn't have to," she said slowly. "Some men could be murderers and
+some couldn't. You couldn't. You might have to _kill_ a man--but not
+murder him. You might do lots of things that wouldn't be right. I
+don't know about that--but those people that convicted you were
+fools!"
+
+"Thank you," he said soberly. "You're right, Glory. I was as innocent
+of that assassination as you are, yet they proved me guilty. It was
+only through influence that I escaped ending my days in prison."
+
+Then he gave her the story, which he had already told her father and
+no one else in the mountains. She listened, thinking not at all of the
+damaging circumstances, but secretly triumphant that she had been
+chosen as a confidant.
+
+But that night Spurrier looked up from a letter he was reading and let
+his eyes wander to the rafters and his thoughts to the trout stream.
+
+It was a letter, too, which should have held his attention. It
+contained, on a separate sheet of paper, a list of names which was
+typed and headed: "Confidential Memorandum." Below that appeared the
+notation: "Members of the general assembly, under American Oil and Gas
+influence. Also names of candidates who oppose them at the next
+election, and who may be reached by us."
+
+Spurrier lighted his pipe and his face became studious, but presently
+he looked up frowning.
+
+"I must speak to old Cappeze," he said aloud and musingly. "He's being
+unfair to her." And that did not seem a relevant comment upon the
+paper he held in his hand.
+
+Then Spurrier started a little as from outside a human voice sounded
+above the chorus of the frogs and whippoorwills.
+
+"Hallo," it sung out. "Hit's Blind Joe Givins. Kin I come in?"
+
+A few minutes later into the lamplight of the room shambled the beggar
+of the disfigured face, whom Spurrier had last seen at the town of
+Waterfall, led by a small, brattish boy. His violin case was tightly
+grasped under his arm, and his free hand was groping.
+
+"I'd done sot out ter visit a kinsman over at ther head of Big Wolfpen
+branch," explained the blind man, "but ther boy hyar's got a stone
+bruise on his heel an' he kain't handily go on, ter-night. We wonder
+could we sleep hyar?"
+
+Spurrier bowed to the law of the mountains, which does not deny
+shelter to the wayfarer, but he shivered fastidiously at the unkempt
+raggedness of his tramp-like visitor, and he slipped into his pocket
+the papers in his hand.
+
+That night before Spurrier's hearth, as in elder times before the
+roaring logs of some feudal castle, the wandering minstrel paid his
+board with song and music; his voice rising high and tremulous in
+quaint tales set to measure.
+
+But on the next morning the boy set out on some mission in the
+neighborhood and left his charge to await his return, seated in a low
+chair, and gazing emptily ahead.
+
+Spurrier went out to the road in response to the shout of a passing
+neighbor, and left his papers lying on the table top, forgetful of the
+presence of the sightless guest, who sat so negligibly quiet in the
+chimney corner.
+
+When he entered the room again the blind man had risen from his seat
+and moved across to the hearth. On the threshold the householder
+halted and stood keenly eyeing him while he groped along the mantel
+shelf as if searching with wavering fingers for something that his
+eyes could not discover--and the thought of the papers which he had
+left exposed caused an uneasy suspicion to dart into Spurrier's mind.
+Any eye that fell on that list would have gained the key to his whole
+strategy and intent, but, of course, this man could not see. Still
+Spurrier cursed himself for a careless fool.
+
+"I was jest seekin' fer a match," said Joe Givins as a slight sound
+from the other attracted his attention. "I aimed ter smoke for a
+leetle spell."
+
+The host struck a match and held it while the broken guest kindled his
+pipe, then he hurriedly glanced through his papers to assure himself
+that nothing had been disturbed--and though each sheet seemed as he
+had left it, the uneasiness in Spurrier's mind refused to be stilled.
+
+Presumably this bat-blind ragamuffin was no greater menace to the
+secrecy of his plans than a bat itself would have been, yet a glimpse
+of this letter would have been so fatal that he asked himself
+anxiously, "How do I know he's not faking?" The far-fetched
+apprehension gathered weight like a snowslide until suddenly out of it
+was born a grim determination.
+
+He would make a test.
+
+Noiselessly, while the ugly face that had been mutilated by a blasting
+charge gazed straight and sightlessly at him, Spurrier opened the
+table drawer and took from it a heavy calibered automatic pistol. It
+was a deadly looking thing and it needed no cocking; only the silent
+slipping forward of a safety catch. In this experiment Spurrier must
+not startle his guest by any ominous sound, but he must satisfy
+himself that his sight was genuinely dead.
+
+"I thought," said the host in a matter-of-fact voice as he searchingly
+studied the other face through narrowed lids, "that when sight went,
+the enjoyment of tobacco went with it." As he spoke he raised and
+leveled the cocked pistol until its muzzle was pointed full into the
+staring face. Deliberately he set his own features into the baleful
+stamp of deadly threat, until his expression was as wicked and ugly as
+a gargoyle of hatred.
+
+If the man were by any possibility shamming it would take cold nerve
+to sit there without any hint of confession as this unwarned
+demonstration was made against him--a demonstration that seemed
+genuine and murderous. For an instant Spurrier fancied that he heard
+the breath rasp in the other's throat, but that, he realized, must
+have been fancy. The face itself altered no line of expression,
+flickered no eyelid. It remained as it had been, stolid and blank, so
+that the man with the pistol felt ashamed of his suspicion.
+
+But Spurrier rose and leaned across the table slowly advancing the
+muzzle until it almost touched the bridge of the nose, just between
+the eyes he was so severely testing. Still no hint of realization came
+from the threatened guest. Then the voice of the blind man sounded
+phlegmatically:
+
+"That's what folks say erbout terbaccy an' blind men--but, by
+crickety, hit _ain't so_."
+
+John Spurrier withdrew his pistol and put it back in the drawer.
+
+"I guess," he said to himself, "he didn't read my letters."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+Across a tree-shaded public square from the courthouse and "jail
+house" at Carnettsville stood a building that wore the dejected guise
+of uncomforted old age, and among the business signs nailed about its
+entrance was the shingle bearing the name of "Creed Faggott, Atty. at
+Law."
+
+The way to this oracle's sanctum lay up a creaking stairway, and on a
+brilliant summer day not long after Spurrier had entertained his blind
+guest it was climbed by that guest in person, led by the impish boy
+whose young mouth was stained with chewing-tobacco.
+
+This precocious child opened the door and led his charge in and, from
+a deal table, Creed Faggott removed his broganned feet and turned sly
+eyes upon the visitors, out of a cadaverous and furtive face.
+
+"You don't let no grass grow under your feet, do you, Joe?" inquired
+the lawyer shortly. "When the day rolls round, you show up without
+default or miscarriage." He paused as the boy led the blind man to a
+chair and then facetiously capped his interrogation. "I reckon I don't
+err in surmisin' that you've come to collect your pension?"
+
+The blind man gazed vacantly ahead. "Who, me?" he inquired with
+half-witted dullness.
+
+"Yes, you. Who else would I mean?"
+
+"Hit's due, ain't hit--my money?"
+
+"Due at noon to-day and noon is still ten minutes off. I'm not sure
+the company didn't make a mistake in allowing you such a generous
+compensation for your accident." There was a pause, then Faggott added
+argumentatively: "Your damage suit would have come to naught, most
+likely."
+
+"Thet ain't ther way ye talked when I lawed ther comp'ny," whined the
+blind man. "Ye 'peared to be right ambitious ter settle outen co'te in
+them days, Mr. Faggott."
+
+"The company didn't want the thing hanging on. They got cold feet.
+Well, I'll give you your check."
+
+"I'd ruther have hit in cash money--silver money," stipulated the
+recipient of the compromise settlement. "I kin count _thet_ over by
+ther feel of hit."
+
+Faggott snorted his disgust but he deposited in the outstretched palm
+the amount that fell due on each quarterly pay day, and the visitor
+thumbed over every coin and tested the edges of all with his teeth.
+After that, instead of rising to go, he sat silently reflective.
+
+"That's all, ain't it," demanded the attorney, and something like a
+pallid grin lifted the lip corners in the blind man's ugly face.
+
+"Not quite all," replied Joe Givins as he shook his head. "No, thar's
+one other leetle matter yit. I'd love ter hev ye write me a letter ter
+ther comp'ny's boss-man in Looeyville. I kinderly aims ter go thar an'
+see him."
+
+This time it was the attorney who, with an incredulity-freighted
+voice, demanded: "Who, you?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Me."
+
+"The Louisville manager," announced Faggott loftily, "is a man of
+affairs. The company conducts its business here through its local
+counsel--that's me."
+
+"Nevertheless an' notwithstandin', I reckon hit'll kinderly pleasure
+ther boss-man ter talk ter _me_--when he hears what I've got ter tell
+him."
+
+A light of greed quickened in the shyster's narrow eyes. It was
+possible that Blind Joe had come by some scrap of salable information.
+It had been stipulated when his damage suit was settled, that he
+should, paradoxically speaking, keep his blind eyes open.
+
+"See here, Joe," the attorney, no longer condescending of bearing,
+spoke now with a wheedling insistence, "if you've got any tidings,
+tell 'em to me. I'm your friend and I can get the matter before the
+parties that hold the purse strings."
+
+Joe Givins stretched out a wavering hand and groped before him. "Lead
+me on outen hyar, boy," he gave laconic command to his youthful
+varlet. "I'm tarryin' overlong an' wastin' daylight."
+
+"What's daylight to you, Joe?" snapped Faggott brutally, but
+recognizing his mistake he, at once, softened his manner to a mollifying
+tone. "Set still a spell an' let's have speech tergether--an' a little
+dram of licker."
+
+Ten minutes of nimble-witted fencing ensued between the two sons
+of avarice, and at their end the blind man stumped out, carrying
+in his breast pocket a note of introduction to a business man
+in Louisville--whose real business was lobbying and directing
+underground investigations--but the lawyer was no wiser than he
+had been.
+
+And when eventually from the murky lobby of the Farmers' Haven Hotel,
+which sits between distillery warehouses in Louisville, the shabby
+mountaineer was led to the office building he sought, he was received
+while more presentable beings waited in an anteroom.
+
+It chanced that on the same day John Spurrier spoke to Dyke Cappeze of
+Glory.
+
+"When we went fishing," he said, "I asked her whether she never felt a
+curiosity for the things beyond the ridges--and her eagerness startled
+me."
+
+An abrupt seriousness overspread the older face and the answering
+voice was sternly pitched.
+
+"I should be profoundly distressed, sir," said Cappeze, "to have
+discontent brought home to her. I should resent it as unfriendly and
+disloyal."
+
+"And yet," Spurrier's own voice was quickened into a more argumentative
+timber, "she has a splendid vitality that it's a pity to crush."
+
+"She has," came the swift retort, "a contented heart which it's a pity
+to unsettle."
+
+The elder eyes hardened and looked out over the wall of obstinacy that
+had immured Dyke Cappeze's life, but his words quivered to a tremor of
+deep feeling.
+
+"I've given her an education of sorts. She knows more law than some
+judges, and if she's ignorant of the world of to-day she's got a
+bowing acquaintance with the classics. I'm not wholly selfish. If
+there was some one--down below that I could send her to--some one who
+would love her enough because she needs to be loved--I'd stay here
+alone, and willingly, despite the fact that it would well-nigh kill
+me." He paused there and his eyes were broodingly somber, then almost
+fiercely he went on: "I would trust her in no society where she might
+be affronted or belittled. I would rather see her live and die here,
+talking the honest, old crudities of the pioneers, than have her
+venture into a life where she could not make her own terms."
+
+"Perhaps she could make her own terms," hazarded Spurrier, and the
+other snapped his head up indignantly.
+
+"Perhaps--yes--and perhaps not. You yourself are a man of the world,
+sir. What would--one of your own sort--have to offer her out there?"
+
+Under that challenging gaze the man from the East found himself
+flushing. It was almost as though under the hypothetical form of the
+question, the father had bluntly warned him off from any interference
+unless he came as an avowed suitor. He had no answer and again the
+lawyer spoke with the compelling force of an ultimatum.
+
+"She must stay here with me, who would die for her, until she goes to
+some man who offers her everything he has to offer; some man who would
+die for her, too." His voice had fallen into tenderness, but a stern
+ring went with his final words. "Meanwhile, I stand guard over her
+like a faithful dog. I may be old and scarred but, by God, sir, I am
+vigilant and devoted!" He waved his thin hand with a gesture of
+dismissal for a closed subject, and in a changed tone added:
+
+"I've recently heard of two other travelers riding through--and they
+have taken up several land options."
+
+"What meaning do you read into it, Mr. Cappeze?"
+
+The lawyer shrugged his shoulders. If he had no explanation to offer,
+it was plain that he did not regard the coming of the strangers as
+meaningless.
+
+"I'm going," said Spurrier casually, "to make a trip up Snake Fork to
+the head of Little Quicksand. Is there any one up there I can call on
+for lodging and information?"
+
+The lawyer shook his head. "It's a mighty rough country and sparsely
+settled. You'll find a lavish of rattlesnakes--and a few unlettered
+humans. There's a fellow up there named Sim Colby who might shelter
+you overnight. He lives by himself, and has a roof that sheds the
+rain. It's about all you can ask."
+
+"It's enough," smiled Spurrier, and a few days later he found himself
+climbing a stiff ascent toward a point where over the tree-tops a
+thread of smoke proclaimed a human habitation.
+
+He was coming unannounced to the house of Sim Colby, but if he had
+expected his visit to be an entire surprise he was mistaken, and if he
+had known the agitation that went a little way ahead of him, he would
+have made a wide detour and passed the place by.
+
+Sim was hoeing in his steeply pitched field when he saw and recognized
+the figure which was yet a half-hour's walk distant, by the
+meanderings of the trail. The hoe fell from his hand and his posture
+stiffened so inimically that the hound at his feet rose and bristled,
+a low growl running half smothered in its throat.
+
+Doubtless, Colby reasoned, Spurrier was coming to his lonely house
+with a purpose of venom and punishment, yet he walked boldly and to
+the outward glance he seemed unarmed. Hence it must be that in the
+former army officer's plan lay some intent more complex than mere
+open-and-shut meeting and slaying: some carefully planned and guileful
+climax to be approached by indirection. Very well, he would also play
+the game out, burying his suspicion under a guise of artlessness, but
+watching every move--and when the moment came striking first.
+
+At a brook, as he hastened toward his house by a short cut, he knelt
+to drink, for his throat was damnably dry, and in the clear water the
+pasty pallor and terror of his face was given back to him, and warned
+him. But also the mirroring brought another thought and the thought
+fathered swift action. In the army he had been spare and clean-shaven
+and a scar had marked his chin. Now he was bearded. He carried a
+beefier bulk and an altered appearance.
+
+Could there be any possibility of Spurrier's failing to recognize
+him--of his having been, after all, ignorant of his presence here?
+
+Yet his eyes would be recognizable. They were arrestingly distinctive,
+for one of them was pale-blue and the other noticeably grayish.
+
+By the path he was following, stalks of Jimson weed grew rank, and
+Sim, rising from his knees, pulled off a handful of leaves and crushed
+them between his palms. When he had reached the house his first action
+was to force from this bruised leafage a few drops of liquid into a
+saucer and this juice he carefully injected into his eyes.
+
+Then he went to the door and squinted up at the sun. It would be
+fifteen minutes before Spurrier would arrive and fifteen minutes might
+be enough. He half closed his eyes, because they were stinging
+painfully, and sat waiting, to all appearances indolent and
+thoughtless.
+
+Spurrier plodded on, measuring the distance to the smoke thread until
+he came in view of the cabin itself, then he approached slowly since
+the stiff climb had winded him.
+
+Now he could see the shingle roof and the log walls, trailed over with
+morning-glory vines, and in the door the slouching figure of a man. He
+came on and the native rose lazily.
+
+"My name's John Spurrier," called out the traveler, "and Lawyer
+Cappeze cited you to me as a man who might shelter me overnight."
+
+The man who had deserted chewed nonchalantly on a grass straw and
+regarded the other incuriously--which was a master bit of dissembling.
+Between them, it seemed to Sim Colby who had once been Private Grant,
+lay the body of a murdered captain. Between them, too, lay the guilt
+of his assassination. To the Easterner's appraisal this heavy-set
+mountaineer with unkempt hair and ragged beard was merely a local type
+and yet in one respect he was unforgettable.
+
+It was his eyes. They were arrestingly uncommon eyes and, once seen,
+they must be remembered. What was the quality that made one notice
+them so instantly, Spurrier questioned himself. Then he realized.
+
+They were inkily black eyes, but that was not all. There seemed to be
+in them no line of demarcation between iris and pupil--only liquid
+pools of jet.
+
+The two men sat there as the shadows lengthened and talked "plumb
+friendly" as Colby later admitted to himself. They smoked Spurrier's
+"fotched-on" tobacco and drank native distillation from the demijohn
+that Colby took down from its place on a rafter. Yet the host was
+filling each tranquilly flowing minute with the intensive planning of
+a hospitality that was, like Macbeth's, to end in murder.
+
+Spurrier would sleep in an alcovelike room which could be locked from
+the outside. Back through the brush was a spot of quicksand where a
+body would leave no trace. One thing only troubled the planning brain.
+He wished he could learn just who knew of his guest's coming here;
+just what precautions that guest had taken before embarking on such a
+venture.
+
+From outside came a shout, interrupting these reflections, and Sim was
+at once on his feet facing the front door, with a surreptitious hand
+inside his shirt, and one eye covertly watching Spurrier, even as he
+looked out. A snarl, too, drew his lips into an unpleasant twist.
+
+The Easterner put down to mountain caution the amazing swiftness with
+which the other had come from his hulking proneness to upstanding
+alertness. But with equal rapidity, Sim's pose relaxed into ease and
+he shouted a welcome as the door darkened with a figure physically
+splendid in its spare strength and commanding height.
+
+Spurrier rose and found himself looking into a face with most engaging
+eyes and teeth that flashed white in smiling.
+
+For a moment as the newcomer gazed at Sim Colby his expression
+mirrored some sort of surprise and his lips moved as if to speak, but
+Spurrier could not see, because Colby's back was turned, the warning
+glance that shot between the two, and the big fellow's lips closed
+again without giving utterance to whatever he had been on the point of
+saying--something to do with eyes that had mystifyingly changed their
+color.
+
+"Mister Spurrier, this hyar's Sam Mosebury," announced the host.
+"Mebby ye mout of heered tell of him."
+
+Spurrier nodded. So this was the outlaw against whose terrorism old
+Cappeze had broken his Quixote lances, the windmill that had unhorsed
+him; the man with a criminal record at which a wild region trembled.
+
+"I've heered tell of Mr. Spurrier, too," vouchsafed the murderer
+equably. "He's a friend of old Dyke Cappeze's."
+
+The "furriner" made no denial. Though he had been sitting with his
+head in the jaws of death ever since he entered this door, it had been
+without any presentiment of danger. Now he felt the menace of this
+terrorist's presence, and that menace was totally fictitious.
+
+"Mr. Cappeze has befriended me," he answered stiffly. "I reckon that's
+not a recommendation to you, is it?"
+
+The man who had newly entered laughed. He drew a chair forward and
+seated himself.
+
+"I reckon, Mr. Spurrier, hit ain't none of my business one way ner
+t'other," he said. "Anyhow, hit ain't no reason why you an' me kain't
+be friends, is hit?"
+
+"It doesn't make any difficulty with me," laughed Spurrier in relief,
+"if it doesn't with you."
+
+Sam Mosebury looked at him, then his voice came with a dry chuckle of
+humor.
+
+"Over at my dwellin' house," he announced with a pleasant drawl, "I've
+got me a pet mockin'-bird--an' I've got me a pet cat, too. Ther three
+of us meks up ther fam'ly over thar."
+
+Spurrier looked at the strong-featured face as he prompted, "Yes?"
+
+"Waal," Sam Mosebury waved his hand, and even his gestures had a
+spacious bigness about them, "ef God Almighty didn't see fit fer
+thet thar bird an' thet thar cat ter love one another--I don't seek
+ter alter His plan. Nonetheless I sets a passel of store by both of
+'em." He filled his pipe, then his words became musing, possibly
+allegorical. "Mebby some day I'll _ree_lax a leetle mite too much in
+watchin' an' then I reckon ther cat'll kill ther bird--but thet's
+accordin' ter nature, too, an' deespite I'll grieve some, I won't
+disgust ther cat none."
+
+That night Spurrier lay on the same shuck-filled mattress with the
+man whom the law had not been strong enough to hang, and for a
+while he remained wakeful, reflecting on the strangeness of his
+bed-fellowship.
+
+But, had he known it, his life was saved that night because the
+murderer had arrived and provided an interfering presence when the
+plans on foot required solitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Perhaps old Cappeze had spoken too late when he sounded his sharp
+warning to the newcomer against unsettling the simple contentment of
+his daughter's mind. Always realizing his transient status in the
+aloofness of this life, Spurrier had scrupulously guarded his contact
+with the girl who belonged to it and who had no prospect of escaping
+it. He had sought to behave to her as he might have behaved to a
+child, with grave or gay friendliness untouched by those gallantries
+that might have been misunderstood, yet treating her intelligence with
+full and adult equality.
+
+But his inclination to see more of her than formerly was one that he
+indulged because it gave him pleasure and because a failure to do so
+would have had the aspect of churlishness.
+
+Those self-confessed traces of snobbery that adhered to this courtier
+at the throne of wealth, were attributes of which the girl saw
+nothing. Neither did she see the shell of cynicism which Spurrier had
+cultivated and this was not because her insight failed of keenness,
+but because in these surroundings they were dormant qualities.
+
+The self that he displayed here was the self of the infectious smile,
+of the frank boldness and good humor that had made him beloved among
+his army mess-mates before these more gracious qualities had been
+winter-killed by misfortune.
+
+So he was the picturesque and charming version of himself, and he
+became to Glory an object of hero worship, whose presence made the day
+eventful and whose intervals of absence were filled with dreams of his
+next coming.
+
+It was about this time that John Spurrier, the "opportunity hound,"
+made a disquieting discovery. It came upon him one night as he sat on
+the porch of Dyke Cappeze's log house at twilight, with pipes glowing
+and seductive influences stealing into the senses. Daylight color had
+faded to the mistiness of tarnished silver except for a lemon
+afterglow above western ridges that were violet-gray, and the evening
+star was a single lantern hanging softly luminous, where soon there
+would be many others.
+
+Cadenced and melodious as a lullaby fraught with the magic of the
+solitudes, the night song of frog and whippoorwill rose stealingly out
+of silence, and the materialist who had been city bound so much since
+conviction of crime had shadowed his life discovered the thing which
+threatened danger.
+
+It came to him as his eyes met those of Glory, who sat in the doorway
+itself--since she, at least, need not fear to show her face to any
+lurking rifleman.
+
+The yellow lamplight from within outlined the lovely contour of her
+rounded cheek and throat and livened her hair, but it was not only her
+undeniable beauty that caused Spurrier sudden anxiety. It was the eyes
+and what he read in them. Instantly as their gazes engaged she dropped
+her glance but, in the moment before she had masked her expression,
+Spurrier knew that she had fallen in love with him. The eyes had said
+it in that instant when he had surprised them. They had immediately
+seized back their secret and hidden it away, but not in time.
+
+The opportunity hound rose and knocked the ash from his pipe. He
+wondered whether old Dyke Cappeze, sitting there inscrutable and dimly
+shaped in the shadows, had shared his discovery--that grizzled old
+watchdog who was not too far gone to fight for his own with the
+strength of his yellowed fangs.
+
+The visitor shook hands and walked moodily home, and as he went he
+sought to dismiss the matter from his mind. It was all a delusion, he
+assured himself; some weird psychological quirk born of a man's innate
+vanity; incited by a girl's physical allurement. He would go to sleep
+and to-morrow he would laugh at the moonshine problem. But he did not
+find it so easy to sleep. He remembered one of those men in the
+islands who had become a melancholiac. The fellow had been normal at
+one moment; then without warning something like an impenetrable shadow
+had struck across him. He had never come out of the shadow. So this
+disquiet--though it was abnormal elation rather than melancholy, had
+suddenly become a fact with himself, and instead of dismissing it
+Spurrier found himself reacting to it. Not only was Glory Cappeze in
+love with him but--absurdity of absurdities--he was in love with
+Glory!
+
+It was as irreconcilable with all the logic of his own nature as any
+conceivable thing could be, yet it was undeniably true.
+
+But Spurrier had been there in the hills when summer had overcome
+winter. He had seen trickles of water grow into freshets and feed
+rivers. He had seen clouds as large as one's hand swell abruptly into
+tempests that cannonaded mightily through the peaks, with the lashing
+of torrents, the sting of lightnings, and the onsweep of hurricanes.
+He had seen the pink flower of laurel and rhododendron make fragrant
+magic over wastes of chocolate and slag-gray mountain sides, and in
+himself something akin to these elemental forces had declared itself.
+He found himself two men, and though he swore resolutely that his
+brain should dominate and govern, he also recognized in himself the
+man of new-born impulses who drew the high air into his chest with a
+keen elation, and who wanted to laugh at the artificial things that
+life has wrought into its structure of accepted civilization.
+
+That insurgent part of himself found a truer congeniality in the
+company of grizzled old Dyke Cappeze than that of Martin Harrison; a
+stronger comradeship in the frank laugh of Glory than in the cool
+intelligence of Vivien's smile.
+
+Glory's brain was as alert as quicksilver, and her heart as high and
+clean as the hills. Yet in his own world these two would be as
+unplaced as gypsies strayed from their dilapidated caravan. Moreover,
+it was ordained that he was to win his game and upon him was to be
+conferred an accolade--the hand, in marriage, of his principal's
+daughter.
+
+Spurrier laughed a little grimly to himself. Of the woman whose hand
+had been half-promised him he could think dispassionately and of this
+other, whom he could not take with him into his world of artificial
+values, he could not think at all without a pounding of pulses and a
+tumult which he thought he had left behind him with his early youth.
+
+In character and genuine metal of mind, Glory was the superior of most
+of those women he knew, yet because she was country bred and trained
+to a code that did not obtain elsewhere, she could no more be removed
+from her setting than a blooming eidelweiss could be successfully
+transplanted in a conservatory. He himself was fixed into a certain
+place which he had attained by fighting his way, in the figurative
+sense at least, over the bodies of the less successful and the less
+enduring. It was too late for him to transplant himself, and he and
+she were plants of differing soil, as though one were a snow flower
+and one a tropic growth.
+
+Also there were immediate things of which to think, such as an
+unexpired threat upon his life.
+
+Already he had escaped the assassin's first effort, and he had no
+guess where the enmity lay which had actuated that attack. That it
+still existed and would strike again he had a full realization. He was
+not walking in the shadow of dread but, because he knew of the menace
+lurking where all the faces were friendly, he had begun to feel that
+companionship of suspense: that nearness of something in hiding under
+which men lived here; and under which women grew old in their
+twenties.
+
+And it is not given to a man to live under such conditions, and remain
+the man who fights only across mahogany tabletops in offices. Yet John
+Spurrier scornfully reasoned that if he could not remain himself even
+in a new and altered habitat, he was a weakling, and he had no
+intention of proving a weakling.
+
+His hand had grasped the plow-haft and, for the present, at least, his
+loyalty belonged to his undertaking.
+
+This inward conflict went with him as he rode across the singing hills
+to gather up his mail at the nearest post office and he told himself,
+"I am a fool to ponder it."
+
+Then his thoughts ran on: "It is dwelling on factitious things that
+gives them force. Life presents a Janus aspect of the double-faced at
+times, but a man must choose his way and ignore the turnings. Glory
+has pure charm. She has a quick mind and a captivating beauty, but so
+far as I'm concerned, she is simply out of the picture. I could be mad
+about her, if I let myself--but presumably I am not adrift on a gulf
+stream of emotionalism."
+
+When he had spent an hour in the dusty little town and turned again
+into the coolness of the hills, he dismounted under the shade of a
+"cucumber tree" and glanced through those letters that were still
+unopened. One envelope was addressed in a hand that tantalized memory
+with a half sense of the familiar, and Spurrier's brow contracted in
+perplexity.
+
+Then his face grew abruptly grave. "By heavens!" he exclaimed. "It's
+Withers--Major Withers! What can he be writing about?"
+
+He opened it and drew out the sheet of paper, and, as he read, his
+expression went through the gamut of surprise and incredulity to a
+settled sternness of purpose that made his face stony.
+
+"If it's true," he exclaimed, "the man is mine to kill! No, not to
+kill, either, but to take alive at all costs."
+
+He stood for a moment, his sinewy body answering to a tremor of deeply
+shaken emotion. Had he been mountain-bred and feud-nurtured, the
+sinister glitter of his eyes could have been no more relentless. He
+was for that moment a man dedicating himself to the blood oath of
+vengeance.
+
+Then he composed his features and smoothed out the letter that his
+clenched fingers had unconsciously crumpled. Again he read what Major
+Withers had to say:
+
+ I am writing because though I infer that you have succeeded in
+ material ways, I have heard nothing of your progress in clearing
+ your name and I know that until that is accomplished, no success
+ will be complete for you.
+
+ Quite recently I have had as my striker a fellow named Wiley, who
+ used to be in your platoon--and I have talked with him a good bit.
+ Not long ago he declared to me his belief that Private Grant who
+ is listed as officially dead, did _not_ die in the Islands.
+
+ He seems to think that Grant made a clean getaway and went back to
+ the Kentucky mountains from which he came. He confesses that he
+ gets this idea from nothing more tangible than casual hints
+ dropped by Private Severance, whose discharge came shortly after
+ you left us, yet his impression is so strong as to amount to
+ conviction. Possibly if you could trace Severance you might learn
+ something. It's a vague clew, I admit, but I pass it along to you
+ for whatever it may be worth.
+
+Slowly, as though his tireless limbs had grown suddenly old, Spurrier
+mounted and rode on with reins hanging. He was so deep in thought that
+he forgot the other unopened letters in his pocket.
+
+Grant might be in these same hills with himself; Grant upon whom his
+counsel had sought to place the blame for the murder of Captain
+Comyn. If they could meet alone for the period of a brief interview,
+either that question would be finally answered or in the reckoning one
+of them would have to die.
+
+But how to trace him in this ragged territory covering a great and
+broken area--a territory which God had seemed to build, as a haven and
+a hiding place for men who sought concealment? Grant would in all
+likelihood see him first and--he entertained no illusions as to the
+result--the deserter would kill him on sight. On the other hand, it
+would do Spurrier no good to kill Grant. If Grant were to serve him it
+must be with a confession wrung from living lips, and on oath.
+
+Of course, too, the years would have changed Grant so that if they
+came face to face he would probably fail to recognize the man he had
+known only in khaki.
+
+The scarred chin? A beard would obliterate that. The stature? Added
+weight or lost weight would make it seem another man's.
+
+By processes of elimination Spurrier culled over the possibilities
+until at length his glance brightened.
+
+In one particular Private Grant could scarcely disguise himself. His
+eyes were in a fashion mismated. One was light gray and one pale blue.
+Yes, if ever they met he would have his clew in that.
+
+And that memory reminded him that he had recently been impressed to an
+unusual degree by a pair of eyes. Whose were they? Oh, yes, he
+remembered now. It was the man at whose house he had met Sam
+Mosebury--Sim Colby who dwelt over beyond Clubfoot Branch.
+
+But Colby's eyes had been noticeable by reason of their extraordinary
+blackness. So that only helped him in so far as it enabled him to
+eliminate from all the thousands of possible men the one man, Sim
+Colby.
+
+The afternoon had spent itself toward sunset as he dismounted and
+stabled his horse, and it was with a face still somberly thoughtful
+that he fitted his key into the padlock which held his door and
+entered.
+
+The interior was dusky in contrast with the outer light, but from one
+window a shaft of golden radiance slanted inward and in it the dust
+motes danced.
+
+Spurrier paused and glanced about him, but before he had thrown down
+the hat he had taken from his perspiring forehead, a sound hideously
+unmistakable caused his heartbeat to miss its rhythm and pound in
+commotion.
+
+Every man has his one terror, or, at least, one antipathy which he is
+unable to treat with customary calmness. With Spurrier it was
+everything reptilian. In the islands he had dreaded the snake menace
+more than fever or head hunters. Now, from the darkened floor near his
+feet came the vicious whir of rattles, and as his eyes flashed toward
+the sound he saw coiled there a huge snake with its flat, arrow-shaped
+head sinuously waving from side to side.
+
+With an agility made lightning-quick by necessity, he leaped aside
+and, at the same instant, the snake launched itself with such venomous
+force that the sound of its striking and falling on the puncheon floor
+was like the lashing of a mule whip. The man had felt the disturbed
+air of its passing as of a sword stroke that had narrowly missed him.
+
+But he had no leisure to regain the breath that had caught startled
+in his throat, before, from his left, he heard again the ominous note
+of warning, and felt his scalp creep with horror. The place which he
+had left locked and believed to be mosquito proof, now seemed alive
+with the loathsome trespassers.
+
+As Spurrier leaped for his couch he heard again the sound of a living
+coil released and its hawserlike lashing of the floor. Now he could
+see more plainly and, calculating his distance, he jumped for the
+table from which he could reach the loaded shotgun that hung on his
+wall. If he fell short, he would come down at their mercy--but he
+landed securely and without capsizing his support. His elevation gave
+him a precarious sort of safety, but on the floor below him he counted
+three rattlesnakes, crawling and recoiling; their cold-blooded eyes
+following his movements with baleful intentness.
+
+Spurrier was conscious of his trembling hands as he leveled the
+weapon, and of a crawling sensation of loathing along his spine.
+
+Twice the gun roared, splintering the flooring and spattering its
+ricochetting pellets, and two of the rattlers twisted in convulsive
+but harmless writhings. But the third head--and it seemed the largest
+of the three--had withdrawn under the cot. He was not even sure that
+these three made up the total. There might be others.
+
+With painstaking care Spurrier came down and armed himself with a
+stout hickory flail which had been used in other days by some
+housewife in her primitive laundry work as a "battling stick."
+
+Then he advanced to the battle, swinging one end of the cot wide and
+shiftily sidestepping. The rattler which lay in piled circles of
+coppery length regarded him with steely venom, turning its swaying
+head deliberately as its enemy circled. With the startling abruptness
+of an electric buzzer it warned and sprang. He escaped by an
+uncomfortable margin and attacked it with the flail before it could
+rearrange its coils. Finally he stood panting with exertion over the
+scene of slaughter.
+
+As he searched the place with profoundest particularity his mind was
+analyzing the strange invasion. His house was as tight as he had
+thought it. There was no cranny that would have let in three large
+rattlers. How had they come there?
+
+Spurrier went out and studied his door. The hasps that held his
+padlock were in place, but the woodwork about them had been recently
+scarred. The lock fastenings had been pulled out and replaced.
+
+With a nervous moisture on his brow the man recognized the fiendish
+ingenuity of his mysterious enemy. These slithering creatures had come
+here by human agency as brute accomplices in the murder that had
+failed from the rifle muzzle. The pertinacity and cunning of the
+scheme's anonymous author gave promise of eventfulness hereafter.
+
+Had he been struck, according to the evident intention, as he entered
+his house, he would probably have died there, unsuccored, leaving the
+door open. The rattlers would either have found their way out after
+that, or, when his body was discovered, the open door would have
+explained their presence inside, and no suspicion of a man's
+conspiracy would have remained.
+
+One thing stood out clear in Spurrier's summing-up. Whatever the
+source of the enmity which pursued him, it had its nerve center in an
+ingenious brain and it threw about itself that element of mystery
+which a timid man would have found terrifying and unendurable. Also it
+operated with a patience which was a manifest of its unswerving
+determination. Effort might be expected to follow effort until success
+came--or the unknown plotter were discovered and disposed of.
+
+Yet the author of these malignant attempts worked with an unflurried
+deliberation, allowing passive intervals to elapse between activities,
+like the volcano that rests in the quiet of false security between
+fatal eruptions.
+
+Of course, the letter with the mention of Private Grant might be a
+clew of identity, yet calm reflection discounted that assumption as a
+wild and unconfirmed grasping out after something tangible.
+
+Perhaps Spurrier as nearly approached the absolute in physical
+fearlessness as it is given to man to come--but the mystery of a
+pursuing hatred which could not be openly faced, filled him with a
+sense of futility, and the futility inspired rage which was unsettling
+and must be combated.
+
+That night he lay long awake, and after he had fallen asleep he came
+often to a sudden and wide-eyed wakefulness again at the sound of an
+owl's call or the creaking of a tree limb.
+
+The next morning found him restless of spirit, and it occurred to him
+that his secret enemy might be lurking near to inspect the results of
+his handiwork, so he went down to the road and hung the three dead
+rattlesnakes along the fence where no passer-by could miss seeing
+their twisted and mutilated lengths. That should be his retort to any
+inquiring and hostile eye, that he was alive and the creatures put
+there to destroy him had paid with their lives.
+
+From a place screened from view he meant to watch that gruesome
+exhibit and mark its effect upon any one who paused to inspect it.
+Possibly in that way a clew might be vouchsafed--but he did not at
+once take cover in the thickets.
+
+It was a glorious morning. The sun had ripped away the mists that, in
+the mountains, always hang damp and veillike between gray dawning and
+colorful day. The cool forest recesses were vocal with the twitterings
+and song from feathered throats.
+
+Spurrier sat down by the road and gave himself up to thoughts that it
+was safer to banish: thoughts that came with those sights and sounds
+and that made long-stilled pulses awaken and throb in him.
+
+This morning made him feel Glory's presence and gave him a fine
+recklessness as to responsibility and consequence. Suddenly he came to
+himself and seemed to hear the cool cynicism of Martin Harrison's
+voice inquiring, as it had once actually inquired: "Growing
+sentimental?"
+
+He pulled himself together and stiffened his expression into one more
+suitable upon the face of a man who has taken the severe vows of
+service to a cold ambition.
+
+But a little later he heard a sound and looked up sidewise to see
+Glory herself standing near him in the road; a materialization of the
+truant dreams he had been entertaining.
+
+She wore a dress whose simplicity accentuated the slender erectness
+of her young body and the litheness of her carriage. Her hair hung in
+braids and the sunbonnet had fallen back from the brightness of her
+hair. In her eyes played the violet lights of a merriment that lifted
+and curved her lips beguilingly.
+
+Spurrier came to his feet, and perhaps Glory, who had succumbed to her
+moment of self-revelation there on the twilight porch, had her revenge
+now. For that first startled moment as their glances met, the eyes
+that looked into hers were lover's eyes, and their unspoken message
+was courtship. If he maintained the stoic's silence forever, as to
+words, at least his heart had spoken.
+
+"Before Heaven," said the man slowly, and the tremor of his voice was
+out of keeping with the ingrained poise of his usual self-command,
+"when they called you Glory, they didn't misname you!"
+
+The girl flushed pink, and he took a step toward her with the absorbed
+intensity of a sleep-walker.
+
+Glory stood there--watched him coming and did not move. To her, though
+she had sought to hide it, he had become the One Man. Her unconfessed
+love had magnified and deified him--and now his own eyes were blazing
+responsively with love for her!
+
+Suddenly she was shaken by a rapturous tremor that seemed almost like
+swooning or being lifted on some powerful wave that swept her clear of
+the earth, so that she made no effort at disguise, but let the
+laughing light in her eyes become softer, yet more glowingly intense.
+
+It was as if they had met in the free realm of dreams where there are
+no hamperings of impossibility. As he drew near her, his arms came
+out, and he halted so that, under that same delightful sense of
+irresponsibility, it seemed to her quite natural to step into their
+welcome.
+
+Possibly the happenings of yesterday and the sleepless hours of last
+night had left Spurrier momentarily light-headed. Certainly had one of
+the rattlers stung him and poisoned his reason, he could not be doing
+a thing more foreign to his program of intention.
+
+He felt his arms close about her; felt the fragrance of her breath,
+found himself pressing his kisses on lips that welcomed them, and
+forgot everything except that this was a moment of ecstasy and
+passion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+For a while they stood there together in the narrow road to whose
+edges the dense greenery came down massed and dewy. Their breath was
+quick with the excitement of that moment when the hills and the rocks
+that upheld them seemed to them palpitant and gloriously shaken. Then
+they heard the lumbering of wheels, and with one impulse that needed
+no expression in words they turned through a gorge which ran at right
+angles into the stillness of the woods--and away from interruption.
+
+Spurrier had, it seemed to him, stepped through a curtain in life and
+found beyond it a door of which he had not known. It seemed natural
+that he and Glory should be going hand in hand into that place of
+dreams like children at play and hearing joyous voices that were mute
+and nonexistent in the world of commonplace and fact.
+
+He did not even pause to reflect that this was a continuation of the
+same ravine in which an assassin's bullet had once so narrowly missed
+him. Yesterday, too, was forgotten.
+
+Just now he was young in his heart again, and had love for his
+talisman. Actuality had been dethroned by some dream wizardry and left
+him free of obligation to reason. Then he heard Glory's voice
+low-pitched and a little frightened.
+
+"It kain't--can't--be true. It's just a dream!"
+
+A flash of sanity, like the shock of a cold plunge, brought the
+thought that, from her lips, had sounded a warning. This was the
+moment, if ever, to draw back and take counsel of common sense. Now it
+would be easier than later to abase himself and confess that in this
+midsummer's madness was no substance or color of reality--that he
+stood unalterably pledged to her renunciation.
+
+But the earthquake does not still itself at the height of its tremor
+and the cyclone does not stop dead with its momentum unspent. Years of
+calculated and nerve-trying self-command were exacting their toll in
+the satisfaction of outbreak. Spurrier's emotional self was in
+volcanic eruption, the more molten and lava-hot for the prolonged
+dormancy of a sealed crater.
+
+He caught the girl again and pressed her so close that the commotion
+of her heart came throbbing against him through the yielding softness
+of her breast; and the agitation of her breath on his face was a
+little tempest of acquiescent sweetness.
+
+"Doesn't it seem real, now?" he challenged as he released her enough
+to let her breathe, yet held her imprisoned, and she nodded,
+radiant-eyed, and answered in a voice half bewildered and more than
+half burdened with self-reproach.
+
+"I didn't even hang back," she made confession. "I just walked right
+into your arms the minute you held them out. I didn't seem able to
+help myself."
+
+Suddenly her eyes, impenitent once more, danced with mischief and her
+smile broke like a sun flash over her face.
+
+"If I'd had the power of witchcraft, I'd have put the spell on you,
+Jack," she declared. "I had to make you love me. I just _had_ to do
+it."
+
+"I rather think you had--that power, dear."
+
+He laughed contentedly as a man may who shifts all responsibility for
+an indiscretion to a force stronger than his own volition.
+
+"You see," she went on as if seeking to make illogic seem logical.
+"From the first--I couldn't think of you except with storm thoughts. I
+couldn't keep my heart quiet, when I was with you."
+
+"At first," he reminded her, "you wanted to kill me. I heard you
+confiding to Rover."
+
+Her eyes grew seriously deep and undefensive in their frankness. It
+was the candor of a woman's pride in conquest.
+
+"I'm not sure yet," she said almost fiercely, "that I wouldn't almost
+rather kill you than--lose you to any other girl."
+
+Vaguely and as yet remotely, Spurrier's consciousness was pricked with
+a forecast of reality's veto, but the present spoke in passion and the
+future whispered weakly in platitudes.
+
+"You won't lose me," he protested. "I'm yours."
+
+"And yet," went on Glory, "you seemed a long way off. You were the man
+who did big things in the world outside. You were--always cool
+and--calculating."
+
+"Glory," his words came with the rush of impetuosity for already the
+whispers of warning were gaining in volume, and impulse was struggling
+for its new freedom, "the man you've seen to-day is one I haven't
+known myself before. Chilled calculation and self-repression have been
+the articles of my creed. I've been crusted with those obsessions
+like a ship's hull with barnacles. Did you know that when vessels pass
+through the Panama Canal, the barnacles drop off?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No," she said, and her lips twisted into something like wistfulness
+as she dropped unconsciously into vernacular. "There's a lavish of
+things I don't know. You've got to learn 'em all to me--I mean teach
+them to me."
+
+"Well," he went on slowly, "steamers that pass through the fresh
+water, from salt to salt, automatically cleanse their plates. You've
+been fresh water to me, Glory."
+
+"Jack," she declared with tempestuous anxiety, "you say I've changed
+you. I'll try to change myself, too, all the ways I can--all the ways
+you want."
+
+"I don't want you changed," he objected. "If you were changed, it
+wouldn't be you."
+
+"Maybe," she persisted, "you'd like me better if I were taller or had
+black eyes."
+
+"I wonder now," he teased with the whimsey of the moment, "what you
+would look like with black eyes? I can't imagine it. Will you do that
+for me?"
+
+"Come to our house to-night," she irrelevantly commanded. "Won't
+you?"
+
+"Yes," he said, "I'd come to-night if I had to swim the Hellespont."
+
+But when he had left her an hour later at the crossroads and started
+back, his eyes fell on the ugly shapes of the three rattlesnakes, over
+which he had forgotten to keep watch and which she had not even seen,
+and yesterday came back with the impact of undisguised realization.
+Yesterday and to-morrow stood out again in their own solid
+proportions and to-day stood like a slender wisp of heart's desire
+shouldered between uncompromising giants of fact.
+
+Spurrier could no longer deny that his personal world centered about
+Glory; that away from her would be only the unspeakable bleakness of
+lonely heart hunger.
+
+But it was equally certain that he could not abandon everything upon
+which he had underpinned his future, and in that structure was no
+niche which she could occupy.
+
+Sitting alone in his house with a chill ache at his heart and facing a
+dilemma that seemed without solution, he knew for once the tortures of
+terror. For once he could not face the future intrepidly.
+
+He had recognized when the army had stigmatized him and cast him out,
+that only by iron force and aggression could he break his way through
+to success. He was enlisted in a warfare captained by financiers of
+major caliber and committed to a struggle out of which victory would
+bring him not only wealth, but a place of his own among such
+financiers--a place which Glory could not share.
+
+He and his principals alike were fighting for the prizes of the
+looting victor in a battle without chivalry, and whether he won or was
+crushed by American Oil and Gas, the native landholder must be ground
+and bruised between the impact of clashing forces. In the trail of his
+victory, no less than theirs, would be human wreckage.
+
+Sitting before his dead hearth while the afternoon shadows slanted and
+lengthened, Spurrier wondered what agonies had wracked the heart of
+Napoleon when he was called upon to choose between Josephine and a
+dynasty. For even in his travail the egoist thought of himself and his
+ambitions in Napoleonic terms.
+
+As he sat there alone with silences about his lonely cabin that seemed
+speaking in still voices of vastness, the poignant personality of his
+thoughts brought him, by the strange anomaly of life, to realizations
+that were not merely personal.
+
+Glory had won his heart and it was as though in doing so she had also
+made his feelings quicken for her people: these people from whose
+poverty, hospitality and kindness had been poured out to him: these
+people who had taken him at first with reserve and then accepted him
+with faith.
+
+He had eaten their bread and salt. He had drunk their illicit whiskey,
+given to him with no fear that he would betray them even in the
+lawlessness which to them seemed honorable and fair.
+
+And yet his purpose here, was the single one of enabling a certain
+group of money-grabbing financiers to triumph over another group at
+the cost of the mountaineer land-holders. It was not because, if he
+succeeded, there would not be enough of legitimate profit to enrich
+all, but because in a campaign of secrecy he could make a confidant of
+no one. If the enterprise were carried through at all he must have
+secured, for principals who would abate nothing and give back nothing,
+the necessary property bought on the basis of barren farming land.
+Were it his own endeavor he could first plunder and develop and then
+make restitution, but acting as an agent he could no more do that
+than the soldier who has unconditionally surrendered, can subsequently
+demand terms.
+
+The man who had been a plunger at gaming table and race track, who had
+succeeded as an imitator of schemes that attracted major capital, was
+of necessity one of imagination. Perhaps had life dealt him different
+cards, Spurrier would have been a novelist or even a poet, for that
+imagination which he had put into heavy harness was also capable of
+flights into phantasy and endowed with something almost mystic.
+
+Now under the stress of this conflict in his mind, as he sat before
+his hearth in shadows that were vague of light and shape, that
+unaccustomed surrender to imagination possessed him, peopling the
+dimness with shapes that seemed actual.
+
+His eye fell upon the empty three-legged stool that stood on the
+opposite side of the hearth, and as though he were looking at one of
+those motion picture effects which show, in double negative one
+character confronting his dual and separate self, he seemed to see a
+figure sitting there and regarding him out of contemptuous eyes.
+
+It was the figure of a very young man clad in the tunic of a
+graduating West Point cadet and it was a figure that bore itself with
+the prideful erectness of one who regards his right to wear his
+uniform as a privilege of knighthood. For Spurrier was fancying
+himself confronted by the man he had been in those days of eager
+forward-looking, and of almost religious resolve to make of himself a
+soldier in the best meaning of the word. Then as his eyes closed for a
+moment under the vividness of the fancy, the figure dissolved into its
+surroundings of shadow and near the stool with folded arms and a
+bitterer scorn stood a lieutenant in khaki.
+
+"So this is what you have come to be," said the imaginary Spurrier
+blightingly to the actual Spurrier. "A looter and brigand no better
+than the false _amigos_ that I fought over there. I was a gentleman
+and you are a cad!"
+
+Had the man been dreaming in sleep instead of wakefulness, his vision
+could hardly have worn habiliments of greater actuality, and he found
+himself retorting in hot defensiveness.
+
+"Whatever I am you made me. It was you who was disgraced. It is
+because I was once you that I am now I. You left me no choice but to
+fight with the weapons that came to hand, and those weapons were
+predatory.... If I have deliberately hardened myself it is only as
+soldiers of other days put on coats of mail--because soft flesh could
+not survive the mace and broadsword."
+
+"And when you win your prizes, if you ever win them," the accusing
+vision appeared to retort, "you will have paid for them by spending
+all that was honorable in yourself; all that was generous and
+soldierly. When you were I, you led a charge across rice paddies
+without cover and under a withering fire. For that you were mentioned
+in dispatches and you had a paragraph in the Army and Navy Journal.
+Have you ever won a prize since then, that meant as much to you?"
+
+John Spurrier came to his feet, with a groan in his throat. His
+temples were moist and marked with a tracery of outstanding veins and
+his hands were clenched.
+
+"Good God!" he exclaimed aloud. "Give me back the name and the uniform
+I had then, and see how gladly I'll tell these new masters to go to
+hell!"
+
+Startled at the sound of his own voice arguing with a fantasy as with
+a fact, the man sank back again into his chair and covered his face
+with his spread hands. But shutting out sight did not serve to shut
+out the images of his fancy.
+
+He saw himself hired out to "practical" overlords and sent to prey on
+friends, then he rose and stood confronting the empty stool where the
+dream-accuser in uniform had stood and once more he spoke aloud. As he
+did so it seemed that the figure returned and stood waiting, stern and
+noncommittal, while he addressed it.
+
+"Give me the success I need, and the independence it carries, and I'll
+spend my life exonerating my name. I'll go back to the islands and
+live among the natives till I find a man who will tell the truth. I'll
+move heaven and earth--but that takes money. I've always stood, in
+this business, with wealth just beyond my grasp--always promised,
+never realized. Let me realize it and be equipped to fight for
+vindication. These men I serve have the prizes to dispense, but I am
+bound hand and foot to them. They take their pay in advance. Once
+victorious I can break with them."
+
+"And these people who have befriended you," questioned the mentor
+voice, "what of them?"
+
+"I love them. They are her people. I shall seem to plunder them, but
+if my plans succeed I shall be in a position to make terms--and my
+terms shall be theirs. Until I succeed I must seem false to them. God
+knows I'm paying for that too. I love Glory!"
+
+Suddenly Spurrier wiped a hand across a clammy forehead and stood
+looking about his room, empty save for himself. He seemed a man who
+had been through a delirium. But he reached no conclusion, and when
+twilight found him tramping toward the Cappeze house it was with a
+heart that beat with anticipation--while it sought refuge in postponed
+decision.
+
+When Glory received him in the lamp-lighted room he halted in
+amazement, for the girl who stood there with a mischievous smile on
+her lips no longer looked at him out of eyes violet-blue, but black as
+liquid jet.
+
+"How did you do that?" he demanded in a voice blank with astonishment.
+"It's a sheer impossibility!"
+
+"Maybe it's witchcraft, Jack," she mocked him.
+
+"Can you change them back?" he asked a little anxiously, and she shook
+her head.
+
+"No, but they'll change of themselves in a day or two."
+
+"I reckon," commented Dyke Cappeze, looking up from his book by the
+table, "I oughtn't to give away feminine secrets, but it's a right
+simple matter, after all. She just put some Jimson-weed juice in her
+eyes and the trick was done."
+
+"Jimson weed," echoed the visitor, and the elder nodded.
+
+"If you happen to remember your botany, you'll recall that its longer
+name is _Datura stramonium_--and it's a strong mydriatic. It swells
+the pupil and obliterates the iris."
+
+It was walking homeward with a low moon overhead that evening that
+Spurrier's thoughts found time to wrestle with other problems than
+those affecting himself and Glory. The incident of the black eyes had
+at first interested him only because they were _her_ eyes, but now he
+thought also of the episode of the rattlesnakes and the letter from
+Major Withers.
+
+In his first analysis of what that letter might mean to him he had
+decided that his man would be recognizable by his mismated eyes. He
+had recalled Sim Colby's black ones while thinking of unusual eyes in
+general and had, in passing, set him down as one who stood alibied.
+
+Now, in the light of this Jimson-weed discovery, those black eyes took
+on a new interest. Presumably it was a trick commonly known in these
+hills. _If_ Colby's eyes had been so altered--and they had seemed
+unnatural in their tense blackness--it must have been with a
+deliberate and sufficient motive. Sim Colby was not making his pupils
+smart and sting as a matter of vanity. A man resorting to disguises
+seeks first to change the most salient notes of his appearance.
+
+Spurrier recalled, with the force of added importance, the surprised
+look on Sam Mosebury's face when that genial murderer, upon his
+arrival, had stifled some impulse of utterance.
+
+Suspicion of Colby was perhaps far-fetched, but it took a powerful
+hold on Spurrier, and one from which he could not free himself. At all
+events, he must see this Sim Colby when Colby did not know he was
+coming--and look at his eyes again.
+
+So he made a second trip across the hills to the head of Little
+Quicksand, and for the sake of safeguarding against any warning going
+ahead of him, he spoke to no one of his intention.
+
+This time he went armed with an automatic pistol and a very grim
+purpose. When they met--if the mountaineer's eyes were no longer
+black--he would probably need both.
+
+But once again the opportunity hound encountered disappointment. He
+found a chimney with no smoke issuing from it and a door barred. The
+horse had been taken out of the stable and from many evidences about
+the untenanted place he judged that the man who lived alone there had
+been absent for several days.
+
+To make inquiries would be to proclaim his interest and prejudice his
+future chances of success, so he slipped back again as surreptitiously
+as he had come, and the determination which he had keyed to the
+concert pitch of climax had to be laid by.
+
+At home again he found that the love which he could neither accept nor
+conquer was demoralizing his moral and mental equipoise. He could no
+longer fix and hold his attention on the problems of his work. His
+spirit was in equinox.
+
+The only solution was to go to Glory and tell her the truth, for if he
+let matters run uncontrolled their momentum would become unmanageable.
+It was the simple matter of choosing failure with her or success
+without her, and he had at last reached his decision. It remained only
+to tell her so.
+
+It had pleased John Spurrier to find a house upon an isolated site
+from which he could work unobserved, while he maintained his careful
+semblance of idleness. His nearest neighbor was a mile away as the
+crow flew, and Dyke Cappeze almost two miles. Even the deep-rutted
+highroad, itself, lay beyond a gorge which native parlance called a
+"master shut-in."
+
+Now that remoteness pleased his enemies as well. Former efforts toward
+his undoing had been balked by accidents. One must be made that could
+have no chance to fail and an isolated setting made for success.
+Matters that required deft handling could be conducted by daylight
+instead of under a tricky moon. It was a good spot for a "rat-killing"
+and Spurrier was to be the rat.
+
+It was well before sunset on a Thursday afternoon that rifle-armed
+men, holding to the concealment of the "laurel hells," began
+approaching the high place above and behind Spurrier's house. They
+came from varying directions and one by one. No one had seen any
+gathering, for the plans had been made elsewhere and the details of
+liaison perfected in advance. Now they trickled noiselessly into their
+designated posts and slowly drew inward toward the common center of
+the house itself.
+
+Spurrier who rode in at mid-afternoon from some neighborhood mission
+commented with pleasure upon the cheery "Bob Whites" of the quail
+whistling back in the timber.
+
+They were Glory's birds, and this winter he would know better than to
+shoot them!
+
+But they were not Glory's birds. They were not birds at all, and those
+pipings came from human throats, establishing touch as the murder
+squad advanced upon him to kill him.
+
+The man opened a package which had come by mail and drew from its
+wrappings the portrait of a girl in evening dress with a rope of
+pearls at her throat. Its silver frame was a counterpart of the one
+which had stood on Martin Harrison's desk that night when Spurrier had
+lifted it and Vivien's father had so meaningly said: "Make good in
+this and _all_ your ambitions can be fulfilled."
+
+Now Spurrier set the framed picture on the table at the center of the
+room and it seemed to look out from that point of vantage with the
+amused indulgence of well-bred condescension upon the Spartan
+simplicity of his house--the rough table and hickory-withed chairs,
+the cot spread with its gray army blanket.
+
+The man gave back to the pictured glance as little fire of eagerness
+as was given out from it.
+
+Just now Vivien seemed to him the deity and personification of a creed
+that was growing hateful, yet one to which he stood still bound. He
+was like the priest whose vows are irrevocable but whose faith in his
+dogma has died, and to himself he murmured ironically, "'The idols are
+broke in the temple of Baal'--and yet I've got to go on bending the
+knee to the debris!"
+
+But when he turned on his heel and looked through the door his face
+brightened, for there, coming over the short-cut between Aunt Erie
+Toppit's and her own home, was Glory, carrying a basket over which was
+tied a bit of jute sacking.
+
+She came on lightly and halted outside his threshold.
+
+"I'm not comin' visitin' you, Mr. John Spurrier," she announced
+gravely despite the twinkle in her eyes. "I'm bent on a more seemly
+matter, but I'm crossin' your property an' I hope you'll forgive the
+trespass."
+
+"Since it's you," he acceded in the same mock seriousness, "I'll grant
+you the right of way. You paid the toll when you let me have a glimpse
+of you."
+
+"And this is your house," she went on musingly. "And I've never seen
+inside its door. It seems strange, somehow, doesn't it?"
+
+Spurrier laughed. "Now that you're here," he suggested, "you might as
+well hold an inspection. It's daylight and we can dispense with a
+chaperon for ten minutes."
+
+She nodded and laughed too. "I guess the granny-folk would go tongue
+wagging if they found it out. Anyhow, I'm going to peek in for just a
+minute."
+
+She stepped lightly up to the threshold and looked inside, and the
+slanting shaft from the window fell full on the new photograph of
+Vivien Martin, so that it stood out in the dim interior emphasized by
+the flash of its silver frame.
+
+Glory went over and studied the face with a somewhat cryptic
+expression, but she made no comment and at the door she announced:
+
+"I'll be goin' on. You can have three guesses what I've got in this
+basket."
+
+But Spurrier, catching sight of a bronze tail-quill glinting between
+the bars of the container, spoke with prompt certainty.
+
+"One guess will be enough. It's one of those carrier pigeons that
+Uncle Jimmy Litchfield gave you."
+
+"You peeped before you guessed," she accused. "I'm going to leave it
+with Aunt Erie and let her take it to Carnettsville with her to-morrow
+and set it free."
+
+"Compare your watches," advised the man, "and get her to note the time
+when she opens the basket. Then you can time the flight."
+
+Glory shook her head and laughed. "I don't own any watch," she
+reminded him. "And even if I did I misdoubt if Aunt Erie would have
+anything to compare it with--unless she carried her alarm clock along
+with her."
+
+"Wait a minute," admonished the man, as he loosened the strap of his
+wrist watch, "I've two as it happens--and a clock besides. You keep
+this one and give Aunt Erie my other. I'll get it for you and set it
+so that they'll be together to the second."
+
+He wheeled then and went into the room at the back and for a few
+minutes, bachelor-like he rummaged and searched for the time-piece
+upon which he had supposed he could lay his fingers in the dark.
+
+Yet Spurrier's thought was not wholly and singly upon the adventure of
+timing the flight of a carrier pigeon. In it there lurked a sense of
+half-guilty uneasiness, which would have been lighter had Glory asked
+some question when she gazed on the picture which sat in a seeming
+place of honor at the center of his room. Her silence on the subject
+had seemed casual and unimportant, yet his intuition told him that had
+it been genuinely so, she would have demanded with child-like interest
+to be told who the woman might be with the high tilted chin and the
+rope of pearls on her throat. The taciturnity had sprung, he fancied,
+less from indifference than from a fear of questioning, and when he
+came quietly to the door, he stood there for a moment, then drew back
+where he would not be so plainly visible.
+
+For Glory had returned to the table and stood with her eyes riveted on
+the framed portrait. Unconscious of being observed her face was no
+longer guarded of betrayal, and in the swift expressiveness of her
+delicate features the man read a gamut and vortex of emotion as
+eloquent as words. The jealousy which her pride sought to veto, the
+doubt which her faith strove to deny, the realization of her own
+self-confessed inferiority in parallel with this woman's aristocratic
+poise and cynical smile, flitted in succession across the face of the
+mountain girl and declared themselves in her eyes.
+
+For an instant the small hands clenched and the lips stirred and the
+pupils blazed with hot fires, so that the man could almost read the
+words that she shaped without sound: "He's mine--he ain't your'n--an'
+I ain't goin' ter give him up ter ye!"
+
+Spurrier remembered how she had declared she would almost rather see
+him die than surrender him to another girl.
+
+Then out of the face the passion faded and the deep eyes widened to a
+suffering like that of despair. The sweetly curved lips drooped in an
+ineffable wistfulness and the smooth throat worked spasmodically,
+while the hands went up and covered the face.
+
+Spurrier drew back into the room into which Glory could not see, and
+then in warning of his coming spoke aloud in a matter-of-fact voice.
+"I've found it," he declared. "It was hiding out from me--that
+watch."
+
+When, after that preface, he came back, Glory was standing again in
+the doorway and as she turned, she presented a face from which had
+been banished the storm of her recent agitation.
+
+He handed her the watch which she took with a steady hand, and a brief
+but cheery, "Farewell."
+
+As she started away Spurrier braced himself with a strong effort and
+inquired: "Glory, didn't you have any question to ask me--about the
+girl--in the frame?"
+
+She halted in the path and stood looking down. Her lowered lids hid
+her eyes, but he thought her cheeks paled a shade. Then she shook her
+head.
+
+"Not unless it's something--you want to tell--without my asking," she
+announced steadfastly.
+
+For over a week he had struggled to bring himself to his confession
+and had failed. Now a sudden impulse assured him that it would never
+be easier; that every delay would make it harder and blacken him with
+a heavier seeming of treason. Vivien's portrait served as a fortuitous
+cue, and he must avail himself of it.
+
+This was the logical time and place, when silence would be only an
+unuttered lie and when procrastination would strip him of even his
+residue of self-respect. To wait for an easy occasion was to hope for
+the impossible and to act with as craven a spirit as to falter when
+the bugle sounded a charge.
+
+Yet he remained so long silent that Glory, looking up and reading the
+hard-wrung misery on his face and the stiff movement of the lips that
+made nothing of their efforts, knew, in advance, the tenor of the
+unspoken message.
+
+She closed her eyes as if to shut out some sudden glare too painful
+to be borne, and then in a quietly courageous voice she helped him
+out.
+
+"You _do_ want to tell me, Jack. You want to take back--what you
+said--over there--don't you?"
+
+Spurrier moistened his lips, with his tongue. "God knows," he burst
+out vehemently, "I don't want to take back one syllable of what I
+said--about loving you."
+
+"What is it, then?"
+
+"Come inside, please," he pleaded. "I'll try to explain."
+
+He went stumblingly ahead of her and set a chair beside the table and
+then he leaned toward her and sought for words.
+
+"I love you, Glory," he fervently declared. "I love you as I didn't
+suppose I could love any one. To me you are music and starlight--but I
+guess I'm almost engaged to her." He jerked his head rebelliously
+toward the portrait.
+
+Glory was numb except for a dull, very present ache that started in
+her heart and filled her to her finger tips, and she made no answer.
+
+"Her father," Spurrier forced himself on, "is a great financier. I'm
+his man. I'm a little cog in a big machine. It's been practically
+understood that I was to become his son-in-law--his successor. I'm too
+deep in, to pull out. It's like a soldier in the thick of a campaign.
+I've got to go through."
+
+That seemed an easier and kinder thing to say than that she herself
+was not qualified for full admittance into the world of his larger
+life.
+
+"You knew this--the other day--as well as now," she reminded him,
+speaking in a stunned voice, yet without anger.
+
+"So help me God, Glory--I had forgotten--everything but--you."
+
+"And now," she half whispered in a dulled monotone, "you remember all
+the rest."
+
+She sat there with the basket on the puncheon floor at her feet, and
+her fingers twisted themselves tautly together. Her lips, parted and
+drooping, gave her delicate face a stamp of dumb suffering, and
+Spurrier's arms ached to go comfortingly around her, but he held
+himself rigid while the silence lengthened. The old clock on the
+mantel ticked clamorously and outside the calls of the bobwhites
+seemed to grow louder and nearer until, half-consciously, Spurrier
+noted their insistence.
+
+Then faintly, Glory said: "You didn't make me any promise. If you
+had--I'd give it back to you."
+
+She rose unsteadily and stood gathering her strength, and Spurrier,
+struggling against the impulse which assailed him like a madness to
+throw down the whole structure of his past and designed future and
+sweep her into his arms, stood with a metal-like rigidity of posture.
+
+Whatever his ultimate decision might be, he kept telling himself, no
+decision reached by surrender to such tidal emotion at a moment of
+equinox could be trusted. Glory herself would not trust it long.
+
+So while the room remained voiceless and the minds of the man and the
+girl were rocking in the swirl of their feelings, the physical senses
+themselves seemed, instead of inert, preternaturally keen--and
+something came to Spurrier's ears which forced its way to his
+attention through the barrier of his abstraction.
+
+Never had the calls of the quail been so frequent and incessant
+before, but this sound was different, as though some one in the nearby
+tangle had stumbled and in the effort to catch himself had caught and
+shaken the leafage.
+
+So the man went to the door and stood looking out.
+
+For a moment he remained there framed and exposed as if painted upon a
+target, and--so close that they seemed to come together--two rifles
+spoke, and two bullets came whining into the house. One imbedded
+itself with a soggy thud in the squared logs of the rear wall but one,
+more viciously directed by the chances of its course, struck full in
+the center of the glass that covered the pictured face of Vivien
+Harrison and sent the portrait clattering and shattered to the floor.
+
+In an instant Spurrier had leaped back, once more miraculously saved,
+and slammed the door, but while he was dropping the stanch bar into
+its sockets, a crash of glass and fresh roars from another direction
+told him that he was also being fired upon through the window. That
+meant that the house was surrounded.
+
+"Who are they, Jack?" gasped the girl, shocked by that unwarned
+fusillade into momentary forgetfulness of everything, except that her
+lover was beset by enemies, and the man who was reaching for his
+rifle, and whose eyes had hardened into points of flint, shook his
+head.
+
+"Whoever they are," he answered, "they want me--only me--but it would
+be death for you to go out through the door."
+
+He drew her to a shadowed corner out of line with both door and
+window, and seized her passionately in his arms.
+
+"If we--can't have each other----" he declared tensely, "I don't want
+life. You said you'd almost rather see me killed than lose me to
+another woman. Now, listen!"
+
+Holding her close to his breast, he drew a deep breath and his
+narrowed eyes softened into something like contentment.
+
+"If you tried to go out first, you'd die before they recognized you.
+They think I'm alone here and they'll shoot at the first movement. But
+if _I_ go out first and fight as long as I can then they'll be
+satisfied and the way will be clear for you."
+
+She threw back her head and her hysterical laugh was scornful.
+
+"Clear for me after _you're_ dead!" she exclaimed. "Hev ye got two
+guns? We'll both go out alive or else neither one of us."
+
+Then suddenly she drew away from him, and he saw her hurriedly
+scribbling on a scrap of paper. Outside it was quiet again.
+
+Glory folded the small sheet and took the pigeon from its basket and
+then, for the first time, Spurrier, who had forgotten the bird,
+divined her intent.
+
+He was busying himself with laying out cartridges, and preparing for a
+siege, and when he looked up again she stood with the bird against her
+cheek, just as she had held the dead quail on that first day.
+
+But before he could interfere she had drawn near the window and he saw
+that to reach the broken pane and liberate the pigeon she must, for a
+moment, stand exposed.
+
+He leaped for her with a shout of warning, but she had straightened
+and thrust the bird out, and then to the accompaniment of a horrible
+uproar of musketry that drowned his own outcry he saw her fall back.
+
+Spurrier was instantly on his knees lifting the drooping head, and as
+her lids flickered down she whispered with a pallid smile:
+
+"The bird's free. He'll carry word home--if ye kin jest hold 'em back
+fer a spell and----"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+The window through whose broken pane Glory had dispatched her
+feathered messenger could not be seen into from the exterior. That was
+a temporary handicap for the besiegers and one upon which, in all
+their forethought, they had not calculated. It happened that at this
+hour of the afternoon the slanting sun struck blindingly upon the
+glass that still remained unbroken and confused the ambushed eyes that
+raked the place from advantageous points along the upper slopes.
+
+So when Glory had risen there for an instant, against the window
+itself, the vigilant assassins had been able to make out only the
+unidentified shadow of a figure moving there, and upon that figure, at
+point-blank range, they had loosed their volley. Whose figure it was
+they could not tell, and since they believed their intended victim to
+be alone they did not question. In the confusion of the instant, with
+the glare on windowpanes, they missed the spot of light that rose
+phoenixlike as the pigeon took flight. The frightened bird mounted
+skyward unnoted and flustered by the bellowing of so much gunnery.
+
+But Spurrier's shout of horror was heard by the besiegers and
+misinterpreted as a cry wrung from him under a mortal wound.
+
+The assailants had not seen nor suspected Glory's approach because she
+had come from the front, and had arrived before they, drawing in from
+the rear and sides, had reached their stations commanding a complete
+outlook. They had assumed their victim to be in solitary possession
+and now they also assumed him to be helpless--perhaps already dead.
+
+Yet they waited, following long-revered precepts of wariness,
+before going onward across the open stretch of the dooryard for an
+ultimate investigation. He might die slowly--and hard. He might
+have left in him enough fight to take a vengeful toll of the oncoming
+attackers--and they could afford to make haste slowly.
+
+So they settled down in their several hiding places and remained as
+inconspicuous as grass burrowing field mice. The forest cathedral
+which they defiled seemed lifeless in the hushed stillness of the
+afternoon as the sun rode down toward its setting.
+
+John Spurrier, inside the house, living where he was supposed to be
+dead, at first made no sound that carried out to them across the
+little interval of space.
+
+He was kneeling on the floor with the girl's head cradled on his knees
+and in his throat sounded only smothering gasps of inarticulate
+despair. These low utterances were animal-like and wrung him with the
+agonies of heartbreak. He thought that she must have died just after
+the whisper and the smile with which she had announced her success in
+her effort to save him.
+
+Kneeling there with the bright head inert on his corduroy-clad knee,
+he fancied that the smile still lingered on her lips even after she
+had laid down her life for him five minutes from the time he had
+forsworn her.
+
+Now that she was gone and he about to go, he could recognize her as a
+serene and splendid star shining briefly above the lurid shoddiness of
+his own grasping life--and the star had set.
+
+At first a profoundly stunned and torpid feeling held him numb; a
+blunt agony of loss and guilt, but slowly out of that wretched
+paralysis emerged another thought. He was helpless to bring her back
+and that futility would drive him mad unless out of it could come some
+motive of action.
+
+She was not only dead, but dead by the hands of murderers who had come
+after him--and all that remained was the effort to avenge her. Like
+waters moving slowly at first but swelling into freshet power, wrath
+and insatiable thirst for vengeance swept him to a sort of madness.
+
+Here he was kneeling over the unstirring woman he had loved while out
+there were the murder hirelings who had brought about the tragedy. Her
+closed and unaccusing eyes, exhorting him as passionate utterances
+could not have done, incited him to a frenzy. At least some of these
+culprits must go unshriven, and by his own hand to the death that
+inevitably awaited himself.
+
+And as Spurrier's flux of molten emotions seethed about that
+determination a solidifying transition came over him and his brain
+cleared of the blind spots of fury into the coherency of a plan.
+
+Out there they would wait for a while to test the completeness of
+their success. If he gave way to his passion and challenged them as
+inclination clamored to do, they would dispatch him at leisure.
+
+Just now he was willing enough to die, but entirely unwilling to die
+alone. He craved company and a red journey for that final crossing. So
+once more he looked down into the face on which there was no stir of
+animation, then very gently bent and kissed the quiet lips.
+
+"If you could come back to me," he chokingly whispered, "I'd unsay
+everything, except that I love you. But if there's a meeting place
+beyond, I'll join you soon--when I've made them pay for you."
+
+He lifted her tenderly and, through his agitation, came a sudden
+realization of how light she was as he laid her gently on his army
+cot. After that he picked up his rifle and bulged out his pockets with
+cartridges.
+
+The cockloft above his room, which was reached by a ladder, had
+windows which were really only loopholes and from there he could
+better see into the tangle that sheltered his enemies.
+
+He entertained no vain hope of rescue. He asked for no deliverance.
+The story drew to its ending and he meant to cap it with the one
+climax to which the last half hour had left anything of significance.
+Since small things become vastly portentous when written into the
+margin between life and death, he hoped that before he died he might
+recognize the face of at least one of the men whom he meant to take
+with him across the River of Eternity.
+
+So, dedicating himself to that motive, he climbed the ladder.
+
+Peering out through first one and then the other of the loopholes of
+the cockloft, he waited, and it seemed to him that he waited
+eternally. He began to fear that his self-sure attackers would content
+themselves with an inactive vigil and that after all he was to be
+cheated.
+
+The sun was westering. The shadows were elongating. The sounds through
+the woods were subtly changing from the voices of day to those of
+approaching night.
+
+Still he waited.
+
+Outside also they were waiting; waiting to make sure that it was safe
+to go in and confirm their presumption that he had fallen.
+
+But when Spurrier had, in a little time as the watch recorded it,
+served out his purgatorial sentence, he sensed a stir in the massed
+banks of the laurel and thrust his rifle barrel outward in preparation
+for welcome. A moment afterward he saw a hat with a downturned brim--a
+coat with an upturned collar--a pair of shoulders that hunched slowly
+forward with almost imperceptible movement. His mind had become a
+calculating machine now, functioning with deliberate surety.
+
+The unrecognizable figure out there was a hundred yards away and the
+rifle he held would bore through the head under the hat crown at that
+range as a gimlet bores through a marked spot on soft pine.
+
+But a single shot would end the show. No one else would appear and
+even the dead man would be hauled back by his heels--unidentified. He
+would wait until he could make his bag of game more worth dying
+for--more worth _her_ dying for!
+
+Other ages seemed to elapse before the butternut figure showed
+stretched at length in the tall grass outside the thicket and a second
+hat appeared. Still Spurrier held his fire until three hats were
+visible and the first man, having crawled to a tree trunk, had half
+risen.
+
+He realized that he could not much longer hold it. At any moment they
+might rush the place in force of numbers, and from more than one side,
+smothering his defense--and once in contact with the walls they would
+need only a lighted torch.
+
+So he sighted with target-range precision and fired, following the
+initial effort with snap-shots at the second and third visible heads.
+
+He had the brief satisfaction of seeing the first man plunge forward,
+clawing at the earth with hands that dropped their weapon. He saw the
+second stumble, recover himself, stumble again and then start crawling
+backward with a disabled, crablike locomotion, while the third figure
+turned, unharmed, and ran to cover. But at the same moment he heard
+shouts and shots from the other side which called him instantly to the
+opposite loophole and, once there, kept him pumping his rifle against
+what appeared to be a charge of confused figures that he had no
+leisure to inspect. They, too, fell back under the vigor of his
+punishment, and Spurrier found himself reloading in a silence that had
+come as suddenly as the noise of the onrush.
+
+He had shot down two assailants, but both had been retrieved beyond
+sight by their confederates, and the besieged man groaned with a
+realization of defeated purpose. The sun was low now and soon it would
+be too dark to see. Then the trappers would close in and take the rat
+out of the trap. What he failed to do while daylight lasted, he would
+never do.
+
+In only one respect did his judgment fail him as he sought to forecast
+the immediate future. It seemed to him that he had spent hours there
+in the cockloft, whereas perhaps thirty minutes had elapsed.
+
+He had been thinking of the pigeon, but had put aside hope as to
+succor from that agency. Old Cappeze was not interested in pigeons.
+The bird would go to roost in its dovecote and sit all night with its
+head tucked placidly under its wing--and the plea for help unread on
+its leg--and the lawyer would never think of looking into the
+dovecote.
+
+Now, since he had failed and must die unavenged--for the wounding of
+two unidentified enemies failed of satisfaction--he must utilize what
+was left of life intensively. Once more before he died, he wanted to
+see the face of the woman whom he had forsworn; the woman who was
+worth infinitely more than the tawdry regards for which he had given
+her up.
+
+So he went down the ladder and knelt beside the cot.
+
+He laid his ear close to the bosom and could have sworn that it
+fluttered to a half heartbeat.
+
+Suddenly Spurrier closed his hands over his face and for the first
+time in years he prayed.
+
+"Almighty Father," he pleaded, "give her back to me! Give me one other
+chance--and exact whatever price Thy wisdom designates."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Toby Austin's meager farm, which abutted on that of Dyke Cappeze,
+that afternoon had trudged Bud Hawkins. In all the mountain region
+thereabout his name was well known and any man of whom you had asked
+information would have told you that Bud was "the poorest and the
+righteousest man that ever rode circuit."
+
+For Bud was among other things a preacher. To use his own words, "I
+farms some, I heals bodies some, an' I gospels some." And in each of
+his avocations he followed faithfully the lights of his conscience.
+
+His own farm lay a long way off, and now he was here as a visitor.
+This afternoon he fared over to the house of Dyke Cappeze as was his
+custom when in that neighborhood. He regarded Cappeze as a righteous
+man and a "wrastler with all evil," and he came bearing the greetings
+of a brotherhood of effort.
+
+The sun was low when he arrived, and the old lawyer confessed to a
+mild anxiety because of Glory's failure to return before the hour
+which her clean-cut regularity fixed as the time of starting the
+supper preparations.
+
+"She took a carrier pigeon over to Aunt Erie Toppit's," explained
+Dyke, "and I looked for her back before now."
+
+"I sometimes 'lows, Brother Cappeze," asserted the visitor with an
+enthusiasm of interest, "thet in these hyar days of sin when God don't
+show Hisself in signs an' miracles no more, erbout ther clostest thing
+ter a miracle we've got left, air ther fashion one of them birds kin
+go up in ther air from any place ye sots hit free at an' foller ther
+Almighty's finger pointin' home."
+
+Cappeze told him that there was just now only one pigeon in the
+dovecote, where the pair belonged, but that one he offered to show,
+and idly be led the way to the place back above the henroosts.
+
+It is, however, difficult for any man to sink his own absorptions in
+those of another, and so it fell about that on the way Cappeze stopped
+at the barn he was building and which was not yet quite complete.
+
+"Brother Hawkins," he said, "as we go along I want to show you the
+barn I've been planning for years--and at last have nearly realized."
+
+In the crude, unfinished life of the hills, lean-tos and even rock
+ledges are pressed into service as barns, but the man who has erected
+an ample and sound structure for such a purpose, stamps himself as one
+who "has things hung up," which is the mountain equivalent for
+wealth.
+
+"That barn," explained Cappeze, pausing before it in expansiveness of
+mood, "is a thing I've wanted ever since I moved over here. A good
+barn stands for a farm run without sloven make-shift--and that one
+cost me well-nigh as much money as my dwelling house. I reckon it
+sounds foolish, but to me that building means a dream come true after
+long waiting. I've skimped myself saving to build it, and it's the
+apple of my eye. If I saw harm come to it, I almost think it would
+hurt me more than to lose the house I live in."
+
+"I reckon no harm won't come ter hit, Brother Cappeze," reassured the
+other. "Yit hit mout be right foresighted to insure hit erginst fire
+an' tempest."
+
+"Of course I will--when it's finished," said the other as he led the
+way inside, and then as he played guide, he forgot the pigeons and
+swelled with the pride of the builder, while time that meant life and
+death went by, so that it was quite a space later that they emerged
+again and went on to the destination which had first called them.
+
+But having arrived there, the elder man halted and his face shadowed
+to a disturbed perplexity.
+
+"That's strange," he murmured. "One pigeon's inside--the hen--and
+there's the cock _trying_ to get in. It's the bird Glory took with
+her. It must have gotten away from her."
+
+"'Pears like ter me," volunteered the preacher, "hit's got some
+fashion of paper hitched on ter one leg. Don't ye dis'arn hit, Brother
+Cappeze?"
+
+Cappeze started as his eyes confirmed the suggestion. Hurriedly he ran
+up the ladder to the resting plank where the bird crooned and preened
+itself, plainly asking for admittance to its closed place of
+habitation. Perhaps his excited manner alarmed the pigeon, which would
+alight on Glory's shoulder without a qualm, for as the man reached out
+his hand for it, it flutteringly eluded him and took again to the
+air.
+
+But now his curiosity was aroused. Possibly Glory meant to stay the
+night at Aunt Erie's and had sent him her announcement in this form.
+He went for grain and scattered it, and after repeated efforts
+succeeded in capturing the messenger.
+
+But when he loosened the paper and read it his face went abruptly
+white and from his lips escaped an excited "Great God!"
+
+He thrust the note into the preacher's hand and rushed indoors,
+emerging after a few minutes with eyes wildly lit and a rifle in his
+hands. Bud Hawkins understood, for he had read in the interval the
+scribbled words:
+
+ Stopped at Jack Spurrier's house. It's surrounded. Men are
+ shooting at us on all sides.
+
+Dyke Cappeze was the one man to whom Spurrier had confided both the
+circumstances of his mysterious waylaying and the matter of the
+rattlesnakes and now the father was not discounting the peril into
+which his daughter had strayed.
+
+"I'm going on ahead, Brother Hawkins," he announced. "I want you to
+send out a general alarm and to follow me with all the armed men you
+can round up." There he halted in momentary bewilderment. In that
+sparsely peopled territory the hurried mustering of an adequate force
+on such short order was in itself almost an impossibility. There were
+no means of communication. Abruptly, the old lawyer wheeled and
+pointed a thin and quivering index finger toward his beloved barn.
+
+"There's just one way," he declared with stoical directness. "All my
+neighbors will come to fight a fire. I've got to set my own barn to
+get them here!"
+
+Five minutes later the structure sent up its black massed summons of
+smoke, shot with vermilion, as the shingles snapped and showed
+glowingly against the black background of vapor, even in the
+brightness of the afternoon.
+
+Dyke Cappeze himself was on his way, and the preacher remaining behind
+was meeting and dispatching each hurried arrival. As he did so his
+voice leaped as it sometimes leaped in the zealot's fervor of
+exhortation, and he sent the men out into the fight with rifle and
+shotgun as trenchantly as he expounded peace from the pulpit.
+
+When a dozen men had ridden away, scattering gravel from galloping
+hoofs, he rode behind the saddle cantle of the last, for it was not
+his doctrine to hold his hand when he sent others into battle. Also he
+might be needed there as a minister, a doctor, or both.
+
+As sunset began to wane to twilight the attackers who lay circled
+about Spurrier's cabin found themselves growing restive.
+
+And inside John Spurrier was a man reanimated by the faint signs of
+life which he had discovered in Glory.
+
+A pulse still fluttered in her heart, but it throbbed flickeringly and
+its life spark was pallid. Every moment this malevolent pack held its
+cordon close was as surely a moment of strangling her faint chance as
+if their fingers had been physically gripping her soft throat. And he
+could only kneel futilely beside her and wait!
+
+From his loopholes upstairs he saw once more two hats and gave their
+wearers shot for shot, but when they kept their rifles popping he
+suspected their purpose and dashed across the floor in time to send
+three rapidly successive bullets into a little group that had detached
+itself from the timber on that side and was creeping toward the house.
+One crawling body collapsed and lay sprawling without motion. Two
+others ran back crouching low and were lost to sight.
+
+So he swung pendulumlike from side to side, firing and changing base,
+and when his second turn brought him to the window through which he
+had shot his man, he saw that the body had already been removed from
+sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+It was a hopeless game and a grim one. He could not cover all the
+defenses long in single-handed effort, and the best he could hope for
+was to die in ample companionship. Now, two men had reached
+broad-girthed oaks, halfway between thicket and house. There they were
+safe for the next rush.
+
+So this was the end of the matter! Spurrier reloaded his rifle and
+went down the ladder. Hastily he carried Glory into the room at the
+back and overturned his heavy table to serve as a final barricade. He
+elected to die here when they swarmed the door from which he could no
+longer keep them, crowning the battle with a finale of punishment as
+they crowded through the breach.
+
+But the minutes dragged with irksome tension. He was keyed up now,
+wire-tight, for the finish, and yet silence fell again and denied him
+the relief of action. To Spurrier it was like a long and cruel delay
+imposed upon a man standing blindfolded and noosed on the scaffold
+trap. Then the quiet was ripped with a totally wasteful fusillade, as
+though every attacker outside were pumping his gun in a contest of
+speed rather than effect.
+
+Spurrier smiled grimly. Let them burn their powder--he would have his
+till they massed in front of his muzzle and the barrier fell.
+
+"When the barrier fell!" Crouched there behind the table where he
+meant to sell his life in that brief space that seemed long, the words
+brought with them the memory of one of the few poems that had ever
+meant much to him--and while he awaited death his mind seized upon the
+lines--a funeral address in soliloquy!
+
+ "For the journey is done and the summit attained,
+ And the barriers fall----"
+
+He strained his ears to his listening and then through his head ran
+other verses:
+
+ "I was ever a fighter, so--one fight more,
+ The best and the last!
+ I would hate that Death bandaged my eyes and forebore
+ And bade me creep past----"
+
+Was that a battering-ram against timber that he heard? He fingered the
+trigger.
+
+ "Then a light, then thy breast,
+ O thou soul of my soul! I shall clasp thee again,
+ And with God be the rest!"
+
+But the door did not fall. The rifle cracking became interspersed with
+alarmed outcries of warning and confusion. He could even hear the
+brush torn with the hurried tramping of running feet, and then the
+pandemonium abruptly stopped dead, and after a long period of inheld
+breath there followed a loud rapping on the door and a voice of
+agonized anxiety shouted:
+
+"In God's name open if ye're still alive. It's Cappeze--and friends!"
+
+The psychological effect of that recognized voice upon John
+Spurrier, and of its incredible meaning, was strange to the point
+of grotesquerie. Its sound carried a complete reversal of everything
+to which his mind had been focussed with a tensity which had keyed
+itself to the acceptance of a violent death, and with the reversal
+came reaction. There was no interim of preparation for the altered
+aspect of affairs. It was precisely as though a runaway train
+furiously speeding to the overhang of an unbridged chasm had
+suddenly begun dashing in the contrary direction with no shade of
+lessening velocity, and no grinding of breaks to a halt between time.
+
+Spurrier had taken no thought of physical strain. He had not known
+that he was wearied with nerve wrack and pell-mell dashing from firing
+point to firing point. He knew nothing of the picture he made with
+clothing torn from his scrambling rushes up-ladder and down-ladder and
+his crouching and shifting among the rough nail-studded spaces of the
+cockloft. Of the face, sweat-reeking and dust-smeared, he had no
+realization, but when that voice called out and he knew that rescuers
+were clamoring where assassins had laid siege, the stout knees under
+him buckled weakly, and the fingers that had fitted his rifle as
+steadily as part of its own metallic mechanism became so inert that
+they could scarcely maintain their grip upon the weapon.
+
+John Spurrier, emotionally stirred and agitated as he had never been
+in battle, because of the limp figure that lay under that roof, stood
+gulping and struggling for a lost voice with which to give back a
+reply. He rocked on his feet and then, like a drunken man went slowly
+and unsteadily forward to lift the bar of the door.
+
+When he had thrown it wide the rush of anxious men halted, backing up
+instinctively, as their eyes were confused by the inner murk and their
+nostrils assailed by the acrid stench of nitrate, from the vapors of
+burnt powder that hung stiflingly between the walls and ceiling
+rafters. Old Cappeze was at their front and when he saw before him the
+battle begrimed and drawn visage of the man, he looked wildly beyond
+it for the other face that he did not see, and his voice broke and
+rose in a high, thin note that was almost falsetto as he demanded:
+"Where is she? Where's Glory?"
+
+John Spurrier sought to speak but the best he could do was to indicate
+with a gesture half appealing and half despairing to the door of the
+other room, where she lay on his army cot. The father crossed its
+threshold ahead of him and dropped to his knees there with agonized
+eyes, and Bud Hawkins, the preacher and physician, not sure yet in
+which capacity he must act, was bent at his shoulder, while Spurrier
+exhorted him with a recovered but tortured voice, "In God's name, make
+haste. There's only a spark of life left."
+
+From the crowd which had followed and stood massed about the door came
+a low but unmistakable smother of fury, as they saw the unmoving
+figure of the girl, and those at the edge wheeled and ran outward
+again with the summary resoluteness that one sees in hounds cast off
+at the start of the chase.
+
+Upon those who remained Brother Hawkins wheeled and swept out his
+hands in a gesture of imperative dismissal.
+
+"Leave us alone, men," he commanded. "I needs ter work alone
+hyar--with ther holp of Almighty God."
+
+But he worked kneeling, tearing away the clothing over the wounded
+breast, and while he did so he prayed with a fervor that was fiercely
+elemental, yet abating no whit of his doctor's efficiency with his
+surprisingly deft hands, while his lips and heart were those of the
+religionist.
+
+"Almighty Father in Heaven," he pleaded, "spare this hyar child of
+Thine ef so be Thy wisdom suffers hit."
+
+There he broke off and as though a different man were speaking, shot
+over his shoulder the curt command: "Fotch me water speedily--Because
+Almighty Father, she's done fell a victim of evil men thet fears Thee
+not in th'ar hearts!"
+
+After a little Brother Hawkins dismissed even the father and Spurrier
+from the room and worked on alone, the voice of his praying sounding
+over his activity.
+
+Ten minutes later, in a crowded room, Bud Hawkins, preacher and
+physician, laid one hand on Spurrier's shoulder and the other on
+Cappeze's.
+
+"Men," he said in a hushed voice, "I fears me ther shot thet hit her
+was a deadener. Yit I kain't quite fathom hit nuther. She's back in
+her rightful senses ergin--but she don't seem ter _want_ to live,
+somehow. She won't put for'ard no effort."
+
+Spurrier wheeled to face them both and his voice came with tense,
+gasping earnestness.
+
+"Before she dies, Brother Hawkins," he pleaded, "you're a minister of
+the gospel--I want you to marry us." He wheeled then on the rescuers,
+who stood breathing heavily from exertion and fight.
+
+"Two of you men stay here as wedding witnesses," he commanded. "One of
+you ride hell-for-leather to the nearest telephone and call up
+Lexington. Have a man start with bloodhounds on a special train. The
+rest of you get into the timber and finecomb it for some scrap of
+cloth--or anything that will give the dogs a chance when they get
+here."
+
+Once more Spurrier was the officer in command, and snappily his
+hearers sprang to obedience, but when the place had almost emptied,
+the three turned and went into the back room, and, kneeling there
+beside the wounded girl, Spurrier whispered:
+
+"Dearest, the preacher has come--to wed us."
+
+Glory's eyes with their deeps of color were startlingly vivid as they
+looked out of the pallid face upon which a little while ago John
+Spurrier had believed the white stamp of death to be fixed.
+
+The features themselves, except the eyes, seemed to have shrunken from
+weakness into wistful smallness, and if the girl had returned, in the
+phrases of the preacher, "to her rightful senses" it had been as one
+coming out of a dream who realizes that she wakes to heartburnings
+which death had promised to smooth away.
+
+Now, as the man stretched out his hand to take hers and drew a ring
+from his own little finger, the violet eyes on the rough pillow became
+transfigured with a luminous and incredulous happiness. But at once
+they clouded again with gravity and pain.
+
+Spurrier was offering to marry her out of pity and gratitude. He was
+seeking to pay a debt, and his authoritative words were spoken from
+his conscience and not from his heart.
+
+So the lips stirred in an effort to speak, failed in that and drooped,
+and weakly but with determination Glory shook her head. She had been
+willing to die for him. She could not argue with him, but neither
+would she accept the perfunctory amends that he now came proffering.
+
+Spurrier rose, pale, and with a tremor of voice as he said to the
+others: "Please leave us alone--for a few moments." Then when no one
+was left in the room but the girl on the bed and the man on his knees
+beside it, he bent forward until his eyes were close to hers and his
+words came with a still intensity.
+
+"Glory, dearest, though I don't deserve it, you've confessed that you
+love me. Now I claim the life you were willing to lay down for me--and
+you can't refuse."
+
+There was wistfulness in her smile, but through her feebleness her
+resolution stood fast and the movement of her head was meant for a
+shake of refusal.
+
+"But why, dear," he argued desperately, "why do you deny me when we
+know there's only one wish in both our hearts?"
+
+His hands had stolen over one of hers and her weak fingers stirred
+caressingly against his own. Her lips stirred too, without sound, then
+she lay in a deathlike quiet for a moment or two summoning strength
+for an effort at speech, and he, bending close, caught the ghost of a
+whisper.
+
+"I don't seek payment ... fer what I done." A gasp caught her breath
+and silenced her for a little but she overcame it and finished almost
+inaudibly. "It was ... a free-will gift."
+
+John Spurrier rose and sat on the side of the bed. His voice was
+electrified by the thrill of his feeling; a feeling purged of all
+artificiality by the rough shoulder touch of death.
+
+"I'm asking another gift, now, Glory; the greatest gift of all. I'm
+asking yourself. Don't try to talk--only listen to me because I need
+you desperately. Except for you they would have killed me to-day--but
+my life's not worth saving if I lose you after all. I'm two men,
+dearest, rolled into one--and one of those men perhaps doesn't deserve
+much consideration, but there's some good in the other and that good
+can't prevail without you any more than a plant can grow without
+sun."
+
+With full realization, he was pitching his whole argument to the note
+of his own selfish needs and wishes, and yet he was guided by a sure
+insight into her heart. Brother Hawkins had said she had no wish to
+live and would make no fight, and he knew that he might plead
+endlessly and in vain unless he overcame her belief that he was
+actuated merely by pity for her. If she could be convinced that it was
+genuinely he who needed her more than she needed him, her woman
+quality of enveloping in supporting love the man who leaned on her,
+would bring consent.
+
+"I sought to strengthen myself for success in life," he went on, "by
+strangling out every human emotion that stood in the way of material
+results. I serve men who sneer at everything on God's earth except
+the practical, and I had come to the point where I let those men
+shape me and govern even my character."
+
+She had been listening with lowered lids and as he paused, she raised
+them and smiled wanly, yet without any sign of yielding to his
+supplications.
+
+"The picture that you saw," he swept on torrentially, "was that of a
+girl whose father employs me. He's a leader in big affairs and to be
+his son-in-law meant, in a business sense, to be raised to royalty.
+Vivien is a splendid woman and yet I doubt if either of us has----" he
+fumbled a bit for his next words and then floundered on with
+self-conscious awkwardness, "has thought of the other with real
+sentiment. Until now, I haven't known what real sentiment meant. Until
+now I haven't appreciated the true values. I discovered them out there
+in the road when you came into my arms--and into my heart. From now on
+my arms will always ache for you--and my heart will be empty without
+you.'"
+
+"But--," Glory's eyes were deeper than ever as she whispered
+laboriously, "but if you're plighted to her----"
+
+"I'm not," he protested hotly. "There is no engagement except a sort
+of understanding with her father: a sort of condescending and tacit
+willingness on his part to let his successor be his son-in-law as
+well."
+
+She lay for a space with the heavy masses of her hair on the rough
+pillow framing the pale and exquisite oval of her face, and her vivid
+eyes troubled with the longing to be convinced. Then her lips shaped
+themselves in a rather pitiful smile that lifted them only at one
+corner.
+
+"Maybe ye don't ... know it Jack," she murmured, "but ye're jest
+seekin' ... ter let me ... die ... easy in my mind ... and happy."
+
+"Before God I am _not_," he vehemently contradicted her. "I'm not
+trying to give but to take. Whether you get well or not, Glory, I want
+to fight for your life and your love. We've faced death, together.
+We've seen things nakedly--together. For neither of us can there ever
+be any true life--except together."
+
+His breath was coming with the swift intensity that was almost a sob
+and, in the eyes that bent over her, Glory read the hunger that could
+not be counterfeited.
+
+"Anyhow," she faltered, "we've had--this minute."
+
+Spurrier rose at last and called the others back. He himself did not
+know when once more he took her hand and the preacher stood over them,
+whether her responses to the services would be affirmative or
+negative.
+
+To Spurrier marriage had always seemed an opportunity. It was a
+thing in which an ambitious man could no more afford yielding to
+uncalculating impulses than in the forming of a major business
+connection. Marriage must carry a man upward toward the peak of his
+destiny, and his wife must bring as her dowry, social reënforcements
+and distinction.
+
+Now, in the darkening room of a log house, with figures clad in
+patches and hodden-gray, he held the hand that was too weak to
+close responsively upon his own, and listened to the words of a
+shaggy-headed preacher, whose beard was a stubble and whose lips moved
+over yellow and fanglike teeth.
+
+Confusedly he heard the questions and his own firm responses to the
+simple service of marriage as rendered by the backwoods preacher, then
+his heart seemed to stop and stand as the words were uttered to which
+Glory must make her answer.
+
+"Will you, Glory, have this man, John Spurrier----"
+
+What would her answer be--assent or negation?
+
+The pause seemed to last interminably as he bent with supplication in
+his glance over her, and the breath came from his lips with an
+unconscious sibilance, like escaping steam from a strained boiler,
+when at last the head on the pillow gave the ghost of a nod.
+
+Even at that moment there lurked in the back of his mind, though not
+admitted as important, the ghost of realization that he was doing
+precisely the sort of thing which, in his own world, would not only
+unclass him but make him appear ludicrous as well.
+
+As for that world of lifted eye-brows he felt just now only a
+withering contempt and a scalding hatred.
+
+Almost as soon as the simple ceremony ended, Glory sank again into
+unconsciousness, and the father and preacher, sitting silent in the
+next room, were unable to forget that though there had been a wedding,
+they were also awaiting the coming of death.
+
+The night fell with the soft brightness of moon and stars, and through
+the tangled woods the searchers were following hard on the flight of
+the assailants--doggedly and grimly, with the burning indignation of
+men bent on vindicating the good name of their people and community.
+Yet, so far, the fugitive squad had succeeded not only in eluding
+capture or recognition, but also in carrying with them their wounded.
+
+From Lexington, where Spurrier had formed strong connections, a deputy
+sheriff was riding in a caboose behind a special engine as fast as the
+roadbeds would permit. The smokestack trailed a flat line of hurrying
+smoke and the whistle screamed startlingly through the night. At the
+officer's knees, gazing up at him out of gentle eyes that belied their
+profession, crouched two tawny dogs with long ears--the bloodhounds
+that were to start from the cabin and give voice in the laurel.
+
+Waiting for them was a torn scrap of blue denim such as rough overalls
+are made of. It had been found in a brier patch where some fleeing
+wearer had snarled himself.
+
+Yet two days later the deputy returned from his quest in the timber,
+shaking his head.
+
+"I'm sorry," he reported. "I've done my best, but it's not been good
+enough."
+
+"What's the trouble?" inquired Cappeze shortly, and the officer
+answered regretfully:
+
+"This country is zigzagged and criss-crossed with watercourses--and
+water throws the dogs off. The fugitives probably made their way by
+wading wherever they could. The longest run we made was up toward Wolf
+Pen Branch."
+
+That was the direction, Spurrier silently reflected, of Sim Colby's
+house, but he made no comment.
+
+Brother Hawkins, who was leaving that afternoon, laid a kindly hand on
+Spurrier's shoulder.
+
+"Thet's bad news," he said. "But I kin give ye better. I kin almost
+give ye my gorrantee thet ther gal's goin' ter come through. Hit's
+_wantin'_ ter live thet does hit."
+
+Spurrier's eyes brightened out of the misery that had dulled them, and
+as to the failure of the chase he reassured himself with the thought
+that the dogs had started toward Sim Colby's house, and that he
+himself could finish what they had begun.
+
+Those tawny beasts had coursed at the behest of a master who was bound
+by the limitations of the law, but he, John Spurrier, was his own
+master and could deal less formally and more condignly with an enemy
+to whom suspicion pointed--and there was time enough.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+And yet on that day when the bobwhites had sounded and the blow had
+fallen, Sim Colby was nowhere near the opportunity hound's house. He
+sat tippling in a mining town two days' journey away, and he had no
+knowledge of what went on at home. His companion was ex-Private
+Severance--once his comrade in arms.
+
+The town was one of those places which discredit the march of industry
+by the mongrelized character of its outposts. The wild aloofness of
+the hills and valleys was marred there by the shacks of the camp and
+its sky soiled by a black reek of coke furnaces.
+
+Filth physical and moral brooded along the unkempt streets where the
+foul buzz of swarming flies sounded over refuse piles, and that spirit
+of degradation lay no less upon the unclean tavern, where the two men
+who had once worn the uniform sat with a bottle of cheap whisky
+between them.
+
+Colby, who had need to maintain his reputation for probity at home,
+made an occasional pilgrimage hither to foregather with his former
+comrade and loosen the galling rein of restraint. Just about the time
+when the attack on Spurrier's house had begun, he had leaned forward
+with his elbows on the table, his face heavy and his eyes inflamed,
+pursuing some topic of conversation which had already gained headway.
+
+"These hyar fellers that seeks ter git rid of Spurrier," he confided,
+"kinderly hinted 'round thet they'd like ter git me ter do ther job
+for 'em, but I pretended like I didn't onderstand what they war
+drivin' at, no fashion at all."
+
+"Why didn't ye hearken ter 'em?" questioned Severance practically.
+"Hit hain't every day a man kin git paid fer doin' what he seeks ter
+do on his own hook."
+
+But Colby grinned with a crafty gleam in his eye and poured another
+drink.
+
+"What fer would I risk ther penitenshery ter do a killin' fer them
+fellers when, ef I jest sets still on my hunkers they'll do _mine_ fer
+me," he countered.
+
+For a time after that whatever enemies Spurrier had seemed to have
+lost their spirit of eagerness. One might have presumed that to the
+rule of amity which apparently surrounded him, there was no
+exception--and so the mystery remained unsolved. Even blind Joe Givins
+made a detour in a journey to stop at Spurrier's house and sing a
+ballad of his own composition anent the mysterious siege and to
+express his indignation at the "pizen meanness" of men who would
+father and carry forward such infamies.
+
+And Glory, who had penetrated so deeply into the shadow that life had
+seemed ended for her, was recovering. Into her pale cheeks came a new
+blossoming and into the smile of her lips and eyes a new light that
+was serene and triumphant. She had been too happy to die.
+
+While the summer waned and the beauties of autumn began to kindle, the
+young wife grew strong, and her husband, seemingly, had nothing to do
+except to wander about the hills with her and discover in her new
+charms. Neighborly saws and hammers were ringing now as his place was
+transformed from its simple condition to the "hugest log house on
+seven creeks."
+
+In some respects he wished that his factitious indolence were real,
+for he felt no pride in the occult fashion in which he was directing
+the activities of his henchmen. And yet a few months ago this progress
+would have been food for satisfaction--almost triumph.
+
+His plans, as outlined to Martin Harrison were by no means at a
+standstill. They were going forward with an adroit drawing in and
+knitting together of scattered strands, and the warp and woof of this
+weaving were coming into definite order and pattern.
+
+The dual necessity was: first to slip through a legislature which was
+supposedly under the domination of American Oil and Gas, a charter
+which should wrest from that concern the sweet fruits of monopoly, and
+secondly, to secure at paltry prices the land options that would give
+the prospective pipe line its right of way.
+
+As this campaign had been originally mapped and devised it had not
+been simple, but now it was complicated by a new and difficult
+element. In those first dreams of conquest the native had been no more
+considered than the red Indian was considered in the minds of the new
+world settlers. Spurrier himself had brushed lightly aside this aspect
+of the affair. Every game has and must have its "suckers." And their
+sorry destiny it is to be despoiled. Now the very term that he had
+used in his thoughts, brought with it an amendment. It is not every
+game that must have its suckers but every bunco game.
+
+Martin Harrison did not know it, but his lieutenant had redrawn his
+plans, and redrawn them in a fashion which the chief would have
+regarded as insubordinate, impractical and sentimental.
+
+Spurrier intended that when the smoke cleared from the field upon
+which the forces of Harrison and those of Trabue had been embattled,
+the Harrison banners should be victoriously afloat and the Trabue
+standards dust trailed. But also he intended that the native
+land-holders, upon whom both combatants had looked as mere unfortunate
+onlookers raked by the cross fire of opposing artillery, should emerge
+as real and substantial gainers.
+
+Of late the man had not escaped the penalty of one who faces
+responsibility and wields power. He had abandoned as puerile his first
+impulse, after his marriage, to throw up his whole stewardship to the
+Wall Street masters. That would have amounted only to an ostentation
+of virtue which would have surrendered the situation into the
+merciless hands of A. O. and G., and would have left the mountain folk
+unprotected.
+
+Yet he could not escape the realization that he would stand with all
+the seeming of a traitor and a plunderer to any of his simple friends
+who learned of his activities--for as yet he could confide to no one
+the plans he was maturing.
+
+It was when the refurnished and enlarged place had been completed that
+the neighbors came from valley, slope, and cove to give their blessing
+at the housewarming which was also, belatedly, the "infaring."
+
+That homely, pioneer observance with which the groom brings home his
+bride, had not been possible after the wedding, but now Aunt Erie
+Toppitt had come over and prepared entertainment on a lavish if homely
+scale since Glory was not yet well.
+
+To the husband as he stood greeting the guests who arrived in jeans
+and hodden-gray, in bright shawls and calicoes, came the feeling of
+contrast and unreality, as though this were all part of some play
+quaintly and exaggeratedly staged to reflect a medieval period. In the
+drawing rooms of Martin Harrison and his confreres he had moved
+through a social atmosphere, quiet, contained, and reflecting such a
+life as the dramatist uses for background in a comedy of manners.
+Closing his eyes now he could see himself as he had been when,
+starting out for such an entertainment, he had paused before the
+cheval glass in his club bedroom, adding a straightening touch to his
+white tie, adjusting the set of his waistcoat and casting a critical
+eye over the impeccable black and white of his evening dress. Here,
+flannel shirted and booted, corduroy breeched and tanned brown, he
+stood by the door watching the arrival of guests who seemed to have
+stepped out of pioneer America or Elizabethan England. There were
+women riding mules or tramping long roads on foot and trailing
+processions of children who could not be left at home; men feeling
+overdressed and uncomfortable because they had donned coats and
+brushed their hats; even wagons plodding slowly behind yokes of oxen
+and one man riding a steer in lieu of a horse!
+
+So they came to give Godspeed to his marriage--and they were the only
+people on God's green earth who thought of him in any terms of regard
+save that regard which sprung from self-interest in his ability to
+serve beyond others!
+
+Men who were blood enemies met here as friends, because his roof
+covered a zone of common friendship and under its protection their
+hatreds could no more intrude on such a day than could pursuit in the
+Middle Ages follow beyond the sanctuary gates of a cathedral. Inside
+sounded the minors of the native fiddlers and the scrape of feet
+"running the sets" of quaint square dances.
+
+The labors of preparation had been onerous. Aunt Erie stood at the
+open door constituting, with Spurrier and his wife, a "receiving line"
+of three, and her wrinkled old face bore an affectation of morose
+exhaustion as to each guest she made the same declaration:
+
+"I hopes an' prays ye all enjoys this hyar party--Gawd knows _my_
+back's broke."
+
+But Spurrier had not in his letters to Harrison mentioned his
+marriage, and to Vivien he had not written at all. He thought they
+would hardly understand, and he preferred to make his announcement
+when he stood face to face with them, relying on the force of his own
+personality to challenge any criticism and proclaim his own
+independence of action. Just now there was no virtue in needlessly
+antagonizing his chief.
+
+Among the guests who came to that housewarming was one chance visitor
+who was not expected. He came because the people under whose roof he
+was being sheltered, had "fetched him along," and he was Wharton, the
+man whose purpose hereabouts had set gossip winging aforetime.
+
+It seemed to some of the local visitors that despite his entire
+courtesy, Spurrier did not evince any profound liking for this other
+"furriner," and since they had come to accept their host as a
+trustworthy oracle, they took the tip and were prepared to dislike
+Wharton, too.
+
+That evening, while blind Joe Givins fiddled, and dancers "ran their
+sets" on the smooth, new floor, a group of men gathered on the porch
+outside and smoked. Among them for a time were both Spurrier and
+Wharton.
+
+The latter raised something of a laugh when he confidently predicted
+that the oil prosperity, for all its former collapse and present
+paralysis, was not permanently dead.
+
+"The world needs oil and there's oil here," he declared with unctuous
+conviction. "Men who are willing to gamble on that proposition will
+win out in the end."
+
+"Stranger," responded Uncle Jimmy Litchfield, taking his pipestem from
+between his teeth and spitting contemptuously at the earth, "ye sees,
+settin' right hyar before ye a man that 'lowed he was a millionaire
+one time, 'count of this hyar same oil ye're discoursin' so hopeful
+about. Thet man's me. I'd been dirt-pore all my days, oftentimes
+hurtin' fer ther plum' needcessities of life. I'm mighty nigh thet
+pore still."
+
+"Did you strike oil in the boom days?" demanded Wharton as he bent
+eagerly forward.
+
+"I owned me a farm, them days, on t'other side ther mounting," went on
+the narrator, "an' them oil men came along an' wanted ter buy ther
+rights offen me."
+
+"Did you sell?"
+
+Uncle Billy chuckled. "They up an' offered me a royalty of one-eighth
+of ther whole production. They proved hit up ter me by 'rithmetic an'
+algebry how hit would make me rich over an' above all avarice--but I
+said no, I wouldn't take no eighth. I stud out fer a _sixteenth_ by
+crickety!"
+
+Both Spurrier and Wharton smothered their laughter as the latter
+inquired gravely: "Did they play one of them royalty games."
+
+"They done better'n thet. They said, 'We'll give ye two sixteenths,'
+an' thet's when I 'lowed I was es good es a Pierpont Morgan. I
+wouldn't nuver hurt fer no needcessity no more."
+
+"And what was the outcome of it all?" asked Wharton.
+
+Uncle Jimmy's face darkened. "The come-uppance of ther whole blame
+business war thet a lot of pore devils what hed done been content with
+poverty found hit twice as hard ter go on bein' pore because they'd
+got to entertainin' crazy dreams ther same as me. Any man thet talks
+oil ter me now's got ter buy outright an' pay me spot cash. I ain't
+playin' no more of them royalty games."
+
+"That's fair enough," said Wharton. "But it seems to me that you
+people are taking the wrong tack. Because the boom collapsed once, you
+are shutting the door against the possibility of its coming again--and
+it's going to come again."
+
+"A man kin git stung once," volunteered another native, "an' hit's
+jest tough luck or bewitchment. Ef he gits stung twicet on ther same
+trumpery, he ain't no more then a plum', daft fool."
+
+Wharton lighted a fresh cigar and turned toward Spurrier.
+
+"Mr. Spurrier here, is a man you all know and trust----" he hazarded.
+"I understand that he's seen oil fields in the West and Mexico. I
+wonder what he thinks about it all."
+
+On the dark porch Spurrier looked at his visitor for a few minutes in
+silence and his first reply was a quiet question.
+
+"Did I tell you I'd seen oil fields in operation?" he inquired, and
+Wharton stammered a little.
+
+"I was under that impression," he said. "Possibly I am wrong."
+
+"No--you are right enough," answered the other evenly. "I just didn't
+remember mentioning it. What is your question exactly?"
+
+"If I have a hunch that oil holds a future here and am willing to back
+that hunch, don't you think I am acting wisely to do it?"
+
+The host sat silent while he seemed to weigh the question with
+judicial deliberation, and during the pause he realized that the
+little group of men were waiting intently for his utterance as for the
+voice of the Delphic oracle.
+
+"I have seen oil operation and oil development," he said at last. "I
+have lived here for some time and know the history of the former boom,
+but I have not bought a foot of ground. That ought to make my opinion
+clear."
+
+"Then you don't believe in the future?"
+
+"Don't you think, Mr. Wharton," inquired Spurrier coolly and, his
+listeners thought, with a shaded note of contempt, "that what I've
+already said, answers your question? If I _did_ believe in it,
+wouldn't I be likely to seek investment at the present stage of land
+prices?"
+
+John Spurrier was glad that it was dark out there. He knew that the
+mountain men awaited his judgment as something carrying the sanction
+of finality and he felt like a Judas. He himself knew that back of his
+seeming betrayal was a determination to safeguard their rights, but
+the whole game of maneuvering and dissembling was as impossible to
+play proudly as it would have been to undertake the duties of a spy.
+
+"I'll admit," observed Wharton modestly, "that if I lost some money,
+it wouldn't break me--and I'm a stubborn man when I get a hunch. Well,
+I'm going in to watch them dance."
+
+He rose and went indoors and Uncle Jimmy, when he put a question
+acted, in effect, as spokesman for them all.
+
+"What does ye think of thet feller, Mr. Spurrier?"
+
+"I think," said the opportunity hound crisply, "that he's a fool, and
+Scripture says, 'a fool and his money are soon parted.'"
+
+"An' ef he seeks ter buy?"
+
+"Sell--by all means--if the price is right!"
+
+The next day when they were alone Glory said:
+
+"I don't like that man Wharton. He's got sneaky eyes."
+
+Her husband laughed. "I can't say that he struck me pleasantly," he
+admitted. "We talked oil out on the porch. He was the optimist and I
+the pessimist."
+
+And it was to happen that the first rift in Glory's lute of happiness
+was to come out of Wharton's agency, though she did not recognize it
+as his.
+
+For in these times, despite a happiness that made her sing through the
+days, something like the panic of stage fright was settling over her:
+a thing yet of the future, but some day to be faced.
+
+So long as life ran quietly, like the shaded streams that went down
+until they made the rivers of the greater and outer world, she was
+confident mistress of her life and had no forebodings. Spurrier
+loved her and she worshiped him--but out there beyond the ridges,
+the activities of his larger life were calling--or would call. Then
+they must leave here and she began to dread the thousand little
+mistakes and the humiliations that might come to him because of her
+unfamiliarity with that life. Since the bearings of achievement are
+delicate, she even feared that she might throw out of gear and
+poise the whole machinery of his success, and in secret Glory was
+poring over absurd books on etiquette and deportment. That these
+stereotyped instructions would only hamper her own naturally plastic
+spirit, she did not know when she read and reread chapters headed,
+"How to Enter a Drawing-room" and "Hints upon Refined Conversation."
+
+That Spurrier would suggest going without her to any field into which
+his work called him, she did not dream. That he would leave her to
+wait for him here, as the companion only of his backwoods hours, her
+pride never contemplated.
+
+Yet in the fall Spurrier did just that thing, and to the letter which
+induced its doing was signed the name of George Wharton. The latter
+wrote:
+
+ "We must begin to lay out lines for work with the next legislature.
+ There are people in Louisville and Lexington whom you should meet
+ and talk with. I think you had better make your headquarters at
+ one of the Louisville clubs, and when you get here I will put you
+ in touch with the proper bearings."
+
+That much might have puzzled any of the mountaineers who had taken
+their own cues from Spurrier's thinly concealed manner of hostility to
+Wharton, but the last part of the letter would have explained that,
+too:
+
+ "The little game down at your house was nothing short of masterly.
+ Your acting was superb, and though you were the star, I think I
+ may claim to have played up to you well. The device of gaining
+ their confidence so that, of their own accord, they turned to you
+ for counsel--and then seeming to gloom on me when I talked oil,
+ was pretty subtle. I could openly preach buying and instead of
+ turning away from me in suspicion, they fell on me for a sucker.
+ I--and others acting for me--have, as the result, secured a good
+ part of the options we need--and you appear to be of all men, the
+ least interested."
+
+Spurrier read the thing twice, then crushed it savagely in his
+clenched hand and cursed under his breath. "The damned jackals," he
+muttered. "That's the pack I'm running with--or rather I'm running
+with them and against them at once."
+
+But when Spurrier had kissed Glory good-by and she had waved a smiling
+farewell, she turned back into her house and covered her face with her
+hands.
+
+"I don't want to believe it," she declared. "I won't believe it--but
+it looks like he's ashamed to take me with him. Not that I blame
+him--only--only I've got to make myself over. He's _got_ to be proud
+of me!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+When he came back for a short stay in the hills between periods of
+quiet but strenuous affairs in Louisville, he brought gifts that
+delighted Glory and a devotion that made her forget her misgivings.
+She had him back, and he found the house expressing in many small ways
+a taste and discrimination which brought to him a flush of pleasurable
+surprise. Glory knew the menace that hung over Spurrier. She knew of
+the malevolent and elusive enmities to which her own life had so
+nearly become forfeit, and the old terror of the mountain woman for
+her man became the cross that she must carry with her. Because of her
+militant father's antagonisms she had been inured from childhood to
+the taut moment of suspense that came with every voice raised at the
+gate and every knock sounding on the door.
+
+There was an element of possible threat in each arrival. She had
+become, as one has need to be, under such circumstances, somewhat
+fatalistic as to the old dangers. Now that the fear embraced her
+husband as well as her father, the philosophy which she had cultivated
+failed her. Yet their happiness was so strong that it threw off these
+things and drew upon the treasury of the present.
+
+Spurrier, who talked little of his own dangers, was far from
+forgetting. His suspicion of Colby strengthened, and he looked forward
+to the day as inevitable when there must be a reckoning between them,
+which would not be a final reckoning unless one of them died, and for
+that encounter he went grimly prepared.
+
+One thing puzzled him. Of Sim Colby he had thought as a somewhat
+solitary character, whose relations with his neighbors, though
+amicable, were yet rather detached. He had seemed to have few
+intimates, yet if he had led this attack, he was palpably able to
+muster at his back a considerable force of men for a desperate
+project. That meant that the infection of hatred against himself had
+spread from a single enmity to the number, at least, of the men who
+had joined in the battle, and it had been a battle in which more than
+one had fallen. Before, he had recognized a single enemy. Henceforth
+he must acknowledge plural enmities.
+
+And along that line of reasoning the next step followed logically.
+
+Who would suggest himself as so natural a leader for a murder
+enterprise as Sam Mosebury, whose record was established in such
+matters? Certainly if this suspicion were well-founded it would be
+safest to know.
+
+Spurrier, despite all he had heard of Sam Mosebury, was reluctant to
+entertain the thought. The man might be, as Cappeze painted him, the
+head and front of an infamously vicious system, yet there was
+something engaging and likable about him, which made it hard to
+believe that for hire or any motive not nearly personal he would have
+conspired to do murder.
+
+So among the many claims upon Spurrier's attention was the effort to
+find out where Sam Mosebury stood, and it was while he was thinking
+of that problem that he encountered the object of his thoughts in
+person. The spot was one distant from his own house. Indeed it was
+near Colby's cabin--still apparently empty--that the meeting took
+place.
+
+The opportunity hound had made several trips over there of late,
+because he required to know something of Colby's activities, and, of
+course, when he came he observed a surreptitious caution which sought
+to guard against any hint leaking through to Colby of his own
+surveillance. He firmly believed that Sim was "hiding out," and that
+despite the seeming emptiness of his habitation he was not far away.
+
+So it was Spurrier, the law-abiding man, who was skulking in the
+laurel while the notorious Mosebury walked the highway "upstanding"
+and openly--and the man in the thicket stooped low to escape
+discovery. But his foot slipped in the tangle and a rotting branch
+cracked under it, giving out a sound which brought Mosebury to an
+abrupt halt with his head warily raised and his rifle poised. He, too,
+had enemies and must walk in caution.
+
+There had been times when Sam's life had hinged on just such trivial
+things as the snapping of a twig, and now, peering through the
+thickets Spurrier saw a flinty hardness come into his eyes.
+
+Sam stepped quietly but swiftly to the roadside and sheltered himself
+behind a rock. He said no word, but he waited, and Spurrier could feel
+that his eyes were boring into his own place of concealment with a
+scrutiny that went over it studiously and keenly, foot by foot.
+
+He hurriedly considered what plan to pursue. If Mosebury was in
+league with Colby, to show himself would be almost as undesirable a
+thing as to show himself to Colby direct. Yet if he stayed there with
+the guilty seeming of one in hiding, Mosebury would end by locating
+him--and might assume that the hiding was itself a proof of enmity. He
+decided to declare himself so he shouted boldly: "It's John Spurrier,"
+and rose a moment later into view.
+
+Then he came forward, thinking fast, and when the two met in the road,
+mendaciously said:
+
+"I guess it looks queer for a man with a clear conscience to take to
+the timber that way, Mr. Mosebury--but you may remember that I was
+recently attacked, and I don't know who did it."
+
+Mosebury nodded. "I'd be ther last man ter fault ye fer thet," he
+concurred. "I was doin' nigh erbout ther same thing myself, but I
+didn't know ye often fared over this way, Mr. Spurrier."
+
+"No, it's off my beat." Spurrier was now lying fluently in what he
+fancied was to be a game of wits with a man who might have led the
+siege upon his house. "I was just going over to Stamp Carter's place.
+He wanted me to advise him about a property deal."
+
+For a space Sam stood gravely thoughtful, and when he spoke his words
+astonished the other.
+
+"Seein' we _hev_ met up, accidental-like, I've got hit in head ter
+tell ye somethin' deespite hit ain't rightly none of my business."
+Again he paused, and it was plain that he was laboring under
+embarrassment, so Spurrier inquired:
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Of course, I've done heered ther talk erbout yore bein' attacked.
+Don't ye really suspicion no special man?"
+
+"Suspicion is one thing, Mr. Mosebury, and knowledge is another."
+
+"Yes, thet's Bible truth, an' yit I wouldn't marvel none yore
+suspicions went over thet-away--an' came up not fur off from hyar." He
+nodded his head toward Sim Colby's house, and Spurrier, who was
+steeled to fence, gave no indication of astonishment. He only
+inquired:
+
+"Why should Mr. Colby hold a grudge against me?"
+
+"I ain't got no power of knowin' thet." Mosebury spoke dryly. "An' es
+I said afore, hit ain't none of my business nohow--still I does know
+thet ye've been over hyar some sev'ral times, an' every time ye came,
+ye came quietlike es ef ye sought ter see Sim afore Sim seed _you_."
+
+"You think I've been here before?"
+
+"No, sir, I don't think hit. I knows hit. I seed ye."
+
+"Saw me!"
+
+"Yes, sir, seed ye. Hit's my business to keep a peeled eye in my
+face."
+
+So Spurrier's careful secrecy had been transparent after all, and if
+this man was an ally of Colby's, Colby already shared his knowledge.
+More than ever Spurrier felt sure that his suspicions of the man whose
+eyes had changed color, were grounded in truth.
+
+"Howsomever," went on Mosebury quietly, "I ain't nuver drapped no hint
+ter Sim erbout hit. I ain't, gin'rally speakin', no meddler, but ef so
+be I kin forewarn ye ergainst harm, hit would pleasure me ter do
+hit."
+
+There was a cordial ring of sincerity in the manner and voice, which
+it was hard to doubt, so the other said gravely:
+
+"Thank you. I did suspect Colby, but I have no proof."
+
+"I don't know whether Sim grudges ye or not," continued Mosebury. "He
+ain't nuver named ther matter ter me nowise, guise, ner fashion--but
+Sim _wasn't with ther crowd thet went atter ye_. He didn't even know
+nothin' erbout hit. Sometimes a man comes to grief by barkin' up ther
+wrong tree."
+
+Again suspicion came to the front. This savored strongly of an attempt
+to alibi a confederate, and Spurrier inquired bluntly:
+
+"Since you broached this subject, I think it's fair to ask you another
+question. You tell me who _didn't_ come. Do you know who _did_?"
+
+For a moment Mosebury's face remained blank, then he spoke stiffly.
+
+"I said I'd be glad ter warn ye--but I didn't say I war willin' ter
+name no names. Thet would be mighty nigh ther same thing es takin'
+yore quarrel onto myself."
+
+"Then that's all you can tell me--that it wasn't Colby?"
+
+"Mr. Spurrier," rejoined the mountaineer seriously, "ye _knows_
+jedgmatically an' p'intedly thet ye've got enemies that means
+business. I ain't nuver seed a man yet in these hills what belittled a
+peril sich as yourn thet didn't pay fer hit--with his life."
+
+"I don't belittle it, but what can I do?"
+
+Sam Mosebury stood with a gaze that wandered off over the broken sky
+line. So grave was his demeanor that when his words came they carried
+the shock of inconsistent absurdity.
+
+"Thar's a witch woman, thet dwells nigh hyar. Ef I war in youre stid,
+I'd git her ter read ther signs fer me an' tell me what I had need
+guard ergainst most."
+
+"I'm afraid," answered Spurrier, repressing his contempt with
+difficulty, "I'm too skeptical to pin my faith to signs and omens."
+
+Again the mountain man was looking gravely across the hills, but for a
+moment the eyes had flashed humorously.
+
+"I reckon we don't need ter cavil over thet, Mr. Spurrier. I don't sot
+no master store by witchcraft foolery my ownself. Mebby ye recalls
+thet oncet I told ye a leetle story erbout my cat an' my mockin'
+bird."
+
+"Yes," Spurrier began to understand now. "You sometimes speak in
+allegory. But this time I don't get the meaning."
+
+"Waal, hit's this fashion. I _don't_ know who ther men war thet tried
+ter kill ye. Thet's God's truth, but I've got my own notions an' mebby
+they ain't fur wrong. I ain't goin' ter name no names--but ef so be ye
+wants ter talk ter ther witch woman, _I'll_ hev speech with her fust.
+What comes outen magic kain't hardly make me no enemies--but mebby hit
+_mout_ enable ye ter discern somethin' thet would profit ye to a
+master degree."
+
+Spurrier stood looking into the face of the other and then impulsively
+he thrust out his hand.
+
+"Mr. Mosebury," he said, "I'll be honest with you. I half suspected
+you--because I'd met you at Colby's and I knew you hated Cappeze. I
+owe you an apology, and I'm glad to know I was wrong."
+
+"Mr. Spurrier," replied the other, "ef I _hed_ attempted yore life I
+wouldn't hev failed, an', moreover, I don't hate old Cappeze. Ther man
+thet wins out don't hev no need ter harbor hatreds. He hates me
+because he sought ter penitentiary me--an' failed."
+
+"When shall we go to consult the oracle?" asked Spurrier, and Mosebury
+shook his head.
+
+"I reckon mebby I mout seem over cautious--even timorouslike ter ye,
+in bein' so heedful erbout keepin' outen sight in this matter," he
+said. "But them thet knows my record, knows I _ain't_, jest ter say
+easy skeered. You go home an' wait an' afore long I'll write ye a
+letter, tellin' ye when ter go an' how ter go. Then ye kin make ther
+journey by yoreself."
+
+"That looks like common sense to me," declared the other, and he went
+home, forgetting the witch woman on the way, because of the other and
+lovelier witchcraft that he knew awaited him in his own house.
+
+Spurrier, despite his dangers, responsibilities, and conflict of
+purposes, was happy. He was happy in a simpler and less complicated
+way than he had ever been before, because his heart was in the
+ascendancy, and Glory, he thought, was "livin' up to her name."
+
+If he could have thrust some other things into the same dark cupboard
+of half-contemptuous philosophy to which he relegated his own dangers,
+he might have been even happier. But a mentor who had rarely troubled
+him in past years became insistent and audible through the
+silences--speaking with the voice of conscience.
+
+He remembered telling Vivian Harrison, over the consommé, that pearls
+did not make oysters happy and that these illiterates of the hills
+might have hidden wealth in the shells of their isolation and gain
+nothing more than the oyster. Indeed, he had thought of them no more
+than the pearl fisherman thinks of the low form of life whose diseased
+state gives birth to treasure. They inhabited a terrain over which he
+and the forces of American Oil and Gas were to do battle, and like
+birds nesting on a battlefield, they must take their chances.
+
+It was no longer possible to maintain that callous indifference. These
+men, to whom he could not, without disclosing his strategy and
+defeating his purpose, tell the truth, had befriended him.
+
+They were human and in many ways lovable. If he succeeded, they would,
+upon his own advice, have sold their birthrights.
+
+However, he gave an anodyne to his conscience with the thought that if
+victory came to him there would be wealth enough for all to share.
+Having won his conquest, he could be generous, rendering back as a
+gift a part of what should have been theirs by right. The means of
+doing this he had worked out but he could confide to no one. He had
+embarked as cold bloodedly as Martin Harrison had ever started on any
+of the enterprises that had made him a money baron. Indeed it had been
+Spurrier who had fired the chief with interest in the scheme, and if
+the thing were culpable the culpability had been his own. Then he had
+come to realize that in the human equation was a factor that he had
+ignored: the rights of the ignorant native. He had fought down that
+recognition as the voice of sentimentality until at last he had no
+longer been able to fight it down. Between those two states of mind
+had been a war of mental agony and conflict, of doubt, of vacillation.
+The conclusion had not been easily reached. Now he meant to carry on
+the war he had undertaken unaltered as to its objective of winning a
+victory for Harrison over Trabue and the myrmidons of A. O. and G.,
+but he meant to bring in that victory in such a guise that the native
+would share in the division of the spoils. He knew that Harrison, if
+he had an intimation of such an amendment of plan, would sharply veto
+it, but when the thing was done it would be too late to object--and
+meanwhile Spurrier regarded himself no less the trustee of the
+mountain-land holder than the servant of Martin Harrison. He was
+willing to shoulder, out of his own stipulated profits, the chief
+burden of this division, and in the end he would have driven a better
+bargain for his simple friends than they could have hoped to attain
+for themselves.
+
+Yet in him was being reborn an element of character, which had long
+been repressed.
+
+And there in the other section of the State where political
+connections had to be established and the skids of intrigue greased,
+much stood waiting to be done. Already most of what could be
+accomplished here on the ground had progressed to a point from which
+the end could be seen.
+
+John Spurrier, the seeming idler, could control almost all the
+territory needful for his right of way--all except a tract belonging
+to Brother Bud Hawkins, cautiously left for the last because he
+wished to handle that himself and did not yet wish to appear in the
+negotiations.
+
+In the intricate workings of such a project by a campaign of secrecy,
+the matter was not only one of acquiring a certain expanse of a
+definite sort of property in a given region, but of acquiring holdings
+that commanded the only practicable route through passable gaps. This
+special lie and trend of ground he thought of and spoke of, in his
+business correspondence, as "the neck of the bottle." When he held it,
+it mattered little who else had liquid in the bottle. It could come
+out only through his neck and, therefore, under his terms. Yet even
+when that was achieved, there remained the need of the corkscrew
+without which he himself could make no use of his range-wide jug of
+crude petroleum. That corkscrew was the charter to be had from a
+legislature where American Oil and Gas was supposed to have sentinels
+at the door.
+
+He could not take Glory with him on these trips, because Glory was of
+the hills, and loyal to the hills--and he could not yet take the
+natives into his confidence. For the same reason he could give her
+only business reasons of the most general and evasive character for
+leaving her behind.
+
+But the work that Spurrier had done so far was only the primary
+section of a broader design. What he had accomplished affected the oil
+field on the remote side of Hemlock Mountain, the part of the field
+that the earlier boom had never touched, and his entire project looked
+to a totality embracing also the "nigh" side, where his operations
+still existed only in projection.
+
+It was while this situation stood that there came to him one day two
+letters calling upon him for two irreconcilable courses of action. One
+was from Louisville, urging him to return there at once to busy
+himself with political plannings; the other was a rude scrawl from Sam
+Mosebury setting an appointment with the "witch woman."
+
+Spurrier was reluctant to go to Louisville. It meant laying aside the
+little paradise of the present for the putting on of heavy harness. It
+necessitated another excuse to Glory, and more than that, being away
+from Glory. Yet that was the bugle call of his mission, and he fancied
+that whatever threatened him here in the hills was a menace of local
+effect. If that were true he would not need the warning which the
+unaccountable desperado, Sam Mosebury, meant to relay to him through
+channels of alleged magic, until he came back.
+
+Therefore, the witch could wait. But in that detail Spurrier erred,
+and when he answered the summons that called him to town without his
+occult consultation, he unwittingly discarded a warning which he
+needed there no less than in the hills.
+
+He was called upon to choose a turning without pause, and he followed
+his business instincts. It happened that instinct misled him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+One afternoon Trabue, the unadvertised dictator of American Oil and
+Gas, sat with several of his close subordinates in a conference that
+had to do with Martin Harrison, the man he assumed to ignore.
+
+"Unless some unforeseen thing sends oil soaring," ventured Oliver
+Morris, "this fellow Spurrier is having his trouble for his pains. My
+idea is that he's seeking to tease us into counter activity--and trail
+after us in the profits."
+
+"And if something _should_ send oil soaring," crisply countered
+Cosgrove, "he'd have us distanced with a runaway start."
+
+"Who is this man Spurrier?" demanded Trabue himself. "What does our
+research department report?"
+
+"He's a protégé of Martin Harrison's."
+
+Trabue appeared to find the words illuminating, and a shrewd irony
+glinted in his brief smile.
+
+"If he's Harrison's man, he's out to knife me--and he has resources at
+his back. Tell me more about him."
+
+Cosgrove took from his portfolio a neatly typed memorandum, and read
+from it aloud:
+
+ Former army officer who gained the sobriquet of "Plunger"
+ Spurrier: Court-martialed and convicted upon charge of murder,
+ and pardoned through efforts of Senator Beverly. Associated with
+ various enterprises as a general investigator and initiative
+ expert. Rumor has it that Harrison is grooming him as his own
+ successor.
+
+"If his reputation is that of a plunger," argued Morris, "my guess is
+that he's playing a long-shot bet for a killing."
+
+"And you guess wrong. If Harrison has picked this fellow to wear his
+own mantle, the man is more than a gambling tout. It is only lunacy to
+underestimate him or dismiss him with contempt."
+
+Cosgrove nodded his concurrence and amplified it. "In my judgment he's
+something of a genius with a chrome-nickeled nerve, but he's adroit as
+well as bold. He has operated only through others and has kept himself
+inconspicuous. Except for an accident, we should have had no warning
+of his activities."
+
+"If he were to get bitten by a rattlesnake," growled Morris savagely,
+"it would be a lucky thing for us. Of course, we might beguile him
+into our own camp."
+
+Trabue shook his head in a decisive negation.
+
+"That would only notify him that we recognize his effort and fear it.
+If the game's big enough, we don't want him." He paused, then added
+with a grim facetiousness: "As for your other suggestion, we have no
+rattlesnakes in our equipment."
+
+The dynamic-minded master of strategy sat balancing a pen-holder on
+his extended forefinger for a few moments, then he inquired as if in
+afterthought: "By the way, I feel curious as to how the tip came to us
+that this conspiracy was on foot. You say that except for an accident
+we should not have known it."
+
+Cosgrove smiled. "It came to this office through the regular channels
+of our local agencies--and I didn't inquire searchingly into the
+details. I gathered, though, that the trail was picked up by a sort of
+information tout--a fellow who was hurt and compromised a damage suit
+against us. It seems that he is supposed to be blind--but he could
+nonetheless see well enough to read some memoranda that chanced to
+come his way." The gentleman cleared his throat almost apologetically
+as he added: "As I remarked I didn't learn the particulars. I merely
+took the information for what it might be worth, and set our men to
+watching."
+
+"I see," Trabue made dry acknowledgment. "And what is being done
+toward watching him?"
+
+"I understand we have a man there who is assuming an enmity toward us
+and who is ostensibly helping Spurrier to build up political
+influence."
+
+"I see," said Trabue once more, with even a shade more dryness in his
+voice.
+
+That conversation had taken place quite a long while before the
+present, but it set into quiet motion the wheels of a large and
+powerful organization.
+
+The knowledge that John Spurrier was objectionable to A. O. and G. had
+filtered through to more local, yet confidential, officials, and
+through them to "men in the field," and it is characteristic of such
+delegations of authority, that each department suits the case referred
+to it to the practical workings of its own environment.
+
+Gentlemen of high business standing in lower Broadway could permit
+themselves no violence of language, beyond the intimation that this
+upstart was a nuisance. Translated into the more candid brutality of
+camp-following parasites in the wildness of the hills, that mild
+declaration became: "The man needs killin'. Let's git him!"
+
+Now, Spurrier found that the visit to Louisville and Lexington, which
+had promised to be the matter of weeks, must stretch itself into
+months, and that until the convening and adjournment of the assembly
+itself, his presence would be as requisite as that of a ship's officer
+on the bridge. In one respect he was gratified. American Oil and Gas
+seemed serenely unsuspicious of any danger. Vigilance seemed lapsed.
+Those men whose duty it was to watch the corporation's interest and to
+hold in line the needed lawmakers, appeared to regard legislative
+protection as a thing bought and paid for and safe from trespass.
+
+And Spurrier, knowing better, was secretly triumphant, but without
+Glory he was far from happy.
+
+Had he known what influences were at work with cancerlike corrosions
+upon her loyalty, what food was nourishing her anxiety, he would have
+stolen the time to go to her. Hers was an anxiety which she did not
+acknowledge. Even to herself she denied its existence and against any
+outside suggestion of inner hurt pride would have risen in valiant
+resentment.
+
+But in her heart it talked on in whispers that she could not hush. At
+night she would waken suddenly, wide-eyed with apprehension and seek
+to reassure herself by the emphasis of her avowals: "He's _not_
+ashamed of me. He's not leaving me because of that! He's a big man
+with big business, and some day he'll take me with him, everywhere!"
+
+When old Cappeze, a man not given to unreflecting or careless speech,
+flatly questioned: "Glory--why doesn't John ever take you with him?"
+she flinched and fell into exculpations that limped.
+
+The old man was quick to note the pained rawness of the nerve he had
+touched, and he began talking of something else, but when he was alone
+once more his old eyes took on that fanatic absorption that came of
+his deep love for his daughter, and he shook his head dubiously over
+her future.
+
+One day a neighborhood woman came by Glory's house and found her
+standing at the door. Tassie Plumford neither claimed nor was credited
+with powers of magic, but she, too, might have been called a "witch
+woman." In curdled disposition and shrewishness of tongue, she merited
+the title.
+
+"Waal, waal, Glory Cappeze," she drawled in her rasping, nasal voice.
+"Yore man hes done built ye a right monstrous fine house, hyar, ain't
+he?"
+
+"Come in and see it, Mrs. Plumford," invited the young wife. "But my
+name's Glory Spurrier now--not Cappeze."
+
+In the gesture with which the woman drew her shawl tighter about her
+lean shoulders, she contrived to convey the affront of suspicion and
+disbelief.
+
+"No, I reckon I ain't got ther power ter tarry now," she declined. "I
+don't git much time fer gaddin', an' be yore name whatsoever hit may,
+there's them hyar-abouts es 'lows yore man lavishes everything on ye
+but his own self. He's away from ye most of his time, albeit I reckon
+he's got car fare aplenty fer two."
+
+Glory stiffened, and without a word turned her back on her ungracious
+visitor. She went into the house with the tilted chin of one who
+disdains to answer insolent slanders, but in the tenderness of her
+heart the barb had nonetheless sunk deep. So people were saying that!
+
+Over at Aunt Erie Toppitt's the shrew again halted--and there it
+seemed that she did have time to "tarry," and roll the morsel of
+gossip under tongue.
+
+"Mebby she's ther furriner's lawful wife an' then ergin mebby she
+ain't nuthin' but his woman," opined Tassie Plumford. "Hit ain't none
+of my business nohow, but a godly woman hes call ter be heedful whar
+she visits at."
+
+"A godly woman!" Aunt Erie's tone stung like a hornet attack. "What
+has godliness got ter do with _you_, anyhow, Tassie Plumford? The
+records of ther high cote over at Carnettsville hes got _yore_ record
+fer a witness thet swears ter perjury."
+
+Mrs. Plumford trembled with rage but, prudently, she elected to ignore
+the reference to her legal status.
+
+"Ef they was rightfully married," she retorted, "hit didn't come ter
+pass twell old man Cappeze diskivered her alone with him--in his
+house--jest ther two of 'em--an' they wouldn't nuver hev _been_
+diskivered savin' an' exceptin' fer ther attack on ther furriner." In
+the self-satisfaction of one who has scored, she added: "I'll be
+farin' on now, I reckon."
+
+"An' don't nuver come back," stormed Aunt Erie, whose occasional
+tantrums were as famous as her usual good humor. "Unless ye seeks ter
+hev ther dawgs sot on ye."
+
+While the spiteful and forked little tongues of gossip were doing
+their serpent best to poison what had promised to be an Eden for Glory
+at home in the hills, the husband who was charged with neglecting her
+was miserable in town.
+
+His work had been the breath of life to him until now, bringing the
+zestful delight of prevailing over stubborn difficulties, and building
+bridges that should carry him across to his goal of financial power.
+Now he found it a necessity that exiled him from a place to which he
+had come half-contemptuously and to which his converted thoughts
+turned as the prayers of the true believer turn toward Mecca.
+
+He who had been urban in habit and taste found nothing in the city to
+satisfy him. The smoke-filled air seemed to stifle him and fill him
+with a yearning for the clean, spirited sweep of the winds across the
+slopes. He knew that these physical aspects were trivial things he
+would have swept aside had they not stood as emblems for a longing of
+the heart itself--a nostalgia born of his new life and love.
+
+But all the plans that had built one on the other toward a definite
+end of making an oil field of the barren hills were drawing to a focus
+that could not be neglected. He could no more leave these things
+undone than could his idol Napoleon have abandoned his headquarters
+before Austerlitz, and the sitting of the legislature could not be
+changed to suit his wishes. Neither could the lining up of forces that
+were to guide his legislation to its passage be left unwatched.
+
+So the absence that he had thought would be brief, or at worst a
+series of short trips away from home, was prolonging itself into a
+winter in Louisville and Frankfort. He found himself as warily busy as
+a collie herding a panicky flock, and as soon as one danger was met
+and averted, a new one called upon him from a new and unsuspected
+quarter.
+
+Much of the deviousness of playing underground politics disgusted him,
+and yet he knew he would have regarded it only as an amusing game for
+high stakes before his change of heart. But now that it was to be a
+battle for the mountain men as well as for Martin Harrison and for
+himself, it could be better stomached.
+
+The effort to pick out men who could be trusted in an enterprise where
+they had to be bought, was one which taxed both his insight into human
+nature and his self-esteem.
+
+Senator Chew, himself a mountaineer, who had come from a ragged
+district to the state assembly and who seemed to harbor a hatred
+against A. O. and G. of utter malevolence, was almost as his other
+self, furnishing him with eyes with which to see and ears with which
+to hear, and familiarity with all the devious, unlovely tricks of
+lobby processes.
+
+But Senator Chew, a countryman, who had capitalized his shifty wits
+and hard-won education, bent his knee to the brazen gods of cupidity
+and ambition.
+
+"I don't just see," he demurred petulantly to Spurrier, "why you go
+about this thing the way you do. You've got unlimited capital behind
+you and yet in going after these options you ain't hardly got hold of
+any more land than just enough to let your pipe line through. You
+could get all a man's property just as cheap per acre as part of
+it--and when I've sweated blood to give you your charter and you've
+sweated blood to grab your right-of-way, that God-forsaken land will
+be a Klondike."
+
+"I hope so," smiled Spurrier, and his ally went on.
+
+"All right, but why have nothing out of it except a pipe-line? Why not
+have the whole damn business to split three ways, among Harrison's
+crowd, yourself--and the crowd I've got to handle?"
+
+"You're a mountain man, Senator," the opportunity hound reminded him.
+"You know that in every other section of the hills to which
+development has come, the native has reaped only a heart-ache and an
+empty belly. I am purposely taking only a part of each man's holding,
+so that when the oil flows there what he has left will be worth more
+to him than all of it was before."
+
+"Hell," growled the politician. "The men you ought to think about
+making money for, are the men you need--like me, and the men who back
+you, like Harrison. These local fellows won't thank you, and in my
+opinion you're a fool, if you'll permit me to talk plain."
+
+"Talk as plain as you like, Senator," smiled the other. "But I think
+I'm acting with right sound sense. Our field can be more profitably
+developed among friends than among enemies--even if no consideration
+other than the practical enters into the problem."
+
+It was not until Christmas time that Spurrier broke away from his
+activities in Louisville, and then he came bearing gifts and with a
+heart full of eagerness. He came elated, too, at the fair promise of
+his prospects, and confident of victory.
+
+So Glory hid the fears that had been growing in her heart and, because
+of the tidal power of personal fascination and contact, she found it
+an easy task. While Spurrier was with her, those fears seemed to lose
+their substance and to stand out as absurdities. They were delirious
+miasmas dissipated by the sun and daylight of companionship.
+
+Spurrier kept most of his valuable papers in a safety vault in
+Louisville, but for purposes of reference here, he maintained a
+complete system of carbon copies, and these must be stored in some
+place where he could feel sure they were immune from any prying eye.
+The entire record of his proceedings would be clear to any reader of
+those memoranda.
+
+While Glory was away one day, he removed a section of the living-room
+wall and fashioned something in the nature of a secret cabinet, upon
+which he could rely for these purposes. Before he went away again he
+shared that secret with her, since in certain exigencies it might be
+needful that some one should be able to act on wired instructions. He
+showed her the bit of molding that was removable and which gave
+entrance to the hidden recess.
+
+"In that strong box," he told her, "are papers of vital importance. If
+I haven't taken you entirely into my confidence about them all, dear,
+it's because they concern other people more closely than myself. All
+my own affairs are yours--but in the service of others, I must obey
+instructions and those instructions are rigid."
+
+He took out one envelope, though, plainly marked.
+
+"This," he said, "is a paper to be used only in case of extreme
+emergency. It is an order on the safety-deposit people in Louisville
+to open my vault to the bearer. In the event of my death, or if I
+should wire you from a distance, I would want you to use it."
+
+Even that admittance into the veiled sanctum of his business life
+pleased Glory, and she nodded her head gravely.
+
+She did not tell him, and he did not guess, that tongues were wagging
+in his absence, and that people said she was good enough only for that
+part of his life in which he shed his white collar and his "fine
+manners" and donned the rougher habiliments of the backwoods.
+
+Even when she learned that his coming back had been only to spend the
+holidays with her and that he must leave again to be gone for weeks,
+at least, she let none of the disquiet that smouldered in her find an
+utterance in words.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On a fine old Blue Grass estate, which exhaled the elegance and ease
+of the Old South, lived Colonel Merriwell, a life-long friend of Dyke
+Cappeze. In years long gone he had more than once sought to have
+Cappeze transfer his activities to a wider field. Now, timber
+interests called him to the mountains, and though the cold weather had
+set in, his daughter chose to come with him. She had heard much of the
+strange and retarded life of the mountains, and because it was so
+different from the refinements with which she had always been
+surrounded, she wanted to see it.
+
+When they arrived after traveling conditions that warranted every
+conception of quaintness, but violated every demand of comfort, the
+girl from the Bluegrass found Glory a discovery.
+
+At once she recognized that into any drawing-room this wilderness-bred
+girl could be safely dropped, and that even though she stood in a
+corner, she would soon become its center.
+
+Helen Merriwell was fascinated by the anomaly of an inherent
+aristocracy in an encompassing life which was almost squalid, and a
+bond of sympathy sprang into instant being. The Bluegrass woman knew
+by instinct, though through no utterance from the loyal lips, that the
+other was lonely, and when Colonel Merriwell announced his intention
+of returning home, the daughter decided to continue her visit and its
+companionship.
+
+To Spurrier's house, too, during the crisp, clear weather of late
+winter came, without announcement or expectation another visitor. They
+were two other visitors to be exact, but one so overshadowed his
+companion in importance that the second became negligible.
+
+At the Carnettsville station the daily train drew up one morning and
+uncoupled, on a siding, the first private car that had ever run over
+that piece of roadbed. Its chef and valet gazed superciliously down
+upon the assembled loungers, but the two gentlemen who alighted and
+gave their names as Martin Harrison and his secretary, Mr. Spooner,
+were to all appearances "jest ordinary folks."
+
+Glory was housecleaning on the day of Harrison's coming, and, in
+neatly patched gingham and dust-protected crown, she came nearer
+seeming the typical mountain woman than she had for many days before.
+Her fresh beauty was hard to eclipse, but she was less presentable
+than she wished to be when her husband's great patron saw her for the
+first time and contrasted her with such women as his own daughter.
+
+When she heard the name, without previous warning, a sort of panic
+possessed her and for once she became tongue-tied and awkward, so that
+after the first, Helen Merriwell stepped into the breach and did the
+talking.
+
+"My name is Martin Harrison," said the great man with simple
+cordiality. "I thought John Spurrier lived here--but I seem to be
+mistaken."
+
+"He--he does live here," stammered Glory, catching the swiftly stifled
+amazement of the magnate's disapproving eyes.
+
+"Here?" He put the question blankly as if only politeness prevented a
+greater vehemence of surprise. "But I expected to find a bachelor
+establishment. There are ladies here."
+
+Glory fell back a step as if in retreat under attack. If this
+statement were true, Spurrier had never acknowledged her to the
+employer with whom his relations were intimately close. In her own
+eyes, she stood as one who had lost caste and been repudiated--and all
+self-confidence abandoned her, giving way to trepidation.
+
+Harrison stood bewilderedly looking at this country girl who had
+turned tremulous and pale, and Helen Merriwell stepped forward.
+
+"Then you didn't know that Mr. Spurrier was married?" she smilingly
+inquired.
+
+The money baron transferred his glance to her as his shadowed face
+lightened into relief. This young woman had the poise and ease of his
+own world, which made communication facile. If Spurrier had not been
+candid with him, at all events he had, perhaps, not unclassed himself.
+The other was presumably a local servant of whom he need think no
+more.
+
+"Mr. Spurrier," he answered easily, "had not mentioned his marriage,
+probably because our recent correspondence has all related to
+business. However, I hold it unhandsome of him not to have done so."
+He paused, then added deferentially: "Of course, I am better prepared
+now to felicitate him--since I have seen you."
+
+But Helen Merriwell laughed and laid a hand on Glory's shoulder.
+
+"You do me too much honor, Mr. Harrison," she assured him. "_This_ is
+Mrs. Spurrier."
+
+The financier's ingrained politeness for once failed him. It was not
+for long, but in the breached instant he stiffened arrogantly as his
+eyes went back to Glory, and betrayed themselves in half-contemptuous
+hostility. The lieutenant whom he had chosen as his own successor in
+the world of lofty affairs had not only deceived him but had thrown
+himself wantonly away upon a stammering daughter of illiterates!
+
+Martin Harrison bowed again, but this time with a precise formality.
+
+"I didn't notify Mr. Spurrier of my coming, since I felt sure I would
+find him here," he explained briefly, directing himself pointedly to
+Helen Merriwell. "I am on my way south, so now I'll defer seeing him
+until another time--unless you expect him back shortly?"
+
+Helen turned inquiringly to Glory and Glory shook her head. The
+episode, confirming her own anxieties, had unnerved her steadfast
+courage into collapse.
+
+Had any warning come to her in advance of the event her bearing toward
+this stranger would have been a different one. The pride that bowed
+submissively to no one except in love, would have sustained her. The
+natural dignity which was the gift of her blood would have been the
+thing that any observer must have first and last recognized. With a
+chance to have shaped her attitude, Glory would have received Harrison
+as a Barbarian princess might have met an ambassador from Rome, but no
+such chance had been afforded her and she stood as distraught and as
+panicky as a stage-struck child whose speech fails.
+
+She even slid back into the rough-hewn vernacular that had been so
+completely banished from her lips and custom.
+
+"I ain't got ther power ter say," she faltered, "when he'll git back.
+He's goin' ter Frankfort first."
+
+"I'll write to him there," said the capitalist.
+
+Harrison departed with the stiff dignity of an affronted sachem, and
+Helen Merriwell, looking after him, smiled with amusement for the
+incident which she so well understood, until she turned and saw
+Glory.
+
+The girl had wilted back against the wall and stood there as if she
+had been stricken. Her great, violet eyes were brimming with the
+spirit of tragedy and held the despair of one who has blithely
+returned home--to find his house in ruin and ashes.
+
+Glory stole away to her own room, escaping the embrace of sympathetic
+arms, as soon as she could. "He's done denied me ter his friends," she
+told herself wildly. "He dast'n't acknowledge me ter fine folks!"
+
+Then through the first, torpid misery of hurt pride, crept a more
+terrifying thought. Spurrier had been practically engaged to this
+man's daughter. He had been diverted from his purpose by motives of
+pity, and now that Harrison knew, he might be ruined--probably would
+be ruined. If so disaster would come to him because of her--and at
+last she rose from the chair where she had dropped down, collapsed,
+with a light of new resolution in her eyes.
+
+"If that's all I'm good for," she declared tempestuously, "he's got to
+be rid of me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+During the sitting of the legislature John Spurrier was a sporadic
+onlooker, and his agents were as vigilant as sentinels in a danger
+zone. The last day of the term drew to a wintry sunset, and when the
+clock registered midnight the body would stand automatically adjourned
+until gavel fall two years hence.
+
+Spurrier, outwardly a picture of serenity, but inwardly tensed for the
+final issue, sat in the visitors' gallery of the Senate chamber. The
+charter upon which all his hopes hung as upon a fulcrum was all but in
+his grasp. Seemingly the enemy slept on. Presumably in those last
+tired hours the authorizing bill would slip through to passage with
+the frictionless ease of well-oiled bearings.
+
+The needed men had been won over. Carping critics might prate, here
+and there, of ugly means that savored of bribery, but that was
+academic. The promise of forth-coming victory remained. Methods may be
+questionable. Results are not, and Spurrier was interested in
+results.
+
+A. O. and G. had corrupted and suborned certain public servants. He
+had discovered their practice and played their own cards to their
+undoing. His ostensible clients were perhaps little cleaner-handed
+than their adversaries, but certainly, those other clients who did
+not even know themselves to be represented stood with no stain on
+their claims.
+
+Those native men and women had not asked him to safeguard them, and
+had they been able to see what he was doing they would have guessed
+only that, after winning their faith, he was bent on swindling them.
+But Spurrier knew not only the seeming facts but those which lay
+beneath and he fought with a definite sense of stewardship.
+
+First the _coup_ must succeed, since that success was the foundation
+of all the rest, and the moment was at hand.
+
+For this he had slaved, faced dangers and deprived himself of the
+contentment of home and the society of his wife. Now it was about to
+end in victory.
+
+The enemy had been caught napping, and the victory would be his.
+Certainly he had been as fair as the foe. What now remained was a
+perfunctory confirmation by the Senate, and in these final wearied
+hours it would slip through easily in the general wind-up of
+uncontested affairs.
+
+Spurrier had not slept for two days--or had slept little. When
+this ended he would go to his bed and lie there in sunken hours of
+restoration the clock around--and after that back to Glory. Already
+he carried in his pocket the brief message which he meant to put
+upon the wires to Harrison, at the moment of midnight and success.
+Characteristically it read: "Complete victory. Spurrier."
+
+Now as the clerk droned through the mass of unfinished matters that
+burdened the schedule, the clock stood at ten in the evening, and a
+spirit of disordered peevishness proclaimed itself in the chamber.
+Seats were vacated. Voices rose in unparliamentary clamor.
+
+From the desk where a mountain senator sat in touseled disarray, a
+flask was drawn and tipped with scant regard to senatorial dignity.
+Then the chairman of the committee which had the steering of
+Spurrier's affairs arose and handed a paper to the clerk.
+
+Spurrier himself maintained the same unemotional cast of countenance
+with which, years before, he had watched a horse in the stretch
+battling for more than he could afford to lose, but Wharton, who sat
+at his side, chewed nervously on an unlighted cigar. Sleepy reporters
+yawned at the press tables as the clerk droned out his sing-song, "An
+act entitled an act conferring charter rights upon the Hemlock Pipe
+Line Company of Kentucky."
+
+The reading of the measure seemed devoid of interest or attention. It
+went forward in confusion, yet when it was ended the mountain man who
+had taken the swig out of his flask, came slowly to his feet.
+
+"Mr. President of the Senate," he drawled, "I want to address a few
+incongruvial remarks to the senators in regards to this here proposed
+measure."
+
+With a sudden sense of premonition Spurrier found himself sitting
+electrically upright.
+
+That man was Senator Chew who had sat in council with him and advised
+him; his right hand in action and his fox-brain in planning, yet now,
+with every moment invaluable he was burning up time!
+
+He was a pygmy among small men, and as he drooled on he seemed to urge
+no pertinent objection. Yet before he had been five minutes on his
+feet his intent was clear and his success assured.
+
+Out of the hands of their recognized lieutenants A. O. and G. had
+taken the matter of serving them. Into the hands of this obscure and
+loutish Solon who was ostensibly pledged to their enemies, they had
+thrust their commission, and now with the clock creeping forward
+toward adjournment, he meant to talk the charter measure to death by
+holding the floor until the opportunity for a vote had elapsed.
+
+Tediously and inanely he meandered along, and no one knew what he was
+talking about. In extravagant metaphor and florid simile he indulged
+himself--and the clock worked industriously, an ally not to be unduly
+hurried.
+
+"Gentlemen of the Senate--" he drooled, "most of us have been raised
+in a land that knows little of the primitive features that make up
+life with us, and though it may not at first seem germane or
+pertinent, I want you to go with me as your guide, while I try to make
+you see the life of those steep counties that are affected by the
+measure before you; counties that lie behind the barriers and sleep
+the ancient sleep of the forgotten."
+
+Men yawned while his tediousness spun itself into a tawdry flow of
+slow words, but the Honorable Mr. Chew talked on.
+
+"Many the day, as a lad, have I lain by a rushing brook," he
+declaimed, "where the water gushes with the sparkle of sunlit crystal
+and watched the deer come down on gingerly lifted feet to drink his
+fill. Now I reckon mighty few of you gentlemen have seen a deer come
+down to drink----"
+
+The minute hand of the clock, in comparison with this windy
+deliberation seemed to be racing between the dial characters.
+
+"In God's name," exclaimed Spurrier, "isn't there any way to shut that
+fool up? He's ruining us. Get some of our leaders up here, Wharton.
+We've got to stop him."
+
+"How?" demanded Wharton with a fallen jaw.
+
+"I don't give a damn how! Kill him--buy him. Anything!"
+
+"It's too late," responded Wharton grimly. "He's already bought. We've
+walked into their trap. We might as well go home."
+
+Spurrier sent for his whip, but he had come to the end of his
+resourcefulness and shook a dejected head.
+
+"If you want to shoot him down as he stands there," said the gentleman
+testily, "I dare say it would stop him short. I know no other way. He
+is having resort to the senatorial privilege of filibuster. We have
+let them slip up on us. A. O. and G. has outbid you, that's all."
+
+"But how in God's name did they get wise?"
+
+The other laughed grimly. "Wise?" he snorted. "My guess is that
+they've been wise all the time and that hayseed Iscariot has been
+playing us along for suckers."
+
+Held by a deadly fascination, Spurrier sank back into his seat. The
+clock over the speaker's desk traveled once, almost twice around
+the dial, and yet that nasal voice wandered on in an endless
+stream of grotesque bombast--talking the charter to a slow death by
+strangulation.
+
+Now, reflected Spurrier bitterly, his connection with the enterprise
+must seem to any eye that viewed it that only of Harrison's jackal and
+lobbyist, who had signally failed in his attempt to raid A. O. and G.
+
+To the mountain folk themselves, if the facts ever percolated into the
+hills, his seeming would be far from heroic and with nothing tangible
+accomplished, it would do no good to tell them that he had made his
+fight with their interests at heart. Such a claim would only stamp him
+in the face of contrary evidence as taking a coward's refuge in lies.
+
+Then when it seemed to him that he could no longer restrain himself,
+Spurrier heard the gavel fall. It was a light sound, but it crashed on
+his brain with thunders of destruction.
+
+"Gentlemen," declared the presiding officer, "The Senate stands
+adjourned, _sine die_."
+
+Had John Spurrier gone to see the "witch woman" when Mosebury advised
+it, his course from that point on would have brought him to a
+different ending.
+
+In looking back on that night, he could never quite remember it with
+consecutive distinctness. Gaps of forgetfulness were fitfully shot
+through with disconnected scraps of recollection. When events began to
+marshal themselves into orderly sequence, the windowpanes of his hotel
+room were turning a dirty gray with the coming of dawn, and he was
+sitting in a straight-backed chair. His bed had not been touched. Back
+of that lay a chaotic sense of irremediable disaster and despair.
+
+At last he caught a glimpse of himself in the mirror, and that picture
+of disheveled wildness startled him and brought him back to
+realization.
+
+Then self-contempt swept in on him. He had been called a man of iron
+nerve; a plunger who never turned a hair under reversals of
+fortune--and now he stood looking through the glass at a broken
+gambler with frenzied eyes. It was such a face as one might see in the
+circle before the Casino at Monte Carlo--the place of suicides.
+
+The man who had seemed to come from nowhere and who had talked last
+night with such destructive volubility, had been a pure shyster. To be
+outwitted by such a clown carried the sting of chagrin, quite apart
+from the material disaster. Yet into his disordered thoughts came the
+realization that the senator had been only a puppet. His actuating
+wires had been pulled by the fingers of A. O. and G. and the men who
+sat as overlords of A. O. and G. were only shysters of a greater
+caliber. The men whom he, himself, served were no better. Compared to
+this backwoods statesman he, John Spurrier, was as a smooth and
+sophisticated confidence man paralleled with a pickpocket. Ethically,
+they were cut from the same cloth, though to differing patterns--one
+rustic and the other urban.
+
+He had been engaged in a tawdry game, for all its gilding of rich
+prospects, but in the face of defeat a man cannot change his colors.
+
+Had he been able to undertake this fight as his own man and choose his
+own methods--changing them as he grew in stature--there might have
+been a man's zest in the game.
+
+Now, less than ever, could he speak open truth to these simple friends
+who had trusted him. Now he must fight out a damaged campaign to the
+end along the lines to which he stood committed, and until the end
+there was nothing to say.
+
+Perhaps if he could avert total ruin, he might yet have opportunity to
+reclaim the confidence of these Esaus who had traded for a mess of
+pottage. Certainly they had nothing to hope for from the myrmidons of
+Trabue.
+
+John Spurrier forced his shoulders back into military erectness. He
+compelled his lips into the stiff and counterfeited curvature of a
+smile.
+
+Not only had every resource he could muster gone into the scrapped
+enterprise, leaving him worse than bankrupt, but through him Martin
+Harrison had been led into the sinking of a fortune.
+
+Harrison would, in all likelihood, be less bitter about the money
+loss, than the thought of the triumphant smile on Trabue's thin lips,
+but it was quite in the cards that, with his contempt for failure, he
+would wash his hands of Spurrier.
+
+That, of course, spelled ruin. The exhibition skater had gone through
+the thin ice.
+
+Harrison could, if he chose, do more than dismiss John Spurrier. He
+had seen to it that his lieutenant was bound to his standards by debts
+he could not pay, save out of some future enrichment contingent on
+success. If he chose to call those loans he would leave his employee
+shattered beyond hope of recovery.
+
+But when Spurrier went down to the hotel dining room at breakfast
+time, a cold bath and a superhuman exertion of will power had
+transformed him. His bearing was a nice blending of the debonair and
+the dignified.
+
+To no eye of observation was there any trace of collapse or reversal.
+He seemed the man who demanded the best from life and who got it.
+
+At a table not far from his own sat Senator Chew with a companion whom
+Spurrier did not know. The traitor glanced up and his eye met that of
+the man he had betrayed, then fell flinching.
+
+Perhaps the mountaineer expected the dining room to stage such a scene
+of recrimination and violence as it had in the past on more than one
+occasion, for his crafty face went brick red, then darkened into
+truculence as he half pushed back his chair and his hand swept
+tentatively toward his hip.
+
+But the plunger had still his pride left, or its remnant, and it was
+no part of his plan to stand the self-confessed and vanquished victim,
+by any patent demonstration of wrath. He met the eyes of the
+politician who had played on both sides of the same game, and smiled,
+and if there was contempt in the expression, it was recognized only by
+the man who knew its cause.
+
+Later he wrote a telegram to Harrison. It was not the thing he had
+expected to say, yet in it went no whine of despair:
+
+ Have suffered a temporary reversal.
+
+Those were the words that the capitalist read when the message, after
+being decoded from its cipher, was laid on his desk.
+
+Harrison, recently returned from his Southern trip, thought
+truculently of that nearby office in which Trabue was also receiving
+telegraphic information, and he writhed in the wormwood of chagrin.
+
+The curtness of his response scorched the wires:
+
+ Explain in person if you can. Otherwise we separate.
+
+So John Spurrier packed his bag and caught the first train for the
+mountains. He must say good-by to Glory, before facing this final
+ordeal, and he believed that in that clarifying air he could brace
+himself for the encounter that awaited him in New York.
+
+As he turned into the yard of his own house he paused, and something
+about his heart tightened until it unsteadied him. Here alone, in all
+the world, he had known what home meant, and in his heart and veins
+rose an intoxicating tumult like that of wine.
+
+Back of that emotional wave though lurked a misery of self-reproach.
+Glory had made the magic of his brief happiness, but there was a
+background, too, of kindly souls and a ruggedly genuine welcome. He
+had learned to know these people and to revise his first, false views
+of them. In them dwelt the stout honesty and real strength of oak and
+hickory.
+
+First he had striven to plunder them, then sought to lift the yoke of
+poverty from their long-bowed shoulders. In both efforts he had
+failed.
+
+But had he failed, after all? Certainly he stood under the black
+shadow of a major disaster, but had not others retrieved disasters and
+made final victory only the brighter for its contrast with lurid
+misfortune?
+
+He had been the plunger who seemed strongest when he was weakest, and
+these enduring hills spoke their message of steadfastness to him as he
+stood surrounded by their lofty crests of spruce and pine.
+
+Then he had reached the door and flung it open and Glory was in his
+arms, but unaccountably she had burst into a tempest of tears.
+
+Before he had had time to speak of the necessity that called him East
+she was telling of the visit of Martin Harrison and his indignant
+departure.
+
+Despite his all-consuming absorption of a moment before, Spurrier drew
+away, chilled by that announcement, and Glory read in his eyes a
+momentary agony of apprehension.
+
+"In God's name," he demanded in a numbed voice, "why didn't you write
+me about that?"
+
+"He said," responded the wife simply, "that _he_ would write to you at
+Frankfort. I thought you knew."
+
+"But I should have thought you'd have spoken of his coming and
+going--like that."
+
+Her head came up with a brief little flash of hurt pride.
+
+"You hadn't ever told him--about me," she said, though without
+accusation. "I didn't want to talk to you about it until you were
+ready to suggest it. It might have seemed--disloyal."
+
+Spurrier again braced his shoulders. After a moment he took her in his
+arms.
+
+"Glory, my sweetheart, I've been playing a game for big stakes. I've
+had to do some things I didn't relish. I've got to do another now. I'm
+summoned to Harrison's office in New York, at once--and I have no
+choice."
+
+Glory drew away and looked with challenging directness into his eyes.
+
+"I suppose--you'll go alone?"
+
+"I must. Business affairs are at a crisis, and I need a free hand.
+But, God granting me a safe return, it's to be our last separation. I
+swear that. I am always wretched without you."
+
+Always before when disappointment or disquiet had riffled the deeps of
+her eyes, it had taken only a word and a smile from this man to dispel
+them and bring back the serenity of content. Her moments of panic when
+she had seemed to drop down, down into pits of foreboding until she
+had plumbed the depth of despair, had been moments to which she had
+surrendered in his absence and of which he had been given no hint.
+
+Now with a gravity that was bafflingly unreadable she stood silent and
+looked about the room, and the man's eyes followed hers.
+
+Why was it, he almost fiercely demanded of himself, that this cottage
+set in remote hills shed about him a feeling of soul-satisfaction that
+he had never encountered in more luxurious places?
+
+Now as he looked at it the thought of leaving it cramped his heart
+with a sort of breathless agony.
+
+Yet, of course, there was no question after all. It was because in
+everything it was reflection of Glory's own spirit and to him Glory
+stood for the only love that had ever been bigger to him than
+himself.
+
+The simplicity and good taste of the small house, standing in a land
+of squalid cabins like a disciple of quiet elegance among beggars, had
+been the result of their collaboration. Glory had had the instinct of
+artistic perception and true values and he had been able to guide her
+from his sybarite experience.
+
+The stone fireplace with its ingle-nook, built by their own hands from
+rocks they had selected and gathered together, seemed to him a
+beautiful thing. The natural wood of the paneling, picked out at the
+saw-mill with a critical eye for graining and figuration, satisfied
+the eye, and the few pictures that he had brought from the East were
+all landscapes that meant something to each of them--lyric bits of
+canvas with singing skies. To every object a memory had attached
+itself; a memory that had also a tendril in their hearts.
+
+But now Glory, too, was looking at all these things as though she as
+well as himself were leaving them. There was something of farewell in
+the glance that lingered on them and caressed them, as if of
+leave-taking and into Spurrier's heart crept the intuition that
+despite his declaration just made that this should be their last
+separation, she was seeing in it a threat of permanence.
+
+And that was the thought that was chilling Glory's heart and muting
+the song of happiness which his coming had awakened. This place which
+had been founded with all the promise of home and companionship was
+beginning to hold for her the foreboding of loneliness and something
+like abandonment. He knew it only when they were together here, but
+she had been in it alone and frightened more than in times of shared
+happiness.
+
+And why was this true? Why could it be either true or necessary
+unless, as she had told herself in panic moments and denied so
+persistently, she was a misfit in his broader life and a woman whom he
+could enjoy in solitude but dared not trust to comparison with
+others?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+At last she turned abruptly away, in order that the misery which would
+no longer submit to concealment might not show itself in her eyes, and
+stood looking out of the window.
+
+Spurrier crossed with anxious swiftness and took her again into his
+arms.
+
+"When I have finished this business trip," he declared fervently, "our
+separations shall end. They have been too many and too long--but I've
+paid for them in loneliness, dear. This call, that I'm answering now,
+is unexpected but it's imperative and I can't disobey it."
+
+She turned then, slowly and gravely, but with no lightening of the
+burdened anxiety in her eyes.
+
+"It's not just that you have to go away, Jack," she told him. "It's a
+great deal more than that."
+
+"What else is there, dearest?" His question was intoned with surprise.
+"When we are together, I have nothing else to ask of life. Have you?"
+
+"The place has been changed--mightily changed," she went on musingly
+as though talking to herself rather than to him. "And yet the walls
+are the same as they were that day--when we both thought we had to die
+here together."
+
+"They are the dearer for that," he exclaimed fervently. "That was what
+made us see things truly."
+
+"I wonder," she questioned, then meeting his eyes steadily she went on
+as though determined to say what must be said.
+
+"When you called Brother Hawkins in to marry us, I was afraid. I was
+afraid because I thought you were only doing it out of kindness, and
+that afterward you'd be ashamed of me."
+
+"Ashamed of you," he echoed with indignant incredulity. "In God's name
+how could I be?"
+
+"Or if not ashamed of me that you couldn't help knowing that I
+was--what I am--all right here in the hills but that outside--I
+wouldn't do."
+
+"If you were ever afraid of that, it was only because you were
+undervaluing yourself. You surely haven't any ghost of such a fear
+left now."
+
+For a little she stood silent again torn between the loyalty that
+hesitated to question him and the pride that was hurt.
+
+Finally she said simply: "It's a bigger fear now. Unless I'm
+unpresentable, why do you--never take me anywhere with you?"
+
+John Spurrier laughed, vastly relieved that the mountain of her
+anxiety had resolved itself, as he thought, into a mole-hill. He could
+laugh because he had no suspicion of the chronic soreness of her heart
+and his answer was lightly made.
+
+"These trips have all been in connection with the sort of business,
+Glory, that would have meant keeping me away from you whether you had
+gone to town or not. When we travel together--and I want that we shall
+travel a great deal--I must be free to devote myself to you. I want to
+show the world to you and I want to show you to the world."
+
+That declaration he fancied ought to resolve her fears of his being
+ashamed of her.
+
+"If you were afraid I'd seem out of place," she assured him, "I might
+be right sorry--and yet I think I'd understand. I'm not a fool and I
+know I'd make mistakes, but I was raised a lawyer's daughter and I've
+got a pretty good business head--yet you've never told me anything of
+what this business is that calls you away. You always treat me as if
+there were no use in even trying to make me understand it."
+
+The man no longer laughed. He could not explain that it was rather
+because she might understand too well than not well enough. Even to
+her, until he was ready to prove his intent by his actual deeds, it
+seemed impossible to give that story without the seeming of the
+plunderer of her people.
+
+"When the time comes that releases me from my pledge of absolute
+secrecy, dear," he told her earnestly, "I mean to tell you all about
+my business--and I think you'll approve, then. Now I don't talk
+because I have no right to."
+
+Again there was silence, after which Glory said in a voice of still
+resolution which he had never heard from her before:
+
+"I'm ignorant and uncultivated, Jack, but to me marriage is a full
+partnership--or it isn't anything. When Mr. Harrison came, I saw for
+the first time just how I looked to men like him. I was just 'pore
+white trash.'"
+
+"Did he----" Spurrier broke off and his face went abruptly white with
+passion. Had Harrison been there at that moment he would have stood
+in danger at the hands of his employee, but Glory shook her head and
+hastened to quiet him.
+
+"He wasn't impolite, Jack. It wasn't that--only I read in his eyes
+what he tried to hide. I only told you that because I wanted you to
+understand me. People here say that you give me everything but
+yourself; that I'm not good enough for you except right here where
+there's nothing better."
+
+"That is a damned lie," he expostulated. "Who says it?"
+
+"Only women-folks and gossipy grannies that you can't fight with,
+Jack," she answered steadily. "But I've thought about it lots. I've
+come to think, dear, that maybe you ought to be free--and if you
+ought," she paused, then the final assertion broke from her with an
+agonized voice, "then, I love you enough to set you free."
+
+Spurrier seized her in his arms and his words came choked with
+vehement feeling.
+
+"I want you, Glory. I want you always and I couldn't live without you.
+When I have to go away I endure it only by thinking of coming back to
+you. If you ever set me free as you call it, it will be only because
+_you_ don't want _me_. I suppose in that case I'd try to take my
+medicine--but I think it would about kill me."
+
+"There's no danger of that, dear," she declared.
+
+The man drew away for a moment and fumbled for words. His aptness of
+speech had deserted him and at last he spoke clumsily:
+
+"It's hard to explain just now, when you've accused me of not taking
+you into my confidence, but I stand at a point, Glory, where I've got
+the hardest fight ahead of me I ever made. I stand to be ruined or to
+make good. I've got to use every minute and every thought in
+competition with quick brains and enormous power. Until its over I
+must be a machine with one idea ... and I'll fail, dear, unless I can
+take with me the knowledge that you trust me."
+
+She looked up into his face and the misery in her eyes gave place to
+confidence.
+
+"Go ahead, Jack," she said. "I believe in you and I'm not even afraid
+of your failing." After a moment she clasped her arms tightly about
+him and added vehemently: "But whether you succeed or fail, come back
+to me, dear, because, except for your sake, it won't make any
+difference to me."
+
+That same afternoon Spurrier found time to visit the "witch woman." It
+had dawned upon him since that night in the Senate chamber that, after
+all, Sim Colby might have been the least dangerous of his enemies, and
+the thought made him inquisitive.
+
+The old crone made her magic with abundant grotesquerie, but at its
+end she peered shrewdly into his eyes, and said:
+
+"I reads hyar in the omends thet mebby ye comes too late."
+
+Spurrier smiled grimly. He thought that himself.
+
+"I dis'arns," went on the hag portentously, "thet a blind man
+impereled ye mightily--a blind man thet plays a fiddle--but thars
+others beside him thet dwells fur away an' holds a mighty power of
+wealth."
+
+A blind man! Spurrier's remembrance flashed back to the visit of blind
+Joe Givins and the papers incautiously left on his table. Yet if he
+was genuinely blind they could have meant nothing to him--and if he
+was not genuinely blind it was hard to conceive of human nerves
+enduring without wincing that test of the gun thrust against the
+temple.
+
+Spurrier rose and paid his fee. Had he seen her in time, this warning
+would have averted disaster. Now it was something of a post-mortem.
+
+At the door of Martin Harrison's office several days later Spurrier
+drew back his shoulders and braced himself. It was impossible to
+ignore the fact that he stood on the brink of total ruin; that his
+sole hope lay in persuading his principal that with more time and more
+money he would yet be able to succeed--and Harrison was as plastic to
+persuasion as a brass Buddha.
+
+But he had steeled himself for the interview--and now he turned the
+knob and swung back the mahogany door.
+
+Spurrier was familiar enough with the atmosphere of that office to
+read the signs correctly. The hushed air of nervousness that hung over
+it now betokened a chief in a mood which no one sought to stir to
+further irritation.
+
+Always in the past Spurrier had been deferentially ushered into a
+private office and treated as the future chief. Now, as though he were
+already a disinherited heir, he was left in the general waiting room,
+and he was left there for an hour. That cooling of the heel, he
+recognized as a warning of the cold reception to come--and an augury
+of ruin.
+
+At last he was called in, but he went with an unruffled demeanor which
+hid from the principal's eye how near to breaking his inward
+confidence was strained.
+
+"I wired you to come at once," began Harrison curtly, and Spurrier
+smiled as he nodded.
+
+"I came at once, sir, except that I hadn't been home for some time,
+and it was necessary to make a stop there."
+
+"Home," Martin's brows lifted a trifle. "You mean the mountains."
+
+"Certainly--for the time being, I'm located there."
+
+"We may as well be honest with each other," asserted the magnate. "I
+consider that under the circumstances you behaved with serious
+discourtesy and without candor." For a casual moment his glance dwelt
+on the portrait of Vivien which stood on his table.
+
+"I disagree with you, sir. I preferred relating the full circumstances,
+which were unusual, when there was an opportunity to do so in person.
+I was kept there by your interests as well as my own."
+
+"That recital," said the older man dryly, "is your concern. Now that I
+know the facts I find myself uninterested in the details. You have
+chosen your way. The question is whether we can travel it together."
+
+"And I presume that the first point of that question demands a full
+report upon the business operations."
+
+"So far as I can see, they have collapsed."
+
+"They have by no means collapsed."
+
+Suddenly the wrath that had been smoldering in Harrison's eyes burst
+into tempest. He brought his clenched fist down upon his desk until
+inkwells and accessories rattled.
+
+This man's moments of equinox were terrifying to those who must bow
+to his will--and his will held sway over broad horizons. If John
+Spurrier had not been intrepid he must have collapsed under the
+withering violence of the passion that rained on him.
+
+"Before God," cried Harrison, pacing his floor like a lion that lashes
+itself to frenzy, "you undertook to avenge me on Trabue. You have
+drawn on me with carte-blanche liberties and spent fortunes like a
+prodigal! You have assured me that you had, at all times, the
+situation well in hand. Then, through some damned blunder, you failed.
+Let the money loss slide. Damn the money! I'm the laughingstock of the
+business world. I'm delivered over to Trabue's enjoyment as a boob who
+failed. I'm an absurdity, and you're responsible!"
+
+"When you've finished, sir," said Spurrier quietly, "I shall endeavor
+to show you that none of those things have happened--that our failure
+is temporary and that when you undertook this enterprise you were in
+no impetuous haste as to the time of its accomplishment."
+
+"The legislature doesn't meet for two years," Harrison barked back at
+him. "That will be two years of preparation for Trabue. Now he's fully
+warned, where do we get off?"
+
+"At our original point of destination, sir."
+
+The opportunity hound began his argument. His demeanor of unruffled
+calm and entire confidence began to exercise its persuasive force.
+Harrison cooled somewhat, but Spurrier was fighting, beneath his pose,
+as a man who has cramps in deep water fights for his life. These few
+minutes would determine his fate, and he was totally at the mercy of
+this single arbiter.
+
+"I have now all the options we need on the far side of Hemlock
+Mountain," Spurrier summarized at last. "All except one tract which
+belongs to Bud Hawkins, who is a preacher and a friend of mine. He
+must have more generous terms, but I will be able to do business with
+him."
+
+"You talk of the options on the far side of the ridge," Harrison broke
+in belligerently. "That is the minor field."
+
+"I'll be able to repeat that performance on the near side."
+
+"You will not! A repetition of your performance is the last thing we
+crave. Any movement now would be only a piling up of warnings. For the
+present you will give every indication of having abandoned the
+project."
+
+"That is my idea, sir. I was not speaking of immediate but future
+activities. Also----" In spite of his desperation of plight the
+younger man's bearing flashed into a challenging undernote of its old
+audacity, "when I used the word 'repeat' I referred to the successful
+portion of my effort. There was no failure on the land end. It was the
+charter that went wrong--through the deceit of a man we had to
+trust."
+
+"A man whom you selected," Harrison caught him up. "You understood, in
+advance, the chances of your game. It was agreed upon your own
+insistence that your hand should be absolutely free--and freedom of
+method carries exclusiveness of responsibility. Traitors exist. They
+don't furnish excuses."
+
+"Nor am I making them. I am merely stating facts which you seem
+inclined to confuse. I grant the failure but I also claim the partial
+success."
+
+Harrison seated himself, and as the interview stretched Spurrier's
+nerves stretched with it under the placid surface of his plunger's
+camouflage. He had, as yet, no way of guessing how the verdict would
+go, and now the capitalist's face was hardened in discouragement. It
+was a face of merciless inflexibility. The sentence had been prepared
+in the judge's mind. There remained only its enunciation.
+
+"Nothing is to be gained by mincing my words, Spurrier," declared
+Spurrier's chief. "We know precisely where you stand."
+
+Harrison extended his hand with its fingers spread and closed it
+slowly into a clenched fist. "I hold you--there! I can crush you to a
+pulp of absolute ruin. You know that. The only question is whether I
+want, or not, to do it."
+
+"And whether, or not, you can afford to do it," amended the other with
+an audacity that he by no means felt. "You must decide whether you can
+afford to accept tamely and as a final defeat, a mere reversal, which
+I--and no one else--can turn into eventual victory."
+
+"I have duly considered that. I had implicit confidence in your
+abilities. You have struck at my personal feeling for you by a silence
+that was not frank. You have allied yourself with the mountain people
+by marriage, and we stand on opposite sides of the line of interest.
+You have all the while been watched by our enemies, and I regard you
+as a defeated man. If I choose to cast you aside, you go to the scrap
+heap. You will never recover."
+
+That was an assertion which there was neither health nor wisdom in
+contradicting and Spurrier waited. His last card was played.
+
+"And I am going to cast you aside--bankrupt you--ruin you!" blazed out
+Harrison, "unless you absolutely meet my requirements during a period
+of probation. That period will engage you in a very different matter.
+For the present you are through with the Kentucky mountains. The new
+task will be a difficult one, and it should put you on your mettle. It
+is one that can't be accomplished at all unless you can do it. You
+have that one chance to retrieve yourself. Take it or leave it."
+
+"What are your terms?"
+
+"You will sail to-morrow for Liverpool. I will give you explicit
+instructions to-night. Go prepared for an extended stay abroad."
+
+For the first time Spurrier's face paled and insurrection flared in
+his pupils.
+
+"Sail for Europe to-morrow!" he exclaimed vehemently. "I'll see you
+damned first! Doesn't it occur to you that a man has his human side? I
+have a wife and a home and when I am ordered to leave them for an
+indefinite time I'm entitled to a breathing space in which to set my
+own affairs in shape. I am willing enough to undertake your
+bidding--but not to-morrow."
+
+Spurrier paused at the end of his outbreak and stood looking down at
+the seated figure, which to all intents and purposes might have been
+the god that held, for him, life and death in his hand.
+
+And as he looked Spurrier thought he had never seen such glacial
+coldness and merciless indifference in any human face. He had known
+this man in the thundering of passion before which the walls about him
+seemed to tremble, but this manifestation of adamant implacability was
+new, and he realized that he had invited destruction in defying it.
+
+"As you please," replied Harrison crisply, "but it's to-morrow or not
+at all. I've already outlined the alternative and since you refuse,
+our business seems concluded. Next time you feel disposed to talk or
+think of what you're entitled to, remember that my view is different.
+All your claims stand forfeit in my judgment. You are entitled to just
+what I choose to offer--and no more."
+
+The chief glanced toward the door with a glance of dismissal, and the
+door became to Spurrier the emblem of finality. Yet he did not at once
+move toward it.
+
+"I appreciate the need of prompt obedience, where there is an urge of
+haste," he persisted, "but if a few days wouldn't imperil results, I
+want those days to make a flying trip to Kentucky and to my wife."
+
+The face of the seated man remained obdurately set but his eyes blazed
+again with a note of personal anger.
+
+"At a time when I was reasonably interested, you chose to leave me
+unenlightened about your domestic arrangements. Now I can claim no
+concern in them. Most wives, however, permit their husbands such
+latitude of movement as business requires. If yours does not it is
+your own misfortune. I think that's all."
+
+Spurrier knew that the jaws of the trap were closing on him. He had
+been too hasty in his outburst and he turned toward the door, but as
+his hand fell on the bronze knob Harrison spoke again.
+
+"Think it over, Spurrier. I can--and will ruin you--unless you yield.
+It is no time for maudlin sentiment, but until five-thirty this
+afternoon, I shall not consider your answer final. Up to that hour you
+may reconsider it, if you wish."
+
+"I will notify you at five," responded the lieutenant as he let
+himself out and closed the door behind him.
+
+That day the opportunity hound spent in an agony of conflicting
+emotions. That the other held a bolt of destruction and was in the
+mood to launch it he did not pretend to doubt. If it were launched
+even the land upon which his cottage stood would no longer be his own.
+He must either return to Glory empty-handed and bankrupt, or strain
+with a new tax, the confidence he had asked of her, with the pledge
+that he would return soon and for good.
+
+But if, even at the cost of humbled pride and Glory's hurt, he
+maintained his business relations, the path to eventual success
+remained open.
+
+As long as the cards were being shuffled chance beckoned and at five
+o'clock Spurrier went into a cigar-store booth and called a downtown
+telephone number.
+
+"You hold the whip hand, sir," he announced curtly when a secretary had
+put Harrison on the wire. "When do I report for final instructions?"
+
+"Come to my house this evening," ordered the master.
+
+Most of the hours of that evening, except the two in Harrison's study,
+Spurrier spent in writing to Glory, tearing up letter after letter
+while the nervous moisture bedewed his brow. It was so impossible to
+give her any true or comprehensive explanation of the pressing weight
+of compulsion. His messages must have the limp of unreason. He was
+crossing the ocean without her and she would read into it a sort of
+abandonment that would hurt and wound her. He had taxed everything
+else in life, and now he was overtaxing her loyalty.
+
+Yet he believed that if in his depleted treasury of life there was one
+thing left upon which he could draw prodigally and with faith, it was
+that love; a love that would stand staunch though he were forced to
+hurt it once again.
+
+So Spurrier sailed and, having arrived on European soil, took up the
+work that threw him into relations with men of large caliber in Capel
+Court and Threadneedle Street. His mission carried him to the
+continent as well; from Paris to Brussels and from Brussels to Hamburg
+and Berlin, where the quaint customs of the Kentucky Cumberlands
+seemed as remote as the life of Mars--remote but, to Spurrier, as
+alluring as the thought of salvation to a recluse who has foresworn
+the things of earth.
+
+In terms of dead reckoning, Berlin is as far from Hemlock Mountain as
+Hemlock Mountain is from Berlin, but in terms of human relations Glory
+felt the distance as infinitely greater than did her husband. To him
+the Atlantic was only an ocean three thousand miles wide; often
+crossed and discounted by familiarity. To her it was a measureless
+waste separating all she knew from another world. To him continental
+dimensions were reckoned in hours of commonplace railway journeying,
+but to her the "measured mile" was both lengthwise and perpendicular,
+and when she passed old friends she fancied that she detected in their
+glances either pity for her desertion or the smirk of "I-told-you-so"
+malevolence.
+
+It even crept to her ears that "some folks" spoke of her as "the
+widder Spurrier" and that Tassie Plumford had chuckled, "I reckon he's
+done gone off an' left her fer good an' all this time. Folks says he's
+fled away cl'ar acrost ther ocean-sea."
+
+Glory told herself that she had promised faith and that she was in no
+danger of faltering, but as the weeks lengthened into months and the
+months followed each other, her waiting became bitter.
+
+In Berlin John Spurrier passed as a British subject, bearing British
+passports. That had been part of the careful plan to prevent discovery
+of what American interests he represented and it had proven effective.
+He had almost accomplished the difficult task of self-redemption, set
+him by the man whose confidence he had strained.
+
+Then came the bolt out of heaven. The inconceivable suddenness of the
+war cloud belched and broke, but he remained confident that he would
+have a chance to finish up before the paralysis cramped bourse and
+exchange.
+
+England would not come in, and he, the seeming British subject, would
+have safe conduct out of Germany.
+
+Now he must get back. This would mean the soaring of oil prices, and
+along new lines the battle must be pitched back there at home, before
+it was too late.
+
+So Spurrier finished his packing. He was going out onto the
+streets to watch the upflame of the war spirit and to make railway
+reservations.
+
+There was a knock at the door and the man opened it. Stiffly erect,
+stood a squad of military police and stiffly their lieutenant
+saluted.
+
+"You are Herr John Spurrier?" he inquired.
+
+The man nodded.
+
+"It is, perhaps, in the nature of a formality, which you will be able
+to arrange," said the officer. "But I am directed to place you under
+arrest. England is in the war. You are said to be a former soldier."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Over the ragged lands that lay on the "nigh side" of Hemlock Mountain
+breathed a spirit of excitement and mighty hope. It had been two years
+since John Spurrier had left the field he had planned to develop, and
+in those years had come the transition of rebirth.
+
+Along muddy streets the hogs still wallowed, but now they were deeply
+rutted by the teaming of ponderous oil gear, and one saw young men in
+pith helmets and pig-skin puttees; keen-faced engineers and oil
+prospectors drawn in by the challenge of wealth from the far trails of
+Mexico and the West. One heard the jargon of that single business and
+the new vocabulary of its devotees. "Wild-catters" following surface
+indications or hunches were testing and well-driving. Gushers rewarded
+some and "dry holes" and "dusters" disappointed others. Into the
+mediæval life of hills that had stood age-long unaltered and aloof
+came the infusion of hot-blooded enterprise, the eager questing after
+quick and miraculous wealth.
+
+In Lexington and Winchester oil exchanges carried the activity of
+small bourses. In newspapers a new form of advertisement proclaimed
+itself.
+
+Oil was king. Oil and its by-product, gasoline, that the armies needed
+and that the thousands of engines on the earth and in the air so
+greedily devoured.
+
+But over on the far side of the ridge men only fretted and chafed as
+yet. They had the oil under their feet, but for it there was no
+outlet. Like a land without a seaport, they looked over at neighbors
+growing rich while they themselves still "hurted fer needcessities."
+
+American Oil and Gas had locked them in while it milked the other cow.
+It had its needed charters for piping both fields, but a man who was
+either dead or somewhere across the world held the way barred in a
+stalemate of controlled rights of way.
+
+Glory thought less about the wonderful things that were going forward
+than did others about her, because she had a broken heart. No letters
+came from Spurrier, and the faith that she struggled to hold high like
+a banner nailed to the masthead of her life, hung drooping. In the end
+her colors had been struck.
+
+If John Spurrier returned in search of her now she would go into
+hiding from him, but it was most unlikely that he would return. He had
+married her on impulse and under a pressure of excitement. He had
+loved her passionately--but not with a strong enough fidelity to hold
+him true--and now she believed he had turned back again to his old
+idols. She was repudiated, and she ought to hate him with the
+bitterness of her mountain blood, yet in her heart's core, though she
+would never forgive him and never return to him, she knew that she
+still loved him and would always love him.
+
+She no longer feared that she would have hampered him in the society
+of his more finished world. She had visited Helen Merriwell and had
+come to know that other world for herself. She found that the gentle
+blood in her veins could claim its own rights and respond graciously.
+Hers had been a submerged aristocracy, but it had come out of its
+chrysalis, bright-winged.
+
+Then one day something happened that turned Glory's little personal
+world upside down and brought a readjustment of all its ideas.
+
+Sim Colby owned a little patch of land beside his homestead place,
+over cross the mountain, and he was among those who became rich. He
+was not so rich as local repute declared him, but rich enough to set
+stirring the avarice of an erstwhile friend, who owned no land at
+all.
+
+So ex-Private Severance came over to the deserter's house with a
+scheme conceived in envy and born of greed. He was bent on blackmail.
+
+When he first arrived, the talk ran along general lines, because
+"Blind Joe," the fiddler, was at the house, and the real object of the
+visit was confidential. Blind Joe had also been an oil beneficiary,
+and he and Sim Colby had become partners in a fashion. During that
+relationship Blind Joe had told Sim some things that he told few
+others.
+
+But when Joe left and the pipes were lighted Severance settled himself
+in a back-tilted chair and gazed reflectively at the crest of the
+timber line.
+
+"You an' me's been partners for a right long spell, Bud Grant, ain't
+we?"
+
+Colby started. The use of that discarded name brought back the past
+with its ghosts of fear. He had almost forgotten that once he had been
+Bud Grant, and a deserter from the army. It was all part of a bygone
+and walled-in long ago. Though they were quite alone he looked
+furtively about him and spoke in a lowered voice:
+
+"Don't call me by thet name. Thar ain't no man but you knows
+erbout--what I used to be."
+
+"Thet's what I've been studyin' erbout. Nobody else but me."
+
+Severance sat silent for a while after that announcement, but there
+was a meaning smile on his lips, and Colby paled a shade whiter.
+
+"_I_ reckon I kin trust ye; I always hev," he declared with a specious
+confidence.
+
+Severance nodded. "I was on guard duty an' I suffered ye ter escape,"
+he went reminiscently on. "I knows thet ye kilt Captain Comyn, an'
+I've done kept a close mouth all these years. Now ye're a rich man an'
+I'm a pore one. Hit looks like ter me ye owes me a debt an' ye'd ought
+ter do a leetle something for me."
+
+So that was it! Colby knew that if he yielded at all, this man's
+avarice and his importunities would feed on themselves increasingly
+and endlessly. Yet he dared not refuse, so he sought to temporize.
+
+"I reckon thar's right smart jestice in what ye says," he conceded,
+"but I don't know jest yit how I stands or how much money I'm wuth.
+Ye'll have ter give me a leetle time ter find out."
+
+But when Severance mounted his mule and rode away, Sim Colby gave him
+only a short start and then hurried on foot through the hill tangles
+by a short cut that would intercept his visitor's course.
+
+He knew that Severance would have to ride through the same gorge in
+which Sim had waylaid Spurrier, and he meant to get there first,
+rifle-armed.
+
+It was sunset when, quite unsuspecting of danger, at least for the
+moment, Severance turned his mule into the gorge. He was felicitating
+himself, since without an acre of land or a drop of oil he had
+"declared himself in" on another's wealth. His mule was a laggard in
+pace, and the rider did not urge him. He was content to amble.
+
+Back of the rock walls of the great cleft, the woods lay hushed and
+dense in the closing shadows. An owl quavered softly, and the water
+among the ferns whispered. All else was quiet.
+
+But from just a little way back, a figure hitched forward as it lay
+belly-down in the "laurel hell." It sighted a rifle and pressed a
+finger.
+
+The mule snorted and stopped dead with a flirt of ears and tail and
+with no word, without even a groan, the rider toppled sidewise and
+slid from the saddle.
+
+The man back in the brush peered out. He noted how still the crumpled
+figure lay between the feet of the patient, mouse-colored beast, that
+switched at flies with its tail. It lay twisted almost double with one
+arm bent beneath its chest.
+
+So Colby crept closer. It would be as well to haul the body back into
+the tangle where it would not be so soon discovered, and to start the
+beast along its way with a slap on the flank.
+
+But just as the assassin stooped, Severance's right hand darted out
+and, as it did so, there was a quick glint of blue steel, and three
+instantly successive reports.
+
+Colby staggered backward with a sense of betrayal and a horrible
+realization of physical pain. His rifle dropped from a shattered hand
+and jets of blood broke out through his rent clothing. Each of those
+three pistol balls had taken effect at a range so close that he had
+been powder-burned. He knew he was mortally hurt, and that the other
+would soon be dead if he was not so already.
+
+Colby began crawling. He was mangled as if by an explosion, but
+instinct drove him. Twice he fainted and recovered dim consciousness
+and still dragged himself tediously along.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Glory was alone in her house. Her father, who had been living with her
+of late, had gone to the county seat overnight.
+
+The young woman sat in silence, and the sewing upon which she had been
+busied lay in her lap forgotten. In her eyes was the far-away look of
+one who eats out one's heart in thoughts that can neither be solved
+nor banished.
+
+Then she heard a faint call. It was hardly more than a gasped whisper,
+and as she rose, startled, and went to the door she saw striving to
+reach it a shape of terrible human wreckage.
+
+Sim Colby's clothes were almost torn from him and blood, dried brown,
+and blood freshly flowing, mingled their ugly smears upon him. His
+lips were livid and his face gray.
+
+Glory ran to him with a horrified scream. She did not yet recognize
+him, and he gasped out a plea for whisky.
+
+With the utmost effort of her young strength she got him in, and
+managed to straighten out the mutilated body with pillows under its
+head.
+
+But after a little the stimulant brought a slight reviving, and he
+talked in broken and disjointed phrases.
+
+"Hit war Severance," he mumbled. "I fought back--I reckon I kilt him,
+too."
+
+Glory gazed in bewildered alarm about the house. Brother Bud Hawkins
+was at Uncle Jimmy Litchfield's place, and she must get medical help,
+though she feared that the wounded man would be dead before her
+return.
+
+When she came back with the preacher, who also "healed human bodies
+some," Colby was still alive but near his passing.
+
+"Ef thar's aught on your conscience, Sim," said the old preacher
+gently, "hit's time ter make yore peace with Almighty God, fer ye're
+goin' ter stand afore him in an hour more. Air ye ready ter face
+Him?"
+
+The dying man looked up, and above the weakness and the suffering that
+filled his eyes, showed a dominating expression of terror. If ever a
+human being needed to be shriven he thought it was himself.
+
+They had to bend close to catch his feeble syllables, as he said: "Git
+paper--write this down."
+
+The preacher obeyed, kneeling on the floor, and though the words were
+few, their utterance required dragging minutes, punctuated with breaks
+of silence and gasping.
+
+"Hit warn't John Spurrier--thet kilt Captain Comyn back tha'r in the
+Philippines.... I knows who done hit----" He broke off there, and the
+girl closed her hands over her face. "I sought ter kill Spurrier--but
+I warn't with them--thet attackted him hyar--an' wounded ther woman."
+
+Once more a long hiatus interrupted the recital and then the mangled
+creature went on: "Hit was ther oil folks thet deevised thet murder
+scheme."
+
+The preacher was busily writing the record of this death-bed statement
+and Glory stood pale and distraught.
+
+The words "oil people" were ringing in her ears. What connection could
+Spurrier have had with them: what enmity could they have had for him?
+
+But out of the confusion of her thoughts another thing stood forth
+with the sudden glare of revelation. This man might die before he
+finished and if he could not tell all he knew, he must first tell that
+which would clear her husband's name. Though that husband had turned
+his back on her, her duty to him in this matter must take precedence
+over the rest.
+
+"Joe Givins--" began Colby once more in laborious syllables, but
+peremptorily the girl halted him.
+
+"Never mind Joe Givins just now," she commanded with as sharp a
+finality as though to her had been delegated the responsibility of his
+judgment. "You said you knew who killed Captain Comyn. Who was it?"
+
+The eyes in the wounded and stricken face gazed up at her in mute
+appeal as a sinner might look at a father confessor, pleading that he
+be spared the bitterest dregs of his admission.
+
+Glory read that glance and her own delicate features hardened. She
+leaned forward.
+
+"I brought you in here and succored you," she asserted with a
+sternness which she could not have commanded in her own behalf.
+"You're going before Almighty God--and unless you answer that
+question honestly--no prayers shall go with you for forgiveness."
+
+"Glory!" The name broke in shocked horror from the bearded lips of the
+preacher. "Glory, the mercy of God hain't ter be interfered with by
+mortals. Ther man's dying!"
+
+Upon him the young woman wheeled with blazing eyes.
+
+"God calls on his servants for justice to the living as well as mercy
+to the dying," she declared. "Sim Colby, who killed Captain Comyn?"
+
+"I done hit," came the unwillingly wrung confession. "My real name's
+Grant.... Severance aided me.... Thet's why I sought to kill Spurrier.
+I deemed he war a huntin' me down."
+
+"Now," ordered the young woman, "what about Joe Givins?"
+
+Again a long pause, then: "Blind Joe Givins--only he ain't no blinder
+than me--read papers hyar--he diskivered thet Spurrier was atter oil
+rights--he tipped off ther oil folks--he war their spy all ther
+time--shammin' ter be blind----" There the speaker struggled to
+breathe and let his head fall back with the utterance incomplete. Five
+minutes later he was dead.
+
+"Hit don't seem ter me," said Brother Hawkins a short time later,
+while Glory still stood in dazed and trance-like wonderment, "es ef
+what he said kin be true. Why ef hit be, John Spurrier was aimin' ter
+plunder us hyar all ther time! He was counselin' us ter sell out--an'
+he was buyin'. I kain't believe that."
+
+But Glory had drawn back to the wall of the room and into her eyes had
+come a new expression. The expression of one who must tear aside a
+veil and know the truth, and who dreads what that truth may be.
+
+She had said that justice, no less than mercy, was God's command laid
+upon mortals. She had, almost by the extremity of withholding from
+Colby his hope of salvation until he spoke, won from him the
+declaration which would give back to John Spurrier an unsmirched name.
+Once Spurrier had said that was his strongest wish in life. But now
+justice called again: this time justice to her own people and perhaps
+it meant the unveiling of duplicity in the man she had married.
+
+"Brother Hawkins," she declared in a low but fervent voice, "if it's
+not true, it's a slander that I can't let stand. If it _is_ true, I
+must undo the wrong he's sought to do--if I can. Please wait."
+
+Then she was tearing at the bit of paneling that gave access to the
+secret cabinet, and poring over papers from a broken and rifled strong
+box.
+
+There was the uncontrovertible record, clear writ, and at length her
+pale face came up resolutely.
+
+"I don't understand it all yet," she told the preacher. "But he was
+buying. He bought everything that's been sold this side the ridge. He
+was seeking to influence the legislature, too. I've got to talk to my
+father."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the next night, when old Dyke Cappeze had ridden back from the
+county seat, that he sat under the lamp in the room where Sim Colby
+had died, and on the table before him were spread the papers that had
+lain unread so long in John Spurrier's secret cabinet.
+
+Across from him sat Glory with her fingers spasmodically clutched and
+her eyes riveted on his face as he read and studied the documents,
+which at first he had been loath to inspect without the permission of
+their owner. He had been convinced, however, when Glory had told the
+story of the dying confession and had appealed to him for counsel.
+
+"By what you tell me," the old lawyer had summarized at the end of her
+recital, "you forced from this man his admission which cleared John
+Spurrier of the charge that's been hanging over him. You set out to
+serve him and refused to be turned aside when Colby balked.... But
+that confession didn't end there. It went on and besides clearing Jack
+in that respect it seems to have involved him in another way. You
+can't use a part of a confession and discard the balance. Perhaps we
+can serve him as well as others best by going into the whole of the
+affair."
+
+So now Glory interrupted by no word or question, despite her anxiety
+to understand and her hoping against hope for a verdict which should
+leave John Spurrier clean of record.
+
+But if she refrained from breaking in on the study that engrossed her
+father and wrinkled his parchment-like forehead, she could not help
+reading the expression of his eyes, the growing sternness and
+indignation of his stiffening lips--and of drawing the moral that when
+he spoke his words must be those of condemnation.
+
+The strident song of the katydids came in through the windows and the
+moon dropped behind the hill crests before Dyke Cappeze spoke, and
+Brother Hawkins, who was spending the night at that house, smoked
+alone on the porch, unwilling to intrude on the confidences that these
+two might wish to exchange.
+
+Finally the lawyer folded the last paper and looked up.
+
+"Do you want the whole truth, little gal?" he inquired bluntly. "How
+much do you still love this man?"
+
+Glory flushed then paled.
+
+"I guess," she said and her words were very low and soft, "I'll love
+him so long as I live--though I hate myself for doing it. He wearied
+of me and forgot me--but I can't do likewise."
+
+Then her chin came up and her voice rang with a quiet finality.
+
+"But I want the truth ... the whole truth without any softening."
+
+"Then as I see it, it's simply this. A war was on between two groups
+of financiers. American Oil and Gas had held a monopoly and maintained
+a corrupt control in the legislature that stifled competition. That's
+why the other oil boom failed. The second group was trying to slip up
+on these corruptionists and gain the control by a campaign of
+surprise. Jack Spurrier appears to have been the ambassador of that
+second group--and he seems to have failed."
+
+The wife nodded. Even yet she unconsciously held a brief for his
+defense.
+
+"So far as you've gone," she reminded her father, "you show him to
+have been what is commonly called a 'practical business man'--but no
+worse than the men he fought."
+
+Cappeze bowed his head gravely and his next words came reluctantly.
+"So far, yes. Of course he could have done none of the things he did
+had he not first won the confidence of those poor ignorant folk that
+are our neighbors and our friends. Of course it was because they
+believed in him and followed his counsel that they sold their
+birthrights to men with whom he pretended to have no connection--and
+yet who took their orders from him."
+
+"Then," Glory started, halted and leaned forward with her hands
+against her breast and her utterance was the monotone of a voice
+forced to a hard question: "Then what I feared was true? He lived
+among us and made friends of us--only to rob us?"
+
+"If by 'us' you mean the mountain people, I fear me that's precisely
+what he did. I can see no other explanation. Which ever of these two
+groups won meant to exploit and plunder us."
+
+For a little she made no answer, but the delicate color of her cheeks
+was gone to an ivory whiteness and the violet eyes were hardening.
+
+"Perhaps we oughtn't to judge him too harshly for these things,"
+said the father comfortingly. "The scroll of my bitterness against
+him is already heavy enough and to spare. He has broken your heart
+and that's enough for me. As to the rest there are many so-called
+honorable gentlemen who are no more scrupulous. We demand clean
+conduct here in these hills," a fierce bitterness came into his
+words, "but then we are ignorant, backwoods folk! There are many
+intricate ins and outs to this business and I don't presume to speak
+with absolute conclusiveness yet."
+
+Outside the katydids sang their prophecies of frost to come and an
+owl hooted. Glory Spurrier sat staring ahead of her and at last she
+said aloud, in that tone which one uses when a thought finds
+expression, unconscious that it has been vocal: "So he won our
+faith--with his clear eyes and his honest smile--only to swindle and
+rob us!"
+
+"My God, if I were a younger man," broke out the father passionately,
+rising from his chair and clenching the damaging papers in his
+talon-like fingers, "I'd learn the oil game. I'd take this information
+and use it against both their gangs--and I believe I could force them
+both to their knees."
+
+He paused and the momentary fire died out of his eyes.
+
+"I'm too old a dog for new tricks though," he added dejectedly, "and
+there's no one else to do it."
+
+"How could it be done?" demanded Glory rousing herself from her
+trance. "Between them they hold all the power, don't they?"
+
+"As far as I can make out," Cappeze explained with the interest of the
+legalistic mind for tackling an abstruse problem, "Spurrier had
+completed his arch as to one of his two purposes--all except its
+keystone. He had yet to gain a passage way through Brother Hawkins'
+land. With that he would have held the completed right-of-way--and
+it's the only one. The other gang of pirates hold the ability to get a
+charter but no right of way over which to use it. Now the man who
+could deliver Brother Hawkins' concession would have a key. He could
+force Spurrier's crowd to agree to almost anything, and with
+Spurrier's crowd he could wring a compromise from the others. Bud
+Hawkins is like the delegate at a convention who can break a
+deadlock. God knows I'd love to tackle it--but it's too late for me."
+
+Glory had come to her feet, and stood an incarnation of combat.
+
+"It's not too late for me," she said quietly. "Perhaps I'm too crude
+to go into John Spurrier's world of cultivated people but I'm shrewd
+enough to go into his world of business!"
+
+"You!" exclaimed the father in astonishment, then after a moment an
+eager light slowly dawned in his eyes and he broke out vehemently: "By
+God in Heaven, girl, I believe you're the man for the job!"
+
+"Call Brother Hawkins in," commanded Glory. "We need his help."
+
+Before he reached the door old Cappeze turned on his heel.
+
+"Glory," he said, "we've need to move out of this house and go back to
+my place. Here we're dwelling under a dishonest roof."
+
+"I'm going to leave it," she responded quickly, "but I'm going farther
+away than that. I'm going to study oil and I'm going to do it in the
+Bluegrass lowlands."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+John Spurrier stepped from the train at Carnettsville into a life that
+had been revolutionized. At last he had succeeded in leaving his
+German exile. His own country was in the war but he, with the
+equipment of a soldier, bore a dishonored name, which would bar him
+from a commission. Here he found the development of his dreams
+realized, but by other hands than his own.
+
+Above all, he must see Glory. He had cabled her and written her, so
+she would be expecting him. Now he gazed about streets through which
+teemed the new activity.
+
+Here was the thing he had seen in his dreams when he stood on wooded
+hills and thought in the terms of the future. Here it stood vivid and
+actual before the eyes that had visioned it.
+
+With a groan he turned into the road homeward on a hired horse. He
+still meant to fight, and unless the Bud Hawkins property had escaped
+him, he would still have to be accounted with--but great prizes had
+slipped away.
+
+At the gate of his house, his heart rose into his throat. The power of
+his emotion almost stifled him. Never had his love for Glory
+flickered. Never had he thought or dreamed of anything else or any one
+else so dearly and so constantly as of her.
+
+He stood at the fence with half-closed eyes for a moment, steadying
+himself against the surges of up-welling emotion, then, raising his
+eyes, he saw that the windows and the door were nailed up. The chimney
+stood dead and smokeless.
+
+Panic clutched at his throat as with a physical grasp. Before him
+trooped a hundred associations unaccountably dear. They were all
+memories of little things, mostly foolish little things that went into
+the sacred intimacy of his life with Glory.
+
+Now there was no Glory there.
+
+He rode at the best speed left in his tired horse over to old
+Cappeze's house, and, as he dismounted, saw the lawyer, greatly aged
+and broken, standing in the door.
+
+One glance at that face confirmed all the fears with which he had been
+battling. It was a face as stern as those on the frieze of the
+prophets. In it there was no ghost of the old welcome, no hope of any
+relenting. This old man saw in him an enemy.
+
+"Where is Glory?" demanded Spurrier as he hurried up to the doorstep,
+and the other looked accusingly back into his eyes and answered in
+cold and bitterly clipped syllables.
+
+"Wherever she is, sir, it's her wish to be there alone." Suddenly the
+old eyes flamed and the old voice rose thin and passionate. "If I
+burned in hell for it to the end of eternity, I would give you no
+other word of her."
+
+"She--she is not dead, then?"
+
+"No--but dead to you."
+
+"Mr. Cappeze," said Spurrier steadily, "are you sure that I may not
+have explanations that may change her view of me?"
+
+"We know," said the lawyer in a voice out of which the passion had
+passed, but which had the dead quality of an opinion inflexibly
+solidified, "that since your marriage, you never made her the
+companion of any hour that was not a backwoods hour. We know that you
+never told us the truth about yourself or your enterprises--that you
+came to us as a friend, won our confidence, and sought to exploit us.
+Your record is one of lies and unfaithfulness, and we have cast you
+out. That is her decision and with me her wish is sacred."
+
+The returned exile stood meeting the relentless eyes of the old man
+who had been his first friend in these hills and for a few moments he
+did not trust himself to speak.
+
+The shock of those shuttered windows and that blankly staring front at
+the house where he had looked for welcome; the collapse of all the
+dreams that had sustained him while a prisoner in an internment camp
+and a refugee hounded across the German border were visiting upon him
+a prostration that left him trembling and shaken.
+
+Finally he commanded his voice.
+
+"To me, too, her wish is sacred--but not until I hear it from her own
+lips. She alone has the right to condemn me and not even she until I
+have made my plea to her. Great God, man, my silence hasn't been
+voluntary. I've been cut off in a Hun prison-camp. I've kept life in
+me only because I could dream of her and because though it was easier
+to die, I couldn't die without seeing her and explaining."
+
+"It was from her own lips that I took my orders," came the unmoved
+response. "Those orders were that through me you should learn
+nothing. You had the friendship of every man here until you abused
+it--now I think you'll encounter no sympathy. I told you once how the
+wolf-bitch would feel toward the man who robbed her of her young. You
+chose to disregard my warning--and I'll ask you to leave my house."
+
+John Spurrier bowed his head. He had lost her! If that were her final
+conclusion, he could hardly seek to dissuade her. At least he could
+lose the final happiness out of his life--from which so much else had
+already been lost--as a gentleman should lose.
+
+And he knew that however old Cappeze might feel, he would not lie. If
+he said that was Glory's deliberately formed decision, that statement
+must be accepted as true.
+
+"I have never loved any one else," said Spurrier slowly. "I shall
+never love any one else. I have been faithful despite appearances. The
+rest of your charges are true, and I make no denial. I gambled about
+as fairly as most men gamble. That is all."
+
+A stiffening pride, made flinty by the old man's hostility, shut
+into silence some things that Spurrier might have said. He scorned
+the seeming of whine that might have lain in explanations, even
+though the explanations should lighten the shadow of his old friend's
+disapproval. He offered no extenuation and breathed nothing of the
+changes that had been wrought in himself by the tedious alchemy of
+time and reflection.
+
+He had begun under the spur of greedy ambition, but changes had been
+wrought in him by Glory's love.
+
+He was still ambitious, but in a different way. He wanted to salvage
+something for the equitable beneficiaries. He wanted to stand, not
+among the predatory millionaires, but to be his own man, with a clean
+name and solvent.
+
+Before he could attain that condition he must render unto Harrison the
+things that were Harrison's and wipe out his own tremendous
+liabilities--but his heart was in the hills.
+
+John Spurrier went slowly and heavy heartedly back to the house which
+he had refashioned for his bride; the house that had become to him a
+shrine to all the dear, lost things of life.
+
+The sun fell in mottled luminousness across its face of tempered gray
+and from the orchard where the lush grass grew knee-high came the
+cheery whistle of a Bob-white.
+
+At the sound the man groaned with a wrench of his heart and throat,
+and his thoughts raced back to that day when the same note had come
+from the voices of hidden assassins and when Glory had exposed her
+breast to rifle-fire to send out the pigeon with its call for help.
+
+The splendid oak that had shaded their stile had grown broader of
+girth and more majestic in the spread of its head-growth since he had
+stood here before, and in the flower beds, in which Glory had
+delighted, a few forlorn survivors, sprung up as volunteers from
+neglected roots, struggled through a choke of dusty weeds.
+
+The man looked about the empty yard and his breath came like that of a
+torture victim on the rack. The desolation and ache of a life deprived
+of all that made it sweet struck in upon him with a blight beside
+which his prison loneliness had been nothing.
+
+"If she knew the whole truth--instead of only half the truth," he
+groaned, "she might forgive me."
+
+He ripped the padlock from the door and let himself in. He flung wide
+a shutter and let the afternoon sun flood the room, and once inside a
+score of little things worked the magic of memory upon him and tore
+afresh every wound that was festering.
+
+There hung the landscapes that he and she had loved and as he looked
+at them her voice seemed to sound again in his ears like forgotten
+music. From somewhere came the heavy fragrance of honeysuckle and old
+nights with her in the moonlight rushed back upon him.
+
+Then he saw an apron on a peg--hanging limp and empty, and again he
+saw her in it. He went and opened a drawer in which his own clothes
+had been kept--and there neatly folded by her hand were things of
+his.
+
+John Spurrier, whose iron nerve had once been café talk in the Orient,
+sat down on a quilted bed and tearless sobs racked him.
+
+"No," he said to himself at last. "No, if she wants her freedom I
+can't pursue her. I've hurt her enough--and God knows I'm punished
+enough."
+
+Unless he were tamely to surrender to the despair that beset him, John
+Spurrier had one other thing to do before he left the hills. He must
+come to such an agreement with Bud Hawkins as would give him a right
+of way over that single tract and complete his chain of holdings. Thus
+fortified the field beyond the ridge would be safe against invasion by
+his enemies and even the other field would have readier outlet to
+market by that route. In the Hawkins property lay the keystone of the
+arch. With it the position was impregnable. Without it all the rest
+fell apart like an inarticulated skeleton.
+
+It happened that Spurrier met Hawkins as he went away from his lonely
+house, and forcing his own miseries into the background, he sought to
+become the business man once more. He began with a frank statement of
+the facts and offered fair and substantial terms of trade.
+
+Both because his affection for the old preacher would have tolerated
+nothing less and because it would have been folly now to play the
+cheaper game, he spoke in the terms of generosity.
+
+But to his surprise and discomfiture, Brother Hawkins shook a stubborn
+head.
+
+"Thar ain't skeercely no power on 'arth, Mr. Spurrier," he declared,
+"thet could fo'ce me inter doin' no business with ye."
+
+"But, Brother Hawkins," argued the opportunity hound, "you are cutting
+your own throat. You and I standing together are invincible. Separate,
+we are lost. I'm almost willing to let you name the terms of
+agreement--to write the contract for yourself."
+
+"I've done been pore a right long while already," the preacher
+reminded him as his eyes kindled with the zealot's fire. "Long afore
+my day Jesus Christ was pore an' ther Apostle Paul, an' other
+righteous men. I ain't skeered ter go on in likewise ter what I've
+always done." He paused and laid a kindly hand on the shoulder of the
+man who offered him wealth.
+
+"I ain't seekin' ter fault ye unduly, John Spurrier. Mebby ye've done
+follered yore lights--but we don't see with no common eye, ner no
+mutual disc'arnment. Ye've done misled folk thet swore by ye, ef I
+sees hit a'right. Now ye offers me wealth, much ther same as Satan
+offered hit ter Jesus on a high place, an' we kain't trade--no more
+then what they could trade."
+
+The old preacher's attitude held the trace of kindliness that sought
+to drape reproof in gentleness and to him, as had been impossible with
+Cappeze, Spurrier poured out his confidence. At the outset, he
+confessed, he had deliberately dedicated himself to the development of
+wealth for himself and his employers, with no thought of others.
+Later, in a fight between wary capitalists where vigilance had to be
+met with vigilance, the seal of secrecy had been imperative. Frankness
+with the mountain men would have been a warning to his enemies. Now,
+however, his sense of responsibility was awake. Now he wanted to win
+back his status of confidence in this land where he had known his only
+home. Now what weight he had left to throw into the scales would be
+righteously thrown. Even yet he must move with strict, guarded
+secrecy.
+
+But the old circuit rider shook his head.
+
+"Hit's too late, now, ter rouse faith in me, John," he reiterated.
+"Albeit I'd love ter credit ye, ef so-be I could. What's come ter pass
+kain't be washed out with words." He paused before he added the simple
+edict against which there was no arguing.
+
+"Mebby I mout stand convinced even yit ef I didn't know thet ther
+devil was urgin' me on with prospects of riches."
+
+One thing remained to him; the pride that should stiffen him in the
+presence of his accusers and judges. When he went into the eclipse of
+ruin, at least he would go with unflinching gallantry.
+
+And it was in that mood that Spurrier reached his club in New York and
+prepared himself for the ordeal of the next day's interview.
+
+He had wired Harrison of his coming, but not of his hopelessness, and
+when his telephone jangled and he heard the voice of the financier, he
+recognized in it an undercurrent of exasperation, which carried omen
+of a difficult interview.
+
+"That you, Spurrier? This is Harrison. Be at my office at eleven
+to-morrow morning. Perhaps you can construe certain riddles."
+
+"Of what nature, sir?"
+
+"Of a nature that won't bear full discussion over the wire. We have
+had an anonymous letter from some mysterious person who claims to come
+with the situation in a sling. It may be a crank whom we'll have to
+throw out--or some one we dare not ignore. At all events, it's up to
+you to dispose of him. He's in your province. If you fail, we lose out
+and, as I said once before, you go to the scrap heap."
+
+Spurrier hung up the phone and sat in a nerveless trepidation which
+was new and foreign to his nature. This interview of to-morrow morning
+would call for the tallest bluffing he had ever attempted, and the
+chances would, perhaps, turn on hair-trigger elements of personal
+force.
+
+He must depend on his coolness, audacity, and adroitness to win a
+decision, and, except by guesswork, he could not hope to formulate in
+advance the terrain of battle or the nature of counter-attack with
+which he must meet his adversary.
+
+That evening he strolled along Broadway and found himself yielding to
+a dangerous and whimsical mood. He wondered how many other men
+outwardly as self-assured and prosperous as himself were covertly
+confessing suicide as one of to-morrow's probabilities.
+
+Over Longacre Square the incandescent billboards flamed and flared.
+The darning-wool kitten disported itself with mechanical abandon. The
+woman who advertised a well-known corset and the man who exploited a
+brand of underwear brilliantly made and unmade their toilets far above
+the sidewalk level. Motors shrieked and droned and crowds drifted.
+
+Before a moving-picture theater, his introspective eye was momentarily
+challenged by a gaudy three-sheet. The poster proclaimed a popular
+screen star in a "fight fuller of punch than that of 'The Wreckers.'"
+
+What caused Spurrier to pause was the composition of the picture--and
+the mental comparison which it evoked. A man crouched behind a heavy
+table, overthrown for a barricade--as he had once done.
+
+Fallen enemies lay on the floor of a crude Western cabin. Others still
+stood, and fought with flashing guns and faces "registering"
+desperation, frenzy, and maniac fury. The hero only, though alone and
+outnumbered, was grimly calm. The stress of that inferno had not
+interfered with the theatric pose of head and shoulders--the grace and
+effect of gesture that was conveyed in the two hands wielding two
+smoking pistols.
+
+Spurrier smiled. It occurred to him that had a director stood by
+while he himself had knelt behind a table he would have bawled out
+many amendments which fact had overlooked. Apparently he and his
+attackers had, by these exacting standards of art, missed the drama of
+the situation.
+
+Over him swept a fresh flood of memory, and it brought a cold and
+nervous dampness to his temples. Again he saw Glory rising at the
+broken window with a pigeon to release--and a life to sacrifice, if
+need be. On her face had been no theatric expression which would have
+warranted a close-up.
+
+Spurrier hastened on, turning into a side street where he could put
+the glare at his back and find a more mercifully dark way.
+
+He was seeing, instead of dark house fronts, the tops of pine trees
+etched against an afterglow, and Glory standing silhouetted against a
+hilltop. Above the grind of the elevated and the traffic, he was
+hearing her voice in thrushlike song, happy because he loved her.
+
+The agony of loss overwhelmed him, and he actually longed, as for a
+better thing, for that moment to come back when behind an overturned
+table he had endured the suspense which death had promised to end in
+an instant filled and paid for with revenge.
+
+Then through his disturbed brain once more flashed lines of verse:
+
+ "I was ever a fighter, so--one fight more,
+ The best and the last!
+ I should hate that Death bandaged my eyes and forebore,
+ And bade me creep past."
+
+At all events he would, in the figurative sense, die fighting
+to-morrow. He knew his mistakes now. If he lived on he hoped to atone
+for them, but if he died he would go out without a whine.
+
+And if he must die, there was one way that seemed preferable to
+others. The army would have none of him, as an officer, because he
+stood besmirched of honor. But he knew the stern temper of the
+mountaineers. They would rise in unanimous response to the call of
+arms. He could go with them, not with any insignia on his collar, but
+marching shoulder against shoulder into that red hell of Flanders and
+France, where a man might baptize himself, shrive himself, and die.
+And in dying they would leave a record behind them!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+Down along the creekbeds back of Hemlock Mountain young Jimmy
+Litchfield, a son of old Uncle Jimmy, had been teaming with a
+well-boring outfit and his wagon had bogged down in deep mud. He had
+failed to extricate himself so he tramped three hard, steep miles and
+telephoned for an extra team. While he awaited deliverance he found
+himself irked and, to while away the time, set his drill down
+haphazard and began to bore.
+
+It would be some hours before help arrived, and when he had worked a
+while he had forgotten all about help.
+
+His drill had struck through soft gravel to an oil pool lying close to
+the surface, and the black tide gushed crazily.
+
+Young Jimmy sat back watching the dark jet that he had no means of
+stemming or containing, and through his simple soul flowed all the
+intoxication of triumph.
+
+He was the discoverer of a new--and palpably a rich field!
+
+Hereafter oil men would speak of the Snake Creek field as copper men
+spoke of Anaconda or gold men of the Yukon.
+
+And that night word went by wire to the opportunity hound who had
+just gone east, that the "fur" side was to the "nigh" side as gold is
+to silver.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"What do you make of it?" demanded Harrison, when Spurrier, secure in
+his seeming of undaunted assurance, arrived at his office and the
+response came smilingly: "I think it means a bluff."
+
+"Read that," snapped the financier as he flung a letter across his
+desk.
+
+Spurrier took the sheet of paper and read in a hand, evidently
+disguised!
+
+ You find yourself in a cul-de-sac. I hold the key to a way out. My
+ terms are definite and determined in advance. I shall be at your
+ office at noon, Tuesday. We will do business at that time, or not
+ at all.
+
+"I repeat," said Spurrier, "that this seems to me a brass-bound bluff.
+I make only the request that I be permitted to talk with this brigand
+alone; to sound him out with no interference and to shape my policy by
+the circumstances. I'm not at all frightened."
+
+Harrison answered snappily:
+
+"I agree to that--but if you fail you fail finally."
+
+So on Tuesday forenoon Spurrier sat cross-legged in Harrison's office
+and their discussion had come to its end. Now, he had only to await
+the unknown person who was to arrive at noon bearing alleged terms, a
+person who claimed to be armed for battle if battle were needed.
+
+At Harrison's left and right sat his favored lieutenants, but Spurrier
+himself occupied a chair a little bit apart, relegated to a zone of
+probation.
+
+Then a rap sounded on the door, and Spurrier smiled with a ghost of
+triumph as he noted that he alone of the small group did not start at
+the signal. For all their great caliber and standing, these men were
+keyed to expectancy and exasperated nervousness.
+
+The clerk who appeared made his announcement with the calculated
+evenness of routine: "A lady is waiting. She says her name doesn't
+matter. She has an appointment for twelve."
+
+"A lady!" exclaimed Harrison in amazement. "My God, do we have to
+fight this thing out with a woman?"
+
+The tableau of astonishment held, until Spurrier broke it:
+
+"What matter personalities to us?" he blandly inquired. "We are
+interested in facts."
+
+The chief lifted his hand and gave curt direction. "Show her in."
+
+Then through the door came a woman whose beauty would have arrested
+attention in any gathering. Just now what these men, rising grudgingly
+from their chairs, noted first, was the self-possession, the poise,
+and the convincing evidence of good breeding and competency which
+characterized her.
+
+She was elegantly but plainly dressed, and her manner conveyed a
+self-assurance in nowise flustered by the prospect of impending
+storm.
+
+No one there, save Spurrier, recognized her, for to Martin Harrison
+carrying the one disapproving impression of a mountain girl in patched
+gingham, the transformation was complete.
+
+And as for Spurrier himself, after coming to his feet, he stood as a
+man might be expected to stand if a specter of death had suddenly
+materialized before him.
+
+For the one time in his life all the assumption of boldness, worn for
+other eyes, broke and fell away from him, leaving him nakedly and
+starkly dumbfounded. He presented the pale and distressed aspect of a
+whipped prize fighter, reeling groggily against the ropes, and
+defenseless against attack.
+
+It was a swift transformation from audacious boldness to something
+which seemed abject, or that at least was the aspect which presented
+itself to Martin Harrison and his aides, but back of it all lay
+reasons into which they could not see.
+
+It was no crumbling and softening of battle metal that had wrought
+this astonishing metamorphosis but a thing much nearer to the man's
+heart. At that moment there departed from his mind the whole urgent
+call of the duel between business enemies--and he saw only the woman
+for whom he had sought and whom he had not found.
+
+In the cumulative force and impact of their heart-breaking sequence
+there rushed back on him all the memories that had been haunting him,
+intensified to unspeakable degree at the sight of her face--and if he
+thought of the business awaiting them at all, it was only with a
+stabbing pain of realization that he had met Glory again only in the
+guise of an enemy.
+
+Harrison gave him one contemptuous glance and remarked brutally:
+
+"Madam, this gentleman was to talk with you, but he seems scarcely
+able to conduct any affair of moment."
+
+Glory was looking at the broken man, too, and into her splendid eyes
+stole a pity that had tenderness back of it.
+
+Old memories came in potent waves, and she closed her lids for a
+moment as though against a painful glare, but with quick recovery she
+spoke.
+
+"It is imperative, gentlemen, that I have a few words first--and
+alone--with Mr. Spurrier."
+
+"If you insist, but----" Harrison's shoulders stiffened. "But we do
+not guarantee that we shall abide by his declarations."
+
+"I do insist--and I think you will find that it is I who am in the
+position to dictate terms."
+
+Harrison gave a sharply imperative gesture toward the door through
+which the others filed out, followed by the chief himself, leaving the
+two alone.
+
+Then John Spurrier rose, and supported himself by hands pressed upon
+the table top. He stood unsteadily at first and failed in his effort
+to speak. Then, with difficulty, he straightened and swept his two
+hands out in a gesture of surrender.
+
+"I'm through," he said. "I thought there was still one fight left in
+me--but I can't fight you."
+
+She did not answer and, after a little, with a slight regaining of his
+self-command, he went on again:
+
+"Glory! What a name and what a fulfillment! You have always been Glory
+to me."
+
+Out of his eyes slowly went the apathy of despair and another look of
+even stronger feeling preëmpted its place: a look of worship and
+adoration.
+
+"I didn't know," admitted Glory softly, "that I was to meet you here.
+I didn't know that the fight was to be between us."
+
+"You have ruined me," he answered. "I'm a sinking ship now, and those
+rats out there will leave me--but it's worth ruin to see you again. I
+want you to take this message with you and remember it. All my life
+I've gambled hard and fought hard. Now I fail hard. I lost you and
+deserved to lose you, but I've always loved you and always shall."
+
+Her eyes grew stern, repressing the tenderness and pity that sought to
+hold them soft.
+
+"You abandoned me," she said. "You sought to plunder my people. I took
+up their fight, and I shall win it."
+
+Spurrier came a step toward her and spread his hands in a gesture of
+surrender, but he had recovered from the shock that had so unnerved
+him a few minutes ago and there was now a certain dignity in his
+acceptance of defeat.
+
+"I break my sword across my knee," he declared, "and since I must do
+it, I'm glad you are the victor. I won't ask for mercy even from
+you--but when you say I abandoned you, you are grievously wrong.
+
+"When you say I sought to plunder your people, you speak the truth
+about me--as I was before I came to love you. From that time on I
+sought to serve your people."
+
+"Sought to serve them?" she repeated in perplexity, "The record shows
+nothing of that."
+
+"And since the record doesn't," he answered steadily, "any assertions
+and protestations would be without proof. I've told you, because my
+heart compelled me. I won't try to convince you. At all events, since
+I failed, my motives don't matter."
+
+"Your motives are everything. I took up the fight," she said, "because
+I thought a Spurrier had wronged them. I wanted a Spurrier to make
+restitution."
+
+"At first I saw only the game, dear heart," he confessed, "never the
+unfairness. I'm ready to pay the price. Ruin me--but in God's name,
+believe that I love you."
+
+Her hand came out waveringly at that, and for a moment rested on his
+shoulder with a little gesture of tenderness.
+
+"I thought I hated you," she said. "I tried to hate you. I've
+dedicated myself to my people and their rights--but if you trust me
+enough, call them in and let me talk with them."
+
+"Trust you enough!" he exclaimed passionately, then he caught her to
+him, and, when he let her go, he stood again transformed and
+revivified into the man he had seemed before she appeared in the
+doorway. It was as though the touch of her lips had given him the fire
+from which he rose phoenixlike.
+
+With an unhesitant step he went to the door and opened it, and the men
+who had gone out trooped back and ranged themselves again about the
+table.
+
+"Mr. Spurrier did all in your interests that a man could do," said
+Glory. "He failed to secure your charter and he failed to secure the
+one tract that serves as the key. I am a mountain woman seeking only
+to protect my people. I hold that tract as trustee for Bud Hawkins. I
+mean to do business, but only at a fair price. It's for you to
+determine whether I deal with you or your competitors."
+
+A look of consternation spread over the faces of the lesser men, but
+Harrison inquired with a grim smile:
+
+"Madam, haven't I seen you somewhere before to-day?"
+
+"Once before--down in the hills."
+
+"Then you are this man's wife! Was this dramatic incident prearranged
+between you?"
+
+She raised an imperative hand, and her voice admitted no question of
+sincerity.
+
+"Make no such mistake. Mr. Spurrier knew nothing of this. He was loyal
+enough--to you. From him I never even learned the nature of his
+business. Without his knowledge _I_ was loyal to my people."
+
+Then for ten minutes she talked clearly, forcefully, and with the ring
+of indubitable sincerity giving fire to voice and manner. She told of
+the fight she and her father had made to keep heart in mountain folk,
+enraged by what they believed to be the betrayal by a man they had
+trusted and attacked by every means of coercion at the disposal of
+American Oil and Gas.
+
+She told of small local reservoirs, mysteriously burned by unknown
+incendiaries; of neighborhood pipe lines cut until they spilled out
+their wealth again into the earth; of how she herself had walked these
+lines at night, watching against sabotage.
+
+As she talked with simple directness and without self-vaunting, they
+saw her growing in the trust of these men whose wrath had been, in the
+words of old Cappeze, "Like that of the wolf-bitch robbed a second
+time of her whelps." They recognized the faith that had commissioned
+her to speak as trustee, and to act with carte-blanche powers.
+
+Harrison and his subordinates were not susceptible men, easily swayed
+by a dramatic circumstance, so they cross-examined and heckled her
+with shrewd and tripping inquiries, until she reminded them that she
+had not come as a supplicant, but to lay before them terms, which they
+would, at their peril, decline to accept.
+
+The realization was strong in them that she had spoken only the truth
+when she declared that she held the key. When they were convinced that
+she realized, in full, the strength of her position, they had no wish
+to antagonize longer.
+
+The group of financiers drew apart, but after a brief consultation
+Harrison came forward and offered his hand.
+
+"Mrs. Spurrier," he announced crisply, "we have gone too far to draw
+back. After all, I think you come rather as a rescue party than an
+attacker. Spurrier, you have married a damned brilliant woman."
+
+Glory accepted the extended hand of peace, and Harrison, with a jerk
+of his head to the door, led his followers out, leaving them alone
+again.
+
+Then Glory held out her arms, and into the bright depths of her eyes
+flashed the old bewitching merriment.
+
+"Thar's a lavish of things I needs ter know, Jack," she said. "You've
+got to l'arn 'em all ter me."
+
+"I come now, not as teacher but as pupil, dear heart," he declared,
+"and I come humbly."
+
+Then her face grew serious and her voice vibrant with tenderness.
+
+"I have another gift for you, Jack, besides myself, I can give you
+back an untarnished name."
+
+
+THE END
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcribers Note
+
+Typographical inconsistencies have been changed and are listed below.
+
+Hyphenation standardized.
+
+Other archaic and variable spelling and hyphenation is preserved,
+including the author's use of eying and eyeing, Quizote, Otello, and
+langour.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+
+Transcriber Changes
+
+The following changes were made to the original text:
+
+ Page 86: Was sterterously (he sat there breathing =stertorously=
+ while the untended fire died away)
+
+ Page 90: Was plausiblity (One explanation only presented itself with
+ any color of =plausibility=)
+
+ Page 96: Was mistly (there was a dreamy violet where it merged
+ =mistily= with the skyline ridges)
+
+ Page 118: Was there ("It is well established by the evidence befo'
+ =ther= co'te")
+
+ Page 120: Was impusively (the girl broke out =impulsively=)
+
+ Page 124: Removed extra quote (Still Spurrier cursed himself for a
+ careless =fool=)
+
+ Page 162: Was it's (you'll recall that =its= longer name is _Datura
+ stramonium_)
+
+ Page 180: Was inperceptible (pair of shoulders that hunched slowly
+ forward with almost =imperceptible= movement)
+
+ Page 208: Guessed at missing text (the latter inquired gravely:
+ ="Did they play one= of them royalty games")
+
+ Page 208: Was single quote (I ain't playin' no more of them royalty
+ =games"=)
+
+ Page 263: Was pacink ("Before God," cried Harrison, =pacing= his
+ floor like a lion)
+
+ Page 301: Was personalties ("What matter =personalities= to us?")
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Law of Hemlock Mountain, by Hugh Lundsford
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Law of Hemlock Mountain, by Hugh Lundsford
+
+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: The Law of Hemlock Mountain
+
+Author: Hugh Lundsford
+
+Illustrator: Douglas Duer
+
+Release Date: November 4, 2010 [EBook #34208]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAW OF HEMLOCK MOUNTAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Katherine Ward, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<h1>THE LAW OF<br />
+HEMLOCK MOUNTAIN</h1>
+<p class='larger'><b>BY<br />
+HUGH LUNDSFORD</b></p>
+<p>Frontispiece by<br />
+DOUGLAS DUER</p>
+<p class='smcap padtop'>New York<br />
+W. J. Watt &amp; Company<br />
+PUBLISHERS</p>
+<p class='smaller padtop'><span class='smcap'>Copyright, 1920, by</span><br />
+W. J. WATT &amp; COMPANY</p>
+<p class='smaller padtop'>PRESS OF<br />
+BRAUNWORTH &amp; CO.<br />
+BOOK MANUFACTURERS<br />
+BROOKLYN, N.Y.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+</div>
+<img src='images/frontis2.jpg' alt='' title='' width='440' height='650' />
+<br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&#8220;I am sorry,&#8221; declared Spurrier, humbly. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know they were pets. They behaved very much like wild birds.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I' id='CHAPTER_I'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The officer whose collar ornaments were the
+winged staff and serpents of the medical
+branch, held what was left of the deck in his
+right hand and moistened the tip of his thumb against
+the tip of his tongue.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Reënforcements, major?&#8221; he inquired with a
+glance to the man at his left, and the poker face of
+the gentleman so addressed remained impervious to
+expression as the answer was given back:</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I&#8217;ll stand by what I&#8217;ve got here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>If the utterance hung on a quarter second of indecision
+it was a circumstance that went unnoted, save
+possibly by a young man with the single bars of a
+lieutenant on his shoulder straps&mdash;and Spurrier gave
+no flicker of recognition of what had escaped the
+others.</p>
+<p>Between the whitewashed walls of the room where
+the little group of officers sat at cards the Philippine
+night breeze stirred faintly with a fevered breath that
+scarcely disturbed the jalousies.</p>
+<p>The pile of poker chips had grown to a bulkiness
+and value out of just proportion to the means of army
+officers below field rank&mdash;and except for the battalion,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span>
+commander and the surgeon none there held higher
+grade than a captaincy. This jungle-hot weather
+made men irresponsible.</p>
+<p>One or two of the faces were excitedly flushed; several
+others were morosely dark. The lights guttered
+with a jaundiced yellow and sweat beaded the temples
+of the players. Sweat, too, made slippery the enameled
+surfaces of the pasteboards. Sweat seemed to ooze
+and simmer in their brains like the oil from overheated
+asphalt.</p>
+<p>These men had been forced into a companionship
+of monotony in a climate of unhealth until their
+studied politeness, even their forced jocularity was
+rather the effort of toleration than the easy play of
+comradeship. Their arduously wooed excitement of
+draw-poker, which had run improvidently out of
+bounds, was not a pleasure so much as an expedient
+against the boredom that had rubbed their tempers
+threadbare and put an edgy sharpness on their nerves.</p>
+<p>Captain Comyn, upon whose call for cards the
+dealer now waited, was thinking of Private Grant out
+there under guard in the improvised hospital. The
+islands had &#8220;gotten to&#8221; Private Grant and &#8220;locoed&#8221;
+him, and he had breathed sulphurous maledictions
+against Captain Comyn&#8217;s life&mdash;but it was not those
+threats that now disturbed the company commander.</p>
+<p>Of late Captain Comyn had been lying awake at
+night and wondering if he, too, were not going the
+same way as the unfortunate file. Horribly quiet fears
+had been stealing poisonously into his mind&mdash;a mind
+not given to timidities&mdash;and the word &#8220;melancholia&#8221;
+had assumed for him a morbid and irresistible compulsion.
+No one save the captain&#8217;s self knew of these
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span>
+secret hauntings, born of climate and smoldering fever,
+and he would not have revealed them on the torture
+rack. For them he entertained the same shame as that
+of a boy grown too large for such weakness, who
+shudders with an unconfessed fear of the dark. But
+he could no more shake them loose and be free of them
+than could the Ancient Mariner rid himself of the bird
+of ill-omen tied about his neck. Now he pulled himself
+together and tossed away a single card.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll take one in the place of that,&#8221; he commented
+with studied carelessness, and Lieutenant John
+Spurrier, with that infectious smile which came readily
+to his lips, pointed a contrast with the captain&#8217;s abstraction
+by the snappy quickness of his announcement:</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I&#8217;m going to trail along, I&#8217;ll need three. Yes,
+three, please, major.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When Spurrier sits in the game,&#8221; commented a
+player who, with a dolorous glance at the booty before
+him, threw down his hands, &#8220;we at least get action.
+Myself, I&#8217;m out of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The battalion commander studied the ceiling with a
+troubled furrow between his brows which was not
+brought there by the hazards of luck. He was reflecting
+that whenever a game was organized it was Spurrier
+who quickened its tempo from innocuous amusement
+to reckless extravagance. Spurrier, fitted for
+his life with so many soldierly qualities, was still,
+above all else, a plunger. That spirit seemed a passion
+that filled and overflowed him. Temperate in other
+habits, he played like a nabob. The major remembered
+hearing that even at West Point Jack Spurrier
+had narrowly, escaped dismissal for gambling in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
+quarters, though his class standing had been distinguished
+and his gridiron record had become a tradition.</p>
+<p>This sort of game with &#8220;the roof off and deuces
+wild,&#8221; was not good for the <i>morale</i> of his junior
+officers, mused the major. It was like spiking whisky
+with absinthe. Yes, to-morrow he would have Spurrier
+at his quarters and talk to him like a Dutch uncle.</p>
+<p>There were three left battling for the often
+sweetened pot now, with three more who had dropped
+out, looking on, and a tensity enveloped the long-drawn
+climax of the evening&#8217;s session.</p>
+<p>Captain Comyn&#8217;s cheek bones had reddened and his
+irascible frown lines deepened. For the moment his
+fears of melancholia had been swallowed up in a fitful
+fury against Spurrier and his smiling face.</p>
+<p>At last came the decisive moment of the final call
+and the show-down, and through the dead silence of
+the moment sounded the distant sing-song of a sentry:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Corporal of the guard, number one, relief!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Over the window sill a tiny green lizard slithered
+quietly and hesitated, pressing itself flat against the
+whitewash.</p>
+<p>Then the major&#8217;s cards came down face upward&mdash;and
+showed a queen-high straight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not quite good enough, major,&#8221; announced Comyn
+brusquely as his breath broke from him with a sort of
+gasp and he spread out a heart flush.</p>
+<p>But Spurrier, who had drawn three cards, echoed
+the captain&#8217;s words: &#8220;Not quite good enough.&#8221; He
+laid down two aces and two deuces, which under the
+cutthroat rule of &#8220;deuces wild&#8221; he was privileged to
+call four aces.</p>
+<p>Comyn came to his feet and pushed back his chair,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
+but he stood unsteadily. The fever in his bones was
+playing queer pranks with his brain. He, whose
+courtesy had always been marked in its punctilio,
+blazed volcano-fashion into the eruption that had been
+gathering through these abnormal days and nights.</p>
+<p>Yet even now the long habit of decorum held waveringly
+for a little before its breaking, and he began
+with a queer strain in his voice:</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have to take my <b>IOU</b>. I&#8217;ve lost more than
+I can pay on the peg.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all right, Comyn,&#8221; began the victor, &#8220;Pay
+when&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; but before he could finish the other interrupted
+with a frenzy of anger:</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, by God, it&#8217;s not all right! It&#8217;s all wrong, and
+this is the last game I sit in where they deal a hand
+to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier&#8217;s smiling lips tightened instantly out of
+their infectious amiability into a forbidding straightness.
+He pushed aside the chips he had been stacking
+and rose stiffly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a statement, Captain Comyn,&#8221; he said with
+a warning note in his level voice, &#8220;which requires some
+explaining.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The abrupt bursting of the tempest had left the
+others in a tableau of amazement, but now the authoritative
+voice of Major Withers broke in upon the
+dialogue.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen, this is an army post, and I am in
+command here. I will tolerate no quarrels.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Without shifting the gaze of eyes that held those
+of the captain, Spurrier answered insistently:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have every respect, major, for the requirements
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
+of discipline&mdash;but Captain Comyn must finish telling
+why he will no longer play cards with me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;ll tell you <i>pronto</i>,&#8221; came the truculent response.
+&#8220;I won&#8217;t play with you because you are too
+damned lucky.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; Spurrier&#8217;s tensity of expression relaxed into
+something like amusement for the anticlimax. &#8220;That
+accusation can be stomached, I suppose.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Too damned lucky,&#8221; went on the other with a
+gathering momentum of rancor, &#8220;and too continuously
+lucky for a game that&#8217;s not professional. When a
+man is so proficient&mdash;or lucky if you prefer&mdash;that the
+card table pays him more than the government thinks
+he&#8217;s worth, it&#8217;s time&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s time for you to stop,&#8221; he cautioned sharply.
+&#8220;I give you the fairest warning!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Comyn, riding the flood tide of his passion&mdash;a
+passion of distempered nerves&mdash;was beyond the
+reach of warnings and his words came in a bitter
+outpouring:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I dare say it was only luck that let you bankrupt
+young Tillsdale, but it was as fatal to him as if it
+bore an uglier name.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The sound in Spurrier&#8217;s throat was incoherent and
+his bodily impulse swift beyond interference. His flat
+palm smote Captain Comyn&#8217;s cheek, to come away
+leaving a red welt behind it, and as the others swept
+forward to intervene the two men grappled.</p>
+<p>They were torn apart, still struggling, as Major
+Withers, unaccustomed to the brooking of such mutinies,
+interposed between them the bulk of his body
+and the moral force of his indignantly blazing eyes.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I will have no more of this,&#8221; he thundered. &#8220;I
+am not a prize-fight referee, that I must break my
+officers out of clinches! Go to your quarters, Comyn!
+You, too, Spurrier. You are under arrest. I shall
+prefer charges against you both. I mean to make an
+example of this matter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But with a strange abruptness the fury died out of
+Comyn&#8217;s face. It left his passion-distorted features
+so instantly that the effect of transformation was uncanny.
+In a breathing space he seemed older and his
+eyes held the dark dejection of utter misery. His
+anger had flared and died before that grimmer emotion
+which secretly haunted him&mdash;the fear that he was
+going the way of climate-crazed Private Grant.</p>
+<p>When they released him he turned dispiritedly and
+left the room in docile silence. He was not thinking
+of the charges to be preferred. They belonged to to-morrow.
+To-night was nearer, and to-night he must
+face those hours of sleeplessness that he dreaded more
+than all the penalties enunciated by the Articles of
+War.</p>
+<p>Spurrier, too, bowed stiffly and left the room.</p>
+<p>Though it was late when Captain Comyn entered
+his own quarters, he did not at once throw himself
+on the army cot that stood against the whitewashed
+wall.</p>
+<p>For him the cot held no invitation&mdash;only the threat
+of insomnia and tossing. His taut nerves had lost
+the gracious art of relaxation, and before his thoughts
+paraded hideously grotesque memories of the few
+faces he had ever seen marred by the dethronement of
+reason.</p>
+<p>Already he had forgotten the violent and discreditable
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
+scene with Spurrier, and presently he
+dropped himself inertly into the camp chair beside the
+table at the room&#8217;s center and opened its drawer.</p>
+<p>Slowly his hand came out clutching a service revolver,
+and his eyes smoldered unnaturally as they
+dwelt on it. But after a little he resolutely shook his
+head and thrust the thing aside.</p>
+<p>He sat in a cold sweat, surrounded by the silence of
+the Eastern night, a comprehensive silence which
+weighed upon him and oppressed him.</p>
+<p>In the thatching of the single-storied adobe building
+he heard the rustling of a house snake, and from
+without, where moonlight seemed to gush and spill
+against the cobalt shadows, shrilled the small voice
+from a lizard&#8217;s inflated, crimson throat.</p>
+<p>It was all crazing him, and his nails bit into his
+palms as he sat there, silent and heavy-breathed.
+Then he heard footsteps nearer and louder than those
+of the pacing sentries, followed by a low rapping of
+knuckles on his own door. Perhaps it was Doctor
+James. He had the kindly habit of besetting men who
+looked fagged with the offer of some innocuous
+bromide. As if bromides could soothe a brain in
+which something had gone <i>malo</i>!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come in,&#8221; he growled, and into the room stepped
+not Major James, but Lieutenant Spurrier.</p>
+<p>Slowly and with an infinite weight of weariness,
+Comyn rose to his feet. He might be afraid of lunacy,
+but not of lieutenants, and his lips smiled sneeringly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you&#8217;ve come to ask a retraction,&#8221; he declared
+ungraciously, &#8220;I&#8217;ve none to offer. I meant all I said.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The visitor stood inside the door calmly eyeing the
+man who was his own company commander.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t come to insist on apologies,&#8221; he replied
+after a moment&#8217;s silence with an off-hand easiness of
+tone. &#8220;That can wait till you&#8217;ve gotten over your
+tantrum. It was another thing that brought me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want to be left alone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Aside from the uncomplimentary features of your
+tirade,&#8221; went on Spurrier placidly and he strolled around
+the table and seated himself on the window sill, &#8220;there
+was a germ of truth in what you said. We&#8217;ve been
+playing too steep a game.&#8221; He paused and the other
+man who remained standing by his table, as though he
+did not wish to encourage his visitor by seating himself,
+responded only with a short, ironic laugh.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See here, Comyn,&#8221; Spurrier&#8217;s voice labored now
+with evident embarrassment. &#8220;What I&#8217;m getting at
+is this: I don&#8217;t want your <b>IOU</b> for that game. I
+simply want you to forget it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the captain took an angry step forward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think I&#8217;m a charity patient?&#8221; he demanded,
+as his temper again mounted to storm pressure.
+&#8220;Why, damn your impertinence, I don&#8217;t want to talk
+to you. I don&#8217;t want you in my quarters!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier slipped from his seat and an angry flush
+spread to his cheek bones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re the hell of a&mdash;gentleman!&#8221; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>The two stood for a few moments without words,
+facing each other, while the lieutenant could hear the
+captain&#8217;s breath rising and falling in a panting
+thickness.</p>
+<p>Surgeon James returning from a visit to a colic
+sufferer was trudging sleepily along the empty <i>calle</i>
+when he noted the light still burning in the captain&#8217;s
+window, and with an exclamation of remembrance for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
+the officer&#8217;s dark-ringed and sleepless eyes, he wheeled
+toward the door. Just as he neared it, a staccato and
+heated interchange of voices was borne out to him,
+and he hurried his step, but at the same instant a pistol
+shot bellowed blatantly in the quiet air and into his
+nostrils stole the acrid savor of burned powder.</p>
+<p>The door, thrown open, gave him the startling picture
+of Comyn sagged across his own table and lying
+grotesque in the yellow light; and of Spurrier standing,
+wide-eyed by the window, with the green and
+cobalt background of the tropic night beyond his
+shoulders. While he gazed the lieutenant wheeled
+and thrust his head through the raised sash, under
+the jalousy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Halt!&#8221; cried James excitedly, leaping forward to
+possess himself of the pistol which Comyn had taken
+from his drawer and thrust aside. &#8220;Halt, Spurrier,
+or I&#8217;ll have to fire!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The other turned back and faced his captor with
+an expression which it was hard to read. Then he
+shook his shoulders as though to disentangle himself
+from an evil dream and in a cool voice demanded:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean to intimate, James, that you suspect
+me of killing Comyn?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean to deny it?&#8221; countered the other
+incredulously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Great God! I oughtn&#8217;t to have to. That shot was
+fired through the window. The bullet whined past
+my ear while my back was turned. That was why I
+looked out just now. Moreover, I am, as you see,
+unarmed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;God grant that you can prove these things, Spurrier,
+but they will need proof.&#8221; The doctor turned to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
+bend over the prostrate figure, and as he did so voices
+rose from the <i>calle</i> where already had sounded the
+alarm and response of running feet. &#8220;Or, perhaps,&#8221;
+added the doctor with stubborn suggestiveness, &#8220;you
+acted in self-defense.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Presently the door opened and the corporal of the
+guard entered and saluted. His eyes traveled rapidly
+about the room and he addressed Spurrier, since James
+was not a line officer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I picked this revolver up, sir, just outside the
+window,&#8221; he said, holding out a service pistol. &#8220;It
+was lying in the moonlight and one chamber is empty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier took the weapon, but when the man had
+gone James suggested in an even voice: &#8220;Don&#8217;t you
+think you had better hand that gun to me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To you? Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because this looks like a case for G. C. M. It
+will have a better aspect if I can testify that, after the
+gun was brought in, it wasn&#8217;t handled by you except
+while I saw you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It seems to me&#8221;&mdash;a belligerent flash darted in the
+lieutenant&#8217;s eyes&mdash;&#8220;that you are singularly set on hanging
+this affair around my neck.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You were with him and no one else was. If I
+were you, I&#8217;d go direct to the major and make a statement
+of facts. He&#8217;ll be getting reports from other
+sources by now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps you are right. Is <i>he</i> dead?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The surgeon nodded, and Spurrier turned and closed
+the door softly behind him.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II' id='CHAPTER_II'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The situation of John Spurrier, who was Jack
+Spurrier to every man in that command, standing
+under the monstrous presumption of having
+murdered a brother officer, called for a reaccommodation
+of the battalion&#8217;s whole habit of thought. It demanded
+a new and unwelcome word in their vocabulary
+of ideas, and against it argued, with the hot advocacy
+of tested acquaintance, every characteristic of
+the man himself, and every law of probability. For
+its acceptance spoke only one forceful plea&mdash;evidence
+which unpleasantly skirted the actuality of demonstration.
+Short of seeing Spurrier shoot his captain down
+and toss his pistol through the open window, Major
+James could hardly have witnessed a more damaging
+picture than the hurriedly opened door had framed to
+his vision.</p>
+<p>Within the close-drawn cordon of a post, held to
+military accountability, facts were as traceable as entries
+on a card index&mdash;and these facts began building to
+the lieutenant&#8217;s undoing. They seemed to bring out
+like acid on sympathetic ink the miracle of a Mr.
+Hyde where his comrades had known only a Doctor
+Jekyll.</p>
+<p>The one man out of the two skeleton companies of
+infantry stationed in the interior town who remained
+seemingly impervious to the strangulating force of the
+tightening net was Spurrier himself.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span></div>
+<p>In another man that insulated and steady-eyed confidence
+might have served as a manifest of innocence
+and a proclamation of clean conscience. But Spurrier
+wore a nick-name, until now lightly considered, to
+which new conditions had added importance.</p>
+<p>They had called him &#8220;The Plunger,&#8221; and now they
+could not forget the nickeled and chrome-hardened
+gambling nerve which had won for him the sobriquet.
+There had been the <i>coup</i> at Oakland, for example,
+when a stretch finish had stood to ruin him or suddenly
+enrich him&mdash;an incident that had gone down in
+racing history and made café talk.</p>
+<p>Through a smother of concealing dust and a thunder
+of hoofs, the field had struggled into the stretch that
+afternoon, tight-bunched, with its snapping silks too
+closely tangled for easy distinguishing&mdash;but the cerise
+cap that proclaimed Spurrier&#8217;s choice was nowhere in
+sight. The bookmakers pedestalled on their high
+stools with field glasses glued to their eyes had been
+more excited than the young officer on the club-house
+lawn, who put away his binoculars while the horses
+were still in the back stretch and turned to chat with
+a girl.</p>
+<p>Three lengths from the finish a pair of distended
+nostrils had thrust themselves ahead of the other
+muzzles to catch the judges&#8217; eyes, and bending over
+steaming withers had nodded a cerise cap.</p>
+<p>But the lieutenant who had escaped financial disaster
+and won a miniature fortune had gone on talking
+to the girl.</p>
+<p>Might it not be suspected in these circumstances
+that &#8220;Plunger&#8221; Spurrier&#8217;s refusal to treat his accusation
+seriously was only an attitude? He was sitting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+in a game now with his neck at stake and the cards
+running against him. Perhaps he was only bluffing
+as he had never bluffed before. Possibly he was brazening
+it out.</p>
+<p>It was not until the battalion had hiked back through
+bosque and over mountains to Manila that the lieutenant
+faced his tribunal: a court whose simplified
+methods cut away the maze of technicalities at which
+a man may grasp before a civilian jury of his peers.</p>
+<p>If, when he actually sat in the room where the evidence
+was heard, his assurance that he was to emerge
+clean-shriven began to reel under blows more powerful
+than he had expected, at least his face continued to
+testify for him with an outward serenity of confidence.</p>
+<p>Doctor James told his story with an admirable restraint
+and an absolute absence of coloring. He had
+meant to go to Comyn, because he read in his eyes the
+signs of nerve waste and insomnia; the same things
+that had caused too many suicides among the men
+whose nervous constitutions failed to adapt themselves
+to the climate.</p>
+<p>Before he had carried his purpose to fulfillment&mdash;perhaps
+a half hour before&mdash;he had gone to look in
+on the case of Private Grant, who was suffering from
+just such a malady, though in a more serious degree.
+That private, a mountaineer from the Cumberland
+hills of Kentucky, had been to all appearances merely
+a lunatic, although it was a case which would yield to
+treatment or perhaps come to recovery even if left
+to itself. On this night he had gone to see if Grant
+needed an opiate, but had found the patient apparently
+sleeping without restlessness, and had not roused him.
+At the door of the place where Grant was under
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+guard, he had paused for a word with Private Severance
+who stood there on sentry duty.</p>
+<p>It had been a sticky night following a hot day, and
+in the <i>calle</i> upon which lay the command in billets
+of nipa-thatched houses, no one but himself and the
+sentries were astir during the twenty minutes he had
+spent strolling in the moonlight. On rounding a corner
+he had seen a light in Comyn&#8217;s window, and he
+had gone around the angle of the adobe house, since
+the door was on the farther side, to offer the captain
+a sleeping potion, too. That was how he chanced on
+the scene of the tragedy, just a moment too late for
+service.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You say,&#8221; began Spurrier&#8217;s counsel, on cross-examination,
+&#8220;that you visited Private Grant about
+half an hour before Captain Comyn was killed and
+found him apparently resting naturally, although on
+previous nights you had thought morphia necessary
+to quiet his delirium?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The major nodded, then qualified slowly:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Grant had not, of course, been continuously out
+of his head nor had he always slept brokenly. There
+had been lucid periods alternating with exhausting
+storm.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are not prepared to swear, though, that this
+seeming sleep might not have been feigned?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am prepared to testify that it is most unlikely.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yet that same night he did make his escape and
+deserted. That is true, is it not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The major bowed. &#8220;He had sought to escape
+before. That was symptomatic of his condition.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And since then he has not been recaptured, though
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+he was in your opinion too ill and deranged to have
+deceived you by feigning sleep?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Quite true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you ever heard Grant threaten Captain
+Comyn&#8217;s life?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whether he had made such threats to your knowledge
+or not, he did come from that hill county of the
+Kentucky mountains commonly called Bloody Brackton,
+did he not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe so. His enlistment record will answer
+that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You do know, though, that the man on guard duty&mdash;the
+man with whom you spoke outside&mdash;was Private
+Severance, also from the so-called Kentucky feud belt
+and a friend of the sick man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can testify of my own knowledge only that he
+was Private Severance and that he and Grant were of
+the same platoon&mdash;Lieutenant Spurrier&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The defense advocate paused and carefully framed
+a hypothetical question to be answered by the witness
+as a medical expert.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will now ask you to speak from your knowledge
+of blood tendencies as affected or distorted by mental
+abnormalities. Suppose a man to have been born and
+raised under a code which still adheres to feudal violence
+and the private avenging of personal grievances
+both real and fancied. Suppose such a man to have
+conceived a bitter hatred against his commanding
+officer and to have brooded over that hatred until it
+had become a fixed idea&mdash;a monomania&mdash;a determination
+to kill; suppose such a man to have known only
+the fierce influences of his retarded hills until he came
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span>
+into the army and to have encountered there a discipline
+which seemed to him a tyranny. I will ask
+you whether such a man might not be apt to react
+to a homicidal mania under nervous derangement, and
+whether such a homicidal mania might not develop
+its own craftiness of method?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Such,&#8221; testified the medical officer, &#8220;is a conceivable
+but a highly imaginative possibility.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then Private Severance was called and came into
+the room, where he stood smartly at attention until instructed
+to take the witness chair. This dark-haired
+private from the Cumberlands looked the soldier from
+crown to sole leather, yet his features seemed to hold
+under their present repose an ancient stamp of sullenness.
+It was an intangible quality rather than an expression,
+as though it bore less relation to his present
+than to some unconquerable survival from generations
+that had passed on; generations that had been always
+peering into shadows and searching them for lurking
+perils.</p>
+<p>In his speech lingered quaintly remnants of dialect
+from the laureled hills that army life had failed to
+eradicate, and in his manner one could note a wariness
+of extreme caution. That was easy to understand,
+because Private Severance, too, stood under the charge
+of having permitted a prisoner to escape, and his evidence
+would confront him later when he in turn occupied
+the dock.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t have no speech with Bud Grant that
+night,&#8221; he testified, &#8220;but I&#8217;d looked in some several
+times through the window. It was a barred window,
+an&#8217; every time I peeked through it I could see Bud
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+layin&#8217; there asleep. The moon fell acrost his cot so I
+could see him plain.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When did you see him last?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;After Major James had been in and come out&mdash;a full
+fifteen minutes later. I&#8217;m able to swear to
+that, because I noticed the moon just as the major
+went out, and, when I looked in through the window
+the last time, the moon was a full quarter hour lower
+down to&#8217;rds settin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s pause the witness volunteered in
+amplification: &#8220;Where I come from we don&#8217;t have
+many clocks or watches. We goes by the sun and
+moon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you can swear that if Private Grant fired
+the shot that killed Captain Comyn, he must have
+escaped and eluded your sight; armed himself, crossed
+the plaza; turned the corner; accomplished the act and
+gotten clean away, all within the brief period of five
+minutes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can swear to more than that. He didn&#8217;t get past
+me till <i>after</i> the pistol went off. There wasn&#8217;t no
+way out but by the one door, and I was right at that
+door all the time until I left it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When did you leave?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The witness gave response without hesitation, yet
+with the same serious weighing of his words.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was standing there, sorter peerin&#8217; up at the stars
+an&#8217; beginning to feel right smart tired when I heard
+the shot. I heard the shout of the corporal of the
+guard, too, an&#8217; then it was that I made my mistake.&#8221;
+He paused and went on evenly. &#8220;I hadn&#8217;t ought to
+have stirred away from my post, but it seemed like a
+sort of a general alarm, an&#8217; I went runnin&#8217; to&#8217;rds it.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+That was the first chanst Bud had to get away. When
+I got back he was gone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are sure he was still there when the shot
+sounded?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;As God looks down, I can swear he was!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then the defense took the witness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When does your enlistment expire?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Two months, come Sunday.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know to the day, don&#8217;t you? You are keenly
+anxious for that day to come, aren&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why wouldn&#8217;t I be? I&#8217;ve got folks at home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Haven&#8217;t you and Grant both been malcontents
+throughout your entire period of service?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s news to me, if it&#8217;s true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Haven&#8217;t you often heard Private Grant swear
+vengeance against Captain Comyn?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not no more than to belly-ache some little.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it not a fact that since you and Grant ran amuck
+on the transport coming over, and Comyn put you
+both in irons, the two of you had sworn vengeance
+against him; that you had both taken the blood oath
+to get him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Severance looked blankly at his questioner and
+blankly shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all new tidings ter me,&#8221; he asserted with
+entire calmness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you know that you deliberately let Grant out
+immediately after the visit of Major James and slipped
+him the pistol with which he fired the shot? Didn&#8217;t
+you do that, knowing that when the report sounded
+you could make it your excuse for leaving your post,
+and then perjure yourself as to the time?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know full well,&#8221; asserted the witness with an unshaken
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
+composure, &#8220;that nothing like that didn&#8217;t
+happen.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Fact built on fact until even the defendant&#8217;s counsel
+found himself arguing against a growing and ugly
+conviction. The pistol had been identified as Spurrier&#8217;s,
+and his explanation that he had left it hanging
+in his holster at his quarters, whence some unknown
+person might have abstracted it, lacked persuasiveness.
+The defense built a structure of hypothesis
+based upon the fact that the open door of Spurrier&#8217;s
+room was visible from the house where Grant
+had been tossing on his cot. The claim was urgently
+advanced that a skulking lunatic might easily have
+seen the glint of blued steel, and have been spurred in
+his madness by the temptation of such an implement
+ready to his hand. But that, too, was held to be a
+fantastic claim. So the verdict was guilty and the sentence
+life imprisonment. It must have been death,
+had the case, for all its warp of presumption and woof
+of logic, been other than circumstantial.</p>
+<p>The defendant felt that this mitigation of the extreme
+penalty was a misplaced mercy. The disgrace
+could be no blacker and death would at least have
+brought to its period the hideousness of the nightmare
+which must now stretch endlessly into the future.</p>
+<p>It was to a prisoner, sentenced and branded, that
+Major Withers came one afternoon when the court-martial
+of Lieutenant Spurrier had run its course as
+topic-in-chief for the Officers&#8217; Club at Manila. Other
+matters were already crowding it out of the minds it
+had profoundly shocked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want to talk to you, Jack,&#8221; began the major
+bluntly. &#8220;I want to talk to you with a candor that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+grows out of the affection we all felt for you&mdash;before
+this damnable thing upset our little world. My God,
+boy, you had life in your sling. You had every quality
+that makes the soldier; you had every social requisite
+except wealth. This besetting passion for gambling
+has brought the whole train of disaster&mdash;as logically
+as if you had killed him at the card table itself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are overlooking the fact, major,&#8221; interrupted
+the prisoner dryly, &#8220;that I didn&#8217;t kill him. Moreover,
+it&#8217;s too late now for the warning to benefit me. I dare
+say in Leavenworth I shall have no trouble curbing
+my passion for gaming.&#8221; He paused and added with
+an irony of despairing bitterness: &#8220;But I suppose I
+should thank you and say, like the negro standing on
+the gallows, &#8217;dis hyar is surely g&#8217;wine to be a great
+lesson ter me.&#8217;&#8221; Suddenly the voice broke and the
+young man wheeled to avert his face. &#8220;My God,&#8221; he
+cried out, &#8220;why didn&#8217;t you let them hang me or shoot
+me? Any man can stiffen his legs and his spine for
+five minutes of dying&mdash;even public dying&mdash;but back
+of those walls with a convict&#8217;s number instead of a
+name&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; There he broke off and the battalion
+commander laid a hand on his heaving shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t come to rub in preachments while you stood
+at the edge of the scaffold or the jail, Jack. My warning
+may not be too late, after all. We&#8217;ve passed the
+matter up to the war department with a strong recommendation
+for clemency. We mean to pull every
+wire that can honorably be pulled. We&#8217;re making the
+most of your good record heretofore and of the conviction
+being based on circumstantial evidence.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused a moment and then went on with a
+trifle of embarrassment in his voice:</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;You know that Senator Beverly is at the governor
+general&#8217;s palace&mdash;and that his daughter is with him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier wheeled at that and stood facing his visitor
+with eyes that had kindled, but in which the light at
+once faded as he commented shortly:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Neither the senator nor Augusta has made any
+effort to see me since I was brought to Manila.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps the senator thought that was best, Jack,&#8221;
+argued Withers. &#8220;For the daughter, of course, I&#8217;m
+not prepared to speak&mdash;but I know that Beverly has
+been keeping the cable hot in your behalf. Your name
+has become so familiar to the operators between here
+and Washington that they don&#8217;t spell it out any more:
+they only need to rap out Sp. now&mdash;and if I needed a
+voice to speak for me on Pennsylvania Avenue or on
+Capitol Hill, there&#8217;s no man I&#8217;d pick before the
+senator.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When he had gone Spurrier sat alone and to his
+ears came the distant playing of a band in the plaza.
+Somewhere in that ancient town was the girl who had
+not been to see him, nor written to him, even though,
+just before his battalion had gone into the bosques
+across the mountains, she had let him slip a ring on
+her finger, and had answered &#8220;yes&#8221; to his question&mdash;the
+most personal question in the world.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III' id='CHAPTER_III'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+</div>
+<p>There was a more assured light in Major
+Withers&#8217; eyes when he next came as a visitor
+into the prison quarters, and the heartiness of
+his hand clasp was in itself a congratulation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The thing was carried up to the president himself,&#8221;
+he declared. &#8220;Washington is sick of you, Spurrier.
+Because of you miles of red tape have been
+snarled up. Departments have worked overtime until
+the single hope of the United States government is that
+it may never hear of you again. You don&#8217;t go to
+prison, after all, my boy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean I am pardoned?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then, remembering that the rose of his bringing
+carried a sharp thorn the senior proceeded with a note
+of concern sobering his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The red tape has not only been tangled because
+of you&mdash;but it has tangled you in its meshes, too,
+Spurrier. Yes, you are pardoned. You are as free
+as I am&mdash;but &#8216;in view of the gravely convincing evidence,
+et cetera, et cetera&#8217;&mdash;it seems that some sort
+of compromise was deemed necessary.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier stood where he had risen from his seat
+and his eyes held those of his informant with a blending
+of inquiry and suspense.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What sort of compromise, major?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You leave the army with a dishonorable discharge.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+The world is open to you and you&#8217;ve got an equipment
+for success&mdash;but you might as well recognize
+from the start that you&#8217;re riding with a heavy impost
+in your saddle clothes, my boy.&#8221; He paused a moment
+and then, dropping his race-track metaphor, went hurriedly
+on: &#8220;For myself, I think you&#8217;re guilty or innocent
+and you ought to be hanged or clean-shriven. I
+don&#8217;t get this dubious middle ground of freedom with
+a tarnished name. It&#8217;s going to crop up to crab things
+for you just when they hang in the balance, and I&#8217;m
+damned if I can see its fairness! It will cause men to
+look askance and to say &#8216;he was saved from rope-stretching
+only by wire-pulling.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>The major ended somewhat savagely and Spurrier
+made no answer. He was gazing out at the patch of
+blue that blazed hotly through the high, barred window
+and, seeing there reminders of the bars sinister
+that would henceforth stand between himself and the
+sky.</p>
+<p>The battalion chief interrupted the long pause to
+suggest:</p>
+<p>&#8220;The <i>Empress</i> sails on Tuesday. If I were you I&#8217;d
+take passage on her. I suppose you will, won&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That depends,&#8221; answered the liberated man hesitantly.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve got to thank the senator&mdash;and, though
+she hasn&#8217;t sent me any message, there&#8217;s a question to
+ask a girl.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s none of my business, of course, Spurrier,&#8221;
+came the advising voice quietly. &#8220;But the Beverlys
+have engaged passage on the <i>Empress</i>. If I were you,
+I&#8217;d drop a formal note of gratitude and leave the rest
+until you meet them aboard.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s thought the other nodded. &#8220;I&#8217;ll
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span>
+follow that suggestion. It may be less embarrassing
+for&mdash;them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The other fellows are going to send a sort of a
+hamper down to the boat. There won&#8217;t be any cards,
+but you&#8217;ll know that a spirit of Godspeed goes with
+the stirrup cup.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For an instant Spurrier looked puzzled and the
+major, whose note of embarrassment had been growing
+until it seemed to choke him, now spluttered and
+sought to bury his confusion under a forced paroxysm
+of coughing.</p>
+<p>Then impulsively he thrust out his hand and
+gripped that of the man of whom just now he could
+remember only gallant things; soldierly qualities and
+gently bred charm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In a fashion, Jack, you must shake hands with all
+of them through me. I come as their proxy. They
+can&#8217;t give you a blowout, you know. They can&#8217;t even
+come to see you off. I can say what I like now. The
+papers aren&#8217;t signed up yet, but afterward&mdash;well, you
+know! Damn it, I forget the exact words that the
+Articles of War employ&mdash;about an officer who goes
+out&mdash;this way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t bother, major. I get your meaning.&#8221; Spurrier
+took the proffered hand in both his own. &#8220;No
+officer can give me social recognition. I believe the
+official words are that I shall be &#8216;deemed ignominious.&#8217;
+Tell the boys I understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>On the sailing day John Spurrier, whose engagingly
+bold eyes had not yet learned to evade the challenge
+of any glance, timed his arrival on board almost as
+surreptitiously as a stowaway. It was from behind
+the closed door of his own stateroom that he listened
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+to the deck commotion of laughter and leave-taking
+and heard, when the whistle had shrieked its warning
+to shore-going visitors, the grind of anchor chain on
+winch and windlass.</p>
+<p>That evening he dined in an inconspicuous corner
+by arrangement with the dining-saloon steward, and
+bolted his meal with nervous haste.</p>
+<p>From afar, as he had stood in a companionway, he
+had glimpsed a panama-hatted girl&mdash;a girl who did
+not see him, and who had shown only between the
+shifting heads and shoulders of the crowd. He could
+not have told even had he been closer whether her
+gloved left hand still wore upon its third finger the
+ring that he had put there&mdash;before things had
+happened.</p>
+<p>He must face the issue of questioning her and being
+questioned, and he hoped that he might have his first
+meeting with her alone&mdash;free from the gaze of other
+eyes that would torture him, and perhaps mortify her.</p>
+<p>So when the moon had risen and the band had
+begun its evening concert he slipped out on deck and
+took up his station alone at the stern rail. It was not
+entirely dark even here, but the light was mercifully
+tempered, and upon the promenaders he turned his
+back, remaining in a seclusion from which, with sidewise
+glances, he appraised each figure that drifted by.</p>
+<p>Once his eyes encountered those of a tall and elderly
+gentleman in uniform upon whose shoulder straps
+glittered the brigadier&#8217;s single star.</p>
+<p>For an instant Spurrier forgot the sadly altered
+color of his status and his hand, answering to instinct,
+rose in salute, while his lips parted in a smile.</p>
+<p>But the older man, who fortunately was alone, after
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
+an embarrassed instant went on, pretending an absent-mindedness
+that ignored the salutation. Spurrier
+could feel that the general was scarcely more comfortable
+than himself.</p>
+<p>Slowly, at length, he left his outlook over the phosphorescent
+wake and drifted isolatedly about the decks,
+giving preference to the spots where the shadows lay
+heaviest. But when his wandering brought him again
+to the place he had abandoned at the stern, he found
+that it had been preëmpted by another. A figure stood
+there alone and so quiet that at first he hardly distinguished
+it as separate from the black contour of a
+capstan.</p>
+<p>But with the realization he recognized a panama
+hat, from under whose brim escaped a breeze-stirred
+strand of dark hair, and promptly he stepped to the
+rail, his rubber-soled shoes making no sound.</p>
+<p>The girl did not hear him, nor did she, as he found
+himself reflecting, feel his presence as lovers do in
+romances, and turn to greet him before he announced
+himself. But as she stood there in the shadow, with
+moonlight and starlight around her, his pulses quickened
+with an insupportable commotion of mingled
+hope and fear.</p>
+<p>Her beauty was that of the aristocrat. It was this
+patrician quality which had first challenged his interest
+in her and answered to his own inordinate pride of
+self-confidence.</p>
+<p>He had liked the lightness with which her small feet
+trod the earth and the prideful tilt of her exquisitely
+modeled chin.</p>
+<p>After all, he had known her only a short time&mdash;and
+now he realized that he did not know her well:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+certainly not well enough to estimate with any surety
+how they would meet again, after an interval which
+had tarnished the name that had come to him from
+two generations of accrued distinction.</p>
+<p>He bent forward, and, in a low voice, spoke her
+name, and she turned without a start so that she stood
+looking into his eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you know,&#8221; he began, and for once he
+spoke without self-assurance, &#8220;that I didn&#8217;t hunt you
+out sooner because I wanted to spare you embarrassment.
+I knew you were sailing by this boat&mdash;and so
+I took it, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She nodded her head, but remained silent. Her
+eyes met his and lingered, but they were like curtained
+windows and told him nothing. It was as if she
+wished to let him pitch the plane of their meeting
+without interference, and he was grateful.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose,&#8221; he began, forcing himself to
+speak with forthright directness, &#8220;I need protest my
+innocence to you&mdash;and I don&#8217;t suppose I need confess
+that the stigma will stick to me&mdash;that in&mdash;some quarters&mdash;it
+will mean ostracism. I wanted to meet you
+the first time alone as much for your sake as my own.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; she agreed faintly, but there was no
+rush of confidence, of sympathy that thought only of
+the black situation in which he stood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know, too,&#8221; he went on with the same steadiness,
+&#8220;that but for your father&#8217;s efforts I should have had
+to spend the rest of my life in prison. Above all, I
+know that your father made those efforts because you
+ordained it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was too horrible,&#8221; she whispered with a little
+shudder. &#8220;It was inconceivable.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;It still is,&#8221; he reminded her. &#8220;There is a question,
+then, to be asked&mdash;a question for you to answer.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl&#8217;s hands dropped on the rail and her fingers
+tightened as her eyes, deeply pained, went off across
+the wake. She seemed unable to help him, unable to
+do more than give back monosyllabic responses to the
+things he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course, I can&#8217;t assume that the promise you
+gave me&mdash;before all this&mdash;still stands, unless you can
+ratify it. I&#8217;m the same man, yet quite a different
+man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At last she turned, and he saw that her lashes were
+wet with tears.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some day,&#8221; she suggested almost pleadingly, &#8220;some
+day surely you will be able to clear your name&mdash;now
+that you&#8217;re free to give yourself to it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He shook his head, &#8220;That is going to be the purpose
+of my life,&#8221; he answered. &#8220;But God only
+knows&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you have done that,&#8221; she impetuously exclaimed,
+&#8220;come back to me. I&#8217;ll wait.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Spurrier shook his head and stiffened a little,
+not indignantly, but painfully, and his face grew paler
+than it had yet been.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is generous of you,&#8221; he said slowly. &#8220;That
+is the best I had the right to hope for&mdash;but it&#8217;s not
+enough. It would be a false position for you&mdash;with a
+mortgage of doubt on your future. I&#8217;ve got to face
+this thing nakedly. I&#8217;ve got to depend only on those
+people who don&#8217;t need proof&mdash;who simply know that
+I must be innocent of&mdash;of <i>this</i> because it would be impossible
+for me to be guilty of it&mdash;people,&#8221; he added,
+his voice rising with just a moment&#8217;s betrayal of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+boyish passion, &#8220;who will take the seeming facts, just
+as they are, and still say, &#8216;Damn the facts!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can I do that?&#8221; She asked the question honestly,
+with eyes in which sincere tears glistened, and at last
+words came in freshet volume. &#8220;Can I ignore the
+fact that father is in public life, where his affairs and
+those of his family are public property? You know
+he is talked of as presidential timber. Can I ask him
+to move heaven and earth to give you back your
+liberty&mdash;and then have his critics say that it was all
+for a member of his own family&mdash;a private use of
+public power?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you want your promise back?&#8221; he demanded
+quietly.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the girl carried her hands to her face, a
+face all the lovelier for its distress. &#8220;I don&#8217;t&mdash;know
+what&mdash;I want,&#8221; she gasped.</p>
+<p>Her lover stood looking down at her, and his
+temples grew coldly moist where the veins stood out.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you don&#8217;t know what you want, dear, I know
+one thing that you can&#8217;t do,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Under these
+circumstances, your only chance of happiness would
+lie in your wanting one thing so much that the rest
+wouldn&#8217;t count.&#8221; He paused, and then he, too, moved
+aside and stood with her, leaning on the rail while
+in the phosphorescent play of the water and the broken
+reflections of the low-hung stars he seemed to find a
+sort of anodyne.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said that what you offered was the most I had
+the right to hope for. That was true. Your father&#8217;s
+objections are legitimate. I owe you both more than
+I can ever pay&mdash;but I won&#8217;t add to that debt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought,&#8221; said the girl miserably, &#8220;that I loved
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+you&mdash;enough for anything. The shock of all this&mdash;has
+made my mind swirl so that now&mdash;I&#8217;m not sure of
+anything.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said dully, &#8220;I understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Yet perhaps what he understood, or thought he
+understood, just then was either more or less than
+implied in the deferential compliance of his voice.
+This girl had given her promise to an officer and a
+gentleman with two generations of gallant army
+record behind him and a promising future ahead. She
+was talking now to one who, in the words of the Articles
+of War was neither an officer nor a gentleman and
+who had been saved from life imprisonment only by
+influence of her own importuning.</p>
+<p>Her own distress of mind and incertitude were so
+palpable and pathetic that the man had spoken with
+apology in his voice, because through him she had
+been forced into her dilemma. Yet, until now, he had
+been young enough and naïve enough to believe in
+certain tenets of romance&mdash;and, in romance, a woman
+who really loved a man would not be weighing at
+such a time her father&#8217;s aspirations toward the White
+House. In romance, even had he been as guilty as
+perdition, he would have stood in her eyes, incapable
+of crime. Palpably life and romance followed variant
+laws and, for a bitter moment, Spurrier wished that
+the senator had kept hands off, and left him to his fate.</p>
+<p>He had heard the senator himself characterized as
+a man cold-bloodedly ambitious and contemptuous of
+others and, having seen only the genial side of that
+prominent gentleman, he had resentfully denied such
+statements and made mental comment of the calumny
+that attaches to celebrity.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span></div>
+<p>Yet, Spurrier argued to himself, the girl was right.
+Quite probably if he had a sister similarly placed, he
+would be seeking to show her the need of curbing impulse
+with common sense.</p>
+<p>From a steamer chair off somewhere at their backs
+came a low peal of laughter, and the orchestra was
+busy with a fox trot. For perhaps five minutes neither
+of them spoke again, but at last the girl twisted the
+ring from her finger. At least her loyalty had kept it
+there until she could remove it in his presence. She
+handed it to him and he turned it this way and that.
+The moonlight teased from its setting a jet of cold
+radiance.</p>
+<p>Then Spurrier tossed it outward and watched the
+white arc of its bright vanishing. He heard a muffled
+sob and saw the girl turn and start toward the companionway
+door. Instinctively he took a step forward
+following, then halted and stood where he was.</p>
+<p>Later, Spurrier forced himself toward the smoke
+room where already under cigar and cigarette smoke,
+poker and bridge games were in progress, and where
+in little groups those men who were not playing discussed
+the topics of East and West. He was following
+no urge of personal fancy in entering that place,
+but rather obeying a resolution he had made out there
+on deck. Now that he had asked his question and
+had his answer there was nothing from which he
+could afford to hide. He knew that he came heralded
+by the advance agency of gossip and that it behooved
+him from the start to meet and give back
+glance for glance: to declare by his bearing that he
+had no intention of skulking, and no apologies to
+make.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></div>
+<p>Yet, having reached the entrance from the deck,
+he hesitated, and while he still stood, with his back to
+the lighted door of the smoke room, he reeled under
+a sudden impact and was thrown against the rail. Recovering
+himself with an exclamation of anger, Spurrier
+found himself confronting a man rising from his
+knees, whose awkwardness had caused the collision.</p>
+<p>But the stumbling person having regained his feet,
+stood seemingly shaken by his fall, and after a
+moment, during which Spurrier eyed him with hostile
+silence, exclaimed:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Plunger Spurrier!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is not my name, sir,&#8221; retorted the ex-officer
+hotly. &#8220;And it&#8217;s not one that I care to have strangers
+employ.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man drew back a step, and the light from the
+doorway fell across a face a little beyond middle age;
+showing a broad forehead and strongly chiseled features
+upon which sat an expression of directness and
+force.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My apology is, at least, as ready as was my exclamation,&#8221;
+declared the stranger in a pleasant voice
+that disarmed hostility. &#8220;The term was not meant
+offensively. I saw you at Oakland one day when a
+race was run, and I&#8217;ve heard certain qualities of yours
+yarned about at mess tables in the East. I ask your
+pardon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s granted,&#8221; acceded Spurrier of necessity. &#8220;And
+since you&#8217;ve heard of me, you doubtless know enough
+to make allowances for my short temper and excuse
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I <i>have</i> heard your story,&#8221; admitted the other man
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+frankly. &#8220;My name is Snowdon. It&#8217;s just possible
+you may have heard of me, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not Snowdon the engineer: the Panama
+Canal man, the Chinese railway builder, are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I had a hand in those enterprises,&#8221; was the answer,
+and with a slight bow the gentleman went his way.</p>
+<p>The spot where the two men had stood talking was
+far enough aft to look down on the space one deck
+lower and one degree farther astern, where, as through
+a well space, showed the meaner life of the steerage.
+There was a light third-class list on this voyage, and
+when Spurrier moved out of the obscurity which had
+been thrown over him by the life boat&#8217;s shadow, he
+stood gazing idly down on an empty prospect. He
+gazed with an interest too moodily self-centered for
+easy inciting.</p>
+<p>He himself stood now clear shown under the frosted
+globe of an overhead light and, after a little, roused
+to a tepid curiosity, he fancied he could make out
+what seemed to be a human figure that clung to the
+blackest of the shadows below him.</p>
+<p>He even fancied that in that lower darkness he
+caught the momentary dull glint of metal reflecting
+some half light, and an impression of furtive movement
+struck in upon him. But after a moment&#8217;s
+scrutiny, which failed to clarify the picture, he decided
+that his imagination had invented the vague shape out
+of nothing more tangible than shadow. If there had
+been a man there he seemed to have dissolved now.</p>
+<p>So Spurrier turned away.</p>
+<p>Had his eyes possessed a nearer kinship to those of
+the cat, which can read the dark, he would have altered
+his course of action from that instant forward. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+would, first, have gone to the captain and demanded
+permission to search the steerage for an ex-private of
+the infantry company that had lately been his own; a
+private against whose name on the muster roll stood
+the entry: &#8220;Dead or deserted.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Yet when he turned on his heel and passed from
+the lighted area he unconsciously walked out of range
+of a revolver aimed at his breast&mdash;thereby temporarily
+settling for the man who fingered the trigger his question,
+&#8220;to shoot or not to shoot.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For Private Grant, a fleeing deserter, convalescent
+from fever and lunacy, had been casting up the
+chances of his own life just then and debating the dangers
+and advantages of letting Spurrier live. Recognizing
+his former officer as he himself looked out of
+his hiding, his first impulse had been one of panic
+terror and in Spurrier he had seen a pursuer.</p>
+<p>The finger had twitched nervously on the trigger&mdash;then
+while he wavered in decision the other had
+calmly walked out of range. Now, if he kept out of
+sight until they reached Frisco, the deserter told himself,
+a larger territory would spread itself for his
+escape than the confines of a steamer, and he belonged
+to a race that can bide its time.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV' id='CHAPTER_IV'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Spurrier entered the smoke room and stood
+for a moment in its threshold.</p>
+<p>There were uniforms there, and some men in
+them whom he had known, though now these other-time
+acquaintances avoided his eye and the necessity
+of an embarrassment which must have come from
+meeting it.</p>
+<p>But from an alcove seat near the door rose a
+stocky gentleman, well groomed and indubitably distinguished
+of guise, who had been tearing the covering
+from a bridge deck.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Spurrier, my boy,&#8221; he exclaimed cordially, &#8220;I&#8217;m
+glad to see you. I read your name on the list. Won&#8217;t
+you join us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>This was the man who had rolled away the mountains
+of official inertia and saved him from prison;
+who had stipulated with his daughter that she should
+not write to him in his cell; and who now embraced
+the first opportunity to greet him publicly with cordial
+words. Here, reflected the cashiered soldier, was poise
+more calculated than his own, and he smiled as he
+shook his head, giving the answer which he knew to
+be expected of him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, thank you, senator.&#8221; Then he added a request:
+&#8220;But if these gentlemen can spare you for a
+few minutes I would appreciate a word with you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly, my boy.&#8221; With a glance about the little
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+company which made his excuses, Beverly rose and
+linked his arm through Spurrier&#8217;s, but when they
+stood alone on deck that graciousness stiffened immediately
+into manner more austere.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve seen Augusta,&#8221; began the younger man briefly,
+&#8220;and told her I wouldn&#8217;t seek to hold her to her
+promise. I suppose that meets with your approval?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The public man, whom rumor credited with presidential
+aspirations, nodded. &#8220;Under the circumstances
+it is necessary. I may as well be candid. I
+tried vainly to persuade her to throw you over entirely,
+but I had to end in a compromise. She agreed
+not to communicate with you in any manner until
+your trial came to its conclusion.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The cashiered officer felt his temples hammering
+with the surge of indignant blood to his forehead.
+This man who had so studiedly and successfully
+feigned genuine pleasure at seeing him, when other
+eyes were looking on, was telling him now with salamander
+coolness that he had urged upon his daughter
+the policy of callous desertion. The impulse toward
+resentful retort was almost overpowering, but with
+it came the galling recognition that, except for Beverly&#8217;s
+bull-dog pertinacity, Spurrier himself would
+have been a life-termer, and that now humility became
+him better than anger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you seek to have Augusta throw me over,
+without even a farewell&mdash;because you believed me
+guilty, sir?&#8221; His inquiry came quietly and the older
+man shook a noncommittal head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not so much what I think as what the world
+will think,&#8221; he made even response. &#8220;To put it in
+the kindest words, Spurrier, you rest under a cloud.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Senator,&#8221; said the other in measured syllables, &#8220;I
+rest, also, under a great weight of obligation to you,
+but, there were times, sir, when for a note from her
+I&#8217;d willingly have accepted the death penalty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t pretend that I fail to understand&mdash;even
+to sympathize with you,&#8221; came the answer. &#8220;You
+must see none the less that I had no alternative. Augusta&#8217;s
+husband must be&mdash;well, like Cæsar&#8217;s wife.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is nothing more to be said, I think,&#8221; admitted
+Spurrier, and the senator held out his hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In every other matter, I feel only as your friend.
+It will be better if to other eyes our relations remain
+cordial. Otherwise my efforts on your behalf would
+give the busy-bodies food for gossip. That&#8217;s what we
+are both seeking to avoid.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier bowed and watched the well-groomed figure
+disappear.</p>
+<p>The cloudless days and the brilliant nights of low-hung
+stars and phosphor waters were times of memorable
+opportunity and paradise for other lovers on
+that steamer. For Spurrier they were purgatorial
+and when he realized Augusta Beverly&#8217;s clearly indicated
+wish that he should leave her free from the embarrassment
+of any tete-a-tete, he knew definitely that
+her silence was as final as words could have made it.
+The familiar panama hat seen at intervals and the
+curve of the cheek that he had once been privileged to
+kiss seemed now to belong to an orbit of life remote
+from his own with an utterness of distance no less
+actual because intangible.</p>
+<p>The young soldier&#8217;s nature, which had been prodigally
+generous, began to harden into a new and unlovely
+bitterness. Once he passed her as she leaned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span>
+on the rail with a young lieutenant who was going to
+the States on his first leave from Island duty, and
+when the girl met his eyes and nodded, the cub of an
+officer looked up&mdash;and cut him dead with needless
+ostentation.</p>
+<p>For the old general, who had pretended not to see
+him, Jack Spurrier had felt only the sympathy due to
+a man bound and embarrassed by a severe code of
+etiquette, but with this cocksure young martinet, his
+hands itched for chastisement.</p>
+<p>Throughout the trying voyage Spurrier felt that
+Snowdon, the engineer, was holding him under an interested
+sort of observation, and this surveillance he
+mildly resented, though the entire politeness of the
+other left him helpless to make his feeling outspoken.
+But when they had stood off from Honolulu and
+brought near to completion the last leg of the Pacific
+voyage, Snowdon invited him into his own stateroom
+and with candid directness spoke his mind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Spurrier,&#8221; he began, &#8220;I&#8217;d like to have a straight
+talk with you if you will accept my assurance of the
+most friendly motive.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier was not immediately receptive. He sat
+eying the other for a little while with a slight frown
+between his eyes, but in the end he nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I should dislike to seem churlish,&#8221; he answered
+slowly. &#8220;But I&#8217;ve had my nerves rubbed raw of
+late, and they haven&#8217;t yet grown callous.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You see, it&#8217;s rather in my line,&#8221; suggested Snowdon
+by way of preface, &#8220;to assay the minerals of character
+in men and to gauge the percentage of pay-dirt
+that lies in the lodes of their natures. So I&#8217;ve watched
+you, and if you care to have the results of my superficial
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+research, I&#8217;m ready to report. No man knows
+himself until introduced to himself by another, because
+one can&#8217;t see one&#8217;s self at sufficient distance to
+gain perspective.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier smiled. &#8220;So you&#8217;re like the announcer at
+a boxing match,&#8221; he suggested. &#8220;You&#8217;re ready to
+say, &#8216;Plunger Spurrier, shake hands with Jack Spurrier&mdash;both
+members of this club.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Precisely,&#8221; assented Snowdon as naturally as
+though there had been no element of facetiousness in
+the suggestion. &#8220;And now in the first place, what do
+you mean to do with yourself?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have no idea.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you have thought of the possibilities
+open to a West Point man&mdash;as a soldier of fortune?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; the answer was unenthusiastic. &#8220;Thought
+of them and discarded them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The voice laughed and then spoke contemptuously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A man&#8217;s sword belongs to his flag. It can no
+more be honorably hired out than a woman&#8217;s love. I
+can see in either only a form of prostitution.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; exclaimed Snowdon heartily. &#8220;I couldn&#8217;t
+have coached you to a better answer. Are you financially
+independent?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;On the contrary, I have nothing. Until now there
+was my pay and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; He paused there but went on
+again with a dogged self-forcing. &#8220;I might as well
+confess that the gaming table has always left a balance
+on my side of the ledger.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t seen you playing since you came aboard.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. I&#8217;ve cut that out&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good again&mdash;and that brings us to where I stop
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+eliciting information about yourself and begin giving
+it. I had heard of your gambling exploits before I
+saw you. I found that you had that cold quality of
+nerve which a few gamblers have, fewer than are
+credited with it, by far! Incidentally, it&#8217;s precisely
+the same quality that makes notable generals&mdash;and
+adroit diplomats&mdash;if they have the other qualities to
+support it. It&#8217;s sublimated self-control and boldness.
+You were using it badly, but it was because you were
+seeking an outlet through the wrong channels. So I
+studied you, quite impersonally. Your situation on
+board wasn&#8217;t easy or enviable. You knew that eyes
+followed you and tongues wagged about you with a
+morbid interest. You saw chatting groups fall abruptly
+silent when you approached them and officers
+you had once fraternized with look hurriedly elsewhere.
+In short, my young friend, you have faced
+an acid test of ordeal, and you have borne yourself
+with neither the defiance of braggadocio, nor the visible
+hint of flinching. If I were looking for a certain
+type of specialized ability, I should say you had qualified.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A flush spread on the face of the listener.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are indeed introducing me to some one I
+haven&#8217;t known,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know, too,&#8221; went on Snowdon, &#8220;that there has
+been a girl&mdash;and,&#8221; he hastened to add as his companion
+stiffened, &#8220;I mention her only to show you
+that my observations have not been <i>too</i> superficial.
+Those qualities which I have catalogued have engaged
+my attention, because they are rare&mdash;rare enough to
+be profitably capitalized.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All this is parable to me, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Quite probably. I mean to construe it. There are
+men who originate or discover great opportunities of
+industry&mdash;and they need capital to bring their plans
+to fruition&mdash;but capital can be approached only
+through envoys and will receive only ambassadors who
+can compel recognition. The man who can hope to be
+successfully accredited to the court of Big Money
+must possess uncommon attributes. Pinch-beck promoters
+and plausible charlatans have made cynics of
+our lords of wealth.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What would such a man accomplish,&#8221; inquired
+Spurrier, &#8220;aside from a sort of non-resident membership
+in the association of plutocrats?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He would,&#8221; declared Snowdon promptly, &#8220;help
+bridge the chasm between the world&#8217;s unfinanced
+achievers, and its unachieving finances.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That,&#8221; conceded the ex-soldier, &#8220;would be worth
+the doing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;John Law at twenty-one built a scheme of finance
+for Great Britain,&#8221; the engineer reminded him. &#8220;He
+could come into the presence of a king and in five minutes
+the king would urge him to stay. Force and presence
+can make such an ambassador, and those things
+are the veins of human ore I&#8217;ve assayed in you in
+paying quantities.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier looked across at the strange companion
+whom chance had thrown across his path with a commotion
+of pulses which his face in no wise mirrored
+into outward expression. It had begun to occur to
+him that if a man is born for an adventurous life
+even the Articles of War cannot cancel his destiny.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It would seem,&#8221; he suggested casually enough,
+&#8220;that this need of which you speak is for fellows, in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+finance, who can carry the message to Garcia, as it
+were. Isn&#8217;t that it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s it, and messengers to Garcia don&#8217;t tramp on
+each other&#8217;s heels. Yet I have spoken of only one
+phase of the career I&#8217;m outlining. It has another side
+to it as well, if one man is going to unite in himself
+the whole of the possibility.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Snowdon broke off there a moment and seemed to
+be distracted by some thought of his own, but presently
+he began again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My hypothetical man would act largely as a free
+lance, knocking about the world on a sort of constantly
+renewed exploration. He would be the prospector
+hunting gold and the explorer searching for
+new continents of industrial development, only instead
+of being just the one or the other he would be a
+sort of sublimation. His job would sometimes call
+him into the wildernesses, but more often, I think, his
+discoveries would lie under the noses of crowds,
+passed by every day by clever folk who never saw
+them&mdash;clever folk who are not quite clever enough.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It would seem to me that those discoveries,&#8221; demurred
+Spurrier thoughtfully, &#8220;would come each time
+to some highly trained technician in some particular
+line.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Snowdon shook his head again. &#8220;That&#8217;s why they
+have come slowly heretofore,&#8221; he declared with conviction.
+&#8220;That man I have in mind is one with a
+sure nose for the trail and a power of absorbing readily
+and rapidly what he requires of the other man&#8217;s
+technical knowledge. It&#8217;s the policy that Japan has
+followed as a nation. They let others work the problems
+out over there&mdash;then they appropriate the results.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span>
+I&#8217;m not commending it as a national trait, but
+for this work it&#8217;s the first essential. Having made
+his discovery, this new type of business man will
+enlist for it the needful financial support.&#8221; He paused
+again and Spurrier, lighting a fresh cigarette, regarded
+him through eyes slit-narrowed against the
+flare of the match.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He must be a sort of opportunity hound,&#8221; continued
+Snowdon smilingly. &#8220;He would go baying
+across the world in full cry and come back to the kennel
+at the end of each chase.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier laughed. &#8220;If you&#8217;ll pardon me, sir,&#8221; he
+hazarded, &#8220;you make a very bad metaphor. I should
+fancy that the opportunity hound would do the stillest
+sort of still hunting.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The older man smiled and bowed his head affirmatively.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I accept the amendment. The point is, do I give
+you the concept of the work?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In a broad, extremely sketchy way, I think I get
+the picture,&#8221; replied Spurrier. &#8220;But could you give
+me some sort of illustration that would make it a
+shade more concrete?&#8221;</p>
+<p>His companion sat considering the question for a
+while and at last inquired: &#8220;Do you know anything
+about oil? I mean about its production?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been on the Pennsylvania Railroad, coming
+west,&#8221; testified the former lieutenant. &#8220;And I&#8217;ve run
+through ragged hills where on every side, stood
+clumsy, timber affairs like overgrown windmills from
+which some victorious Don Quizote had knocked off
+the whirligigs. Then I&#8217;ve read a little of Ida Tarbell.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Even that will serve for a sort of background.
+Now, people in general think of striking oil as they
+might think of finding money on the sidewalk or of
+lightning striking a particular spire&mdash;as a matter of
+purest chance. To some extent that idea is correct
+enough, but the brains of oil production are less haphazard.
+In the office of a few gentlemen who hold
+dominion over oil and gas hangs a map drawn by the
+intelligence department of their general staff. On that
+map are traced lines not unlike those showing ocean
+currents, but their arrows point instead to currents
+far under ground, where runs the crude petroleum,
+discovered&mdash;and undiscovered.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Undiscovered?&#8221; Spurrier&#8217;s brows were lifted in
+polite incredulity, but his companion nodded decisively.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Discovered and undiscovered,&#8221; he repeated.
+&#8220;Geological surveys told the mapmakers how certain
+lines and structures ran in tendency. Where went a
+particular formation of Nature&#8217;s masonry, there in
+probability would go oil. The method was not absolute,
+I grant you, but neither was it haphazard. Sitting
+in an office in Pittsburgh a certain man drew on his
+chart what has since been recognized as the line of
+the forty-second degree, running definitely from the
+Pennsylvania fields down through Ohio and into the
+Appalachian hills of Kentucky&mdash;thence west and
+south. Study your fields in Oklahoma, in old Mexico,
+and you will find that, widely separated as they are,
+each of them is marked by a cross on that map, and
+that each of them lies along the current trend which
+the Pittsburgh man traced before many of them were
+touched by a drill.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;That, surely,&#8221; argued Spurrier, &#8220;testifies for the
+highly skilled technician, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So far. I now come to the chance of the opportunity
+hound. The present fields are spots of production
+here and there. Between them lie others,
+virgin to pump or rig. Much of that ground is, of
+course, barren territory, for even on an acre of proven
+location dry holes may lie close to gushers; one
+man&#8217;s farm may be a &#8216;duster&#8217; while his neighbor&#8217;s
+spouts black wealth. But along that charted
+line run the probabilities.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Into Spurrier&#8217;s eyes stole the gleam of the adventuring
+spirit that was strong in him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It sounds like Robert Louis Stevenson and buried
+treasure,&#8221; he declared with unconcealed enthusiasm,
+but Snowdon only smiled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Remember,&#8221; he cautioned, &#8220;I&#8217;m illustrating&mdash;nothing
+more. Now in the foothills of the Kentucky
+Cumberlands, for example, some years ago men began
+finding oil. It lay for the most part in a country
+where the roads were creek beds&mdash;remote from railway
+facilities. It was an expensive sort of proposition
+to develop, but the cry of &#8216;Oil! Oil!&#8217; has never
+failed to set the pack a-running, and it ran.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t remember hearing of that rush,&#8221; admitted
+Spurrier.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I dare say you didn&#8217;t. It was a flare-up and a
+die-down. The men who rushed in, plodded dejectedly
+out again, poorer by the time they had spent.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then the boom collapsed?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It collapsed&mdash;but why? Because the gentlemen
+who hold dominion over oil and gas caucussed and so
+ordained. They gathered around their map and stuck
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
+pins here and there. They said, &#8216;This oil can come
+out in two ways only: by pipe line or tank cars. We
+will stand aloof and develop where the cost is less and
+the profit greater&mdash;and without us, it cannot succeed.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Were there no independent concerns to bring the
+stuff to market?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Snowdon laughed. &#8220;The gentlemen who hold dominion
+have their own defenses against competition.
+You may have heard of a certain dog in the manger?
+Well, they said as they sat about their table on which
+the map was spread, &#8216;Some day other fields may run
+out. Some day something may set oil soaring until
+even this yield may be well worth our attention. We
+will therefore hold this card in reserve against that
+day and that contingency.&#8217; So quietly, inconspicuously,
+yet with a power that strangled competition,
+lobbies operated in State legislatures. The independents
+failed to secure needful charters&mdash;the lines were
+never laid. Those particular fields starved, and now
+the ignorant mountaineers who woke for a while to
+dreams of wealth, laugh at the man who says &#8216;oil&#8217; to
+them. Yet at some properly, or improperly designated
+day, those failure fields will flash on the astonished
+world as something risen from the dead, and
+fortunes will blossom for the lucky.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; prompted the listener.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now let us suppose our opportunity hound as willing
+to go unostentatiously into that country; as willing
+to spend part of each year there for a term of
+years; nipping options here and there, waiting patiently
+and watching his chance to slip a charter
+through one of those bound and gagged legislatures in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+some moment of relaxed vigilance. Such a man might
+find himself ultimately standing with the key to the
+situation in his own hand. It&#8217;s just a story, but perhaps
+it serves to give you my meaning.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did I understand you to suggest,&#8221; inquired Spurrier
+with a forced calmness, &#8220;that you fancy you see
+in me the qualities of your opportunity hound?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Our own concern,&#8221; said Snowdon quietly, &#8220;is fortunate
+enough to have passed through the period of
+cooling its heels in the anterooms of capital, but we
+can still use a man such as I have described. There&#8217;s
+a place for you with us if you want it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When do I go to work?&#8221; demanded the former
+lieutenant rising from his seat, and Snowdon countered:</p>
+<p>&#8220;When will you be ready to begin?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When we dock at &#8217;Frisco,&#8221; came the immediate response,
+&#8220;provided I be allowed time for an affair of
+my own, two months from now. A certain private in
+my old company will be discharged from the service
+then. I fancy he&#8217;ll land there, and I want to be waiting
+for him when he steps ashore.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A reprisal?&#8221; inquired Snowdon in a disappointed
+tone, but the other shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is the one man through whom there&#8217;s a chance
+of clearing my name,&#8221; Spurrier said slowly. &#8220;I hope
+it won&#8217;t call for violence.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V' id='CHAPTER_V'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Private Grant had been bred of the blood of
+hatred and suckled in vindictiveness. He had
+come into being out of the heritage of feud
+fighting &#8220;foreparents,&#8221; and he thought in the terms of
+his ancestry.</p>
+<p>When he had fled into the jungle beyond the island
+village, though he had been demented and enfeebled,
+the instinct of a race that had often &#8220;hidden out&#8221;
+guided him. That instinct and chance had led him to
+a native house where his disloyalty gave him a welcome,
+and there he had found sanctuary until his fever
+subsided and he emerged cadaverous, but free. Word
+had filtered through to him there of Spurrier&#8217;s court-martial
+and its result.</p>
+<p>In the course of time, fever-wasted yet restored out
+of his semi-lunacy, he had made his way furtively
+but successfully toward Manila and there he had supplemented
+the sketchy fragments of information with
+which his disloyal native friends had been able to provide
+him.</p>
+<p>He knew now that the accused officer had pitched
+his defense upon an accusation of the deserter and
+the refugee&#8217;s eyes smoldered as he learned that he
+himself had been charged with prefacing his flight
+with murder. He knew what that meant. The disgraced
+officer would move heaven and earth to clear
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+his smirched name, and the condition precedent would
+be the capture of Private Grant and the placing of him
+in the prisoner&#8217;s dock. To be wanted for desertion
+was grave enough. To be wanted both for desertion
+and the assassination of his company commander was
+infinitely worse, and to stand in that position and face,
+as he believed he would have to, a conspiracy of class
+feeling, was intolerable.</p>
+<p>Haunting the shadowy places about Manila, Grant
+had been almost crazed by his fears but with the lifting
+of the steamer&#8217;s anchor, a great spirit of hope had
+brightened in him, feeding on the solace of the thought
+that, once more in the States, he could lose himself
+from pursuit and vigilance.</p>
+<p>Then he had seen, on the same ship, the face of the
+man whom, above all others, he had occasion to fear!</p>
+<p>For their joint lives the world was not large
+enough. One of them must die, and in the passion
+that swept over him with the dread of discovery.
+Grant had skirted a relapse into his recent mania.</p>
+<p>At that moment when Spurrier had looked down
+and he had looked up, the deserter had seen only one
+way out, and that was to kill. But when the other had
+moved away, seemingly without recognition, his
+thoughts had moved more lucidly again.</p>
+<p>Until he had tried soldiering he had known only
+the isolated life of forested mountains and here on a
+ship at sea he felt surrounded and helpless&mdash;almost
+timid. When he landed at San Francisco, if his luck
+held him undiscovered that long, he would have dry
+land under him and space into which to flee.</p>
+<p>The refugee had hated Comyn. Now Comyn was
+dead and Grant transferred his hatred from the dead
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+captain to the living lieutenant, resolving that he also
+must die.</p>
+<p>The moment to which he looked forward with the
+most harrowing apprehension was that when the vessel
+docked and put her passengers ashore. Here at
+sea a comforting isolation lay between first and third
+cabin passengers and one could remain unseen from
+those deck levels that lay forward and above. But
+with the arrangements for disembarkation, he was unfamiliar,
+and for all he knew, the steerage people
+might be herded along under the eyes of those who
+traveled more luxuriously. He might have to march
+in such a procession, willy-nilly, over a gang-plank
+swept by a watchful eye.</p>
+<p>So Private Grant brooded deeply and his thoughts
+were not pretty. Also he kept his pistol near him and
+when the hour for debarkation arrived he was ripe for
+trouble.</p>
+<p>It happened that a group of steerage passengers,
+including himself, were gathered together much as he
+had feared they might be, and Grant&#8217;s face paled and
+hardened as he saw, leaning with his elbows on a rail
+above him and a pipe in his mouth, the officer whom
+he dreaded.</p>
+<p>Grant&#8217;s hand slipped unobtrusively under his coat
+and his eyes narrowed as his heart tightened and became
+resolved.</p>
+<p>Spurrier had not yet seen him but at any moment he
+might do so. There was nothing to prevent the wandering
+and casual glance from alighting on the spot
+where the deserter stood, and when it did so the
+mountaineer would draw and fire.</p>
+<p>But as the ex-officer&#8217;s eyes went absently here and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+there a girl passed at his back and perhaps she spoke
+as she passed. At all events the officer straightened
+and stiffened. Across his face flashed swiftly such an
+expression as might have come from a sudden and
+stinging blow, and then, losing all interest in the bustle
+of the lower decks, the man turned on his heel and
+walked rapidly away.</p>
+<p>The deserter&#8217;s hand stole away from the pistol
+grip and his breath ran out in a long, sibilant gasp of
+relief and reaction. When later he had landed safely
+and unmolested, he turned in flight toward the mountains
+that he knew over there across the continent&mdash;mountains
+where only bloodhounds could run him to
+earth.</p>
+<p>Beyond the rims of those forest-tangled peaks he
+had never looked out until he had joined the army, and
+once back in them, though he dare not go, for a while,
+to his own home county, he could shake off his palsy
+of fear.</p>
+<p>He traveled as a hobo, moneyless, ignorant, and unprepossessing
+of appearance, yet before the leaves
+began to fall he was at last tramping slopes where the
+air tasted sweeter to his nostrils, and the speech of
+mankind fell on his ear with the music of the accustomed.</p>
+<p>The name of Bud Grant no longer went with him.
+That, since it carried certain unfulfilled duties to an
+oath of allegiance, he generously ceded to the United
+States Army, and contented himself with the random
+substitute of Sim Colby.</p>
+<p>Now he tramped swingingly along a bowlder-broken
+creek bed which by local euphemism was called
+a road. When his way led him over the backbone of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span>
+a ridge he could see, almost merged with the blue of
+the horizon, the smoky purple of a sugar loaf peak,
+which marked his objective.</p>
+<p>When he passed that he would be in territory where
+his journeying might end. To reach it he must
+transverse the present vicinity in which a collateral
+branch of his large family still dwelt, and where he
+himself preferred to walk softly, wary of possible recognition.</p>
+<p>To the man whose terror had seen in every casual
+eye that rested on him while he crossed a continent,
+a gleam of accusation, it was as though he had reached
+sanctuary. The shoulders that he had forced into a
+hang-dog slough to disguise the soldierly bearing which
+had become habitual in uniform, came back into a
+more buoyant and upright swing. The face that had
+been sullen with fear now looked out with something
+of the bravado of earlier days, and the whole experience
+of the immediate past; of months and even years,
+took on the unreality of a nightmare from which he
+was waking.</p>
+<p>The utmost of caution was still required, but the
+long flight was reaching a goal where substantial
+safety lay like a land of promise. It was a land of
+promise broken with ragged ranges and it was
+fiercely austere; the Cumberland mountains reared
+themselves like a colossal and inhospitable wall of isolation
+between the abundant richness of lowland Kentucky
+to the west, and Virginia&#8217;s slope seaward to the
+east.</p>
+<p>But isolation spelled refuge and the taciturn silences
+of the men who dwelt there, asking few questions and
+answering fewer, gave promise of unmolested days.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span></div>
+<p>These hills were a world in themselves; a world
+that had stood, marking time for a hundred and fifty
+years, while to east and west life had changed and
+developed and marched with the march of the years.
+Sequestered by broken steeps of granite and sand
+stone, the human life that had come to the coves and
+valleys in days when the pioneers pushed westward,
+had stagnated and remained unaltered.</p>
+<p>Illiteracy and ignorance had sprung chokingly into
+weed-like prevalence. The blood-feud still survived
+among men who fiercely insisted upon being laws unto
+themselves. Speech fell in quaint uncouthness that
+belonged to another century, and the tides of progress
+that had risen on either hand, left untouched and
+uninfluenced the men and women of mountain blood,
+who called their lowland brethren &#8220;furriners&#8221; and
+who distrusted all that was &#8220;new-fangled&#8221; or
+&#8220;fotched-on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Habitations were widely separated cabins. Roads
+were creekbeds. Life was meager and stern, and in
+the labyrinths of honeycombed and forest-tangled
+wilds, men who were &#8220;hidin&#8217; out&#8221; from sheriffs, from
+revenuers, from personal enemies, had a sentimental
+claim on the sympathy of the native-born.</p>
+<p>This was the life from which the deserter had
+sprung. It was the life to which with eager impatience
+he was returning; a life of countless hiding places and
+of no undue disposition to goad a man with questioning.</p>
+<p>Through the billowing richness of the Bluegrass
+lowlands, he had hurried with a homing throb in his
+pulses. As the foothills began to break out of the fallow
+meadows and the brush to tangle at the fringe of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
+the smoothness, his breath had come deeper and more
+satisfying. When the foothills rose in steepness until
+low, wet streamers of cloud trailed their slopes like
+shrapnel smoke, and the timber thickened and he saw
+an eagle on the wing, something like song broke into
+being in his heart.</p>
+<p>He was home. Home in the wild mountains where
+air and the water had zest and life instead of the
+staleness that had made him sick in the flat world
+from which he came. He was home in the mountains
+where others were like him and he was not a barbarian
+any longer among contemptuous strangers.</p>
+<p>He plodded along the shale-bottomed water course
+for a little way and halted. As his woodsman&#8217;s eye
+took bearings he muttered to himself: &#8220;Hit&#8217;s a right
+slavish way through them la&#8217;rel hills, but hit&#8217;s a cut-off,&#8221;
+and, suiting his course to his decision, he turned
+upward into the thickets and began to climb.</p>
+<p>An hour later he had covered the &#8220;hitherside&#8221; and
+&#8220;yon side&#8221; of a small mountain, and when he came to
+the highway again he found himself confronted by a
+half dozen armed horsemen whose appearance gave
+him apprehensive pause, because at once he recognized
+in them the officialdom of the law. The mounted
+travelers drew rein, and he halted at the roadside,
+nodding his greeting in affected unconcern.</p>
+<p>The man who had been riding at the fore held in
+his left hand the halter line of a led horse, and now he
+looked down at the pedestrian and spoke in the familiar
+phrase of wayside amenity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howdy, stranger, what mout yore name be?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sim Colby from acrost Hemlock Mountain ways,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+but I&#8217;ve done been west fer a year gone by, though, an&#8217;
+I&#8217;m jest broguein&#8217; along to&#8217;rds home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The questioner, a long, gaunt man with a face that
+had been scarred, but never altered out of its obstinate
+set, eyed him for a moment, then shot out the question:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did ye ever hear tell of Sam Mosebury over thet-away?&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was lucky that the fugitive had given as his home
+a territory with which he had some familiarity. Now
+his reply came promptly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I knows him when I sees him. Some folks
+used ter give him a right hard name over thar, but I
+reckon he&#8217;s all right ef a man don&#8217;t aim ter crowd him
+too fur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know how fur he mout of been crowded,&#8221;
+brusquely replied the man with the extra horse, &#8220;but
+he kilt a man in Rattletown yestiddy noon an&#8217; tuck
+ter ther woods. I&#8217;m after him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The foot traveler expressed an appropriate interest,
+then added:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howsomever, hit ain&#8217;t none of my affair, an&#8217; seein&#8217;
+thet I&#8217;ve got a right far journey ahead of me, I&#8217;ll
+hike along.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the leader of the mounted group shook his
+head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One of my men got horse flung back thar an&#8217; broke
+a bone inside him. I&#8217;m ther high sheriff of this hyar
+county, an&#8217; I hereby summons ye ter go along with
+me an&#8217; ack as a member of my possy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Under his tan Private Grant paled a little. This
+mischance carried a triple menace to his safety. It
+involved riding back to the county seat where some
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+man might remember his face, and recall that two
+years ago he had gone away on a three years&#8217; enlistment.
+But even if he escaped that contingency, it
+meant tarrying in this neighborhood through which
+he had meant to pass inconspicuously and rapidly. To
+be attached to a <i>posse comitatus</i> riding the hills on a
+man hunt meant to challenge every passing eye with
+an interest beyond the casual.</p>
+<p>Finally, though he might well have forgotten him,
+the man whose trail he was now called to take in pursuit
+had once known him slightly, and if they met
+under such hostile auspices, might recognize and denounce
+him.</p>
+<p>But the sheriff sat enthroned in his saddle and robed
+in the color of authority. At his back sat five other
+men with rifles across their pommels, and with such
+a situation there was no argument. The law&#8217;s officer
+threw the bridle rein of the empty-saddled mount to
+the man in the road.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Get up on this critter,&#8221; he commanded tersely,
+&#8220;and don&#8217;t let him git his head down too low. He
+follers buck-jumpin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When Grant, alias Colby, found that the men riding
+with him were more disposed to somber silence
+than to inquisitiveness or loquacity, he breathed easier.
+He even made a shrewd guess that there were others
+in that small group who answered the call of the law
+as reluctantly as he.</p>
+<p>Sam Mosebury was accounted as dangerous as a
+rattlesnake, and Bud doubted whether even the high
+sheriff himself would make more than a perfunctory
+effort to come to grips with him in his present desperation.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span></div>
+<p>When the posse had ridden several hours, and had
+come to a spot in the forest where the trail forked
+diversely, a halt was called. They had traveled steep
+ways and floundered through many belly-deep fords.
+Dust lay gray upon them and spattered mud overlaid
+the dust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve done come ter a pass, now,&#8221; declared the
+sheriff, &#8220;where hit ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; ter profit us no longer
+ter go trailin&#8217; in one bunch. We hev need ter split
+up an&#8217; turkey tail out along different routes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The sun had long crossed the meridian and dyed the
+steep horizon with burning orange and violet when
+Bud Grant and Mose Biggerstaff, with whom he had
+been paired off, drew rein to let their horses blow in
+a gorge between beetling walls of cliff.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Me, I ain&#8217;t got no master relish for this task, no-how,&#8221;
+declared Mose morosely as he spat at the black
+loam of rotting leaves. &#8220;No man ain&#8217;t jedgmatically
+proved ter me, yit, thet ther feller Sam kilt didn&#8217;t need
+killin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Bud nodded a solemn concurrence in the sentiment.
+Then abruptly the two of them started as though at
+the intrusion of a ghost and, of instinct, their hands
+swept holsterward, but stopped halfway.</p>
+<p>This sudden galvanizing of their apathy into life
+was effected by the sight of a figure which had materialized
+without warning and in uncanny silence in a
+fissure where the rocks dripped from reeking moss
+on either side.</p>
+<p>It stood with a cocked repeating rifle held easily at
+the ready, and it was a figure that required no heralding
+of its identity or menace.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Were ye lookin&#8217; fer me, boys?&#8221; drawled Sam
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+Mosebury with a palpable enjoyment of the situation,
+not unlike that which brightens the eyes of a cat as it
+plays with a mouse already crippled.</p>
+<p>With swift apprehension the eyes of the two deputies
+met and effected an understanding. Mose Biggerstaff
+licked his bearded lips until their stiffness relaxed
+enough for speech.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Me an&#8217; Sim Colby hyar,&#8221; he protested, &#8220;got summoned
+by ther high sheriff. We didn&#8217;t hev no rather
+erbout hit one way ner t&#8217;other. All we&#8217;ve got ter go
+on air ther <i>dee</i>scription thet war give ter us&mdash;an&#8217; we
+don&#8217;t see no resemblance atween ye an&#8217; ther feller
+we&#8217;re atter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The murderer stood eying them with an amused
+contempt, and one could recognize the qualities of
+dominance which, despite his infamies, had won him
+both fear and admiration.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ef ye thinks ye&#8217;d ought ter take me along an&#8217; show
+me ter yore high sheriff,&#8221; he suggested, and the finger
+toyed with the trigger, &#8220;I&#8217;m right hyar.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Afore God, no!&#8221; It was Bud who spoke now
+contradicting his colleague. &#8220;I&#8217;ve seed Sam Mosebury
+often times&mdash;an&#8217; ye don&#8217;t no fashion faver him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Sam laughed. &#8220;I&#8217;ve seed ye afore, too, I reckon,&#8221;
+he commented dryly. &#8220;But ef ye don&#8217;t know me, I
+reckon I don&#8217;t need ter know <i>you</i>, nuther.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The two sat atremble in their saddles until the apparition
+had disappeared in the laurel.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Gray-templed and seamed of face, Dyke Cappeze
+entered the courthouse at Carnettsville one day a few
+months later and paused for a moment, his battered
+law books under his threadbare elbow, to gaze around
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+the murky hall of which his memory needed no refreshing.</p>
+<p>About the stained walls hung fly-specked notices of
+sheriff&#8217;s sales, and between them stamped long-haired,
+lean-visaged men drawn in by litigation or jury service
+from branchwater and remote valley.</p>
+<p>Out where the sun lay mellow on the town square
+was the brick pavement, on which Cappeze&#8217;s law partner
+had fallen dead ten years ago, because he dared
+to prosecute too vigorously. Across the way stood
+the general store upon which one could still see the
+pock-marking of bullets reminiscent of that day when
+the Heatons and the Blacks made war, and terrorized
+the county seat.</p>
+<p>Dyke Cappeze looked over it all with a deep melancholy
+in his eyes. He knew his mountains and loved
+his people whose virtues were more numerous, if less
+conspicuous, than their sins. In his heart burned a
+militant insurgency. These hills cried out for development,
+and development demanded a conception of
+law broader gauged and more serious than obtained.
+It needed fearless courts, unterrified juries, intrepid
+lawyers.</p>
+<p>He had been such a lawyer, and when he had applied
+for life insurance he had been adjudged a prohibitive
+risk. To-day the career of three decades was
+to end, and as the bell in the teetering cupola began to
+clang its summons he shook his head&mdash;and pressed
+tight the straight lips that slashed his rugged face.</p>
+<p>On the bench sat the circuit-riding judge of that
+district; a man to whom, save when he addressed him
+as &#8220;your honor,&#8221; Dyke Cappeze had not spoken in
+three years. They were implacable enemies, because
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+too often the lawyer had complained that justice
+waited here on expediency.</p>
+<p>Cappeze looked at the windows bleared with their
+residue of dust and out through them at the hills
+mantling to an autumnal glory. Then he heard that
+suave&mdash;to himself he said hypocritical&mdash;voice from
+the bench.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen of the bar, any motions?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Wearily the thin, tall-framed lawyer came to his
+feet and stood erect and silent for a moment in his
+long, black coat, corroding into the green of dilapidation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;May it please your honor,&#8221; he grimly declared. &#8220;I
+hardly know whether my statement may be properly
+called a motion or not. It&#8217;s more a valedictory.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He drew from his breast pocket a bit of coarse,
+lined writing paper and waved it in his talon-like hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was retained by the widow Sales, whose husband
+was shot down by Sam Mosebury, to assist the prosecution
+in bringing the assassin to punishment. The
+grand jury has failed to indict this defendant. The
+sheriff has failed to arrest him. The court has failed
+to produce those witnesses whom I have subp&oelig;naed.
+The machinery of the law which is created for the
+sole purpose of protecting the weak against the encroachments
+of the malevolent has failed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused, and through the crowded room the
+shuffling feet fell silent and heads bent excitedly forward.
+Then Cappeze lifted the paper in his hand and
+went on:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hold here an unsigned letter that threatens me
+with death if I persist with this prosecution. It came
+to me two weeks ago, and since receiving it I have redoubled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
+my energy. When this grand jury was impaneled
+and charged, such a note also reached each
+of its members. I know not what temper of soul
+actuates those men who have sworn to perform the
+duties of grand jurors. I know not whether these
+threats have affected their deliberations, but I know
+that they have failed to return a true bill against Sam
+Mosebury!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The judge fingering his gavel frowned gravely.
+&#8220;Does counsel mean to charge that the court has
+proven lax?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean to say,&#8221; declared the lawyer in a voice that
+suddenly mounted and rung like a trumpeted challenge,
+&#8220;that in these hills of Kentucky the militant
+spirit of the law seems paralyzed! I mean to say that
+terrorism towers higher than the people&#8217;s safeguards!
+For a lifetime I have battled here to put the law above
+the feud&mdash;and I have failed. In this courthouse my
+partner fought for a recognition of justice and at its
+door he paid the penalty with his life. I wish to make
+no charges other than to state the facts. I am growing
+old, and I have lost heart in a vain fight. I wish
+to withdraw from this case as associate commonwealth
+counsel, because I can do nothing more than
+I have done, and that is enough. I wish to state publicly
+that to-day I shall take down my shingle and
+withdraw from the practice of law, because law
+among us seems to me a misnomer and a futile semblance.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In a dead silence the elderly attorney came to his
+period and gathered up again under his threadbare
+elbow his two or three battered books. Turning, he
+walked down the center aisle toward the door, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span>
+as he went his head sagged dejectedly forward on his
+chest.</p>
+<p>He heard the instruction of his enemy on the bench,
+still suave:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Clerk, let the order be entered striking the
+name of Mr. Cappeze from the record as associate
+counsel for the commonwealth.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was early forenoon when the elderly attorney
+left the dingy law office which he was closing, and the
+sunset fires were dying when he swung himself down
+from the saddle at his own stile in the hills and walked
+between the bee-gums and bird boxes to his door.
+But before he reached it the stern pain in his eyes
+yielded to a brightening thought, and as if responsive
+to that thought the door swung open and in it stood
+a slim girl with eyes violet deep, and a beauty so alluring
+and so wildly natural that her father felt as if
+youth had met him again, when he had begun to think
+of all life as musty and decrepit with age.</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' id='CHAPTER_VI'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Except in that narrow circle of American life
+which follows the doings and interests of the
+army and navy, the world had forgotten, in the
+several years since its happening, the court-martial
+and disgrace of John Spurrier&mdash;but Spurrier himself
+had not been able to forget.</p>
+<p>His name had become forcefully identified with
+other things and, in the employ of Snowdon&#8217;s company,
+he had been into those parts of the world which
+call to a man of energy and constructive ability of
+major calibre. But the joy of seeing mine fields open
+to the rush where there had been only desert before:
+of seeing chasms bridged into roadways had not been
+enough to banish the brooding which sprung from
+the old stigma. In remote places he had encountered
+occasional army men to remind him that he was no
+longer one of them and, though he was often doing
+worthier things than they, they were bound by regulations
+which branded him.</p>
+<p>So Spurrier had hardened, not into outward crustiness
+of admitted chagrin, but with an inner congealing
+of spirit which made him look on life as a somewhat
+merciless fight and what he could wrest from life as
+the booty of conquest.</p>
+<p>One day, in Snowdon&#8217;s office after a more than usually
+difficult task had reached accomplishment, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+chief candidly proclaimed justification for his first
+estimate of his aide, and Spurrier smiled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s generous of you to speak so, sir,&#8221; he said
+slowly, &#8220;and I&#8217;m glad to leave you with that impression&mdash;because
+with many regrets I <i>am</i> leaving you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The older man raised his brows in surprise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I had hoped our association would be permanent,&#8221;
+he responded. &#8220;I suppose, though, you have an opening
+to a broader horizon. If so it comes as recognition
+well earned.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s an offer from Martin Harrison, sir,&#8221; came the
+reply in slowly weighed words. &#8220;There are objections,
+of course, but the man who gains Harrison&#8217;s
+confidence stands in the temple of big money.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. Of course Harrison&#8217;s name needs no amplification.&#8221;
+The man who had opened a door for
+Spurrier in what had seemed a blank wall, sat for a
+moment silent then broke out with more than his
+customary emphasis of expression. &#8220;Objection from
+me may seem self-interested because I am losing a
+valuable assistant. But&mdash;damn it all, Harrison is a
+pirate!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier&#8217;s tanned cheeks flushed a shade darker but
+he nodded his head. His fine eyes took on that glint
+of hardness which, in former times, had never marred
+their engaging candor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to have you understand me, sir. I owe
+you that much and a great deal more. I know that
+Harrison and his ilk of big money operators are none
+too scrupulous&mdash;but they have power and opportunity
+and those are things I must gain.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I had supposed,&#8221; suggested Snowdon deliberately,
+&#8220;that you wanted two things above all else. First to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+establish your innocence to the world, and secondly,
+even if you failed in that, to make your name so substantially
+respected that you could bear&mdash;the other.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Until recently I had no other thought.&#8221; The
+young man rose and stood with his fine body erect and
+as full of disciplined strength as that of a Praxiteles
+athlete. Then he took several restless turns across
+the floor and halted tensely before his benefactor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have let no grass grow under my feet. You
+know how I have run down every conceivable clue and
+how I stand as uncleared as the day the verdict was
+brought at Manila. I&#8217;ve begun to despair of vindication....
+I am not by nature a beast of prey.... I
+prefer fair play and the courtesies of sportsmanlike
+conflict.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused, then went forward again in a hardening
+voice: &#8220;But in this land of ours there are two aristocracies
+and only two&mdash;and I want to be an aristocrat
+of sorts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t realize we had even so much variety as
+that,&#8221; observed Snowdon and the younger man continued.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The real aristocracy is that of gentle blood and
+ideals. Our little army is its true nucleus and there a
+man doesn&#8217;t have to be rich. I was born to that and
+reared to it as to a deep religion&mdash;but I&#8217;ve been cast
+out, unfrocked, cashiered. I can&#8217;t go back. One
+class is still open to me; the brazen, arrogant circles
+of wealth into which a double-fisted achiever can
+bruise his way. I don&#8217;t love them. I don&#8217;t revere
+them, but they offer power and I mean to take my place
+on their tawdry eminence. It&#8217;s all that&#8217;s left.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not preaching humility,&#8221; persisted Snowdon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+quietly. &#8220;I started you along the paths of financial
+combat and I see no fault in your continuing, but may
+I be candid to the point of bluntness?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused for permission and Spurrier prompted:
+&#8220;Yes, please go on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; finished Snowdon, &#8220;since you&#8217;ve been with
+me I&#8217;ve watched you grow&mdash;and you <i>have</i> grown.
+But I&#8217;ve also seen a fine chivalric sense gradually
+blunting; a generous predisposition hardening out of
+flexibility into something more implacable, less gracious.
+It&#8217;s a pity&mdash;and Martin Harrison won&#8217;t soften
+you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a while Spurrier stood meditatively silent, then
+he smiled and once more nodded his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t a thing you&#8217;ve said that isn&#8217;t true, Mr.
+Snowdon, and you&#8217;re the one man who could say it
+without any touch of offensiveness. I&#8217;ve counted the
+costs. God knows if I could go back to the army to-morrow
+with a shriven record, I&#8217;d rather have my
+lieutenant&#8217;s pay than all the success that could ever
+come from moneyed buccaneers! But I can&#8217;t do that.
+I can&#8217;t think of myself as a fighting man under my
+own flag whose largest pay is his contentment and his
+honor. Very well, I have accepted Hobson&#8217;s choice.
+I will join that group which fights with power, for
+power; the group that&#8217;s strong enough to defy the
+approval they can&#8217;t successfully court. I <i>have</i> hardened
+but I&#8217;ve needed to. I hope I shan&#8217;t become so
+flagrant, however, that you&#8217;ll have to regret sponsoring
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Snowdon laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not afraid of that,&#8221; he made hasty assurance.
+&#8220;And my friendliest wishes go with you.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></div>
+<p>Since that day John Spurrier had come to a place
+of confidence in the counsels over which Harrison
+presided with despotic authority.</p>
+<p>The man in the street, deriving his information
+from news print, would have accorded Martin Harrison
+a place on the steering committee of the country&#8217;s
+wealth and affairs, and in such a classification he
+would have been both right and wrong.</p>
+<p>There were exclusive coteries of money manipulation
+to which Harrison was denied an entree. These
+combinations were few but mighty, and until he won
+the sesame of admission to their supreme circle his
+ambition must chafe, unsatisfied: his power, greater
+than that of many kings, must seem to himself too
+weak.</p>
+<p>It must not be inferred that Harrison was embittered
+by the wormwood of failure. His trophies of
+success were numerous and tangible enough for every
+purpose except his own contentment.</p>
+<p>To-night he was smiling with baronial graciousness
+while he stood welcoming a group of dinner guests in
+his own house, and as his butler passed the tray of
+canapes and cocktail glasses the latest arrival presented
+himself.</p>
+<p>The host nodded. &#8220;Spurrier,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I think you
+know every one here, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young man who had just come was perfectly
+tailored and self-confident of bearing, and as vigorous
+of bodily strength as a wrestler in training. The time
+that had passed over him since he had left Snowdon&#8217;s
+company for wider and more independent fields had
+wrought changes in him, and in so far as the observer
+could estimate values from the externals of life, every
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+development had been upward toward improvement.
+Yet, between the man&#8217;s impressive surface and his soul
+lay an acquired coat of cynicism and a shell of cultivated
+selfishness.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier, who had renounced the gaming
+table, was more passionately and coldly than ever the
+plunger, dedicated to the single religion of ambition.
+He had failed to remove the blot of the court-martial
+from his name, and, denied the soldier&#8217;s ethical place,
+he had become a sort of moss-trooper of finance.</p>
+<p>Backed only by his personal qualifications, he had
+won his way into a circle of active wealth, and though
+he seemed no more a stranger there than a duckling
+in a pool, he himself knew that another simile would
+more truly describe his status.</p>
+<p>He was like an exhibition skater whose eye-filling
+feats are watched with admiration and bated breath.
+His evolutions and dizzy pirouettings were performed
+with an adroit ease and grace, but he could feel the
+swaying of the thin ice under him and could never
+forget that only the swift smoothness of his flight
+stood between himself and disaster.</p>
+<p>He must live on a lavish scale or lose step with the
+fast-moving procession. He must maintain appearances
+in keeping with his associations&mdash;or drop downscale
+to meaner opportunities and paltrier prizes. The
+wealth which would establish him firmly seemed always
+just a shade farther away than the reach of his
+outstretched grasp.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We were just talking about Trabue, Spurrier,&#8221;
+his host enlightened him as he looked across the rim
+of his lifted glass, with eyes hardening at the mention
+of that name.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span></div>
+<p>Spurrier did not ask what had been said about Trabue,
+but he guessed that it savored of anathema. For
+Trabue, whose name rarely appeared in the public announcements
+of American Oil and Gas, was none the
+less the white-hot power and genius of that organization&mdash;its
+unheralded chief of staff. Just as A. O.
+and G. dominated the world of finance, so he dominated
+A. O. and G.</p>
+<p>Harrison laughed. &#8220;I&#8217;m not a vindictive man,&#8221; he
+declared in humorous self-defense, &#8220;but I want his
+scalp as Salome wanted the head of John the Baptist.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The newly arrived guest smiled quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a large order, Mr. Harrison,&#8221; he suggested,
+&#8220;and yet it&#8217;s in line with a matter I want to
+take up with you. My conspiracy won&#8217;t exactly separate
+O. H. Trabue from his scalp lock, but it may pull
+some pet feathers out of his war bonnet. I&#8217;m leaving
+to-morrow on a mission of reconnaissance&mdash;and
+when I come back&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>The eyes of the elder and younger engaged with a
+quiet interchange of understanding, and Spurrier
+knew that into Martin&#8217;s mind, as crowded with activities
+as a busy harbor, an idea had fallen which
+would grow into interest.</p>
+<p>When dinner was announced, the adventurer de
+luxe&mdash;for it was so that he recognized himself in the
+confessional of his own mind&mdash;took in the daughter
+of his host, and this mark of distinction did not escape
+the notice of several men.</p>
+<p>Spurrier himself was gravely listening to some low-voiced
+aside from the girl who nibbled at an olive, and
+who merited his attention.</p>
+<p>She was tall and undeniably handsome, and if her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span>
+mentality sparkled with a cool and brilliant light rather
+than a warm and appealing glow, that was because she
+had inherited the pattern of her father&#8217;s mind.</p>
+<p>If, notwithstanding her wealth and position, she
+was still unmarried three seasons after her coming-out,
+it was her own affair and possibly his good fortune.
+For when the Jack Spurrier of these days contemplated
+marriage at all, he thought of it as an aid to
+his career rather than a sentimental adventure.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m leaving in the morning,&#8221; he was saying in a
+low voice, &#8220;for the Kentucky Cumberlands, where I&#8217;m
+told life hasn&#8217;t changed much since the pioneers
+crossed over their divide. It&#8217;s the Land of Do-Without.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Land of Do-Without?&#8221; she repeated after him.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s an expressive phrase, Jack. Is it your own or
+should there be quotation marks?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier laughed as he admitted: &#8220;I claim no credit;
+I merely quote, but the land down there in the steeps
+is one, from all I hear, to stir the imagination into
+terms more or less poetic.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He leaned forward a little and his engaging face
+mirrored his own interest so that the girl found herself
+murmuring: &#8220;Tell me something about it, then.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is,&#8221; he assured her, &#8220;a stretch of unaltered
+mediævalism entirely surrounded by modernity&mdash;yet
+holding aloof. Though the country has spread to the
+Pacific and it lies within three hundred miles of Atlantic
+tidewater, it is still our one frontier where
+pioneers live under the conditions that obtained in the
+days of the Indian.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That seems difficult to grasp,&#8221; she demurred, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+he nodded his head, abstractedly sketching lines on the
+damask cloth with his oyster fork.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When the nation was born,&#8221; he enlightened, &#8220;and
+the questing spirit of the overland voyagers asserted
+itself, the bulk of its human tide flowed west along
+the Wilderness Road. Through Cumberland Gap lay
+their one discovered gate in the wall that nature had
+built to the sky across their path. It was a wall more
+ancient than that of the Alps and between the ridges
+many of them were stranded.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How?&#8221; she demanded, arrested by the vibrant interest
+of his own voice, and he continued with a
+shrug of the shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Many reasons. A pack mule fallen lame&mdash;a
+broken wagon-wheel; small things were enough in such
+times of hardship to make a family settle where it
+found itself balked. The more fortunate won through
+to &#8216;take the west with the axe and hold it with the
+rifle.&#8217; Then came railroads and steamboats, going
+other ways, and the ridges were swallowed again by
+the wilderness. The stranded brethren remained
+stranded and they did not alter or progress. They
+remained self-willed, fiercely independent and dedicated
+to the creed &#8216;Leave us alone.&#8217; Their life to-day
+is the life of two centuries ago.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl lifted the brows that were dark enough
+to require no penciling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was the speech of a dreamer and a poet, Jack,
+and I thought you the most practical of men. What
+calls you into a land of poverty? I didn&#8217;t know you
+ever ran on cold trails.&#8221; She spoke with a delicately
+shaded irony, as though for the materialism of his own
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
+viewpoint, yet he knew that her interest in him would
+survive no failure of worldly attainment.</p>
+<p>He did not repeat to her the story told him so long
+ago by Snowdon, the engineer, nor confide to her that
+ever since then his mind had harked back insistently
+to that topic and its possibilities. Now he only smiled
+with diplomatic suavity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pearls,&#8221; he said, &#8220;don&#8217;t feed oysters into robustness.
+They make &#8217;em most uncomfortable. The
+poverty-stricken illiterates in these hills, where I&#8217;m
+going, might starve for centuries over buried treasure&mdash;which
+some one else might find.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In the stories,&#8221; she answered, though she did not
+seem disturbed at the thought, &#8220;the stranger in the
+Cumberlands always arouses the ire of some whiskered
+moonshiner and falls in a creek bed pierced by a
+shot from the laurel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier grinned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or he falls in love with a barefoot Diana and
+teaches her to adore him in return.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Miss Harrison made a satirical little grimace. &#8220;At
+least teach her to eat with a fork, too, Jack,&#8221; she
+begged him. &#8220;It will contribute to your fastidious
+comfort when you come back here to sell your pearls
+at Tiffany&#8217;s or in Maiden Lane, or wherever it is that
+one wholesales his treasure-trove.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>If John Spurrier had presented the picture of a
+man to the manner born as he sat with Martin Harrison&#8217;s
+daughter at Martin Harrison&#8217;s table, he fitted
+into the ensemble, too, a week later, as he crossed the
+hard-tramped dirt of the street from the railway station
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
+at Waterfall and entered the shabby tavern
+over the way&mdash;for the opportunity hound must be
+adaptable.</p>
+<p>Here he would leave the end of the rails and travel
+by mule into a wilder country, for on the geological
+survey maps that he carried with him he had made
+tracings of underground currents which it had not
+been easy to procure.</p>
+<p>These red-inkings were exact miniatures of a huge
+wall chart in the headquarters of American Oil and
+Gas, and to others than a trusted few they were not
+readily accessible. How Spurrier had achieved his
+purpose is a separate story and one over which he
+smiled inwardly, though it may have involved features
+that were not nicely ethical.</p>
+<p>The tavern had been built in the days when Waterfall
+had attracted men answering the challenge of oil
+discovery. Now it had fallen wretchedly into decay,
+and over it brooded the depression of hopes and
+dreams long dead. Gladly Spurrier had left that town
+behind him.</p>
+<p>Now, on a crisp afternoon, when the hill slopes were
+all garbed in the rugged splendor of the autumn&#8217;s
+high color, he was tramping with a shotgun on his
+elbow and a borrowed dog at his heels. He had
+crossed Hemlock Mountain and struck into the hinterland
+at its back.</p>
+<p>Until now he had thought of Hemlock Mountain
+as a single peak, but he had discovered it to be, instead,
+an unbroken range beginning at Hell&#8217;s Door and
+ending at Praise the Lord, which zigzagged for
+a hundred miles and arched its bristling backbone
+two thousand feet into the sky. Along this entire
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
+length it offered only a few passes over which a
+traveler could cross except on foot or horseback.</p>
+<p>He had found entertainment overnight at a clay-chinked
+log-cabin, where he had shared the single
+room with six human beings and two dogs. This
+census takes no account of a razor-back pig which
+was segregated in a box under the dining table, where
+its feeding with scraps simplified the problem of
+stock raising.</p>
+<p>His present objective was the house of Dyke Cappeze,
+the retired lawyer, whose name had drifted into
+talk at every town in which he had stopped along the
+railroad.</p>
+<p>Cappeze was a &#8220;queer fellow,&#8221; a recluse who had
+quit the villages and drawn far back into the hills
+themselves. He was one who could neither win nor
+stop fighting; who wanted to change the unalterable,
+and, having failed, sulked like Achilles in his tent.
+But whoever spoke of Cappeze credited him with being
+a positive and unique personality, and Spurrier meant
+to know him.</p>
+<p>So he pretended to hunt quail&mdash;in a country where
+a covey rose and scattered beyond gorges over which
+neither dog nor man could follow. One excuse served
+as well as another so long as he seemed sufficiently
+careless of the things which were really the core and
+center of his interest. And now Cappeze&#8217;s place ought
+to be near by.</p>
+<p>Off to one side of the ragged way stretched a brown
+patch of stubble, and suddenly the dog stopped at its
+edge, lifted his muzzle with distended nostrils delicately
+aquiver, and then went streaking away into the rattling
+weed stalks, eagerly quartering the bare field.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span></div>
+<p>Spurrier followed, growling skeptically to himself:
+&#8220;He&#8217;s made a stand on a rabbit. That dog&#8217;s a liar and
+the truth is not in him!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the setter had come to a halt and held motionless,
+his statuesque pose with one foreleg uplifted as
+rigid as a piece of bronze save for the black muzzle
+sensitively alert and tremulous.</p>
+<p>Then as the man walked in there came that startling
+little thunder of whirring wings with which quail
+break cover.</p>
+<p>The ground seemed to burst with a tiny drumming
+eruption of up-surging feathery shapes, and Spurrier&#8217;s
+gun spoke rapidly from both barrels. Save for the
+two he had downed, the covey crossed a little rise
+beyond a thicket of blackberry brier where he marked
+them by the tips of a few gnarled trees, and the man
+nodded his head in satisfaction as the dog he had
+libeled neatly retrieved his dead birds and cast off
+again toward the hummock&#8217;s ridge.</p>
+<p>Spurrier, following more slowly, lost sight of his
+setter and, before he had caught up, he heard a
+whimpering of fright and pain. Puzzled, he hastened
+forward until from a slight elevation, which commanded
+a burial ground, choked with a tangle of
+brambles and twisted fox grapes, he found himself
+looking on a picture for which he was entirely unprepared.</p>
+<p>His dog was crouching and crawling in supplication,
+while above him, with eyes that snapped lightning
+jets of fury, stood a slender girl with a hickory
+switch tightly clenched in a small but merciless hand.</p>
+<p>As the gunner came into sight she stood her ground,
+a little startled but obdurately determined, and her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
+expression appeared to transfer her anger from the
+animal she had whipped to the master, until he almost
+wondered whether she might not likewise use the
+hickory upon him.</p>
+<p>He tried not to let the vivid and unexpected beauty
+of the apparition cloud his just indignation, and his
+voice was stern with offended dignity as he demanded:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you mind telling me why you&#8217;re mistreating
+my dog? He&#8217;s the gentlest beast I ever knew.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl was straight and slim and as colorful as
+the landscape which the autumn had painted with
+crimson and violet, but in her eyes flamed a war fire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that a-bulgin&#8217; out yore coat pocket, thar?&#8221;
+she demanded breathlessly. &#8220;You an&#8217; yore dog air
+both murderers! Ye&#8217;ve been shootin&#8217; into my gang of
+pet pa&#8217;tridges.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pet&mdash;partridges?&#8221; He repeated the words in a
+mystified manner, as under the compulsion of her
+gaze he drew out the incriminating bodies of the
+lifeless victims.</p>
+<p>The girl snatched the dead birds from him and laid
+their soft breasts against her cheek, crooning sorrowfully
+over them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They trusted me ter hold &#8217;em safe,&#8221; she declared in
+a grief-stricken tone. &#8220;I&#8217;d kept all the gunners from
+harmin&#8217; &#8217;em&mdash;an&#8217; now they&#8217;ve done been betrayed&mdash;an&#8217;
+murdered.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry,&#8221; declared Spurrier humbly. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t
+know they were pets. They behaved very much like
+wild birds.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The dog rose from his cowering position and came
+over to shelter himself behind Spurrier, who just then
+heard the underbrush stir at his back and wheeled to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+find himself facing an elderly man with a ruggedly
+chiseled face and a mane of gray hair. It was a face
+that one could not see without feeling a spirit force
+behind it, and when the man spoke his sonorous voice,
+too, carried a quality of impressiveness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t have no way of knowin&#8217;, Glory,&#8221; he said
+placatingly to the girl. &#8220;Bob Whites are mostly wild,
+you know.&#8221; Then turning back to the man again he
+courteously explained: &#8220;She fed this gang through
+last winter when the snows were heavy. They&#8217;d come
+up to the door yard an&#8217; peck &#8217;round with the chickens.
+She&#8217;s gifted with the knack of gentlin&#8217; wild things.&#8221;
+He paused, then added with a grim touch of irony.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s a lesson that it would have profited me to learn&mdash;but
+I never could master it. You&#8217;re a furriner hereabouts,
+ain&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My name is John Spurrier,&#8221; said the stranger. &#8220;I
+was looking for Dyke Cappeze.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m Dyke Cappeze,&#8221; said the elderly man, &#8220;an&#8217; this
+is my daughter, Glory. Come inside. Yore welcome
+needs some mendin&#8217;, I reckon.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII' id='CHAPTER_VII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>As John Spurrier followed his host between rhododendron
+thickets that rose above their heads,
+he found himself wondering what had become
+of the girl, but when they drew near to an old house
+whose stamp of orderly neatness proclaimed its contrast
+to the scattering hovels of widely separated
+neighbors, he caught a flash of blue gingham by the
+open door and realized that the Valkyrie had taken a
+short cut.</p>
+<p>The dog, too, had arrived there ahead of its master
+and was fawning now on the girl, who leaned impulsively
+over to take the gentle-pointed muzzle between
+her palms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry I whopped ye,&#8221; she declared in a silver-voiced
+contrition that made the man think of thrush
+notes. &#8220;Hit wasn&#8217;t <i>yore</i> fault no-how. Hit was thet&mdash;thet
+stuck-up furriner. I <i>hates</i> him!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The setter waved its plumed tail in forgiveness and
+contentment, and the girl, discovering with an upward
+glance that she had been overheard, rose and stood for
+a moment defiantly facing the object of her denunciation,
+then, as embarrassment flooded her cheeks with
+color, fled into the house.</p>
+<p>The sense of having stepped back into an older century
+had been growing on John Spurrier ever since
+he had turned away from the town of Waterfall, and
+now it possessed him with a singular fascination.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span></div>
+<p>Here was a different world, somber under its
+shadow of frugality, and breathing out the heavy atmosphere
+of isolation. The spirit of this strange life
+looked out from the wearied eyes of Dyke Cappeze as
+he sat filling his pipe across the hearth, a little later,
+and it sounded in his voice when he announced slowly:</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not for me to withhold hospitality in a land
+where a ready welcome is about all we have to offer,
+and yet you could hardly have picked a worse house
+to come to between the Virginia border and the Kaintuck
+ridges.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier raised his brows interrogatively, and at the
+same moment he noticed matters hitherto overlooked.
+The windows were heavily shuttered and his host sat
+beyond the line of vision from the open door&mdash;with
+a rifle leaning an arm&#8217;s length away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Coming as a stranger,&#8221; continued Cappeze, &#8220;you
+start without enmities&mdash;with a clean page. You might
+spend your life here and find a sincere welcome everywhere&mdash;so
+long as you avoided other men&#8217;s controversies.
+But you come to me and that, sir, is a bad
+beginning&mdash;a very bad beginning.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A contemplative cloud of smoke went up from the
+pipe, and the voice finished in a tone of bitterness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m the most hated man in this region where
+hatreds grow like weeds.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean because you have stood out for the enforcement
+of law?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The other nodded, &#8220;It has taken me a lifetime,&#8221; he
+observed, &#8220;to learn that the mountains are stronger,
+if not more obstinate, than I.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that the only reason they hate you?&#8221; inquired
+the visitor, and the lawyer, removing the pipe stem
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+from his teeth, regarded him for a space in silence.
+Then he commented quietly:</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you knew this country better, you wouldn&#8217;t
+have to ask that question. In Athens, I believe, they
+ostracized Aristides because he was &#8216;too just a man.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nonetheless, I&#8217;m glad I came to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cappeze smiled gravely. He had a rude sort of
+dignity which Spurrier found beguiling; a politeness
+that sprang from a deeper rooting than mere formula.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Merely coming to see me&mdash;once in a while&mdash;won&#8217;t
+damn you, I reckon. A man has a license to be interested
+in freaks. But take my advice, and I sha&#8217;n&#8217;t be
+offended. Tell every one that you hold no brief for
+me and listen with an open mind when they blackguard
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier laughed. &#8220;In a place where assassination
+is said to come cheap, you have at least been able to
+take care of yourself, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That,&#8221; said the other slowly, &#8220;is as it happens. My
+partner was less lucky. My own luck may break some
+day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And yet you go on living here when you&#8217;d be safe
+enough anywhere else.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I go on living here. It&#8217;s a land where a man&#8217;s
+mind starves and where the great marching song of
+the world&#8217;s progress is silent&mdash;and yet&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; Again
+he paused to draw in and exhale a cloud of pipe
+smoke. &#8220;Yet there&#8217;s something in the winds that blow
+here, in the air one breathes, that &#8216;is native to my
+blood.&#8217; Elsewhere I should be miserable, sir, and my
+daughter&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He came to an abrupt stop and Spurrier took him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+up quickly. &#8220;She seems young and vital enough to
+crave all of life&#8217;s variety.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But she is contented, sir.&#8221; The elderly man spoke
+eagerly as though to convince himself and quiet troubling
+doubts. &#8220;She, too, would rather be here. We
+know this life and take it as we find it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier felt that the conversation was tending into
+channels too personal for the participation of a chance
+acquaintance, and he guided it to a less intimate subject.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I understand, Mr. Cappeze, that in the campaign
+just ended, you stumped this district whole-heartedly
+in behalf of one of the candidates for the circuit
+judgeship.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again the hawk-keen blaze flared in the eyes of his
+host.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are mistaken, sir,&#8221; he declared with heated
+emphasis. &#8220;It was less <i>for</i> a candidate than <i>against</i>
+one that I worked. The man whom circumstances
+compelled me to support was a poor thing, but he was
+better than his adversary.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was it party spirit that prompted you, then?&#8221; inquired
+the guest, feeling that politeness called for
+some show of interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes I think,&#8221; said the lawyer with a grim
+smile, &#8220;that from some men God withholds the blessed
+power of riding life&#8217;s waves. All they can do is to
+buffet and fight and wear themselves out. Perhaps
+I&#8217;m that sort. The man who won&mdash;who succeeded
+himself on the bench&mdash;is an expedientist. So long as
+he presides, timid juries will return timid verdicts
+and the law will falter. I took the stump to brand
+him before the people as an apostate to his oath. I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span>
+knew he would win, but I meant to make him wear his
+trade-mark of cowardice along with his smirk of self-righteousness!&#8221;</p>
+<p>As Spurrier listened, not to a feudist but to a man
+who had worn himself out fighting feudism, there
+came to him like a revelation an appreciation of the
+bitterness which runs in the grim undertow of this
+blood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe,&#8221; he suggested, glancing sidewise at the
+door beyond which he heard the thrushlike voice of
+the girl, &#8220;that you made an issue of a murder case
+which collapsed&mdash;a case in which you had been employed
+to prosecute.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Cappeze told him. &#8220;Because I believe it to
+be one in which the officers of the court lay down and
+quit like dogs. The defendant was a red-handed
+bully, generally feared&mdash;and the law was in timid
+keeping. I am still trying to have the grand jury call
+before it the prosecutor, the sheriff, and every deputy
+who served on that posse. I want to make them tell,
+on oath, just how hard they sought to apprehend the
+assassin&mdash;who still walks boldly and freely among us&mdash;unwhipped
+of justice.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier rose, deeply impressed by the headstrong,
+willful courage of this old insurgent, whose daughter&#8217;s
+eyes were so full of spring gentleness.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Far up the dwindling thread of a small water
+course, where the forest was jungle-thick, a log cabin
+hung perched to a rocky cornfield that tilted like a
+steep roof, and under its shingles Sim Colby dwelt
+alone. Since his coming here he had been assimilated
+into the commonplace life of the neighborhood and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+the question of his origin was no longer discussed.
+The time had gone by when even an acquaintance of
+other days would be apt to calculate that his term of
+enlistment in the army had not run its full course.
+Moreover, there were no such acquaintances here;
+none who had known him before he changed his name
+from Grant to Colby. The shadow of dread which
+had once obsessed him had gradually and imperceptibly
+lightened until for weeks together he forgot how
+poignantly it had once haunted him. He had painstakingly
+established a reputation exemplary beyond
+the tendencies of his nature in this new habitat&mdash;since
+trouble might cause closed pages to reopen.</p>
+<p>Now on a November afternoon a deputy sheriff,
+serving summonses in that neighborhood dismounted
+at the door where Sim stood with his hand resting
+on the jamb, and the two mulled over what sparse
+gossip the uneventful neighborhood afforded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Old Cappeze, he&#8217;s a-seekin&#8217; ter rake up hell afresh
+an&#8217; brew more pestilence fer everybody,&#8221; announced
+the deputy glumly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s he projeckin&#8217; at now?&#8221; asked Sim.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s seekin&#8217; ter warm over thet ancient Sam Mosebury
+case afore ther grand jury. Come ter think of
+hit, Sim, ye rid with ther high sheriff yoreself thet
+time, didn&#8217;t ye?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Moodily the other nodded. That was a matter he
+preferred to leave buried.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Waal, Cappeze is claimin&#8217; now thet ther possy
+didn&#8217;t make no master effort ter lay hands on Sam.
+He aims ter hev all ye boys tell ther grand jury what
+ye knows erbout ther matter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The deputy turned away, but in afterthought he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span>
+paused, thrashing idly with his switch at the weed
+stalks, as he retailed an almost forgotten item of
+news.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A furriner come ter town yistidday, an&#8217; sot out
+straightway acrost Hemlock Mountain fer old Cappeze&#8217;s
+dwellin&#8217; house.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What manner of man war he, Joe?&#8221; Sim&#8217;s interest
+was perfunctory. Had he been haled into the
+grand-jury room in those earlier days, the prospect
+would have bristled with apprehensions, but now he
+had behind him the background of respectability and
+Mose Biggerstaff, who alone knew of his craven behavior
+as a member of the posse, was dead. Sim felt
+secure in his mantle of virtue.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He war a right upstandin&#8217; sort of feller&mdash;ther furriner,&#8221;
+enlightened the deputy. &#8220;He goes under ther
+name of Spurrier&mdash;John Spurrier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As though an electric wire of high tension had
+broken and brushed him in falling, Sim Colby&#8217;s attitude
+stiffened and every muscle grew taut from neck
+to ankles as his jaw sagged.</p>
+<p>The deputy, with his foot already in the stirrup,
+missed the terror spasms of the face gone suddenly
+putty gray. He missed the gasp that contracted the
+throat and caused its breath to wheeze, and when he
+glanced back again from his saddle, the other had,
+with an effort of sheer desperation, regained his outward
+semblance of composure. He still leaned indolently
+against the door frame, but now he needed
+its support, because all his nerves jumped and a confusion
+like the swarming of angry bees filled his brain.</p>
+<p>Afterward he groped his way inside and dropped
+down into a low chair by the hearth. For a long time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+he sat there breathing <a name='TC_1'></a><ins title='Was sterterously'>stertorously</ins> while the untended
+fire died away to ashen dreariness. The sun went
+down beyond the pine tops and still he sat dully with
+his hands hanging over his knees, their fingers twitching
+in panic aimlessness.</p>
+<p>Out of a past that he had cut away from the present
+had arisen a ghost of hideous menace. Here into the
+laurel which had promised sanctuary his Nemesis had
+pursued him.</p>
+<p>Two men with the guilt of a murder standing between
+them had come into a radius too small to contain
+them both. It was as if they had met on a narrow
+log spanning a chasm where only one could pass and
+the other must fall.</p>
+<p>If old Cappeze dragged him to the courthouse now,
+he would be delivered over to Spurrier, waiting there
+to identify him, as a fox in a trap is delivered to the
+skinning knife. That must be the meaning of the
+stranger&#8217;s visit to the lawyer.</p>
+<p>Sim Colby went to an ancient and dilapidated
+bureau and from a creaking drawer took out a memento
+which, for some reason, he had preserved from
+times not treasured in memory. He carried it to the
+open door and stood looking at it as it lay on the palm
+of his hand with the light glinting upon it.</p>
+<p>It was a sharpshooter&#8217;s medal, for, whatever his
+military shortcomings, Private Grant had been an efficient
+rifleman, and as he looked at it now his lips
+twisted into a grim smile. Then he took his rifle from
+its corner and, sitting on the doorstep, polished it with
+a fond particularity, oiling its mechanism and burnishing
+its bore.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span></div>
+<p>Already Spurrier had made arrangements to ensconce
+himself under the roof of a house he had
+rented. Already the faces that he met in the road
+were, for the most part, familiar, and without exception
+they were friendly. Quick on the heels of his
+first disgust for the squalor of this lapsed and retarded
+life, had succeeded an exhilaration born of the wine-like
+sparkle of the air and the majestic breadth of
+vistas across ridge and valley. As he watched mile-wide
+shadows creep between sky-high lines of peaks,
+his dreams borrowed something of their vastness.</p>
+<p>Through half-closed lids imagination looked out
+until the range-broken spaces altered to its vision.
+Spurrier saw white roads and the glitter of rails running
+off into gossamer webs of distance. Where now
+stood virgin forests of hard wood he visualized the
+shaftings of oil derricks, the red iron sheeting of
+tanks, the belching stacks of refineries, and in that defaced
+landscape he read the triumph of conquest; the
+guerdon of wealth; the satisfaction of power.</p>
+<p>One afternoon Spurrier started over to the house
+he had rented, but into which he had not yet moved.
+The way lay for a furlong or more through a gorge
+deeply and somberly shaded. Even now, at midday,
+the sunlight of the upper places left it cloistered and
+the bowlders trooped along in ferny dampness, where
+the little waters whispered.</p>
+<p>Beside a bulky hummock of green-corroded sandstone
+the man halted and stood musingly, with eyes
+downcast and thoughts uplifted&mdash;uplifted to the worship
+of his one god: Ambition. At his feet was an
+oily sediment along the water&#8217;s edge and the gravel
+was thick with &#8220;sand blossom&#8221;&mdash;tiny fossil formations
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+that are prima facie evidence of oil. Then,
+without warning, he felt a light sting along his cheek
+and the rock-walled fissure reverberated under what
+seemed a volley of musketry.</p>
+<p>But the magnified and crumbling effect of the echo
+struck him with a less poignant realization than a
+slighter sound and a sharper one. As if a taut piano
+wire had been sharply struck, came the clear whang
+that he recognized as the flight song of a rifle bullet,
+and, whatever its origin it called for a prompt taking
+of cover.</p>
+<p>Spurrier side-stepped as quickly as a boxer, and
+stood, for the moment at least, bulwarked behind the
+rock that was so providentially close.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m John Spurrier&mdash;a stranger in these parts,&#8221;
+he sung out in a confident voice of forced boldness
+and cheerfulness. &#8220;I reckon you&#8217;ve made a mistake
+in your man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was no answer and Spurrier cautiously raised
+his hat on the end of a stick with the same deliberation
+that might have marked his action had it been his own
+head emerging from cover.</p>
+<p>Instantly the hidden rifle spoke again and the hat
+came down pierced through its band, while the rocks
+once more reverberated to multiplied detonations.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It would seem,&#8221; the man told himself grimly, &#8220;that
+after all there was no mistake.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was unarmed and in no position to pursue investigations
+of the mystery, but by crawling along on
+his belly he could keep his body shielded behind the
+litter of broken stone that edged the brook until he
+reached the end of the gorge itself and came to safer
+territory.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span></div>
+<p>Slowly, Spurrier traveled out of his precarious position,
+flattening himself when he paused to rest and
+listen, as he had made his men flatten themselves over
+there in the islands when they were going forward
+without cover under the fire of snipers.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII' id='CHAPTER_VIII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Spurrier was not frightened, but he was
+deeply mystified, and when he reached the cabin
+which he was preparing for occupancy he sat
+down on the old millstone that served as a doorstep
+and sought enlightenment from reflection and the
+companionship of an ancient pipe.</p>
+<p>In an hour or two &#8220;Uncle Jimmy&#8221; Litchfield, under
+whose smoky roof he was being temporarily sheltered,
+would arrive with a jolt wagon and yoke of oxen,
+teaming over the household goods that Spurrier meant
+to install. Already the new tenant had swept and
+whitewashed his cabin interior and had let the clear
+winds rake away the mildew of its long vacancy. Now
+he sat smoking with a perplexity-drawn brow, while
+a tuneful sky seemed to laugh mockingly at the absurd
+idea of riflemen in ambush.</p>
+<p>Every neighbor had manifested a spirit of cordiality
+toward him. To many of them he was indebted for
+small and voluntary kindnesses, and he had maintained
+a diplomatic neutrality in all local affairs that
+bore a controversial aspect.</p>
+<p>Certainly, he could not flatter himself that as yet
+any premonition of danger had percolated to those distant
+centers of industry against which he was devising
+a campaign of surprise. One explanation only
+presented itself with any color of <a name='TC_2'></a><ins title='Was plausiblity'>plausibility</ins>.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></div>
+<p>That trickle of water might come to the gorge from
+a spot back in the laurel where, under the shelter of
+a felled hemlock top, some one tended a small &#8220;blockade&#8221;
+distillery; some one who resented an invasion of
+his privacy.</p>
+<p>Yet even that inference was not satisfactory. Only
+yesterday a man had offered him moonshine whisky,
+declaring quite unsuspiciously: &#8220;Ef ye&#8217;re vouched fer
+by Uncle Jimmy, I ain&#8217;t a&#8217;skeered of ye none. I
+made thet licker myself&mdash;drink hearty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Of the real truth no ghostly glimmer of suspicion
+came in even the most shadowy fashion to his mind.</p>
+<p>His efforts to trace to definite result some filament
+of fact that might prove the court-martial to have
+reached a conclusion at variance with the truth, had
+all ended in failure. That the matter was hopeless
+was an admission which he could not afford to make
+and which he doggedly denied, but with waning confidence.</p>
+<p>This state of mind prevented him from suspecting
+any connection between this present and mysterious
+enmity and those things which had happened across
+the Pacific.</p>
+<p>He had kept himself informed as to the movements
+of Private Severance and when that time-expired man
+had stepped ashore at San Francisco, John Spurrier
+had been waiting to confront him, even though it involved
+facing men who had once been brother officers
+and who could no longer speak to him as an equal.</p>
+<p>From the former soldier, who brought a flush to
+his cheeks by saluting him and calling him &#8220;Lieutenant,&#8221;
+he had learned nothing. There had been no
+reason to hope for much. It was unlikely that he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+would be able to shake into a damaging admission of
+complicity&mdash;and any statement of value must have
+amounted to that&mdash;the witness who had come unscathed
+out of the cross-examination of two courts-martial.</p>
+<p>Indeed Spurrier had expected to encounter unveiled
+hostility in the attitude of the mountaineer, who had
+been doing sentry duty at the door through which
+the prisoner, Grant, had escaped. It might have followed
+logically upon the officer&#8217;s defense, which had
+sought to involve that sentinel as an accomplice in
+the fugitive&#8217;s flight, and even in the murder itself.</p>
+<p>But Severance had greeted him without rancor and
+with the disarming guise of candid friendliness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d be full willin&#8217; ter help ye, Lieutenant&mdash;ef so be
+I could,&#8221; he had protested. &#8220;I knows full well yore
+lawyers was plum obliged ter seek ter hang ther blame
+wharsoever they was able, an&#8217; I ain&#8217;t harborin&#8217; no
+grudge because I happened ter be one they sought ter
+hurt. But I don&#8217;t know nothin&#8217; that kin aid ye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think Grant escaped alive?&#8221; demanded
+Spurrier, and the other shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I feels so plum, dead sartain he died,&#8221; came the
+prompt response, &#8220;thet when I gits back home I&#8217;m
+goin&#8217; ter tell his folks he did. Bud Grant was a friend
+of mine, but when he went out inter thet jungle he
+was too weakly ter keer fer hisself an&#8217; ef he&#8217;d lived
+they would hev done found him an&#8217; brought him
+back.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier had come to embrace that belief himself.
+The one man whose admission, wrung from him by
+persuasion or compulsion, could give him back his
+clean name, must have perished there in the <i>bijuca</i>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span>
+tangles. The hope of meeting the runaway in life
+had died in the ex-officer&#8217;s heart and consequently it
+did not now occur to him to think of the deserter as a
+living menace.</p>
+<p>At length he rose and stood against the shadowy
+background of his door, which was an oblong of darkness
+behind the golden outer clarity.</p>
+<p>Off in the tangle of oak and poplar and pine a ruffed
+grouse drummed and a &#8220;cock of the woods&#8221; rapped its
+tattoo on a sycamore top.</p>
+<p>Once he fancied he heard a stirring in the rhododendron
+where its large waxen leaves banked themselves
+thickly a hundred yards distant, and his eyes
+turned that way seeking to pierce the impenetrable
+screen&mdash;but unavailingly. Perhaps some small, wild
+thing had moved there.</p>
+<p>Then, as had happened before that afternoon,
+the stillness broke to a rifle shot&mdash;this time clean and
+sharp, unclogged by echoes.</p>
+<p>Spurrier stood for an instant while a surprised expression
+showed in his out-staring eyes, then he
+swayed on his feet. His hands came up and clutched
+spasmodically at his left breast, and with a sudden
+collapse he dropped heavily backward, and lay full
+length, swallowed in the darkness that hung beyond
+the door.</p>
+<p>Over the rhododendron thicket quiet settled
+drowsily again, but through the toughness of interlaced
+branches stole upward and outward an acrid
+powder smell and a barely perceptible trickle of smoke.</p>
+<p>Crouched there, his neutral-hued clothing merging
+into the earth tones about him, a man peered out, but
+he did not rise to go forward and inspect his work.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+Instead, he opened the breech block of his piece and
+with unhurried care blew through the barrel&mdash;cleansing
+it of its vapors.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon thar ain&#8217;t no needcessity to go over thar
+an&#8217; look at him,&#8221; he reflected. &#8220;When they draps
+down <i>thet</i>-away, they don&#8217;t git up no more&mdash;an&#8217; some
+person from afar mout spy me crossin&#8217; ther dooryard.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So he edged backward into the tangle, moving like
+a crawfish and noiselessly took up his homeward
+journey.</p>
+<p>When the slow plodding ox team came at last to
+the dooryard and Uncle Billy stood shouting outside
+the house, Sim Colby, holding to tangles where he
+would meet no chance wayfarer, was already miles
+away and hurrying to establish his alibi against suspicion,
+in his own neighborhood&mdash;where no one knew
+he had been absent.</p>
+<p>Though it be an evil thing and shameful to confess,
+ex-private Bud Grant, alias Sim Colby, traveled
+light-heartedly, roweled by no tortures of conscience,
+but blithe in the assurance of a ghost laid, and a
+peril averted.</p>
+<p>He would have been both amazed and chagrined
+had he remained peering from his ambuscade, for
+when Uncle Billy&#8217;s shadow fell through the open door
+the man to whom he had come rose from a chair to
+meet him, and he presented no mangled or blood-stained
+breast to the eyes of his visitors.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ye ain&#8217;t jest a-quippin&#8217; with me, be ye?&#8221; demanded
+the old mountaineer incredulously when he had heard
+the story in all its detail. &#8220;This hyar&#8217;s a right serious-soundin&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
+matter&mdash;an&#8217; ye ain&#8217;t got no enemies
+amongst us thet I&#8217;ve heered tell of.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier pointed out the spot in the newly whitewashed
+wall where the bullet lay imbedded with its
+glint of freshly flattened lead.</p>
+<p>&#8220;After the first experience,&#8221; he explained, &#8220;I&#8217;d had
+some time to think. I was standing in the door so I
+fell down&mdash;and played dead.&#8221; He added after a pause
+quietly: &#8220;I&#8217;ve seen men shot to death, and I happened
+to know how a man drops when it&#8217;s a heart hit.
+I fell inside where I&#8217;d be out of sight, because I was
+unarmed, and all I could do was to wait for you. I
+watched through the door, but the fellow never
+showed himself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come on, boys,&#8221; commanded the old mountaineer
+in a determined voice. &#8220;Let&#8217;s beat thet la&#8217;rel while
+ther tracks is still fresh. Mebby we mout l&#8217;arn somethin&#8217;
+of this hyar monstrous matter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But they learned nothing. Sim Colby had spent
+painstaking thought upon his effort and he had left
+no evidence written in the mold of the forest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit beats all hell,&#8221; declared the nonplussed Uncle
+Billy at last. &#8220;I ain&#8217;t got ther power ter fathom hit.
+Ef I war you I wouldn&#8217;t talk erbout this ter no man
+save only me an&#8217; old Dyke Cappeze. Still-huntin&#8217;
+lands more game then blowin&#8217; a fox horn.&#8221; And
+Spurrier nodded his head.</p>
+<p>Though Spurrier for a few days after that slipped
+through the gorge with the stealth of a sharpshooter,
+covering himself behind rocks as he went, he heard
+no sound there more alarming than the chatter of
+squirrels or the grunt of a strayed razor-back rooting
+among the acorns. Gradually he relaxed his vigilance
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span>
+as a man will if his nature is bold and his dreams
+too sweeping to be forever hobbled by petty precautions.</p>
+<p>The purpose which he privately served called for
+ranging the country with a trained eye, and with him
+went the contour maps upon which were traced red
+lines.</p>
+<p>One day he came, somewhat winded from a stiff
+climb, to an eminence that spread the earth below him
+and made of it a panorama. The bright carnival of
+the autumn was spending itself to its end, but among
+trees already naked stood others that clung to a gorgeousness
+of color the more brilliant in the face of
+death. Overhead was flawless blue, and there was a
+dreamy violet where it merged <a name='TC_3'></a><ins title='Was mistly'>mistily</ins> with the skyline
+ridges.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All that it needs,&#8221; mused the man whimsically and
+aloud, &#8220;is the music of Pan&#8217;s pipes&mdash;and perhaps a
+small chorus of dryads.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he heard a laugh and, wheeling suddenly, discovered
+Glory Cappeze regarding him from the cap
+of a towering rock where, until he had reached this
+level, she had been hidden from view. Now she
+flushed shyly as the man strode over and confronted
+her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you still hate me?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon thet don&#8217;t make no master differ ter ye,
+does hit?&#8221; The musical voice was painfully diffident,
+and he remembered that she had always been shy with
+him except on that first meeting when the leaping
+anger in her eyes had burned away self-consciousness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know,&#8221; he gravely reminded her, &#8220;when I
+first saw you, you were on the point of thrashing me.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span>
+You had me cowed and timid. Since then I&#8217;ve come
+to think of you as the shooting star.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused, waiting for her to demand an elucidation
+of that somewhat obscure statement, but she said
+nothing. She only sat gazing over his head toward
+the horizon, and her cheeks were excitedly flushed
+from the delicate pink of apple bloom to the warmer
+color of peach blossom.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Since you don&#8217;t ask what I mean,&#8221; he continued
+easily, &#8220;I shall tell you. I&#8217;ve been to your house perhaps
+four or five times. From afar, each time, I&#8217;ve
+seen a scrap of color. Sometimes it has been blue,
+sometimes red, but always it has vanished with the
+swiftness of a shooting star. It is a flash and it is
+gone. Sometimes from beyond a door I also hear a
+voice singing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He leaned his elbows on the rock at her feet and
+stood gazing into the eyes that would not meet his
+own, and still she favored him with no response.
+After a little silence the man altered his tone and
+spoke argumentatively:</p>
+<p>&#8220;You forgave the dog, you know&mdash;why not the
+man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>That question carried her thoughts back to the murdered
+quail and a gusty back-flash of resentment conquered
+her diffidence. Her sternness of tone and the
+thrushlike softness of her voice, mingled with the
+piquancy of paradox.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A dawg don&#8217;t know no better.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Some dogs are very wise,&#8221; he assured her. &#8220;And
+some men very foolish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The dawg,&#8221; she went on still unplacated, &#8220;got
+right down on his stomach and asked my pardon. I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span>
+<i>hed</i> ter fergive him, when he humbled hisself like
+that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m willing,&#8221; John Spurrier amiably assured her,
+&#8220;to get right down on my stomach, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then she laughed, and though she sought to retreat
+again into her aloofness, the spell was broken.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Am I forgiven?&#8221; he demanded, and she shook
+her head doubtfully though no longer with conviction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she told him; then she added with a startlingly
+exact mimicry of her father&#8217;s most legalistic
+manner: &#8220;No. The co&#8217;te will take the case under
+advisement an&#8217; defer jedgment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I forgot,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that you are a lawyer&#8217;s daughter.
+What were you looking at across there&mdash;so fascinatedly?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Them hills,&#8221; she enlightened succinctly.</p>
+<p>Spurrier studied her. Her deep eyes had held a
+glow of almost prayerful enchantment for which her
+laconic words seemed inadequate.</p>
+<p>Watching her out of the tail of his eye he fell into
+borrowed phrases: &#8220;&#8216;Violet peaks uplifted through
+the crystal evening air.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She shot a glance at him suddenly, eagerly; then at
+once the lids lowered, masking the eyes again as she
+inquired:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thet thar&#8217;s poetry, ain&#8217;t hit?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m prepared to go to the mat with any critic who
+holds the contrary,&#8221; he assured her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit&#8217;s comin&#8217; on ter be night. I&#8217;ve got ter start
+home,&#8221; she irrelevantly announced, as she slid from
+her rough throne, and the man fell boldly in step at
+her side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When your honor rules on the matter under advisement,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+he said humbly before their paths separated,
+&#8220;please remember that the defendant was a
+poor wretch who didn&#8217;t know he was breaking the
+law.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For the first time their glances engaged fully and
+without avoidance, and a twinkle flashed in the girl&#8217;s
+pupils.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Ignorantia legis neminem excusat</i>,&#8221; she serenely
+responded, and Spurrier gasped. Here was a girl who
+could not steer her English around the shoals of illiteracy,
+giving him his retort in Latin: &#8220;Ignorance of
+the law excuses no one.&#8221; Of course, it meant only
+that her quick memory had appropriated and was
+parroting legal phrases learned from her father, but it
+struck the chord of contrasts, and to the man&#8217;s imagination
+it dramatized her so that when she had gone
+on with the lissome grace of her light stride, he stood
+looking after her.</p>
+<p>Rather abruptly after that the autumn fires of
+splendor burned out to the ashes of coming winter,
+and then it was that Spurrier went north. As his
+train carried him seaward he had the feeling that it
+was also transporting him from an older to a younger
+century, and that while his mind dwelt on the stalwart
+and unsophisticated folk with whom he had been
+brushing shoulders, the life resolved itself into an
+austere picture against which the image of Glory stood
+out with the quick vividness of a red cardinal flitting
+among somber pine branches.</p>
+<p>Because she was so far removed from his own orbit
+he could think of her impersonally and enjoy the
+thought as though it were of a new type of flower or
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+bird, recognizing her attractive qualities in a detached
+fashion.</p>
+<p>As Spurrier gave himself up to the relaxation of
+reminiscence with that abandon of train travel which
+admits of no sustained effort, he began comparing this
+life, left over from another era, with that he had
+known against more cultivated and complex backgrounds.</p>
+<p>Then in analytical mood he reviewed his own past,
+looking with a lengthening of perspective on the love
+affair that had been broken by his court-martial. His
+adoration of the Beverly girl had been youthful
+enough to surround itself with young illusions.</p>
+<p>That was why it had all hurt so bitterly, perhaps,
+with its ripping away of his faith in romantic conceptions
+of love-loyalty.</p>
+<p>He wondered now if he had not borne himself with
+the Quixotic martyrdom of callowness. He had
+sought to shield the girl from even the realization that
+her lack of confidence was ungenerous. He had
+sought to take all the pain and spare her from sharing
+it. But she had solaced herself with a swift recovery
+and a new lover, and had he been guilty she
+could not have abandoned him more cavalierly. Well,
+that softness belonged to an out-grown stage of development.</p>
+<p>He had seen himself then as obeying the dictates
+of chivalry. He thought of it now as inexperienced
+folly&mdash;perhaps, so far as she was concerned, as a lucky
+escape. His amours of the present were not so
+naively conducted. To Vivian he had paid his attentions
+with an eye watchful of material advantages.
+They belonged to a sophisticated circle which seasoned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+life&#8217;s fare rather with the salt of cynicism than
+with the sugar of romanticism. Yet the thought of
+Vivian caused no pulse to flutter excitedly.</p>
+<p>The glimpse of Glory had been refreshing because
+she was so honest and sincere that she disquieted
+one&#8217;s acquired cynicism of viewpoint. One might as
+well spout world-wisdom to a lilac bush as to Glory!
+Yet there was a sureness about her which argued for
+her creed of wholesome, simple things and old half-forgotten
+faiths which one would like to keep alive&mdash;if
+one could.</p>
+<p>Snow drifted in the air and made a nimbus about
+each arc light as Spurrier&#8217;s taxi, turning between the
+collonade pillars of the Pennsylvania Station, gave
+him his first returning glimpse of New York. He had
+come East in obedience to a wired summons from
+Martin Harrison, brief to curtness as were all business
+messages from that man of few and trenchant
+words. The telegram had been slow crossing the
+mountain, but Spurrier had been prompt in his response.</p>
+<p>A tempered glare hung mistily above the Longacre
+Square district through the snow flurries to the north,
+and the rumbled voice of the town, after these months
+in quiet places, was to the returned pilgrim like the
+heavy breathing of a monster sleeping out a fever.</p>
+<p>At the room that he kept at his club in Fifth Avenue&mdash;for
+that was a part of the pretentious display of
+affluence made necessary by his ambitious scheme of
+things&mdash;he called up a number from memory. It was
+a number not included in the telephone directory, and,
+recognizing the voice that answered him, he said
+briefly:</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Manners, this is Mr. Spurrier. Will you tell Mr.
+Harrison I&#8217;m on the wire?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hello, Spurrier,&#8221; boomed a deep voice after an
+interval. &#8220;We&#8217;re dining out this evening and we go
+to the opera afterward, but I want a word with you
+to-night. In fact, I want you to start for Russia on
+Wednesday. Drop into our box, and drive home with
+me for a few minutes afterward.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Russia on Wednesday! Spurrier&#8217;s unoccupied hand
+clenched in irritation, but his voice was as unruffled
+as if he had been asked to make ready for a journey
+to Hoboken. He knew enough of Harrison&#8217;s methods
+to ask no questions. If they could have been answered
+over the phone Harrison could have found many men
+to send to Russia. It was because they were for his
+ear alone that he had been called to New York.</p>
+<p>That evening he listened to &#8220;Otello&#8221; with thoughts
+that wandered from the voices of the singers. They
+refused even to be chained by the novelty of a slender
+tenor as a new Russian star held the spotlight. He
+was studying the almost too regular beauty of Vivian
+Harrison&#8217;s profile as she sat serene and self-confident
+with the horseshoe of the Metropolitan beyond her.</p>
+<p>At midnight Spurrier sat with Harrison in his
+study and listened to a crisp summarizing of the Russian
+scheme. It proved to be a project boldly conceived
+on a broad scale and requiring an ambassador
+dependable enough and resourceful enough to decide
+large matters as they arose, without cabling for instructions.</p>
+<p>In turn Spurrier talked of his own past doings, and
+through their cigar smoke the seeming idleness of
+those weeks assayed a wealth of exact information
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+and stood revealed as the incubation period of a large
+conception. Keenly formulated plans emerged from
+his recitals so simply and convincingly that the greater
+financier leaned forward and let his cigar die.</p>
+<p>Then Harrison rose and paced the room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know something about me, Spurrier,&#8221; he
+began. &#8220;When I came East they laughed at me&mdash;if
+they deigned to notice me at all. They said: &#8216;Here
+comes a bushleaguer who thinks he&#8217;s good enough for
+the big game. It&#8217;s one more lamb to the shearing
+shed.&#8217; That&#8217;s the East, Spurrier! That&#8217;s cocksure
+New York! They sneer at a Western-bred horse&mdash;or
+a Western-trained prize fighter&mdash;and when the
+newcomer licks the best they&#8217;ve got they straightway
+let out a holler that they taught him all he knows.
+Why, New York would die of lassitude and anæmia if
+it wasn&#8217;t for blood infusions from the provinces!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier gazed interestedly at the tall figure of the
+man with the sandy red mustache, and the snapping
+eyes, who for all his impeccability of evening dress,
+might have taken a shovel or pick from a section
+hand and taught him how to level a road bed. Harrison
+laughed shortly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They haven&#8217;t inhaled me so far. I brought only
+a million with me to this town, and I&#8217;ve got&mdash;well,
+I&#8217;ve got plenty, but I can&#8217;t call it a day quite yet.
+There&#8217;s one buccaneer to be settled with first! He&#8217;s
+got to go to the mat with me and come up bloody
+enough to admit that he&#8217;s been in a ruction. He
+chooses to pretend that I&#8217;m nonexistent, and I won&#8217;t
+stand being ignored! I want to leave my mark on
+that man, and with God&#8217;s help&mdash;and yours&mdash;I&#8217;m going
+to do it!&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;You mean Trabue?&#8221; asked Spurrier, and Harrison&#8217;s
+head gave a decisive jerk of affirmation while
+the hot glow of his eyes made his companion think of
+smelting furnaces.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s why this thing of yours interests me.
+That&#8217;s why I&#8217;m willing to get behind you and back you
+to the hilt,&#8221; the big fellow of finance went on. &#8220;A.
+O. and G. are trying to hold others out of this Kentucky
+field. That proves that they think enough of
+it to be hurt by having it torn from their teeth. All I
+need to know is what will hurt them! If you can
+take some teeth along with the bone, so much the better.&#8221;
+He paused, then in a voice that had altered to
+cold steadiness, commanded: &#8220;Now, give me your
+facts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At present prices of oil,&#8221; summarized Spurrier,
+&#8220;the development back of Hemlock Mountain
+wouldn&#8217;t pay. With higher market values, it <i>would</i>
+pay, but less handsomely than other fields A. O. and
+G. can work. Once the initial cost is laid out, the
+profit will be constant. The A. O. and G. idea is to
+hold it in reserve and await developments&mdash;meanwhile
+keeping up the &#8216;no trespass&#8217; sign.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t the range practically prohibit railroading?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Possibly&mdash;but it doesn&#8217;t prohibit pipe lines.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier opened the packet he had brought in his
+overcoat pocket and spread a map under the flooding
+light of a table lamp.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have traced there what seems to me a practical
+piping route,&#8221; he explained. &#8220;I call it the neck of
+the bottle. There is a sort of gap through the hills
+and a porous formation caused by a chain of caverns.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span>
+Nature is willing to help with some ready-made tunnels.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why haven&#8217;t they discovered that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The oil development of fifteen years ago never
+crossed Hemlock Mountain. It came the other way.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Harrison stood thinking for a time, then demanded
+tersely: &#8220;Have you secured any land or options?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not an acre, nor an inch,&#8221; laughed Spurrier.
+&#8220;This is a waiting game. I don&#8217;t mean to appear interested.
+If any man offered to give me a farm I
+should say it wasn&#8217;t worth State taxes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do we get the property into our hands
+then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The buying must be gradual and through men
+with whom we appear to have no connection.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And the State charter&mdash;how about that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There lies the chief problem,&#8221; admitted Spurrier.
+&#8220;The charter must come from a legislature that A. O.
+and G. can, at present, control.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What,&#8221; Harrison shot the question out like a cross-examiner,
+&#8220;is the present attitude of the natives toward
+oil and oil men?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Indifference and skepticism.&#8221; The reply was
+prompt but the amplification more deliberate. &#8220;Once
+they saw wealth ahead&mdash;then the boom collapsed, and
+they have no longer any faith in the magic of the word
+&#8216;oil.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I presume,&#8221; suggested Harrison, &#8220;you are encouraging
+that disbelief?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier&#8217;s face clouded, but only for a moment.
+&#8220;I am the most skeptical of all the skeptics,&#8221; he assented,
+&#8220;and yet I&#8217;m sorry that they can&#8217;t be gainers.
+They are an honest, upstanding folk and they have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span>
+always felt the pinch of privation. After all they are
+the rightful owners and development of their country
+ought to benefit them. Of course, though, to forecast
+the possibilities would kill the game. We can&#8217;t
+take them into our confidence without sounding a
+warning to the enemy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Growing sentimental?&#8221; queried Harrison dryly,
+and the younger man shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he responded slowly, &#8220;I can&#8217;t afford that&mdash;yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And see that you don&#8217;t,&#8221; admonished the chief
+sharply. &#8220;Bear in mind, as you have in the past, that
+we don&#8217;t want to depend on men of brittle resolution
+and temperamental squeamishness. We are in this
+thing toward a definite end and not as humanitarian
+dreamers. However&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; He broke off abruptly
+and added in a milder voice, &#8220;I don&#8217;t have to caution
+you. You understand the proposition.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For some minutes the cigar smoke floated in a silent
+room, while Martin Harrison sat with the knitted
+brows of concentrated thought. Spurrier did not interrupt
+the mental process which he knew had the
+heat and power of an ore smelter, reducing to fluid
+amenability the hard metal of a stubborn proposition.
+He knew, too, that the fuel which fed the fire was his
+principal&#8217;s animosity against Trabue, rather than the
+possibilities or extent of the loot. This, no less than
+the mountain vendetta, was, in last analysis, a personal
+feud and in the parlance of the Cumberlands a
+&#8220;war was in ther b&#8217;ilin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At last Harrison straightened up and tossed away
+his cigar.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are ambitious, Spurrier,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Put this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+thing over and I should say that all your ambitions
+can come to realization.&#8221;</p>
+<p>While he sat waiting Spurrier had lifted from the
+table a photograph of Vivien, appropriately framed in
+silver. He had taken it up idly because it was a new
+portrait and one that he had not before seen, but into
+the gesture the father read a deeper significance. It
+was as if Spurrier had asked &#8220;All my ambitions?&#8221;
+and had emphasized his question by laying his hands
+on the picture of the girl. That, thought Harrison,
+was an audacious suggestion, but it was Spurrier&#8217;s
+audacity that recommended him.</p>
+<p>Slowly the capitalist&#8217;s eyes lighted into an amused
+smile as their glance traveled from the younger face
+to the framed photograph, and slowly he nodded his
+head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>All</i> your ambitions,&#8221; he repeated meaningly, then
+with the electric snap of warning in his voice he added
+an admonition: &#8220;But don&#8217;t underestimate the difficulties
+of your undertaking. You are bucking the
+strongest and most relentless piracy in finance. You
+will incur enmities that will stop nowhere, and you
+must operate in a country where murderers are for
+&#8216;hire.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>The threat of personal danger just at that moment
+disquieted John Spurrier less than the other curtailment
+of freedom implied in Harrison&#8217;s words; the
+tacit acceptance of him as Vivien&#8217;s suitor. It came
+to him abruptly that he did not love Vivien; that he
+wished to remain untrammeled. Heretofore, he had
+always postponed matrimonial thoughts for the misty
+future. Now they became embarrassingly near and
+tangible.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>But quick on this realization followed another.
+Here was an offered alliance of tremendous advantage
+and one not to be ignored. To be Vivien&#8217;s husband
+might fail of rapture, but to be Martin Harrison&#8217;s
+son-in-law meant triumph. It meant his own nomination
+as heir apparent and successor in that position
+of cardinal importance to which he had looked upward
+as to a throne.</p>
+<p>There was no trace of dubiety in his voice as he
+answered:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have counted the handicaps, sir. I&#8217;m taking my
+chance with open eyes.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX' id='CHAPTER_IX'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Sim Colby, after that day when he had slipped
+through the laurel, had gone back to his own
+house and waited for the talk of John Spurrier&#8217;s
+mysterious death to drift along the waterways where
+news is the only speedy traveler.</p>
+<p>There had been no such gossip and he had dared
+betray his interest by no inquiry, but he knew it could
+have only one meaning; that he had failed.</p>
+<p>Spurrier was alive, and obviously he was holding
+his counsel concerning his narrow escape. This silence
+seemed to Sim Colby an ominous thing indicative of
+some crafty purpose&mdash;as if the intended victim were
+stalking grimly as well as being stalked. Sim came
+of a race that knows how to bide its time and that can
+keep bright the edge of hatred against long-delayed
+reprisals. It was certainly to be presumed that Spurrier
+had taken some of his friends into his confidence
+and that under the mantle of silence over on Little
+Turkey Tail, these friends were now watchfully alert.
+The enterprise that had once failed could not be reundertaken
+at once. Sim must wait for the vigilance
+to &#8220;blow over,&#8221; and while he waited the rancor of
+his hatred must fester with the thorn-prickings of a
+thousand doubts and apprehensions.</p>
+<p>Then he heard one day that Spurrier had left the
+mountains, and on another day the news was brought
+that the grand jury had declined to reopen the old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+issues of the murder case in which Mosebury had
+escaped justice. Both these things were comforting in
+themselves, but they failed of complete reassurance
+for the deserter.</p>
+<p>Men said that Spurrier was coming back again, so
+the day of reckoning was only deferred&mdash;not escaped.</p>
+<p>The determination with which Sim had set out on
+his mission of death had largely preëmpted his field of
+thought. Now, after weeks and months of brooding
+reflection, he himself had become only a sort of human
+garment worn by the sinister spirit of resolve.</p>
+<p>So all that winter while John Spurrier was away
+as the ambassador, practicing in Moscow and Odessa
+the adroit arts of financial diplomacy, the fixed idea
+of his assassination was festering in the mind of the
+man who lived, under an assumed name, at the head
+of Little Quicksand.</p>
+<p>That obsession took fantastic shapes and wove
+webs of grotesque patterns of hate as Colby, who had
+been Grant, sat brooding before his untidy hearth
+while the winter winds wailed about the eaves and
+lashed the mountain world into forlorn bleakness.</p>
+<p>And while Colby meditated unendingly on the absentee
+and built ugly plans against his return, so in
+another house and in another spirit, the ex-officer was
+also remembered.</p>
+<p>Winter in these well-nigh roadless hills meant a
+blockade and a siege with loneliness and stagnation
+as the impregnably intrenched attackers. The victims
+could only wait and endure until the rescue
+forces of spring should come to raise the chill and
+sodden barricade, with a flaunting of blossom-banners
+and the whispered song of warm victory.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span></div>
+<p>Glory Cappeze, for the first time in her life, suffered
+from loneliness. She had thought herself too
+used to it to mind it much, but John Spurrier had
+brought a new element to her existence and left behind
+him a void. She had been hardly more than
+an onlooker to his occasional visits with her father,
+but she had been a very interested onlooker. When
+he talked a vigorous mind had spoken and had
+brought the greater, unknown, outer world to her
+door. The striking face with its square jaw; the ingrained
+graces and courtesies of his bearing; the
+quickness of his understanding&mdash;all these things had
+been a light in the gray mediocrity of uneventful
+days and a flame that had fired her imagination to a
+splendid disquiet.</p>
+<p>The infectious smile and force of personality that
+had been a challenge to more critical women, had
+been almost dazzling qualities to the mountain girl of
+strangled opportunities.</p>
+<p>But it was that last meeting in which he had
+thawed her shyness into friendliness that Glory remembered
+most eagerly. That had seemed to make
+of Spurrier not only a hero admired from a distance
+but a hero who was also a friend, and she was hungry
+for friends.</p>
+<p>So it came to pass that to these two widely variant
+welcomes, neither of which he suspected, John Spurrier
+was returning from Russia when spring had
+lightly brushed the Cumberland slopes with delicate
+fragrance and the color of blossoming.</p>
+<p>In Louisville, in Frankfort, and in other Kentucky
+towns along his way the returning man had made
+stops and investigations, to the end that he came
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+primed with certain information of an ex-cathedra
+sort.</p>
+<p>The fruits of this research included an abstract of
+the personnel of the legislature and the trend of oil
+influences in State politics, and he studied his notebook
+as he traveled from the rolling, almost voluptuous
+fertility of the bluegrass section to the piedmont
+where the foothills began to break the sky.</p>
+<p>On the porch of the dilapidated hotel at Waterfall
+a sparse crowd centered about a seated figure, and
+when he had reached the spot Spurrier paused, challenged
+by a sense of the medieval, that gripped him as
+tangibly as a hand clapped upon his shoulder.</p>
+<p>The seated man was blind and shabby, with a beggar&#8217;s
+cup strapped to his knee, and a &#8220;fiddle&#8221; nestling
+close to the stubbled chin of a disfigured face. He
+sang in a weird falsetto, with minors that rose thin
+and dolorous, but he was in every essential the ballad
+singer who improvised his lays upon topical themes,
+as did Scott&#8217;s last minstrel&mdash;a survival of antiquity.</p>
+<p>Now he was whining out a personal plaint in the
+words of his &#8220;song ballet.&#8221;</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&#8220;I used ter hev ther sight ter see ther hills so high an&#8217; green,</p>
+<p>I used ter work a standard rig an&#8217; drill fer kero<i>sene</i>.&#8221;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>The singer&#8217;s lugubrious pathos appeared to be received
+with attentive and uncritical interest. Beyond
+doubt he took himself seriously and sadly.</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&#8220;I used ter know a woman&#8217;s love, an&#8217; read a woman&#8217;s eyes,</p>
+<p>An&#8217; look into my baby&#8217;s face an&#8217; dwell in paradise,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span></p>
+<p>Until a comp&#8217;ny foreman, plum&#8217; heedless in his mind</p>
+<p>Let nitroglycer<i>een</i> explode an&#8217; made me go stone blind.&#8221;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>Spurrier, half-turning, saw a traveling salesman
+standing at his elbow with a repressed grin of amusement
+struggling in his glance.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Queer card, that,&#8221; whispered the drummer. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
+seen him before; one of the wrecks left over from the
+oil-boom days. A &#8216;go-devil&#8217; let loose too soon and
+blinded him.&#8221; He paused, then added as though by
+way of apology for his seeming callousness: &#8220;Some
+people say the old boy is a sort of a miser and has a
+snug pile salted away.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier nodded and went on into the office, but
+later in the day he sought out the blind fiddler and engaged
+him in conversation. The man&#8217;s blinding had
+left him a legacy of hate for all oil operators, and
+from such relics as this of the active days Spurrier
+knew how to evoke scraps of available information.
+It was not until later that it occurred to him that he
+had answered questions as well as asked them&mdash;but,
+of course, he had not been indiscreet.</p>
+<p>With John Spurrier, riding across hills afoam with
+dogwood blossom and tenderly vivid with young
+green, went persistently the thought of the blind beggar
+who seemed almost epic in his symbolism of
+human wreckage adrift in the wake of the boom. Yet
+he was honest enough to admit inwardly that should
+victory fall to his banners there would be flotsam in
+the wake of his triumph, too; simple folk despoiled
+of their birthright. He came as no altruist to fight
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
+for the native born. He, no less than A. O. and G.,
+sought to exploit them.</p>
+<p>When he went to the house of Dyke Cappeze he did
+not admit the curiosity, amounting to positive anxiety,
+to see again the little barbarian, who slurred consonants,
+doubled her negatives, split her infinitives and
+retorted in the Latin of Blackstone. Yet when Glory
+did not at once appear, he found himself unaccountably
+disappointed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s been another stranger in here since you
+went away,&#8221; the old man smilingly told him. &#8220;What
+is he doing here? That&#8217;s the one burning question
+debated along the highways when men &#8216;meet and make
+their manners.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; laughed Spurrier, &#8220;what <i>is</i> he doing here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cappeze shrugged his bent shoulders as he knocked
+the rubble from his pipe and a quizzical twinkle came
+into his eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So far as I can make out, sir, he&#8217;s as much a
+gentleman of leisure as you are yourself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier knew what an excellent subterfuge may
+sometimes lie in frankness, and now he had recourse
+to its concealment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good heavens, Mr. Cappeze, I&#8217;m no idler!&#8221; he declared.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m associated with capitalists who work me
+like a mule. Since I saw you, for example, I&#8217;ve been
+in Russia and I&#8217;ve been hard-driven. That&#8217;s why I
+come here. If I couldn&#8217;t get absolutely away from it
+all now and then, I&#8217;d soon be ready for a madhouse.
+Here I can forget all that and keep fit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cappeze nodded. &#8220;That&#8217;s just about the way I
+sized you up. At first, folks pondered about you, too,
+but now they take you on faith.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I hope so&mdash;and this new man? Has he stepped on
+anybody&#8217;s toes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not yet. He hasn&#8217;t even bought any land, but
+there have been some several transfers of property,
+in other names, since he came. He <i>may</i> be some man&#8217;s
+silent partner.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What sort of partnership would it be?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;God knows.&#8221; For an instant the shrewd eyes
+leaped into a glint of feeling. &#8220;These poor benighted
+devils suspect the Greeks bearing gifts. Civilization
+has always come here only to leave its scar. They have
+been stung once&mdash;over oil. God pity the man who
+seeks to sting them again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You think,&#8221; Spurrier responded lightly, as one
+without personal interest, &#8220;they wouldn&#8217;t take it
+kindly?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Once again the sonorous and kindly voice mounted
+abruptly to vehemence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As kindly, sir, as a wolf bitch robbed, the second
+time, of her whelps. It&#8217;s all a wolf bitch has.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That evening as he walked slowly homeward with
+a neighbor whom he had met by the way, Spurrier
+came face to face with Wharton, the other stranger,
+and the mountaineer performed the offices of introduction.</p>
+<p>The two men from the outer world eyed each other
+incuriously and parted after an exchange of commonplaces.</p>
+<p>When Spurrier separated from his chance companion,
+the hillsman drawled: &#8220;Folks <i>says</i> thet feller&#8217;s
+buyin&#8217; land. God knows what fer he wants hit, but ef
+he <i>does</i> hone fer hit, hit&#8217;s kinderly probable thet hit&#8217;s
+wuth holdin&#8217; on to.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span></div>
+<p>When the brook trout began to leap and flash Cappeze
+delegated Glory to act for him as Spurrier&#8217;s
+guide, and as the girl led the way to the likeliest pools,
+the young, straight-growing trees were not more
+gracefully slender.</p>
+<p>The fragrance from the pink-hearted laurel and the
+locust bloom had no delicacy more subtle or provocative
+than that of her cheeks and hair. The breeze in
+the nodding poplar tops seemed scarcely freer or
+lighter than her movements. Like the season she was
+young and in blossom and like the hills she was wild
+of beauty.</p>
+<p>Spurrier admitted to himself that, were he free to
+respond to the pagan and vital promptings of impulse,
+instead of standing pledged to rigid and austere
+purposes, this girl would have made something ring
+within him as a tuning fork rings to its note.</p>
+<p>Since the days of Augusta Beverly&#8217;s ascendency,
+he had never felt the need of raising any sort of defense
+between himself and a woman. At first he had
+believed himself, with youthful resentment, a woman-hater
+and more latterly he had become in this, as in
+other affairs, an expedientist. Augusta had proven
+weak in loyalty, under stress, and Vivian had been
+indifferent to the ostracism of his former comrades so
+long as her own aristocracy of money accepted him.
+Both had been snobs in a sense, and in a sense he too
+was a snob.</p>
+<p>But because this girl was of a simplicity that regarded
+all things in their primary colors and nothing
+in the shaded half-tones of politer usage, it was needful
+to guard against her mistaking his proffered comradeship
+for the attitude of the lover&mdash;and that would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+have been most disastrous. It would have made necessary
+awkward explanations that would wound her,
+embarrass him and arouse the old man&#8217;s just ire. For
+people, he was learning, may be elementally uncouth
+and yet prouder than Lucifer, and except when he
+was here on their own ground there was no common
+meeting place between their standards of living.</p>
+<p>Yet Glory&#8217;s presence was like a gypsy-song to his
+senses; rich and lyrical with a touch of the plaintive.
+Glory, he knew, would have believed in him when
+Augusta Beverly had doubted, and would have stood
+fast when Augusta had cut loose.</p>
+<p>This was the sort of thought with which it was
+dangerous to dally&mdash;and perhaps that was precisely
+why, under this tuneful sky, it pleased him to humor
+it. Certainly, whatever the cause, the sight of her
+made him step more elastically as she went on ahead.</p>
+<p>When they had whipped the streams for trout until
+hunger clamored, Spurrier sat, with a sandwich in his
+hand in grass that waved knee-high, and through half
+closed lids watched Glory as she moved about crooning
+an old ballad, and seemingly unconscious of himself,
+herself and all but the sunlit spirit of the early
+summer day.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory,&#8221; he said suddenly, calling her by her given
+name for the first time and in a mood of experiment.</p>
+<p>As naturally as though she had not noted his lapsed
+formality, she turned toward him and answered in
+kind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What air hit, Jack?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What fer?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;For calling me Jack.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span></div>
+<p>Then her cheeks colored deeply and she wheeled to
+her work again. But after a little she faced him once
+more to say half angrily:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I called ye Jack because ye called me Glory.
+You&#8217;ve always put a Miss afore hit till now, an&#8217; I
+&#8217;lowed ye&#8217;d done made up yore mind ter be friendly
+at last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve always wanted to be friendly,&#8221; he assured her.
+&#8220;It was you who began with a hickory switch and
+went on with hard words in Latin.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl laughed, and the peal of her mirth transmuted
+their status and dispelled her self-consciousness.
+She came over and stood looking down at him
+with violet eyes mischievously a-sparkle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The co&#8217;te,&#8221; she announced, &#8220;hes carefully weighed
+there evidence in ther case of Jack Spurrier, charged
+with ther willful murder of Bob White, and is ready
+to enter jedgment. Jack Spurrier, stand up ter be
+sentenced!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man rose to his feet and stood with such well-feigned
+abjectness of suspense that she had to fight
+back the laughter from her eyes to preserve her own
+pose of judicial gravity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is well established by the evidence befo&#8217; <a name='TC_4'></a><ins title='Was there'>ther</ins>
+co&#8217;te,&#8221; she went solemnly on, &#8220;thet ther defendant is
+guilty on every count contained in the indictment.&#8221;
+She checked off upon the fingers of the left hand the
+roster of his crime as she summarized it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He entered inter an unlawful conspiracy with the
+codefendant Rover, a setter dawg. He made a felonious
+assault without provocation. He committed murder
+in the first degree with malice prepense.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span></div>
+<p>Spurrier&#8217;s head sank low in mock despair, until
+Glory came to her peroration and sentence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yet since the defendant is amply proved to be a
+poor, ignorant wanderer upon the face of the earth,
+unpossessed of ordinary knowledge, the court is constrained
+to hold him incapable of discrimination between
+right an&#8217; wrong. Hence he is not fully responsible
+for his acts of violence. Mercy as well as
+justice lies in the province of the law, twins of a
+sacred parentage and equal before the throne.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She broke off in a laugh, and so sudden was the
+transition from absolute mimicry that the man forgot
+to laugh with her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory,&#8221; he demanded somewhat breathlessly, &#8220;have
+you ever been to a theater in your life? Have you
+ever seen a real actress?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because you <i>are</i> one. Does this life satisfy you?
+Isn&#8217;t there anything off there beyond the hills that
+ever calls you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The dancing eyes grew abruptly grave, almost
+pained, and the response came slowly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Everything</i> down thar calls ter me. I craves hit
+all!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier suddenly recalled old Cappeze&#8217;s half-frightened
+vehemence when the recluse had inveighed
+against the awakening of vain longings in his daughter.
+Now he changed his manner as he asked:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder if I&#8217;d offend you if I put a question.
+I don&#8217;t want to.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ye mout try an&#8217; see. I ain&#8217;t got no power ter
+answer twell I hears hit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right. I&#8217;ll risk it. Your father doesn&#8217;t talk
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+mountain dialect. His English is pure&mdash;and you were
+raised close to him. Why do <i>you</i> use&mdash;the other
+kind?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She did not at once reply and, when she did, the
+astonishingly adaptable creature no longer employed
+vernacular, though she spoke slowly and guardedly as
+one might who ventured into a foreign tongue.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My father has lived down below as well as here.
+He&#8217;s a gentleman, but he aims&mdash;I mean he intends&mdash;to
+live here now till he dies.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As she paused Spurrier prompted her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;and you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My father thinks that while I <i>do</i> live here, I&#8217;d
+better fit into the life and talk in the phrases that don&#8217;t
+seem high-falutin&#8217; to my neighbors.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I dare say,&#8221; he assured her with forced conviction,
+&#8220;that your father is right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a brief silence between them while the
+warm stillness of the woods breathed its incense and
+its langour, then the girl broke out <a name='TC_5'></a><ins title='Was impusively'>impulsively</ins>:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want to see and hear and taste everything, out
+there!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her hands swept outward with an all-embracing
+gesture toward the whole of the unknown. &#8220;There
+aren&#8217;t any words to tell how I want it! What do you
+want more than anything else, Jack?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man remained silent for a little, studying her
+under half-lowered lids while a smile hovered at the
+corners of his lips. But the smile died abruptly and
+it was with deep seriousness that he answered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think, more than anything else, I want a clean
+name and a vindicated reputation.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory&#8217;s eyes widened so that their violet depths became
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+pools of wondering color and her lips parted in
+surprise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A clean name!&#8221; she echoed incredulously. &#8220;What
+blight have you got on it, Jack?&#8221; Then catching herself
+up abruptly she flushed crimson and said apologetically:
+&#8220;That&#8217;s a question I haven&#8217;t any license to
+put to you, though. Only you broached the subject
+yourself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And having broached it, I am willing to pursue
+it,&#8221; he assured her evenly. &#8220;I was an army officer
+until I was charged with unprovoked murder&mdash;and
+court-martialed; dishonorably discharged from the
+service in which my father and grandfather had lived
+and died.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a moment or two she made no answer but her
+quick expressiveness of lip and eye did not, even for
+a startled interval, betray any shock of horror. When
+she did speak it was in a voice so soft and compassionate
+that the man thought of its quality before he
+realized its words.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did the man that&mdash;that was <i>really</i> guilty go scot
+free, whilst you had to shoulder his blame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There had been no question of evidence; no waiting
+for any denial of guilt. She had assumed his innocence
+with the same certainty that her eye assumed
+the flawlessness of the overheard blue. Her interest
+was all for his wronging and not at all for his alleged
+wrong.</p>
+<p>The man started with surprise; the surprise of one
+who had trained himself into an unnatural callousness
+as a defense against what had seemed a universal
+proneness to convict. He had told himself that Glory
+would see with a straighter and more intuitive eye.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span>
+He had told her baldly of the thing which he seldom
+mentioned out of an inquisitiveness to test her reaction
+to the revelation, but he was unprepared for such
+unhesitant belief.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think you are the first human being, Glory,&#8221; he
+said quietly but with unaccustomed feeling in his
+voice, &#8220;who ever heard that much and gave me a
+clean bill of health without hearing a good bit more.
+Why didn&#8217;t you ask whether or not I was guilty?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t have to,&#8221; she said slowly. &#8220;Some men
+could be murderers and some couldn&#8217;t. You couldn&#8217;t.
+You might have to <i>kill</i> a man&mdash;but not murder him.
+You might do lots of things that wouldn&#8217;t be right.
+I don&#8217;t know about that&mdash;but those people that convicted
+you were fools!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; he said soberly. &#8220;You&#8217;re right,
+Glory. I was as innocent of that assassination as you
+are, yet they proved me guilty. It was only through
+influence that I escaped ending my days in prison.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he gave her the story, which he had already
+told her father and no one else in the mountains. She
+listened, thinking not at all of the damaging circumstances,
+but secretly triumphant that she had been
+chosen as a confidant.</p>
+<p>But that night Spurrier looked up from a letter he
+was reading and let his eyes wander to the rafters and
+his thoughts to the trout stream.</p>
+<p>It was a letter, too, which should have held his attention.
+It contained, on a separate sheet of paper, a
+list of names which was typed and headed: &#8220;Confidential
+Memorandum.&#8221; Below that appeared the
+notation: &#8220;Members of the general assembly, under
+American Oil and Gas influence. Also names of candidates
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+who oppose them at the next election, and who
+may be reached by us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier lighted his pipe and his face became studious,
+but presently he looked up frowning.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I must speak to old Cappeze,&#8221; he said aloud and
+musingly. &#8220;He&#8217;s being unfair to her.&#8221; And that did
+not seem a relevant comment upon the paper he held
+in his hand.</p>
+<p>Then Spurrier started a little as from outside a
+human voice sounded above the chorus of the frogs
+and whippoorwills.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hallo,&#8221; it sung out. &#8220;Hit&#8217;s Blind Joe Givins. Kin
+I come in?&#8221;</p>
+<p>A few minutes later into the lamplight of the room
+shambled the beggar of the disfigured face, whom
+Spurrier had last seen at the town of Waterfall, led by
+a small, brattish boy. His violin case was tightly
+grasped under his arm, and his free hand was groping.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d done sot out ter visit a kinsman over at ther
+head of Big Wolfpen branch,&#8221; explained the blind
+man, &#8220;but ther boy hyar&#8217;s got a stone bruise on his heel
+an&#8217; he kain&#8217;t handily go on, ter-night. We wonder
+could we sleep hyar?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier bowed to the law of the mountains, which
+does not deny shelter to the wayfarer, but he shivered
+fastidiously at the unkempt raggedness of his tramp-like
+visitor, and he slipped into his pocket the papers
+in his hand.</p>
+<p>That night before Spurrier&#8217;s hearth, as in elder
+times before the roaring logs of some feudal castle,
+the wandering minstrel paid his board with song and
+music; his voice rising high and tremulous in quaint
+tales set to measure.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></div>
+<p>But on the next morning the boy set out on some
+mission in the neighborhood and left his charge to
+await his return, seated in a low chair, and gazing
+emptily ahead.</p>
+<p>Spurrier went out to the road in response to the
+shout of a passing neighbor, and left his papers lying
+on the table top, forgetful of the presence of the sightless
+guest, who sat so negligibly quiet in the chimney
+corner.</p>
+<p>When he entered the room again the blind man had
+risen from his seat and moved across to the hearth.
+On the threshold the householder halted and stood
+keenly eyeing him while he groped along the mantel
+shelf as if searching with wavering fingers for something
+that his eyes could not discover&mdash;and the thought
+of the papers which he had left exposed caused an
+uneasy suspicion to dart into Spurrier&#8217;s mind. Any
+eye that fell on that list would have gained the key
+to his whole strategy and intent, but, of course, this
+man could not see. Still Spurrier cursed himself for
+a careless <a name='TC_6'></a><ins title='Removed extra quote'>fool.</ins></p>
+<p>&#8220;I was jest seekin&#8217; fer a match,&#8221; said Joe Givins as
+a slight sound from the other attracted his attention.
+&#8220;I aimed ter smoke for a leetle spell.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The host struck a match and held it while the
+broken guest kindled his pipe, then he hurriedly
+glanced through his papers to assure himself that
+nothing had been disturbed&mdash;and though each sheet
+seemed as he had left it, the uneasiness in Spurrier&#8217;s
+mind refused to be stilled.</p>
+<p>Presumably this bat-blind ragamuffin was no greater
+menace to the secrecy of his plans than a bat itself
+would have been, yet a glimpse of this letter would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+have been so fatal that he asked himself anxiously,
+&#8220;How do I know he&#8217;s not faking?&#8221; The far-fetched
+apprehension gathered weight like a snowslide until
+suddenly out of it was born a grim determination.</p>
+<p>He would make a test.</p>
+<p>Noiselessly, while the ugly face that had been
+mutilated by a blasting charge gazed straight and
+sightlessly at him, Spurrier opened the table drawer
+and took from it a heavy calibered automatic pistol.
+It was a deadly looking thing and it needed no cocking;
+only the silent slipping forward of a safety catch.
+In this experiment Spurrier must not startle his guest
+by any ominous sound, but he must satisfy himself
+that his sight was genuinely dead.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought,&#8221; said the host in a matter-of-fact voice
+as he searchingly studied the other face through narrowed
+lids, &#8220;that when sight went, the enjoyment of
+tobacco went with it.&#8221; As he spoke he raised and
+leveled the cocked pistol until its muzzle was pointed
+full into the staring face. Deliberately he set his own
+features into the baleful stamp of deadly threat, until
+his expression was as wicked and ugly as a gargoyle
+of hatred.</p>
+<p>If the man were by any possibility shamming it
+would take cold nerve to sit there without any hint
+of confession as this unwarned demonstration was
+made against him&mdash;a demonstration that seemed
+genuine and murderous. For an instant Spurrier
+fancied that he heard the breath rasp in the other&#8217;s
+throat, but that, he realized, must have been fancy.
+The face itself altered no line of expression, flickered
+no eyelid. It remained as it had been, stolid and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
+blank, so that the man with the pistol felt ashamed of
+his suspicion.</p>
+<p>But Spurrier rose and leaned across the table slowly
+advancing the muzzle until it almost touched the
+bridge of the nose, just between the eyes he was so
+severely testing. Still no hint of realization came
+from the threatened guest. Then the voice of the
+blind man sounded phlegmatically:</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what folks say erbout terbaccy an&#8217; blind
+men&mdash;but, by crickety, hit <i>ain&#8217;t so</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier withdrew his pistol and put it back
+in the drawer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess,&#8221; he said to himself, &#8220;he didn&#8217;t read my
+letters.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X' id='CHAPTER_X'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Across a tree-shaded public square from the
+courthouse and &#8220;jail house&#8221; at Carnettsville
+stood a building that wore the dejected guise
+of uncomforted old age, and among the business signs
+nailed about its entrance was the shingle bearing the
+name of &#8220;Creed Faggott, Atty. at Law.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The way to this oracle&#8217;s sanctum lay up a creaking
+stairway, and on a brilliant summer day not long after
+Spurrier had entertained his blind guest it was climbed
+by that guest in person, led by the impish boy whose
+young mouth was stained with chewing-tobacco.</p>
+<p>This precocious child opened the door and led his
+charge in and, from a deal table, Creed Faggott removed
+his broganned feet and turned sly eyes upon
+the visitors, out of a cadaverous and furtive face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t let no grass grow under your feet, do
+you, Joe?&#8221; inquired the lawyer shortly. &#8220;When the
+day rolls round, you show up without default or miscarriage.&#8221;
+He paused as the boy led the blind man to
+a chair and then facetiously capped his interrogation.
+&#8220;I reckon I don&#8217;t err in surmisin&#8217; that you&#8217;ve come to
+collect your pension?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The blind man gazed vacantly ahead. &#8220;Who,
+me?&#8221; he inquired with half-witted dullness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you. Who else would I mean?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit&#8217;s due, ain&#8217;t hit&mdash;my money?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Due at noon to-day and noon is still ten minutes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+off. I&#8217;m not sure the company didn&#8217;t make a mistake
+in allowing you such a generous compensation for
+your accident.&#8221; There was a pause, then Faggott
+added argumentatively: &#8220;Your damage suit would
+have come to naught, most likely.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thet ain&#8217;t ther way ye talked when I lawed ther
+comp&#8217;ny,&#8221; whined the blind man. &#8220;Ye &#8217;peared to be
+right ambitious ter settle outen co&#8217;te in them days, Mr.
+Faggott.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The company didn&#8217;t want the thing hanging on.
+They got cold feet. Well, I&#8217;ll give you your check.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d ruther have hit in cash money&mdash;silver money,&#8221;
+stipulated the recipient of the compromise settlement.
+&#8220;I kin count <i>thet</i> over by ther feel of hit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Faggott snorted his disgust but he deposited in the
+outstretched palm the amount that fell due on each
+quarterly pay day, and the visitor thumbed over every
+coin and tested the edges of all with his teeth. After
+that, instead of rising to go, he sat silently reflective.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all, ain&#8217;t it,&#8221; demanded the attorney, and
+something like a pallid grin lifted the lip corners in the
+blind man&#8217;s ugly face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not quite all,&#8221; replied Joe Givins as he shook his
+head. &#8220;No, thar&#8217;s one other leetle matter yit. I&#8217;d love
+ter hev ye write me a letter ter ther comp&#8217;ny&#8217;s boss-man
+in Looeyville. I kinderly aims ter go thar an&#8217;
+see him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This time it was the attorney who, with an incredulity-freighted
+voice, demanded: &#8220;Who, you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir. Me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Louisville manager,&#8221; announced Faggott
+loftily, &#8220;is a man of affairs. The company conducts
+its business here through its local counsel&mdash;that&#8217;s me.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Nevertheless an&#8217; notwithstandin&#8217;, I reckon hit&#8217;ll
+kinderly pleasure ther boss-man ter talk ter <i>me</i>&mdash;when
+he hears what I&#8217;ve got ter tell him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A light of greed quickened in the shyster&#8217;s narrow
+eyes. It was possible that Blind Joe had come by some
+scrap of salable information. It had been stipulated
+when his damage suit was settled, that he should, paradoxically
+speaking, keep his blind eyes open.</p>
+<p>&#8220;See here, Joe,&#8221; the attorney, no longer condescending
+of bearing, spoke now with a wheedling insistence,
+&#8220;if you&#8217;ve got any tidings, tell &#8217;em to me. I&#8217;m your
+friend and I can get the matter before the parties that
+hold the purse strings.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Joe Givins stretched out a wavering hand and groped
+before him. &#8220;Lead me on outen hyar, boy,&#8221; he gave
+laconic command to his youthful varlet. &#8220;I&#8217;m tarryin&#8217;
+overlong an&#8217; wastin&#8217; daylight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s daylight to you, Joe?&#8221; snapped Faggott
+brutally, but recognizing his mistake he, at once,
+softened his manner to a mollifying tone. &#8220;Set still
+a spell an&#8217; let&#8217;s have speech tergether&mdash;an&#8217; a little
+dram of licker.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Ten minutes of nimble-witted fencing ensued between
+the two sons of avarice, and at their end the
+blind man stumped out, carrying in his breast pocket
+a note of introduction to a business man in Louisville&mdash;whose
+real business was lobbying and directing underground
+investigations&mdash;but the lawyer was no wiser
+than he had been.</p>
+<p>And when eventually from the murky lobby of the
+Farmers&#8217; Haven Hotel, which sits between distillery
+warehouses in Louisville, the shabby mountaineer was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+led to the office building he sought, he was received
+while more presentable beings waited in an anteroom.</p>
+<p>It chanced that on the same day John Spurrier
+spoke to Dyke Cappeze of Glory.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When we went fishing,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I asked her
+whether she never felt a curiosity for the things beyond
+the ridges&mdash;and her eagerness startled me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>An abrupt seriousness overspread the older face and
+the answering voice was sternly pitched.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I should be profoundly distressed, sir,&#8221; said Cappeze,
+&#8220;to have discontent brought home to her. I
+should resent it as unfriendly and disloyal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And yet,&#8221; Spurrier&#8217;s own voice was quickened
+into a more argumentative timber, &#8220;she has a splendid
+vitality that it&#8217;s a pity to crush.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She has,&#8221; came the swift retort, &#8220;a contented heart
+which it&#8217;s a pity to unsettle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The elder eyes hardened and looked out over the
+wall of obstinacy that had immured Dyke Cappeze&#8217;s
+life, but his words quivered to a tremor of deep
+feeling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve given her an education of sorts. She knows
+more law than some judges, and if she&#8217;s ignorant of
+the world of to-day she&#8217;s got a bowing acquaintance
+with the classics. I&#8217;m not wholly selfish. If there was
+some one&mdash;down below that I could send her to&mdash;some
+one who would love her enough because she needs to
+be loved&mdash;I&#8217;d stay here alone, and willingly, despite
+the fact that it would well-nigh kill me.&#8221; He paused
+there and his eyes were broodingly somber, then
+almost fiercely he went on: &#8220;I would trust her in no
+society where she might be affronted or belittled. I
+would rather see her live and die here, talking the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+honest, old crudities of the pioneers, than have her
+venture into a life where she could not make her own
+terms.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps she could make her own terms,&#8221; hazarded
+Spurrier, and the other snapped his head up indignantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps&mdash;yes&mdash;and perhaps not. You yourself
+are a man of the world, sir. What would&mdash;one of
+your own sort&mdash;have to offer her out there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Under that challenging gaze the man from the East
+found himself flushing. It was almost as though under
+the hypothetical form of the question, the father had
+bluntly warned him off from any interference unless
+he came as an avowed suitor. He had no answer and
+again the lawyer spoke with the compelling force of
+an ultimatum.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She must stay here with me, who would die for
+her, until she goes to some man who offers her everything
+he has to offer; some man who would die for
+her, too.&#8221; His voice had fallen into tenderness, but a
+stern ring went with his final words. &#8220;Meanwhile,
+I stand guard over her like a faithful dog. I may be
+old and scarred but, by God, sir, I am vigilant and
+devoted!&#8221; He waved his thin hand with a gesture of
+dismissal for a closed subject, and in a changed tone
+added:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve recently heard of two other travelers riding
+through&mdash;and they have taken up several land options.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What meaning do you read into it, Mr. Cappeze?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The lawyer shrugged his shoulders. If he had no
+explanation to offer, it was plain that he did not regard
+the coming of the strangers as meaningless.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going,&#8221; said Spurrier casually, &#8220;to make a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+trip up Snake Fork to the head of Little Quicksand.
+Is there any one up there I can call on for lodging
+and information?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The lawyer shook his head. &#8220;It&#8217;s a mighty rough
+country and sparsely settled. You&#8217;ll find a lavish of
+rattlesnakes&mdash;and a few unlettered humans. There&#8217;s
+a fellow up there named Sim Colby who might shelter
+you overnight. He lives by himself, and has a roof
+that sheds the rain. It&#8217;s about all you can ask.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s enough,&#8221; smiled Spurrier, and a few days later
+he found himself climbing a stiff ascent toward a point
+where over the tree-tops a thread of smoke proclaimed
+a human habitation.</p>
+<p>He was coming unannounced to the house of Sim
+Colby, but if he had expected his visit to be an entire
+surprise he was mistaken, and if he had known the
+agitation that went a little way ahead of him, he would
+have made a wide detour and passed the place by.</p>
+<p>Sim was hoeing in his steeply pitched field when he
+saw and recognized the figure which was yet a half-hour&#8217;s
+walk distant, by the meanderings of the trail.
+The hoe fell from his hand and his posture stiffened so
+inimically that the hound at his feet rose and bristled,
+a low growl running half smothered in its throat.</p>
+<p>Doubtless, Colby reasoned, Spurrier was coming to
+his lonely house with a purpose of venom and punishment,
+yet he walked boldly and to the outward glance
+he seemed unarmed. Hence it must be that in the
+former army officer&#8217;s plan lay some intent more complex
+than mere open-and-shut meeting and slaying:
+some carefully planned and guileful climax to be approached
+by indirection. Very well, he would also
+play the game out, burying his suspicion under a guise
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+of artlessness, but watching every move&mdash;and when
+the moment came striking first.</p>
+<p>At a brook, as he hastened toward his house by a
+short cut, he knelt to drink, for his throat was
+damnably dry, and in the clear water the pasty pallor
+and terror of his face was given back to him, and
+warned him. But also the mirroring brought another
+thought and the thought fathered swift action. In the
+army he had been spare and clean-shaven and a scar
+had marked his chin. Now he was bearded. He
+carried a beefier bulk and an altered appearance.</p>
+<p>Could there be any possibility of Spurrier&#8217;s failing
+to recognize him&mdash;of his having been, after all, ignorant
+of his presence here?</p>
+<p>Yet his eyes would be recognizable. They were arrestingly
+distinctive, for one of them was pale-blue
+and the other noticeably grayish.</p>
+<p>By the path he was following, stalks of Jimson weed
+grew rank, and Sim, rising from his knees, pulled off
+a handful of leaves and crushed them between his
+palms. When he had reached the house his first action
+was to force from this bruised leafage a few drops of
+liquid into a saucer and this juice he carefully injected
+into his eyes.</p>
+<p>Then he went to the door and squinted up at the
+sun. It would be fifteen minutes before Spurrier
+would arrive and fifteen minutes might be enough.
+He half closed his eyes, because they were stinging
+painfully, and sat waiting, to all appearances indolent
+and thoughtless.</p>
+<p>Spurrier plodded on, measuring the distance to the
+smoke thread until he came in view of the cabin
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span>
+itself, then he approached slowly since the stiff climb
+had winded him.</p>
+<p>Now he could see the shingle roof and the log walls,
+trailed over with morning-glory vines, and in the door
+the slouching figure of a man. He came on and the
+native rose lazily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My name&#8217;s John Spurrier,&#8221; called out the traveler,
+&#8220;and Lawyer Cappeze cited you to me as a man who
+might shelter me overnight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man who had deserted chewed nonchalantly
+on a grass straw and regarded the other incuriously&mdash;which
+was a master bit of dissembling. Between
+them, it seemed to Sim Colby who had once been
+Private Grant, lay the body of a murdered captain.
+Between them, too, lay the guilt of his assassination.
+To the Easterner&#8217;s appraisal this heavy-set mountaineer
+with unkempt hair and ragged beard was
+merely a local type and yet in one respect he was unforgettable.</p>
+<p>It was his eyes. They were arrestingly uncommon
+eyes and, once seen, they must be remembered. What
+was the quality that made one notice them so instantly,
+Spurrier questioned himself. Then he realized.</p>
+<p>They were inkily black eyes, but that was not all.
+There seemed to be in them no line of demarcation
+between iris and pupil&mdash;only liquid pools of jet.</p>
+<p>The two men sat there as the shadows lengthened
+and talked &#8220;plumb friendly&#8221; as Colby later admitted
+to himself. They smoked Spurrier&#8217;s &#8220;fotched-on&#8221;
+tobacco and drank native distillation from the demijohn
+that Colby took down from its place on a rafter.
+Yet the host was filling each tranquilly flowing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+minute with the intensive planning of a hospitality that
+was, like Macbeth&#8217;s, to end in murder.</p>
+<p>Spurrier would sleep in an alcovelike room which
+could be locked from the outside. Back through the
+brush was a spot of quicksand where a body would
+leave no trace. One thing only troubled the planning
+brain. He wished he could learn just who knew of
+his guest&#8217;s coming here; just what precautions that
+guest had taken before embarking on such a venture.</p>
+<p>From outside came a shout, interrupting these reflections,
+and Sim was at once on his feet facing the
+front door, with a surreptitious hand inside his shirt,
+and one eye covertly watching Spurrier, even as he
+looked out. A snarl, too, drew his lips into an unpleasant
+twist.</p>
+<p>The Easterner put down to mountain caution the
+amazing swiftness with which the other had come
+from his hulking proneness to upstanding alertness.
+But with equal rapidity, Sim&#8217;s pose relaxed into ease
+and he shouted a welcome as the door darkened with
+a figure physically splendid in its spare strength and
+commanding height.</p>
+<p>Spurrier rose and found himself looking into a face
+with most engaging eyes and teeth that flashed white
+in smiling.</p>
+<p>For a moment as the newcomer gazed at Sim Colby
+his expression mirrored some sort of surprise and
+his lips moved as if to speak, but Spurrier could not
+see, because Colby&#8217;s back was turned, the warning
+glance that shot between the two, and the big fellow&#8217;s
+lips closed again without giving utterance to whatever
+he had been on the point of saying&mdash;something to
+do with eyes that had mystifyingly changed their color.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Mister Spurrier, this hyar&#8217;s Sam Mosebury,&#8221; announced
+the host. &#8220;Mebby ye mout of heered tell of
+him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier nodded. So this was the outlaw against
+whose terrorism old Cappeze had broken his Quixote
+lances, the windmill that had unhorsed him; the man
+with a criminal record at which a wild region trembled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heered tell of Mr. Spurrier, too,&#8221; vouchsafed
+the murderer equably. &#8220;He&#8217;s a friend of old Dyke
+Cappeze&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The &#8220;furriner&#8221; made no denial. Though he had
+been sitting with his head in the jaws of death ever
+since he entered this door, it had been without any
+presentiment of danger. Now he felt the menace of
+this terrorist&#8217;s presence, and that menace was totally
+fictitious.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Cappeze has befriended me,&#8221; he answered
+stiffly. &#8220;I reckon that&#8217;s not a recommendation to you,
+is it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man who had newly entered laughed. He drew
+a chair forward and seated himself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon, Mr. Spurrier, hit ain&#8217;t none of my business
+one way ner t&#8217;other,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Anyhow, hit
+ain&#8217;t no reason why you an&#8217; me kain&#8217;t be friends,
+is hit?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It doesn&#8217;t make any difficulty with me,&#8221; laughed
+Spurrier in relief, &#8220;if it doesn&#8217;t with you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Sam Mosebury looked at him, then his voice came
+with a dry chuckle of humor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Over at my dwellin&#8217; house,&#8221; he announced with a
+pleasant drawl, &#8220;I&#8217;ve got me a pet mockin&#8217;-bird&mdash;an&#8217;
+I&#8217;ve got me a pet cat, too. Ther three of us meks up
+ther fam&#8217;ly over thar.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span></div>
+<p>Spurrier looked at the strong-featured face as he
+prompted, &#8220;Yes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Waal,&#8221; Sam Mosebury waved his hand, and even
+his gestures had a spacious bigness about them, &#8220;ef
+God Almighty didn&#8217;t see fit fer thet thar bird an&#8217; thet
+thar cat ter love one another&mdash;I don&#8217;t seek ter alter
+His plan. Nonetheless I sets a passel of store by both
+of &#8217;em.&#8221; He filled his pipe, then his words became
+musing, possibly allegorical. &#8220;Mebby some day I&#8217;ll
+<i>ree</i>lax a leetle mite too much in watchin&#8217; an&#8217; then I
+reckon ther cat&#8217;ll kill ther bird&mdash;but thet&#8217;s accordin&#8217;
+ter nature, too, an&#8217; deespite I&#8217;ll grieve some, I won&#8217;t
+disgust ther cat none.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That night Spurrier lay on the same shuck-filled
+mattress with the man whom the law had not been
+strong enough to hang, and for a while he remained
+wakeful, reflecting on the strangeness of his bed-fellowship.</p>
+<p>But, had he known it, his life was saved that night
+because the murderer had arrived and provided an
+interfering presence when the plans on foot required
+solitude.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI' id='CHAPTER_XI'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Perhaps old Cappeze had spoken too late when
+he sounded his sharp warning to the newcomer
+against unsettling the simple contentment of his
+daughter&#8217;s mind. Always realizing his transient status
+in the aloofness of this life, Spurrier had scrupulously
+guarded his contact with the girl who belonged
+to it and who had no prospect of escaping it. He had
+sought to behave to her as he might have behaved to
+a child, with grave or gay friendliness untouched by
+those gallantries that might have been misunderstood,
+yet treating her intelligence with full and adult
+equality.</p>
+<p>But his inclination to see more of her than formerly
+was one that he indulged because it gave him pleasure
+and because a failure to do so would have had the
+aspect of churlishness.</p>
+<p>Those self-confessed traces of snobbery that adhered
+to this courtier at the throne of wealth, were attributes
+of which the girl saw nothing. Neither did
+she see the shell of cynicism which Spurrier had cultivated
+and this was not because her insight failed of
+keenness, but because in these surroundings they were
+dormant qualities.</p>
+<p>The self that he displayed here was the self of the
+infectious smile, of the frank boldness and good
+humor that had made him beloved among his army
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+mess-mates before these more gracious qualities had
+been winter-killed by misfortune.</p>
+<p>So he was the picturesque and charming version of
+himself, and he became to Glory an object of hero
+worship, whose presence made the day eventful and
+whose intervals of absence were filled with dreams of
+his next coming.</p>
+<p>It was about this time that John Spurrier, the &#8220;opportunity
+hound,&#8221; made a disquieting discovery. It
+came upon him one night as he sat on the porch of
+Dyke Cappeze&#8217;s log house at twilight, with pipes glowing
+and seductive influences stealing into the senses.
+Daylight color had faded to the mistiness of tarnished
+silver except for a lemon afterglow above western
+ridges that were violet-gray, and the evening star was
+a single lantern hanging softly luminous, where soon
+there would be many others.</p>
+<p>Cadenced and melodious as a lullaby fraught with
+the magic of the solitudes, the night song of frog and
+whippoorwill rose stealingly out of silence, and the
+materialist who had been city bound so much since
+conviction of crime had shadowed his life discovered
+the thing which threatened danger.</p>
+<p>It came to him as his eyes met those of Glory, who
+sat in the doorway itself&mdash;since she, at least, need not
+fear to show her face to any lurking rifleman.</p>
+<p>The yellow lamplight from within outlined the
+lovely contour of her rounded cheek and throat and
+livened her hair, but it was not only her undeniable
+beauty that caused Spurrier sudden anxiety. It was
+the eyes and what he read in them. Instantly as their
+gazes engaged she dropped her glance but, in the moment
+before she had masked her expression, Spurrier
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+knew that she had fallen in love with him. The eyes
+had said it in that instant when he had surprised them.
+They had immediately seized back their secret and
+hidden it away, but not in time.</p>
+<p>The opportunity hound rose and knocked the ash
+from his pipe. He wondered whether old Dyke Cappeze,
+sitting there inscrutable and dimly shaped in the
+shadows, had shared his discovery&mdash;that grizzled old
+watchdog who was not too far gone to fight for his
+own with the strength of his yellowed fangs.</p>
+<p>The visitor shook hands and walked moodily home,
+and as he went he sought to dismiss the matter from
+his mind. It was all a delusion, he assured himself;
+some weird psychological quirk born of a man&#8217;s innate
+vanity; incited by a girl&#8217;s physical allurement. He
+would go to sleep and to-morrow he would laugh at
+the moonshine problem. But he did not find it so easy
+to sleep. He remembered one of those men in the
+islands who had become a melancholiac. The fellow
+had been normal at one moment; then without warning
+something like an impenetrable shadow had struck
+across him. He had never come out of the shadow.
+So this disquiet&mdash;though it was abnormal elation
+rather than melancholy, had suddenly become a fact
+with himself, and instead of dismissing it Spurrier
+found himself reacting to it. Not only was Glory
+Cappeze in love with him but&mdash;absurdity of absurdities&mdash;he
+was in love with Glory!</p>
+<p>It was as irreconcilable with all the logic of his
+own nature as any conceivable thing could be, yet it
+was undeniably true.</p>
+<p>But Spurrier had been there in the hills when summer
+had overcome winter. He had seen trickles of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+water grow into freshets and feed rivers. He had
+seen clouds as large as one&#8217;s hand swell abruptly into
+tempests that cannonaded mightily through the peaks,
+with the lashing of torrents, the sting of lightnings,
+and the onsweep of hurricanes. He had seen the pink
+flower of laurel and rhododendron make fragrant
+magic over wastes of chocolate and slag-gray mountain
+sides, and in himself something akin to these elemental
+forces had declared itself. He found himself two
+men, and though he swore resolutely that his brain
+should dominate and govern, he also recognized in
+himself the man of new-born impulses who drew the
+high air into his chest with a keen elation, and who
+wanted to laugh at the artificial things that life has
+wrought into its structure of accepted civilization.</p>
+<p>That insurgent part of himself found a truer congeniality
+in the company of grizzled old Dyke Cappeze
+than that of Martin Harrison; a stronger comradeship
+in the frank laugh of Glory than in the cool
+intelligence of Vivien&#8217;s smile.</p>
+<p>Glory&#8217;s brain was as alert as quicksilver, and her
+heart as high and clean as the hills. Yet in his own
+world these two would be as unplaced as gypsies
+strayed from their dilapidated caravan. Moreover, it
+was ordained that he was to win his game and upon
+him was to be conferred an accolade&mdash;the hand, in
+marriage, of his principal&#8217;s daughter.</p>
+<p>Spurrier laughed a little grimly to himself. Of the
+woman whose hand had been half-promised him he
+could think dispassionately and of this other, whom
+he could not take with him into his world of artificial
+values, he could not think at all without a pounding
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span>
+of pulses and a tumult which he thought he had
+left behind him with his early youth.</p>
+<p>In character and genuine metal of mind, Glory was
+the superior of most of those women he knew, yet because
+she was country bred and trained to a code that
+did not obtain elsewhere, she could no more be removed
+from her setting than a blooming eidelweiss
+could be successfully transplanted in a conservatory.
+He himself was fixed into a certain place which he had
+attained by fighting his way, in the figurative sense at
+least, over the bodies of the less successful and the
+less enduring. It was too late for him to transplant
+himself, and he and she were plants of differing soil,
+as though one were a snow flower and one a tropic
+growth.</p>
+<p>Also there were immediate things of which to
+think, such as an unexpired threat upon his life.</p>
+<p>Already he had escaped the assassin&#8217;s first effort,
+and he had no guess where the enmity lay which had
+actuated that attack. That it still existed and would
+strike again he had a full realization. He was not
+walking in the shadow of dread but, because he knew
+of the menace lurking where all the faces were
+friendly, he had begun to feel that companionship of
+suspense: that nearness of something in hiding under
+which men lived here; and under which women grew
+old in their twenties.</p>
+<p>And it is not given to a man to live under such conditions,
+and remain the man who fights only across
+mahogany tabletops in offices. Yet John Spurrier
+scornfully reasoned that if he could not remain himself
+even in a new and altered habitat, he was a weakling,
+and he had no intention of proving a weakling.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span></div>
+<p>His hand had grasped the plow-haft and, for the
+present, at least, his loyalty belonged to his undertaking.</p>
+<p>This inward conflict went with him as he rode
+across the singing hills to gather up his mail at the
+nearest post office and he told himself, &#8220;I am a fool
+to ponder it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then his thoughts ran on: &#8220;It is dwelling on factitious
+things that gives them force. Life presents a
+Janus aspect of the double-faced at times, but a man
+must choose his way and ignore the turnings. Glory
+has pure charm. She has a quick mind and a captivating
+beauty, but so far as I&#8217;m concerned, she is simply
+out of the picture. I could be mad about her, if I
+let myself&mdash;but presumably I am not adrift on a
+gulf stream of emotionalism.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When he had spent an hour in the dusty little town
+and turned again into the coolness of the hills, he dismounted
+under the shade of a &#8220;cucumber tree&#8221; and
+glanced through those letters that were still unopened.
+One envelope was addressed in a hand that tantalized
+memory with a half sense of the familiar, and Spurrier&#8217;s
+brow contracted in perplexity.</p>
+<p>Then his face grew abruptly grave. &#8220;By heavens!&#8221;
+he exclaimed. &#8220;It&#8217;s Withers&mdash;Major Withers! What
+can he be writing about?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He opened it and drew out the sheet of paper, and,
+as he read, his expression went through the gamut
+of surprise and incredulity to a settled sternness of
+purpose that made his face stony.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If it&#8217;s true,&#8221; he exclaimed, &#8220;the man is mine to
+kill! No, not to kill, either, but to take alive at all
+costs.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
+<p>He stood for a moment, his sinewy body answering
+to a tremor of deeply shaken emotion. Had he been
+mountain-bred and feud-nurtured, the sinister glitter
+of his eyes could have been no more relentless. He
+was for that moment a man dedicating himself to the
+blood oath of vengeance.</p>
+<p>Then he composed his features and smoothed out
+the letter that his clenched fingers had unconsciously
+crumpled. Again he read what Major Withers had to
+say:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>I am writing because though I infer that you have succeeded
+in material ways, I have heard nothing of your
+progress in clearing your name and I know that until that
+is accomplished, no success will be complete for you.</p>
+<p>Quite recently I have had as my striker a fellow named
+Wiley, who used to be in your platoon&mdash;and I have talked
+with him a good bit. Not long ago he declared to me his
+belief that Private Grant who is listed as officially dead,
+did <i>not</i> die in the Islands.</p>
+<p>He seems to think that Grant made a clean getaway and
+went back to the Kentucky mountains from which he came.
+He confesses that he gets this idea from nothing more
+tangible than casual hints dropped by Private Severance,
+whose discharge came shortly after you left us, yet his
+impression is so strong as to amount to conviction. Possibly
+if you could trace Severance you might learn something.
+It&#8217;s a vague clew, I admit, but I pass it along to you for
+whatever it may be worth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Slowly, as though his tireless limbs had grown suddenly
+old, Spurrier mounted and rode on with reins
+hanging. He was so deep in thought that he forgot
+the other unopened letters in his pocket.</p>
+<p>Grant might be in these same hills with himself;
+Grant upon whom his counsel had sought to place the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span>
+blame for the murder of Captain Comyn. If they
+could meet alone for the period of a brief interview,
+either that question would be finally answered or in
+the reckoning one of them would have to die.</p>
+<p>But how to trace him in this ragged territory covering
+a great and broken area&mdash;a territory which God
+had seemed to build, as a haven and a hiding place for
+men who sought concealment? Grant would in all
+likelihood see him first and&mdash;he entertained no illusions
+as to the result&mdash;the deserter would kill him on
+sight. On the other hand, it would do Spurrier no
+good to kill Grant. If Grant were to serve him it
+must be with a confession wrung from living lips,
+and on oath.</p>
+<p>Of course, too, the years would have changed Grant
+so that if they came face to face he would probably
+fail to recognize the man he had known only in khaki.</p>
+<p>The scarred chin? A beard would obliterate that.
+The stature? Added weight or lost weight would
+make it seem another man&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>By processes of elimination Spurrier culled over the
+possibilities until at length his glance brightened.</p>
+<p>In one particular Private Grant could scarcely disguise
+himself. His eyes were in a fashion mismated.
+One was light gray and one pale blue. Yes, if ever
+they met he would have his clew in that.</p>
+<p>And that memory reminded him that he had recently
+been impressed to an unusual degree by a pair
+of eyes. Whose were they? Oh, yes, he remembered
+now. It was the man at whose house he had met Sam
+Mosebury&mdash;Sim Colby who dwelt over beyond Clubfoot
+Branch.</p>
+<p>But Colby&#8217;s eyes had been noticeable by reason of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+their extraordinary blackness. So that only helped
+him in so far as it enabled him to eliminate from all
+the thousands of possible men the one man, Sim
+Colby.</p>
+<p>The afternoon had spent itself toward sunset as he
+dismounted and stabled his horse, and it was with a
+face still somberly thoughtful that he fitted his key
+into the padlock which held his door and entered.</p>
+<p>The interior was dusky in contrast with the outer
+light, but from one window a shaft of golden radiance
+slanted inward and in it the dust motes danced.</p>
+<p>Spurrier paused and glanced about him, but before
+he had thrown down the hat he had taken from his
+perspiring forehead, a sound hideously unmistakable
+caused his heartbeat to miss its rhythm and pound in
+commotion.</p>
+<p>Every man has his one terror, or, at least, one antipathy
+which he is unable to treat with customary calmness.
+With Spurrier it was everything reptilian. In
+the islands he had dreaded the snake menace more
+than fever or head hunters. Now, from the darkened
+floor near his feet came the vicious whir of rattles, and
+as his eyes flashed toward the sound he saw coiled
+there a huge snake with its flat, arrow-shaped head
+sinuously waving from side to side.</p>
+<p>With an agility made lightning-quick by necessity,
+he leaped aside and, at the same instant, the snake
+launched itself with such venomous force that the
+sound of its striking and falling on the puncheon floor
+was like the lashing of a mule whip. The man had
+felt the disturbed air of its passing as of a sword
+stroke that had narrowly missed him.</p>
+<p>But he had no leisure to regain the breath that had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span>
+caught startled in his throat, before, from his left, he
+heard again the ominous note of warning, and felt
+his scalp creep with horror. The place which he had
+left locked and believed to be mosquito proof, now
+seemed alive with the loathsome trespassers.</p>
+<p>As Spurrier leaped for his couch he heard again the
+sound of a living coil released and its hawserlike lashing
+of the floor. Now he could see more plainly and,
+calculating his distance, he jumped for the table from
+which he could reach the loaded shotgun that hung
+on his wall. If he fell short, he would come down
+at their mercy&mdash;but he landed securely and without
+capsizing his support. His elevation gave him a precarious
+sort of safety, but on the floor below him he
+counted three rattlesnakes, crawling and recoiling;
+their cold-blooded eyes following his movements with
+baleful intentness.</p>
+<p>Spurrier was conscious of his trembling hands as
+he leveled the weapon, and of a crawling sensation of
+loathing along his spine.</p>
+<p>Twice the gun roared, splintering the flooring and
+spattering its ricochetting pellets, and two of the
+rattlers twisted in convulsive but harmless writhings.
+But the third head&mdash;and it seemed the largest of the
+three&mdash;had withdrawn under the cot. He was not
+even sure that these three made up the total. There
+might be others.</p>
+<p>With painstaking care Spurrier came down and
+armed himself with a stout hickory flail which had
+been used in other days by some housewife in her
+primitive laundry work as a &#8220;battling stick.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he advanced to the battle, swinging one end of
+the cot wide and shiftily sidestepping. The rattler
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
+which lay in piled circles of coppery length regarded
+him with steely venom, turning its swaying head deliberately
+as its enemy circled. With the startling
+abruptness of an electric buzzer it warned and sprang.
+He escaped by an uncomfortable margin and attacked
+it with the flail before it could rearrange its coils.
+Finally he stood panting with exertion over the scene
+of slaughter.</p>
+<p>As he searched the place with profoundest particularity
+his mind was analyzing the strange invasion.
+His house was as tight as he had thought it. There
+was no cranny that would have let in three large
+rattlers. How had they come there?</p>
+<p>Spurrier went out and studied his door. The hasps
+that held his padlock were in place, but the woodwork
+about them had been recently scarred. The lock fastenings
+had been pulled out and replaced.</p>
+<p>With a nervous moisture on his brow the man recognized
+the fiendish ingenuity of his mysterious
+enemy. These slithering creatures had come here by
+human agency as brute accomplices in the murder that
+had failed from the rifle muzzle. The pertinacity and
+cunning of the scheme&#8217;s anonymous author gave
+promise of eventfulness hereafter.</p>
+<p>Had he been struck, according to the evident intention,
+as he entered his house, he would probably
+have died there, unsuccored, leaving the door open.
+The rattlers would either have found their way out
+after that, or, when his body was discovered, the open
+door would have explained their presence inside, and
+no suspicion of a man&#8217;s conspiracy would have remained.</p>
+<p>One thing stood out clear in Spurrier&#8217;s summing-up.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+Whatever the source of the enmity which pursued
+him, it had its nerve center in an ingenious brain
+and it threw about itself that element of mystery
+which a timid man would have found terrifying and
+unendurable. Also it operated with a patience which
+was a manifest of its unswerving determination.
+Effort might be expected to follow effort until success
+came&mdash;or the unknown plotter were discovered
+and disposed of.</p>
+<p>Yet the author of these malignant attempts worked
+with an unflurried deliberation, allowing passive intervals
+to elapse between activities, like the volcano
+that rests in the quiet of false security between fatal
+eruptions.</p>
+<p>Of course, the letter with the mention of Private
+Grant might be a clew of identity, yet calm reflection
+discounted that assumption as a wild and unconfirmed
+grasping out after something tangible.</p>
+<p>Perhaps Spurrier as nearly approached the absolute
+in physical fearlessness as it is given to man to
+come&mdash;but the mystery of a pursuing hatred which
+could not be openly faced, filled him with a sense of
+futility, and the futility inspired rage which was unsettling
+and must be combated.</p>
+<p>That night he lay long awake, and after he had
+fallen asleep he came often to a sudden and wide-eyed
+wakefulness again at the sound of an owl&#8217;s call or the
+creaking of a tree limb.</p>
+<p>The next morning found him restless of spirit, and
+it occurred to him that his secret enemy might be lurking
+near to inspect the results of his handiwork, so
+he went down to the road and hung the three dead
+rattlesnakes along the fence where no passer-by could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+miss seeing their twisted and mutilated lengths. That
+should be his retort to any inquiring and hostile eye,
+that he was alive and the creatures put there to destroy
+him had paid with their lives.</p>
+<p>From a place screened from view he meant to watch
+that gruesome exhibit and mark its effect upon any
+one who paused to inspect it. Possibly in that way a
+clew might be vouchsafed&mdash;but he did not at once take
+cover in the thickets.</p>
+<p>It was a glorious morning. The sun had ripped
+away the mists that, in the mountains, always hang
+damp and veillike between gray dawning and colorful
+day. The cool forest recesses were vocal with the
+twitterings and song from feathered throats.</p>
+<p>Spurrier sat down by the road and gave himself up
+to thoughts that it was safer to banish: thoughts that
+came with those sights and sounds and that made
+long-stilled pulses awaken and throb in him.</p>
+<p>This morning made him feel Glory&#8217;s presence and
+gave him a fine recklessness as to responsibility and
+consequence. Suddenly he came to himself and seemed
+to hear the cool cynicism of Martin Harrison&#8217;s voice
+inquiring, as it had once actually inquired: &#8220;Growing
+sentimental?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He pulled himself together and stiffened his expression
+into one more suitable upon the face of a man
+who has taken the severe vows of service to a cold
+ambition.</p>
+<p>But a little later he heard a sound and looked up
+sidewise to see Glory herself standing near him in the
+road; a materialization of the truant dreams he had
+been entertaining.</p>
+<p>She wore a dress whose simplicity accentuated the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+slender erectness of her young body and the litheness
+of her carriage. Her hair hung in braids and the
+sunbonnet had fallen back from the brightness of her
+hair. In her eyes played the violet lights of a merriment
+that lifted and curved her lips beguilingly.</p>
+<p>Spurrier came to his feet, and perhaps Glory, who
+had succumbed to her moment of self-revelation there
+on the twilight porch, had her revenge now. For that
+first startled moment as their glances met, the eyes
+that looked into hers were lover&#8217;s eyes, and their unspoken
+message was courtship. If he maintained the
+stoic&#8217;s silence forever, as to words, at least his heart
+had spoken.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Before Heaven,&#8221; said the man slowly, and the
+tremor of his voice was out of keeping with the ingrained
+poise of his usual self-command, &#8220;when they
+called you Glory, they didn&#8217;t misname you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl flushed pink, and he took a step toward her
+with the absorbed intensity of a sleep-walker.</p>
+<p>Glory stood there&mdash;watched him coming and did
+not move. To her, though she had sought to hide it,
+he had become the One Man. Her unconfessed love
+had magnified and deified him&mdash;and now his own eyes
+were blazing responsively with love for her!</p>
+<p>Suddenly she was shaken by a rapturous tremor
+that seemed almost like swooning or being lifted on
+some powerful wave that swept her clear of the earth,
+so that she made no effort at disguise, but let the
+laughing light in her eyes become softer, yet more
+glowingly intense.</p>
+<p>It was as if they had met in the free realm of
+dreams where there are no hamperings of impossibility.
+As he drew near her, his arms came out, and he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
+halted so that, under that same delightful sense of
+irresponsibility, it seemed to her quite natural to step
+into their welcome.</p>
+<p>Possibly the happenings of yesterday and the sleepless
+hours of last night had left Spurrier momentarily
+light-headed. Certainly had one of the rattlers stung
+him and poisoned his reason, he could not be doing a
+thing more foreign to his program of intention.</p>
+<p>He felt his arms close about her; felt the fragrance
+of her breath, found himself pressing his kisses on
+lips that welcomed them, and forgot everything except
+that this was a moment of ecstasy and passion.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XII' id='CHAPTER_XII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>For a while they stood there together in the narrow
+road to whose edges the dense greenery
+came down massed and dewy. Their breath
+was quick with the excitement of that moment when
+the hills and the rocks that upheld them seemed to
+them palpitant and gloriously shaken. Then they
+heard the lumbering of wheels, and with one impulse
+that needed no expression in words they turned
+through a gorge which ran at right angles into the
+stillness of the woods&mdash;and away from interruption.</p>
+<p>Spurrier had, it seemed to him, stepped through a
+curtain in life and found beyond it a door of which
+he had not known. It seemed natural that he and
+Glory should be going hand in hand into that place of
+dreams like children at play and hearing joyous voices
+that were mute and nonexistent in the world of commonplace
+and fact.</p>
+<p>He did not even pause to reflect that this was a
+continuation of the same ravine in which an assassin&#8217;s
+bullet had once so narrowly missed him. Yesterday,
+too, was forgotten.</p>
+<p>Just now he was young in his heart again, and had
+love for his talisman. Actuality had been dethroned
+by some dream wizardry and left him free of obligation
+to reason. Then he heard Glory&#8217;s voice low-pitched
+and a little frightened.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It kain&#8217;t&mdash;can&#8217;t&mdash;be true. It&#8217;s just a dream!&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></div>
+<p>A flash of sanity, like the shock of a cold plunge,
+brought the thought that, from her lips, had sounded
+a warning. This was the moment, if ever, to draw
+back and take counsel of common sense. Now it
+would be easier than later to abase himself and confess
+that in this midsummer&#8217;s madness was no substance
+or color of reality&mdash;that he stood unalterably
+pledged to her renunciation.</p>
+<p>But the earthquake does not still itself at the height
+of its tremor and the cyclone does not stop dead with
+its momentum unspent. Years of calculated and
+nerve-trying self-command were exacting their toll
+in the satisfaction of outbreak. Spurrier&#8217;s emotional
+self was in volcanic eruption, the more molten and
+lava-hot for the prolonged dormancy of a sealed
+crater.</p>
+<p>He caught the girl again and pressed her so close
+that the commotion of her heart came throbbing
+against him through the yielding softness of her
+breast; and the agitation of her breath on his face was
+a little tempest of acquiescent sweetness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t it seem real, now?&#8221; he challenged as he
+released her enough to let her breathe, yet held her
+imprisoned, and she nodded, radiant-eyed, and answered
+in a voice half bewildered and more than half
+burdened with self-reproach.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t even hang back,&#8221; she made confession.
+&#8220;I just walked right into your arms the minute you
+held them out. I didn&#8217;t seem able to help myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Suddenly her eyes, impenitent once more, danced
+with mischief and her smile broke like a sun flash over
+her face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I&#8217;d had the power of witchcraft, I&#8217;d have put
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+the spell on you, Jack,&#8221; she declared. &#8220;I had to make
+you love me. I just <i>had</i> to do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I rather think you had&mdash;that power, dear.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He laughed contentedly as a man may who shifts
+all responsibility for an indiscretion to a force
+stronger than his own volition.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You see,&#8221; she went on as if seeking to make illogic
+seem logical. &#8220;From the first&mdash;I couldn&#8217;t think of
+you except with storm thoughts. I couldn&#8217;t keep my
+heart quiet, when I was with you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At first,&#8221; he reminded her, &#8220;you wanted to kill
+me. I heard you confiding to Rover.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her eyes grew seriously deep and undefensive in
+their frankness. It was the candor of a woman&#8217;s pride
+in conquest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not sure yet,&#8221; she said almost fiercely, &#8220;that
+I wouldn&#8217;t almost rather kill you than&mdash;lose you to
+any other girl.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Vaguely and as yet remotely, Spurrier&#8217;s consciousness
+was pricked with a forecast of reality&#8217;s veto, but
+the present spoke in passion and the future whispered
+weakly in platitudes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t lose me,&#8221; he protested. &#8220;I&#8217;m yours.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And yet,&#8221; went on Glory, &#8220;you seemed a long way
+off. You were the man who did big things in the
+world outside. You were&mdash;always cool and&mdash;calculating.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory,&#8221; his words came with the rush of impetuosity
+for already the whispers of warning were gaining
+in volume, and impulse was struggling for its new
+freedom, &#8220;the man you&#8217;ve seen to-day is one I haven&#8217;t
+known myself before. Chilled calculation and self-repression
+have been the articles of my creed. I&#8217;ve
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span>
+been crusted with those obsessions like a ship&#8217;s hull
+with barnacles. Did you know that when vessels pass
+through the Panama Canal, the barnacles drop off?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she said, and her lips twisted into something
+like wistfulness as she dropped unconsciously into
+vernacular. &#8220;There&#8217;s a lavish of things I don&#8217;t know.
+You&#8217;ve got to learn &#8217;em all to me&mdash;I mean teach them
+to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he went on slowly, &#8220;steamers that pass
+through the fresh water, from salt to salt, automatically
+cleanse their plates. You&#8217;ve been fresh water to
+me, Glory.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jack,&#8221; she declared with tempestuous anxiety,
+&#8220;you say I&#8217;ve changed you. I&#8217;ll try to change myself,
+too, all the ways I can&mdash;all the ways you want.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want you changed,&#8221; he objected. &#8220;If you
+were changed, it wouldn&#8217;t be you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe,&#8221; she persisted, &#8220;you&#8217;d like me better if I
+were taller or had black eyes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder now,&#8221; he teased with the whimsey of the
+moment, &#8220;what you would look like with black eyes?
+I can&#8217;t imagine it. Will you do that for me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come to our house to-night,&#8221; she irrelevantly commanded.
+&#8220;Won&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;d come to-night if I had to swim
+the Hellespont.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But when he had left her an hour later at the crossroads
+and started back, his eyes fell on the ugly shapes
+of the three rattlesnakes, over which he had forgotten
+to keep watch and which she had not even seen, and
+yesterday came back with the impact of undisguised
+realization. Yesterday and to-morrow stood out again
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+in their own solid proportions and to-day stood like a
+slender wisp of heart&#8217;s desire shouldered between uncompromising
+giants of fact.</p>
+<p>Spurrier could no longer deny that his personal
+world centered about Glory; that away from her
+would be only the unspeakable bleakness of lonely
+heart hunger.</p>
+<p>But it was equally certain that he could not abandon
+everything upon which he had underpinned his
+future, and in that structure was no niche which she
+could occupy.</p>
+<p>Sitting alone in his house with a chill ache at his
+heart and facing a dilemma that seemed without solution,
+he knew for once the tortures of terror. For
+once he could not face the future intrepidly.</p>
+<p>He had recognized when the army had stigmatized
+him and cast him out, that only by iron force and aggression
+could he break his way through to success.
+He was enlisted in a warfare captained by financiers
+of major caliber and committed to a struggle out of
+which victory would bring him not only wealth, but
+a place of his own among such financiers&mdash;a place
+which Glory could not share.</p>
+<p>He and his principals alike were fighting for the
+prizes of the looting victor in a battle without chivalry,
+and whether he won or was crushed by American
+Oil and Gas, the native landholder must be ground
+and bruised between the impact of clashing forces. In
+the trail of his victory, no less than theirs, would be
+human wreckage.</p>
+<p>Sitting before his dead hearth while the afternoon
+shadows slanted and lengthened, Spurrier wondered
+what agonies had wracked the heart of Napoleon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+when he was called upon to choose between Josephine
+and a dynasty. For even in his travail the egoist
+thought of himself and his ambitions in Napoleonic
+terms.</p>
+<p>As he sat there alone with silences about his lonely
+cabin that seemed speaking in still voices of vastness,
+the poignant personality of his thoughts brought him,
+by the strange anomaly of life, to realizations that
+were not merely personal.</p>
+<p>Glory had won his heart and it was as though in
+doing so she had also made his feelings quicken for
+her people: these people from whose poverty, hospitality
+and kindness had been poured out to him:
+these people who had taken him at first with reserve
+and then accepted him with faith.</p>
+<p>He had eaten their bread and salt. He had drunk
+their illicit whiskey, given to him with no fear that
+he would betray them even in the lawlessness which to
+them seemed honorable and fair.</p>
+<p>And yet his purpose here, was the single one of enabling
+a certain group of money-grabbing financiers
+to triumph over another group at the cost of the
+mountaineer land-holders. It was not because, if he
+succeeded, there would not be enough of legitimate
+profit to enrich all, but because in a campaign of
+secrecy he could make a confidant of no one. If the
+enterprise were carried through at all he must have
+secured, for principals who would abate nothing and
+give back nothing, the necessary property bought on
+the basis of barren farming land. Were it his own
+endeavor he could first plunder and develop and then
+make restitution, but acting as an agent he could no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
+more do that than the soldier who has unconditionally
+surrendered, can subsequently demand terms.</p>
+<p>The man who had been a plunger at gaming table
+and race track, who had succeeded as an imitator of
+schemes that attracted major capital, was of necessity
+one of imagination. Perhaps had life dealt him
+different cards, Spurrier would have been a novelist
+or even a poet, for that imagination which he had put
+into heavy harness was also capable of flights into
+phantasy and endowed with something almost mystic.</p>
+<p>Now under the stress of this conflict in his mind, as
+he sat before his hearth in shadows that were vague of
+light and shape, that unaccustomed surrender to imagination
+possessed him, peopling the dimness with
+shapes that seemed actual.</p>
+<p>His eye fell upon the empty three-legged stool that
+stood on the opposite side of the hearth, and as though
+he were looking at one of those motion picture effects
+which show, in double negative one character confronting
+his dual and separate self, he seemed to see a
+figure sitting there and regarding him out of contemptuous
+eyes.</p>
+<p>It was the figure of a very young man clad in the
+tunic of a graduating West Point cadet and it was a
+figure that bore itself with the prideful erectness of
+one who regards his right to wear his uniform as a
+privilege of knighthood. For Spurrier was fancying
+himself confronted by the man he had been in those
+days of eager forward-looking, and of almost religious
+resolve to make of himself a soldier in the best
+meaning of the word. Then as his eyes closed for a
+moment under the vividness of the fancy, the figure
+dissolved into its surroundings of shadow and near
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+the stool with folded arms and a bitterer scorn stood
+a lieutenant in khaki.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So this is what you have come to be,&#8221; said the
+imaginary Spurrier blightingly to the actual Spurrier.
+&#8220;A looter and brigand no better than the false <i>amigos</i>
+that I fought over there. I was a gentleman and you
+are a cad!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Had the man been dreaming in sleep instead of
+wakefulness, his vision could hardly have worn habiliments
+of greater actuality, and he found himself retorting
+in hot defensiveness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whatever I am you made me. It was you who
+was disgraced. It is because I was once you that I am
+now I. You left me no choice but to fight with the
+weapons that came to hand, and those weapons were
+predatory.... If I have deliberately hardened myself
+it is only as soldiers of other days put on coats of mail&mdash;because
+soft flesh could not survive the mace and
+broadsword.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And when you win your prizes, if you ever win
+them,&#8221; the accusing vision appeared to retort, &#8220;you
+will have paid for them by spending all that was honorable
+in yourself; all that was generous and soldierly.
+When you were I, you led a charge across rice paddies
+without cover and under a withering fire. For
+that you were mentioned in dispatches and you had a
+paragraph in the Army and Navy Journal. Have you
+ever won a prize since then, that meant as much to
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier came to his feet, with a groan in his
+throat. His temples were moist and marked with a
+tracery of outstanding veins and his hands were
+clenched.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Good God!&#8221; he exclaimed aloud. &#8220;Give me back
+the name and the uniform I had then, and see how
+gladly I&#8217;ll tell these new masters to go to hell!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Startled at the sound of his own voice arguing with
+a fantasy as with a fact, the man sank back again into
+his chair and covered his face with his spread hands.
+But shutting out sight did not serve to shut out the
+images of his fancy.</p>
+<p>He saw himself hired out to &#8220;practical&#8221; overlords
+and sent to prey on friends, then he rose and stood
+confronting the empty stool where the dream-accuser
+in uniform had stood and once more he spoke aloud.
+As he did so it seemed that the figure returned and
+stood waiting, stern and noncommittal, while he addressed
+it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give me the success I need, and the independence
+it carries, and I&#8217;ll spend my life exonerating my name.
+I&#8217;ll go back to the islands and live among the natives
+till I find a man who will tell the truth. I&#8217;ll move
+heaven and earth&mdash;but that takes money. I&#8217;ve always
+stood, in this business, with wealth just beyond my
+grasp&mdash;always promised, never realized. Let me realize
+it and be equipped to fight for vindication. These
+men I serve have the prizes to dispense, but I am
+bound hand and foot to them. They take their pay in
+advance. Once victorious I can break with them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And these people who have befriended you,&#8221; questioned
+the mentor voice, &#8220;what of them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I love them. They are her people. I shall seem to
+plunder them, but if my plans succeed I shall be in a
+position to make terms&mdash;and my terms shall be theirs.
+Until I succeed I must seem false to them. God
+knows I&#8217;m paying for that too. I love Glory!&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span></div>
+<p>Suddenly Spurrier wiped a hand across a clammy
+forehead and stood looking about his room, empty
+save for himself. He seemed a man who had been
+through a delirium. But he reached no conclusion,
+and when twilight found him tramping toward the
+Cappeze house it was with a heart that beat with anticipation&mdash;while
+it sought refuge in postponed decision.</p>
+<p>When Glory received him in the lamp-lighted room
+he halted in amazement, for the girl who stood there
+with a mischievous smile on her lips no longer looked
+at him out of eyes violet-blue, but black as liquid jet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How did you do that?&#8221; he demanded in a voice
+blank with astonishment. &#8220;It&#8217;s a sheer impossibility!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe it&#8217;s witchcraft, Jack,&#8221; she mocked him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can you change them back?&#8221; he asked a little
+anxiously, and she shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, but they&#8217;ll change of themselves in a day or
+two.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon,&#8221; commented Dyke Cappeze, looking up
+from his book by the table, &#8220;I oughtn&#8217;t to give away
+feminine secrets, but it&#8217;s a right simple matter, after
+all. She just put some Jimson-weed juice in her eyes
+and the trick was done.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jimson weed,&#8221; echoed the visitor, and the elder
+nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you happen to remember your botany, you&#8217;ll
+recall that <a name='TC_7'></a><ins title="Was it's">its</ins> longer name is <i>Datura stramonium</i>&mdash;and
+it&#8217;s a strong mydriatic. It swells the pupil and
+obliterates the iris.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was walking homeward with a low moon overhead
+that evening that Spurrier&#8217;s thoughts found time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+to wrestle with other problems than those affecting
+himself and Glory. The incident of the black eyes
+had at first interested him only because they were <i>her</i>
+eyes, but now he thought also of the episode of the
+rattlesnakes and the letter from Major Withers.</p>
+<p>In his first analysis of what that letter might mean
+to him he had decided that his man would be recognizable
+by his mismated eyes. He had recalled Sim
+Colby&#8217;s black ones while thinking of unusual eyes in
+general and had, in passing, set him down as one who
+stood alibied.</p>
+<p>Now, in the light of this Jimson-weed discovery,
+those black eyes took on a new interest. Presumably
+it was a trick commonly known in these hills. <i>If</i>
+Colby&#8217;s eyes had been so altered&mdash;and they had
+seemed unnatural in their tense blackness&mdash;it must
+have been with a deliberate and sufficient motive. Sim
+Colby was not making his pupils smart and sting as a
+matter of vanity. A man resorting to disguises seeks
+first to change the most salient notes of his appearance.</p>
+<p>Spurrier recalled, with the force of added importance,
+the surprised look on Sam Mosebury&#8217;s face when
+that genial murderer, upon his arrival, had stifled
+some impulse of utterance.</p>
+<p>Suspicion of Colby was perhaps far-fetched, but it
+took a powerful hold on Spurrier, and one from which
+he could not free himself. At all events, he must see
+this Sim Colby when Colby did not know he was
+coming&mdash;and look at his eyes again.</p>
+<p>So he made a second trip across the hills to the head
+of Little Quicksand, and for the sake of safeguarding
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
+against any warning going ahead of him, he spoke to
+no one of his intention.</p>
+<p>This time he went armed with an automatic pistol
+and a very grim purpose. When they met&mdash;if the
+mountaineer&#8217;s eyes were no longer black&mdash;he would
+probably need both.</p>
+<p>But once again the opportunity hound encountered
+disappointment. He found a chimney with no smoke
+issuing from it and a door barred. The horse had
+been taken out of the stable and from many evidences
+about the untenanted place he judged that the man
+who lived alone there had been absent for several
+days.</p>
+<p>To make inquiries would be to proclaim his interest
+and prejudice his future chances of success, so he
+slipped back again as surreptitiously as he had come,
+and the determination which he had keyed to the concert
+pitch of climax had to be laid by.</p>
+<p>At home again he found that the love which he
+could neither accept nor conquer was demoralizing his
+moral and mental equipoise. He could no longer fix
+and hold his attention on the problems of his work.
+His spirit was in equinox.</p>
+<p>The only solution was to go to Glory and tell her
+the truth, for if he let matters run uncontrolled their
+momentum would become unmanageable. It was the
+simple matter of choosing failure with her or success
+without her, and he had at last reached his decision.
+It remained only to tell her so.</p>
+<p>It had pleased John Spurrier to find a house upon
+an isolated site from which he could work unobserved,
+while he maintained his careful semblance of idleness.
+His nearest neighbor was a mile away as the crow
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span>
+flew, and Dyke Cappeze almost two miles. Even the
+deep-rutted highroad, itself, lay beyond a gorge which
+native parlance called a &#8220;master shut-in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Now that remoteness pleased his enemies as well.
+Former efforts toward his undoing had been balked by
+accidents. One must be made that could have no
+chance to fail and an isolated setting made for success.
+Matters that required deft handling could be
+conducted by daylight instead of under a tricky moon.
+It was a good spot for a &#8220;rat-killing&#8221; and Spurrier
+was to be the rat.</p>
+<p>It was well before sunset on a Thursday afternoon
+that rifle-armed men, holding to the concealment of
+the &#8220;laurel hells,&#8221; began approaching the high place
+above and behind Spurrier&#8217;s house. They came from
+varying directions and one by one. No one had seen
+any gathering, for the plans had been made elsewhere
+and the details of liaison perfected in advance. Now
+they trickled noiselessly into their designated posts
+and slowly drew inward toward the common center
+of the house itself.</p>
+<p>Spurrier who rode in at mid-afternoon from some
+neighborhood mission commented with pleasure upon
+the cheery &#8220;Bob Whites&#8221; of the quail whistling back
+in the timber.</p>
+<p>They were Glory&#8217;s birds, and this winter he would
+know better than to shoot them!</p>
+<p>But they were not Glory&#8217;s birds. They were not
+birds at all, and those pipings came from human
+throats, establishing touch as the murder squad advanced
+upon him to kill him.</p>
+<p>The man opened a package which had come by mail
+and drew from its wrappings the portrait of a girl in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+evening dress with a rope of pearls at her throat. Its
+silver frame was a counterpart of the one which had
+stood on Martin Harrison&#8217;s desk that night when
+Spurrier had lifted it and Vivien&#8217;s father had so meaningly
+said: &#8220;Make good in this and <i>all</i> your ambitions
+can be fulfilled.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Now Spurrier set the framed picture on the table
+at the center of the room and it seemed to look out
+from that point of vantage with the amused indulgence
+of well-bred condescension upon the Spartan simplicity
+of his house&mdash;the rough table and hickory-withed
+chairs, the cot spread with its gray army
+blanket.</p>
+<p>The man gave back to the pictured glance as little
+fire of eagerness as was given out from it.</p>
+<p>Just now Vivien seemed to him the deity and personification
+of a creed that was growing hateful, yet
+one to which he stood still bound. He was like the
+priest whose vows are irrevocable but whose faith in
+his dogma has died, and to himself he murmured ironically,
+&#8220;&#8216;The idols are broke in the temple of Baal&#8217;&mdash;and
+yet I&#8217;ve got to go on bending the knee to the
+debris!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But when he turned on his heel and looked through
+the door his face brightened, for there, coming over the
+short-cut between Aunt Erie Toppit&#8217;s and her own
+home, was Glory, carrying a basket over which was
+tied a bit of jute sacking.</p>
+<p>She came on lightly and halted outside his threshold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not comin&#8217; visitin&#8217; you, Mr. John Spurrier,&#8221;
+she announced gravely despite the twinkle in her eyes.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+&#8220;I&#8217;m bent on a more seemly matter, but I&#8217;m crossin&#8217;
+your property an&#8217; I hope you&#8217;ll forgive the trespass.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Since it&#8217;s you,&#8221; he acceded in the same mock seriousness,
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll grant you the right of way. You paid
+the toll when you let me have a glimpse of you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And this is your house,&#8221; she went on musingly.
+&#8220;And I&#8217;ve never seen inside its door. It seems strange,
+somehow, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier laughed. &#8220;Now that you&#8217;re here,&#8221; he suggested,
+&#8220;you might as well hold an inspection. It&#8217;s
+daylight and we can dispense with a chaperon for ten
+minutes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She nodded and laughed too. &#8220;I guess the granny-folk
+would go tongue wagging if they found it out.
+Anyhow, I&#8217;m going to peek in for just a minute.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She stepped lightly up to the threshold and looked
+inside, and the slanting shaft from the window fell
+full on the new photograph of Vivien Martin, so that
+it stood out in the dim interior emphasized by the
+flash of its silver frame.</p>
+<p>Glory went over and studied the face with a somewhat
+cryptic expression, but she made no comment
+and at the door she announced:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be goin&#8217; on. You can have three guesses what
+I&#8217;ve got in this basket.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Spurrier, catching sight of a bronze tail-quill
+glinting between the bars of the container, spoke with
+prompt certainty.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One guess will be enough. It&#8217;s one of those carrier
+pigeons that Uncle Jimmy Litchfield gave you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You peeped before you guessed,&#8221; she accused.
+&#8220;I&#8217;m going to leave it with Aunt Erie and let her take
+it to Carnettsville with her to-morrow and set it free.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Compare your watches,&#8221; advised the man, &#8220;and
+get her to note the time when she opens the basket.
+Then you can time the flight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory shook her head and laughed. &#8220;I don&#8217;t own
+any watch,&#8221; she reminded him. &#8220;And even if I did I
+misdoubt if Aunt Erie would have anything to compare
+it with&mdash;unless she carried her alarm clock along
+with her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait a minute,&#8221; admonished the man, as he loosened
+the strap of his wrist watch, &#8220;I&#8217;ve two as it happens&mdash;and
+a clock besides. You keep this one and
+give Aunt Erie my other. I&#8217;ll get it for you and set it
+so that they&#8217;ll be together to the second.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He wheeled then and went into the room at the
+back and for a few minutes, bachelor-like he rummaged
+and searched for the time-piece upon which he
+had supposed he could lay his fingers in the dark.</p>
+<p>Yet Spurrier&#8217;s thought was not wholly and singly
+upon the adventure of timing the flight of a carrier
+pigeon. In it there lurked a sense of half-guilty uneasiness,
+which would have been lighter had Glory
+asked some question when she gazed on the picture
+which sat in a seeming place of honor at the center of
+his room. Her silence on the subject had seemed
+casual and unimportant, yet his intuition told him
+that had it been genuinely so, she would have demanded
+with child-like interest to be told who the
+woman might be with the high tilted chin and the rope
+of pearls on her throat. The taciturnity had sprung,
+he fancied, less from indifference than from a fear
+of questioning, and when he came quietly to the door,
+he stood there for a moment, then drew back where
+he would not be so plainly visible.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span></div>
+<p>For Glory had returned to the table and stood with
+her eyes riveted on the framed portrait. Unconscious
+of being observed her face was no longer guarded of
+betrayal, and in the swift expressiveness of her delicate
+features the man read a gamut and vortex of emotion
+as eloquent as words. The jealousy which her
+pride sought to veto, the doubt which her faith strove
+to deny, the realization of her own self-confessed inferiority
+in parallel with this woman&#8217;s aristocratic
+poise and cynical smile, flitted in succession across the
+face of the mountain girl and declared themselves in
+her eyes.</p>
+<p>For an instant the small hands clenched and the
+lips stirred and the pupils blazed with hot fires, so that
+the man could almost read the words that she shaped
+without sound: &#8220;He&#8217;s mine&mdash;he ain&#8217;t your&#8217;n&mdash;an&#8217; I
+ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; ter give him up ter ye!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier remembered how she had declared she
+would almost rather see him die than surrender him to
+another girl.</p>
+<p>Then out of the face the passion faded and the deep
+eyes widened to a suffering like that of despair. The
+sweetly curved lips drooped in an ineffable wistfulness
+and the smooth throat worked spasmodically, while
+the hands went up and covered the face.</p>
+<p>Spurrier drew back into the room into which Glory
+could not see, and then in warning of his coming
+spoke aloud in a matter-of-fact voice. &#8220;I&#8217;ve found
+it,&#8221; he declared. &#8220;It was hiding out from me&mdash;that
+watch.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When, after that preface, he came back, Glory was
+standing again in the doorway and as she turned, she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span>
+presented a face from which had been banished the
+storm of her recent agitation.</p>
+<p>He handed her the watch which she took with a
+steady hand, and a brief but cheery, &#8220;Farewell.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As she started away Spurrier braced himself with a
+strong effort and inquired: &#8220;Glory, didn&#8217;t you have
+any question to ask me&mdash;about the girl&mdash;in the
+frame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She halted in the path and stood looking down. Her
+lowered lids hid her eyes, but he thought her cheeks
+paled a shade. Then she shook her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not unless it&#8217;s something&mdash;you want to tell&mdash;without
+my asking,&#8221; she announced steadfastly.</p>
+<p>For over a week he had struggled to bring himself
+to his confession and had failed. Now a sudden impulse
+assured him that it would never be easier; that
+every delay would make it harder and blacken him
+with a heavier seeming of treason. Vivien&#8217;s portrait
+served as a fortuitous cue, and he must avail himself
+of it.</p>
+<p>This was the logical time and place, when silence
+would be only an unuttered lie and when procrastination
+would strip him of even his residue of self-respect.
+To wait for an easy occasion was to hope for
+the impossible and to act with as craven a spirit as
+to falter when the bugle sounded a charge.</p>
+<p>Yet he remained so long silent that Glory, looking
+up and reading the hard-wrung misery on his face and
+the stiff movement of the lips that made nothing of
+their efforts, knew, in advance, the tenor of the unspoken
+message.</p>
+<p>She closed her eyes as if to shut out some sudden
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+glare too painful to be borne, and then in a quietly
+courageous voice she helped him out.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You <i>do</i> want to tell me, Jack. You want to take
+back&mdash;what you said&mdash;over there&mdash;don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier moistened his lips, with his tongue. &#8220;God
+knows,&#8221; he burst out vehemently, &#8220;I don&#8217;t want to
+take back one syllable of what I said&mdash;about loving
+you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it, then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come inside, please,&#8221; he pleaded. &#8220;I&#8217;ll try to explain.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He went stumblingly ahead of her and set a chair
+beside the table and then he leaned toward her and
+sought for words.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I love you, Glory,&#8221; he fervently declared. &#8220;I love
+you as I didn&#8217;t suppose I could love any one. To me
+you are music and starlight&mdash;but I guess I&#8217;m almost
+engaged to her.&#8221; He jerked his head rebelliously toward
+the portrait.</p>
+<p>Glory was numb except for a dull, very present
+ache that started in her heart and filled her to her
+finger tips, and she made no answer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Her father,&#8221; Spurrier forced himself on, &#8220;is a
+great financier. I&#8217;m his man. I&#8217;m a little cog in a big
+machine. It&#8217;s been practically understood that I was
+to become his son-in-law&mdash;his successor. I&#8217;m too deep
+in, to pull out. It&#8217;s like a soldier in the thick of a
+campaign. I&#8217;ve got to go through.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That seemed an easier and kinder thing to say than
+that she herself was not qualified for full admittance
+into the world of his larger life.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You knew this&mdash;the other day&mdash;as well as now,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span>
+she reminded him, speaking in a stunned voice, yet
+without anger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So help me God, Glory&mdash;I had forgotten&mdash;everything
+but&mdash;you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now,&#8221; she half whispered in a dulled monotone,
+&#8220;you remember all the rest.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She sat there with the basket on the puncheon floor
+at her feet, and her fingers twisted themselves tautly
+together. Her lips, parted and drooping, gave her
+delicate face a stamp of dumb suffering, and Spurrier&#8217;s
+arms ached to go comfortingly around her, but
+he held himself rigid while the silence lengthened.
+The old clock on the mantel ticked clamorously and
+outside the calls of the bobwhites seemed to grow
+louder and nearer until, half-consciously, Spurrier
+noted their insistence.</p>
+<p>Then faintly, Glory said: &#8220;You didn&#8217;t make me
+any promise. If you had&mdash;I&#8217;d give it back to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She rose unsteadily and stood gathering her
+strength, and Spurrier, struggling against the impulse
+which assailed him like a madness to throw down the
+whole structure of his past and designed future and
+sweep her into his arms, stood with a metal-like rigidity
+of posture.</p>
+<p>Whatever his ultimate decision might be, he kept
+telling himself, no decision reached by surrender to
+such tidal emotion at a moment of equinox could be
+trusted. Glory herself would not trust it long.</p>
+<p>So while the room remained voiceless and the minds
+of the man and the girl were rocking in the swirl of
+their feelings, the physical senses themselves seemed,
+instead of inert, preternaturally keen&mdash;and something
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+came to Spurrier&#8217;s ears which forced its way to his
+attention through the barrier of his abstraction.</p>
+<p>Never had the calls of the quail been so frequent
+and incessant before, but this sound was different, as
+though some one in the nearby tangle had stumbled and
+in the effort to catch himself had caught and shaken
+the leafage.</p>
+<p>So the man went to the door and stood looking out.</p>
+<p>For a moment he remained there framed and exposed
+as if painted upon a target, and&mdash;so close that
+they seemed to come together&mdash;two rifles spoke, and
+two bullets came whining into the house. One imbedded
+itself with a soggy thud in the squared logs
+of the rear wall but one, more viciously directed by
+the chances of its course, struck full in the center of
+the glass that covered the pictured face of Vivien
+Harrison and sent the portrait clattering and shattered
+to the floor.</p>
+<p>In an instant Spurrier had leaped back, once more
+miraculously saved, and slammed the door, but while
+he was dropping the stanch bar into its sockets, a crash
+of glass and fresh roars from another direction told
+him that he was also being fired upon through the
+window. That meant that the house was surrounded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who are they, Jack?&#8221; gasped the girl, shocked by
+that unwarned fusillade into momentary forgetfulness
+of everything, except that her lover was beset by
+enemies, and the man who was reaching for his rifle,
+and whose eyes had hardened into points of flint,
+shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whoever they are,&#8221; he answered, &#8220;they want me&mdash;only
+me&mdash;but it would be death for you to go out
+through the door.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span></div>
+<p>He drew her to a shadowed corner out of line with
+both door and window, and seized her passionately in
+his arms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If we&mdash;can&#8217;t have each other&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; he declared
+tensely, &#8220;I don&#8217;t want life. You said you&#8217;d almost
+rather see me killed than lose me to another woman.
+Now, listen!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Holding her close to his breast, he drew a deep
+breath and his narrowed eyes softened into something
+like contentment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you tried to go out first, you&#8217;d die before they
+recognized you. They think I&#8217;m alone here and they&#8217;ll
+shoot at the first movement. But if <i>I</i> go out first and
+fight as long as I can then they&#8217;ll be satisfied and the
+way will be clear for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She threw back her head and her hysterical laugh
+was scornful.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Clear for me after <i>you&#8217;re</i> dead!&#8221; she exclaimed.
+&#8220;Hev ye got two guns? We&#8217;ll both go out alive or
+else neither one of us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then suddenly she drew away from him, and he
+saw her hurriedly scribbling on a scrap of paper. Outside
+it was quiet again.</p>
+<p>Glory folded the small sheet and took the pigeon
+from its basket and then, for the first time, Spurrier,
+who had forgotten the bird, divined her intent.</p>
+<p>He was busying himself with laying out cartridges,
+and preparing for a siege, and when he looked up
+again she stood with the bird against her cheek, just
+as she had held the dead quail on that first day.</p>
+<p>But before he could interfere she had drawn near
+the window and he saw that to reach the broken pane
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span>
+and liberate the pigeon she must, for a moment, stand
+exposed.</p>
+<p>He leaped for her with a shout of warning, but she
+had straightened and thrust the bird out, and then to
+the accompaniment of a horrible uproar of musketry
+that drowned his own outcry he saw her fall back.</p>
+<p>Spurrier was instantly on his knees lifting the
+drooping head, and as her lids flickered down she
+whispered with a pallid smile:</p>
+<p>&#8220;The bird&#8217;s free. He&#8217;ll carry word home&mdash;if ye kin
+jest hold &#8217;em back fer a spell and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIII' id='CHAPTER_XIII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>The window through whose broken pane Glory
+had dispatched her feathered messenger could
+not be seen into from the exterior. That was
+a temporary handicap for the besiegers and one upon
+which, in all their forethought, they had not calculated.
+It happened that at this hour of the afternoon
+the slanting sun struck blindingly upon the glass that
+still remained unbroken and confused the ambushed
+eyes that raked the place from advantageous points
+along the upper slopes.</p>
+<p>So when Glory had risen there for an instant,
+against the window itself, the vigilant assassins had
+been able to make out only the unidentified shadow of
+a figure moving there, and upon that figure, at point-blank
+range, they had loosed their volley. Whose figure
+it was they could not tell, and since they believed
+their intended victim to be alone they did not question.
+In the confusion of the instant, with the glare on windowpanes,
+they missed the spot of light that rose
+ph&oelig;nixlike as the pigeon took flight. The frightened
+bird mounted skyward unnoted and flustered by the
+bellowing of so much gunnery.</p>
+<p>But Spurrier&#8217;s shout of horror was heard by the besiegers
+and misinterpreted as a cry wrung from him
+under a mortal wound.</p>
+<p>The assailants had not seen nor suspected Glory&#8217;s approach
+because she had come from the front, and had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span>
+arrived before they, drawing in from the rear and
+sides, had reached their stations commanding a complete
+outlook. They had assumed their victim to be
+in solitary possession and now they also assumed him
+to be helpless&mdash;perhaps already dead.</p>
+<p>Yet they waited, following long-revered precepts
+of wariness, before going onward across the open
+stretch of the dooryard for an ultimate investigation.
+He might die slowly&mdash;and hard. He might have left
+in him enough fight to take a vengeful toll of the oncoming
+attackers&mdash;and they could afford to make haste
+slowly.</p>
+<p>So they settled down in their several hiding places
+and remained as inconspicuous as grass burrowing
+field mice. The forest cathedral which they defiled
+seemed lifeless in the hushed stillness of the afternoon
+as the sun rode down toward its setting.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier, inside the house, living where he was
+supposed to be dead, at first made no sound that carried
+out to them across the little interval of space.</p>
+<p>He was kneeling on the floor with the girl&#8217;s head
+cradled on his knees and in his throat sounded only
+smothering gasps of inarticulate despair. These low
+utterances were animal-like and wrung him with the
+agonies of heartbreak. He thought that she must have
+died just after the whisper and the smile with which
+she had announced her success in her effort to save
+him.</p>
+<p>Kneeling there with the bright head inert on his
+corduroy-clad knee, he fancied that the smile still
+lingered on her lips even after she had laid down her
+life for him five minutes from the time he had forsworn
+her.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span></div>
+<p>Now that she was gone and he about to go, he could
+recognize her as a serene and splendid star shining
+briefly above the lurid shoddiness of his own grasping
+life&mdash;and the star had set.</p>
+<p>At first a profoundly stunned and torpid feeling
+held him numb; a blunt agony of loss and guilt, but
+slowly out of that wretched paralysis emerged another
+thought. He was helpless to bring her back and that
+futility would drive him mad unless out of it could
+come some motive of action.</p>
+<p>She was not only dead, but dead by the hands of
+murderers who had come after him&mdash;and all that remained
+was the effort to avenge her. Like waters
+moving slowly at first but swelling into freshet power,
+wrath and insatiable thirst for vengeance swept him
+to a sort of madness.</p>
+<p>Here he was kneeling over the unstirring woman he
+had loved while out there were the murder hirelings
+who had brought about the tragedy. Her closed and
+unaccusing eyes, exhorting him as passionate utterances
+could not have done, incited him to a frenzy.
+At least some of these culprits must go unshriven, and
+by his own hand to the death that inevitably awaited
+himself.</p>
+<p>And as Spurrier&#8217;s flux of molten emotions seethed
+about that determination a solidifying transition came
+over him and his brain cleared of the blind spots of
+fury into the coherency of a plan.</p>
+<p>Out there they would wait for a while to test the
+completeness of their success. If he gave way to his
+passion and challenged them as inclination clamored
+to do, they would dispatch him at leisure.</p>
+<p>Just now he was willing enough to die, but entirely
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+unwilling to die alone. He craved company and a red
+journey for that final crossing. So once more he
+looked down into the face on which there was no stir
+of animation, then very gently bent and kissed the
+quiet lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you could come back to me,&#8221; he chokingly
+whispered, &#8220;I&#8217;d unsay everything, except that I love
+you. But if there&#8217;s a meeting place beyond, I&#8217;ll join
+you soon&mdash;when I&#8217;ve made them pay for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He lifted her tenderly and, through his agitation,
+came a sudden realization of how light she was as
+he laid her gently on his army cot. After that he
+picked up his rifle and bulged out his pockets with
+cartridges.</p>
+<p>The cockloft above his room, which was reached
+by a ladder, had windows which were really only loopholes
+and from there he could better see into the
+tangle that sheltered his enemies.</p>
+<p>He entertained no vain hope of rescue. He asked
+for no deliverance. The story drew to its ending and
+he meant to cap it with the one climax to which the
+last half hour had left anything of significance. Since
+small things become vastly portentous when written
+into the margin between life and death, he hoped that
+before he died he might recognize the face of at least
+one of the men whom he meant to take with him
+across the River of Eternity.</p>
+<p>So, dedicating himself to that motive, he climbed
+the ladder.</p>
+<p>Peering out through first one and then the other
+of the loopholes of the cockloft, he waited, and it
+seemed to him that he waited eternally. He began to
+fear that his self-sure attackers would content themselves
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+with an inactive vigil and that after all he was to
+be cheated.</p>
+<p>The sun was westering. The shadows were elongating.
+The sounds through the woods were subtly
+changing from the voices of day to those of approaching
+night.</p>
+<p>Still he waited.</p>
+<p>Outside also they were waiting; waiting to make
+sure that it was safe to go in and confirm their presumption
+that he had fallen.</p>
+<p>But when Spurrier had, in a little time as the watch
+recorded it, served out his purgatorial sentence, he
+sensed a stir in the massed banks of the laurel and
+thrust his rifle barrel outward in preparation for welcome.
+A moment afterward he saw a hat with a
+downturned brim&mdash;a coat with an upturned collar&mdash;a
+pair of shoulders that hunched slowly forward with
+almost <a name='TC_8'></a><ins title='Was inperceptible'>imperceptible</ins> movement. His mind had become
+a calculating machine now, functioning with deliberate
+surety.</p>
+<p>The unrecognizable figure out there was a hundred
+yards away and the rifle he held would bore through
+the head under the hat crown at that range as a gimlet
+bores through a marked spot on soft pine.</p>
+<p>But a single shot would end the show. No one else
+would appear and even the dead man would be hauled
+back by his heels&mdash;unidentified. He would wait until
+he could make his bag of game more worth dying for&mdash;more
+worth <i>her</i> dying for!</p>
+<p>Other ages seemed to elapse before the butternut
+figure showed stretched at length in the tall grass outside
+the thicket and a second hat appeared. Still Spurrier
+held his fire until three hats were visible and the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+first man, having crawled to a tree trunk, had half
+risen.</p>
+<p>He realized that he could not much longer hold it.
+At any moment they might rush the place in force
+of numbers, and from more than one side, smothering
+his defense&mdash;and once in contact with the walls they
+would need only a lighted torch.</p>
+<p>So he sighted with target-range precision and fired,
+following the initial effort with snap-shots at the second
+and third visible heads.</p>
+<p>He had the brief satisfaction of seeing the first man
+plunge forward, clawing at the earth with hands that
+dropped their weapon. He saw the second stumble,
+recover himself, stumble again and then start crawling
+backward with a disabled, crablike locomotion, while
+the third figure turned, unharmed, and ran to cover.
+But at the same moment he heard shouts and shots
+from the other side which called him instantly to the
+opposite loophole and, once there, kept him pumping
+his rifle against what appeared to be a charge of confused
+figures that he had no leisure to inspect. They,
+too, fell back under the vigor of his punishment, and
+Spurrier found himself reloading in a silence that had
+come as suddenly as the noise of the onrush.</p>
+<p>He had shot down two assailants, but both had been
+retrieved beyond sight by their confederates, and the
+besieged man groaned with a realization of defeated
+purpose. The sun was low now and soon it would be
+too dark to see. Then the trappers would close in and
+take the rat out of the trap. What he failed to do
+while daylight lasted, he would never do.</p>
+<p>In only one respect did his judgment fail him as he
+sought to forecast the immediate future. It seemed to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span>
+him that he had spent hours there in the cockloft,
+whereas perhaps thirty minutes had elapsed.</p>
+<p>He had been thinking of the pigeon, but had put
+aside hope as to succor from that agency. Old Cappeze
+was not interested in pigeons. The bird would
+go to roost in its dovecote and sit all night with its
+head tucked placidly under its wing&mdash;and the plea for
+help unread on its leg&mdash;and the lawyer would never
+think of looking into the dovecote.</p>
+<p>Now, since he had failed and must die unavenged&mdash;for
+the wounding of two unidentified enemies failed
+of satisfaction&mdash;he must utilize what was left of life
+intensively. Once more before he died, he wanted to
+see the face of the woman whom he had forsworn;
+the woman who was worth infinitely more than the
+tawdry regards for which he had given her up.</p>
+<p>So he went down the ladder and knelt beside the cot.</p>
+<p>He laid his ear close to the bosom and could have
+sworn that it fluttered to a half heartbeat.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Spurrier closed his hands over his face
+and for the first time in years he prayed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Almighty Father,&#8221; he pleaded, &#8220;give her back to
+me! Give me one other chance&mdash;and exact whatever
+price Thy wisdom designates.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>To Toby Austin&#8217;s meager farm, which abutted on
+that of Dyke Cappeze, that afternoon had trudged
+Bud Hawkins. In all the mountain region thereabout
+his name was well known and any man of whom you
+had asked information would have told you that Bud
+was &#8220;the poorest and the righteousest man that ever
+rode circuit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For Bud was among other things a preacher. To
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+use his own words, &#8220;I farms some, I heals bodies some,
+an&#8217; I gospels some.&#8221; And in each of his avocations he
+followed faithfully the lights of his conscience.</p>
+<p>His own farm lay a long way off, and now he was
+here as a visitor. This afternoon he fared over to
+the house of Dyke Cappeze as was his custom when in
+that neighborhood. He regarded Cappeze as a
+righteous man and a &#8220;wrastler with all evil,&#8221; and he
+came bearing the greetings of a brotherhood of effort.</p>
+<p>The sun was low when he arrived, and the old
+lawyer confessed to a mild anxiety because of Glory&#8217;s
+failure to return before the hour which her clean-cut
+regularity fixed as the time of starting the supper
+preparations.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She took a carrier pigeon over to Aunt Erie Toppit&#8217;s,&#8221;
+explained Dyke, &#8220;and I looked for her back
+before now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I sometimes &#8217;lows, Brother Cappeze,&#8221; asserted the
+visitor with an enthusiasm of interest, &#8220;thet in these
+hyar days of sin when God don&#8217;t show Hisself in signs
+an&#8217; miracles no more, erbout ther clostest thing ter a
+miracle we&#8217;ve got left, air ther fashion one of them
+birds kin go up in ther air from any place ye sots hit
+free at an&#8217; foller ther Almighty&#8217;s finger pointin&#8217; home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cappeze told him that there was just now only one
+pigeon in the dovecote, where the pair belonged, but
+that one he offered to show, and idly be led the way
+to the place back above the henroosts.</p>
+<p>It is, however, difficult for any man to sink his own
+absorptions in those of another, and so it fell about
+that on the way Cappeze stopped at the barn he was
+building and which was not yet quite complete.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Brother Hawkins,&#8221; he said, &#8220;as we go along I want
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+to show you the barn I&#8217;ve been planning for years&mdash;and
+at last have nearly realized.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In the crude, unfinished life of the hills, lean-tos
+and even rock ledges are pressed into service as barns,
+but the man who has erected an ample and sound structure
+for such a purpose, stamps himself as one who
+&#8220;has things hung up,&#8221; which is the mountain equivalent
+for wealth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That barn,&#8221; explained Cappeze, pausing before it
+in expansiveness of mood, &#8220;is a thing I&#8217;ve wanted ever
+since I moved over here. A good barn stands for a
+farm run without sloven make-shift&mdash;and that one
+cost me well-nigh as much money as my dwelling
+house. I reckon it sounds foolish, but to me that
+building means a dream come true after long waiting.
+I&#8217;ve skimped myself saving to build it, and it&#8217;s the
+apple of my eye. If I saw harm come to it, I almost
+think it would hurt me more than to lose the house I
+live in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon no harm won&#8217;t come ter hit, Brother Cappeze,&#8221;
+reassured the other. &#8220;Yit hit mout be right
+foresighted to insure hit erginst fire an&#8217; tempest.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course I will&mdash;when it&#8217;s finished,&#8221; said the
+other as he led the way inside, and then as he played
+guide, he forgot the pigeons and swelled with the pride
+of the builder, while time that meant life and death
+went by, so that it was quite a space later that they
+emerged again and went on to the destination which
+had first called them.</p>
+<p>But having arrived there, the elder man halted and
+his face shadowed to a disturbed perplexity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s strange,&#8221; he murmured. &#8220;One pigeon&#8217;s
+inside&mdash;the hen&mdash;and there&#8217;s the cock <i>trying</i> to get in.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+It&#8217;s the bird Glory took with her. It must have
+gotten away from her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Pears like ter me,&#8221; volunteered the preacher,
+&#8220;hit&#8217;s got some fashion of paper hitched on ter one
+leg. Don&#8217;t ye dis&#8217;arn hit, Brother Cappeze?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cappeze started as his eyes confirmed the suggestion.
+Hurriedly he ran up the ladder to the resting
+plank where the bird crooned and preened itself,
+plainly asking for admittance to its closed place of
+habitation. Perhaps his excited manner alarmed the
+pigeon, which would alight on Glory&#8217;s shoulder without
+a qualm, for as the man reached out his hand for
+it, it flutteringly eluded him and took again to the air.</p>
+<p>But now his curiosity was aroused. Possibly Glory
+meant to stay the night at Aunt Erie&#8217;s and had sent
+him her announcement in this form. He went for
+grain and scattered it, and after repeated efforts succeeded
+in capturing the messenger.</p>
+<p>But when he loosened the paper and read it his
+face went abruptly white and from his lips escaped an
+excited &#8220;Great God!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He thrust the note into the preacher&#8217;s hand and
+rushed indoors, emerging after a few minutes with
+eyes wildly lit and a rifle in his hands. Bud Hawkins
+understood, for he had read in the interval the scribbled
+words:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Stopped at Jack Spurrier&#8217;s house. It&#8217;s surrounded. Men
+are shooting at us on all sides.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Dyke Cappeze was the one man to whom Spurrier
+had confided both the circumstances of his mysterious
+waylaying and the matter of the rattlesnakes and now
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
+the father was not discounting the peril into which his
+daughter had strayed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going on ahead, Brother Hawkins,&#8221; he announced.
+&#8220;I want you to send out a general alarm and
+to follow me with all the armed men you can round
+up.&#8221; There he halted in momentary bewilderment. In
+that sparsely peopled territory the hurried mustering
+of an adequate force on such short order was in itself
+almost an impossibility. There were no means of communication.
+Abruptly, the old lawyer wheeled and
+pointed a thin and quivering index finger toward his
+beloved barn.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s just one way,&#8221; he declared with stoical
+directness. &#8220;All my neighbors will come to fight a
+fire. I&#8217;ve got to set my own barn to get them here!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Five minutes later the structure sent up its black
+massed summons of smoke, shot with vermilion, as
+the shingles snapped and showed glowingly against the
+black background of vapor, even in the brightness of
+the afternoon.</p>
+<p>Dyke Cappeze himself was on his way, and the
+preacher remaining behind was meeting and dispatching
+each hurried arrival. As he did so his voice leaped
+as it sometimes leaped in the zealot&#8217;s fervor of exhortation,
+and he sent the men out into the fight with
+rifle and shotgun as trenchantly as he expounded
+peace from the pulpit.</p>
+<p>When a dozen men had ridden away, scattering
+gravel from galloping hoofs, he rode behind the saddle
+cantle of the last, for it was not his doctrine to hold
+his hand when he sent others into battle. Also he
+might be needed there as a minister, a doctor, or both.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span></div>
+<p>As sunset began to wane to twilight the attackers
+who lay circled about Spurrier&#8217;s cabin found themselves
+growing restive.</p>
+<p>And inside John Spurrier was a man reanimated by
+the faint signs of life which he had discovered in
+Glory.</p>
+<p>A pulse still fluttered in her heart, but it throbbed
+flickeringly and its life spark was pallid. Every moment
+this malevolent pack held its cordon close was
+as surely a moment of strangling her faint chance as
+if their fingers had been physically gripping her soft
+throat. And he could only kneel futilely beside her
+and wait!</p>
+<p>From his loopholes upstairs he saw once more two
+hats and gave their wearers shot for shot, but when
+they kept their rifles popping he suspected their purpose
+and dashed across the floor in time to send three
+rapidly successive bullets into a little group that had
+detached itself from the timber on that side and was
+creeping toward the house. One crawling body collapsed
+and lay sprawling without motion. Two others
+ran back crouching low and were lost to sight.</p>
+<p>So he swung pendulumlike from side to side, firing
+and changing base, and when his second turn brought
+him to the window through which he had shot his
+man, he saw that the body had already been removed
+from sight.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIV' id='CHAPTER_XIV'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+</div>
+<p>It was a hopeless game and a grim one. He could
+not cover all the defenses long in single-handed
+effort, and the best he could hope for was to die
+in ample companionship. Now, two men had reached
+broad-girthed oaks, halfway between thicket and
+house. There they were safe for the next rush.</p>
+<p>So this was the end of the matter! Spurrier reloaded
+his rifle and went down the ladder. Hastily
+he carried Glory into the room at the back and overturned
+his heavy table to serve as a final barricade.
+He elected to die here when they swarmed the door
+from which he could no longer keep them, crowning
+the battle with a finale of punishment as they crowded
+through the breach.</p>
+<p>But the minutes dragged with irksome tension. He
+was keyed up now, wire-tight, for the finish, and yet
+silence fell again and denied him the relief of action.
+To Spurrier it was like a long and cruel delay imposed
+upon a man standing blindfolded and noosed on the
+scaffold trap. Then the quiet was ripped with a
+totally wasteful fusillade, as though every attacker
+outside were pumping his gun in a contest of speed
+rather than effect.</p>
+<p>Spurrier smiled grimly. Let them burn their
+powder&mdash;he would have his till they massed in front
+of his muzzle and the barrier fell.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;When the barrier fell!&#8221; Crouched there behind
+the table where he meant to sell his life in that brief
+space that seemed long, the words brought with them
+the memory of one of the few poems that had ever
+meant much to him&mdash;and while he awaited death his
+mind seized upon the lines&mdash;a funeral address in
+soliloquy!</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&#8220;For the journey is done and the summit attained,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And the barriers fall&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>He strained his ears to his listening and then
+through his head ran other verses:</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&#8220;I was ever a fighter, so&mdash;one fight more,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The best and the last!</p>
+<p>I would hate that Death bandaged my eyes and forebore</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And bade me creep past&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>Was that a battering-ram against timber that he
+heard? He fingered the trigger.</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&#8220;Then a light, then thy breast,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>O thou soul of my soul! I shall clasp thee again,</p>
+<p>And with God be the rest!&#8221;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>But the door did not fall. The rifle cracking became
+interspersed with alarmed outcries of warning
+and confusion. He could even hear the brush torn
+with the hurried tramping of running feet, and then
+the pandemonium abruptly stopped dead, and after
+a long period of inheld breath there followed a loud
+rapping on the door and a voice of agonized anxiety
+shouted:</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;In God&#8217;s name open if ye&#8217;re still alive. It&#8217;s Cappeze&mdash;and
+friends!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The psychological effect of that recognized voice
+upon John Spurrier, and of its incredible meaning,
+was strange to the point of grotesquerie. Its sound
+carried a complete reversal of everything to which his
+mind had been focussed with a tensity which had
+keyed itself to the acceptance of a violent death, and
+with the reversal came reaction. There was no interim
+of preparation for the altered aspect of affairs. It
+was precisely as though a runaway train furiously
+speeding to the overhang of an unbridged chasm had
+suddenly begun dashing in the contrary direction with
+no shade of lessening velocity, and no grinding of
+breaks to a halt between time.</p>
+<p>Spurrier had taken no thought of physical strain.
+He had not known that he was wearied with nerve
+wrack and pell-mell dashing from firing point to firing
+point. He knew nothing of the picture he made with
+clothing torn from his scrambling rushes up-ladder
+and down-ladder and his crouching and shifting
+among the rough nail-studded spaces of the cockloft.
+Of the face, sweat-reeking and dust-smeared, he had
+no realization, but when that voice called out and
+he knew that rescuers were clamoring where assassins
+had laid siege, the stout knees under him buckled
+weakly, and the fingers that had fitted his rifle as
+steadily as part of its own metallic mechanism became
+so inert that they could scarcely maintain their grip
+upon the weapon.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier, emotionally stirred and agitated as
+he had never been in battle, because of the limp figure
+that lay under that roof, stood gulping and struggling
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
+for a lost voice with which to give back a reply. He
+rocked on his feet and then, like a drunken man went
+slowly and unsteadily forward to lift the bar of the
+door.</p>
+<p>When he had thrown it wide the rush of anxious
+men halted, backing up instinctively, as their eyes were
+confused by the inner murk and their nostrils assailed
+by the acrid stench of nitrate, from the vapors of
+burnt powder that hung stiflingly between the walls
+and ceiling rafters. Old Cappeze was at their front
+and when he saw before him the battle begrimed
+and drawn visage of the man, he looked wildly beyond
+it for the other face that he did not see, and his
+voice broke and rose in a high, thin note that was
+almost falsetto as he demanded: &#8220;Where is she?
+Where&#8217;s Glory?&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier sought to speak but the best he could
+do was to indicate with a gesture half appealing and
+half despairing to the door of the other room, where
+she lay on his army cot. The father crossed its threshold
+ahead of him and dropped to his knees there with
+agonized eyes, and Bud Hawkins, the preacher and
+physician, not sure yet in which capacity he must act,
+was bent at his shoulder, while Spurrier exhorted him
+with a recovered but tortured voice, &#8220;In God&#8217;s name,
+make haste. There&#8217;s only a spark of life left.&#8221;</p>
+<p>From the crowd which had followed and stood
+massed about the door came a low but unmistakable
+smother of fury, as they saw the unmoving figure of
+the girl, and those at the edge wheeled and ran outward
+again with the summary resoluteness that one
+sees in hounds cast off at the start of the chase.</p>
+<p>Upon those who remained Brother Hawkins
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
+wheeled and swept out his hands in a gesture of imperative
+dismissal.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Leave us alone, men,&#8221; he commanded. &#8220;I needs
+ter work alone hyar&mdash;with ther holp of Almighty
+God.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But he worked kneeling, tearing away the clothing
+over the wounded breast, and while he did so he
+prayed with a fervor that was fiercely elemental, yet
+abating no whit of his doctor&#8217;s efficiency with his surprisingly
+deft hands, while his lips and heart were
+those of the religionist.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Almighty Father in Heaven,&#8221; he pleaded, &#8220;spare
+this hyar child of Thine ef so be Thy wisdom suffers
+hit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There he broke off and as though a different man
+were speaking, shot over his shoulder the curt command:
+&#8220;Fotch me water speedily&mdash;Because Almighty
+Father, she&#8217;s done fell a victim of evil men thet fears
+Thee not in th&#8217;ar hearts!&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a little Brother Hawkins dismissed even the
+father and Spurrier from the room and worked on
+alone, the voice of his praying sounding over his
+activity.</p>
+<p>Ten minutes later, in a crowded room, Bud Hawkins,
+preacher and physician, laid one hand on Spurrier&#8217;s
+shoulder and the other on Cappeze&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Men,&#8221; he said in a hushed voice, &#8220;I fears me ther
+shot thet hit her was a deadener. Yit I kain&#8217;t quite
+fathom hit nuther. She&#8217;s back in her rightful senses
+ergin&mdash;but she don&#8217;t seem ter <i>want</i> to live, somehow.
+She won&#8217;t put for&#8217;ard no effort.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier wheeled to face them both and his voice
+came with tense, gasping earnestness.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Before she dies, Brother Hawkins,&#8221; he pleaded,
+&#8220;you&#8217;re a minister of the gospel&mdash;I want you to marry
+us.&#8221; He wheeled then on the rescuers, who stood
+breathing heavily from exertion and fight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Two of you men stay here as wedding witnesses,&#8221;
+he commanded. &#8220;One of you ride hell-for-leather to
+the nearest telephone and call up Lexington. Have
+a man start with bloodhounds on a special train. The
+rest of you get into the timber and finecomb it for
+some scrap of cloth&mdash;or anything that will give the
+dogs a chance when they get here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Once more Spurrier was the officer in command,
+and snappily his hearers sprang to obedience, but when
+the place had almost emptied, the three turned and
+went into the back room, and, kneeling there beside
+the wounded girl, Spurrier whispered:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dearest, the preacher has come&mdash;to wed us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory&#8217;s eyes with their deeps of color were startlingly
+vivid as they looked out of the pallid face upon
+which a little while ago John Spurrier had believed the
+white stamp of death to be fixed.</p>
+<p>The features themselves, except the eyes, seemed to
+have shrunken from weakness into wistful smallness,
+and if the girl had returned, in the phrases of the
+preacher, &#8220;to her rightful senses&#8221; it had been as one
+coming out of a dream who realizes that she wakes to
+heartburnings which death had promised to smooth
+away.</p>
+<p>Now, as the man stretched out his hand to take
+hers and drew a ring from his own little finger, the
+violet eyes on the rough pillow became transfigured
+with a luminous and incredulous happiness. But at
+once they clouded again with gravity and pain.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></div>
+<p>Spurrier was offering to marry her out of pity and
+gratitude. He was seeking to pay a debt, and his
+authoritative words were spoken from his conscience
+and not from his heart.</p>
+<p>So the lips stirred in an effort to speak, failed in
+that and drooped, and weakly but with determination
+Glory shook her head. She had been willing to die for
+him. She could not argue with him, but neither would
+she accept the perfunctory amends that he now came
+proffering.</p>
+<p>Spurrier rose, pale, and with a tremor of voice as
+he said to the others: &#8220;Please leave us alone&mdash;for a
+few moments.&#8221; Then when no one was left in the
+room but the girl on the bed and the man on his
+knees beside it, he bent forward until his eyes were
+close to hers and his words came with a still intensity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory, dearest, though I don&#8217;t deserve it, you&#8217;ve
+confessed that you love me. Now I claim the life you
+were willing to lay down for me&mdash;and you can&#8217;t
+refuse.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was wistfulness in her smile, but through her
+feebleness her resolution stood fast and the movement
+of her head was meant for a shake of refusal.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But why, dear,&#8221; he argued desperately, &#8220;why do
+you deny me when we know there&#8217;s only one wish in
+both our hearts?&#8221;</p>
+<p>His hands had stolen over one of hers and her
+weak fingers stirred caressingly against his own. Her
+lips stirred too, without sound, then she lay in a deathlike
+quiet for a moment or two summoning strength
+for an effort at speech, and he, bending close, caught
+the ghost of a whisper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t seek payment ... fer what I done.&#8221; A
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+gasp caught her breath and silenced her for a little
+but she overcame it and finished almost inaudibly.
+&#8220;It was ... a free-will gift.&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier rose and sat on the side of the bed.
+His voice was electrified by the thrill of his feeling;
+a feeling purged of all artificiality by the rough
+shoulder touch of death.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m asking another gift, now, Glory; the greatest
+gift of all. I&#8217;m asking yourself. Don&#8217;t try to talk&mdash;only
+listen to me because I need you desperately. Except
+for you they would have killed me to-day&mdash;but
+my life&#8217;s not worth saving if I lose you after all.
+I&#8217;m two men, dearest, rolled into one&mdash;and one of
+those men perhaps doesn&#8217;t deserve much consideration,
+but there&#8217;s some good in the other and that good can&#8217;t
+prevail without you any more than a plant can grow
+without sun.&#8221;</p>
+<p>With full realization, he was pitching his whole
+argument to the note of his own selfish needs and
+wishes, and yet he was guided by a sure insight into
+her heart. Brother Hawkins had said she had no
+wish to live and would make no fight, and he knew
+that he might plead endlessly and in vain unless he
+overcame her belief that he was actuated merely by
+pity for her. If she could be convinced that it was
+genuinely he who needed her more than she needed
+him, her woman quality of enveloping in supporting
+love the man who leaned on her, would bring consent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I sought to strengthen myself for success in life,&#8221;
+he went on, &#8220;by strangling out every human emotion
+that stood in the way of material results. I serve men
+who sneer at everything on God&#8217;s earth except the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span>
+practical, and I had come to the point where I let those
+men shape me and govern even my character.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She had been listening with lowered lids and as he
+paused, she raised them and smiled wanly, yet without
+any sign of yielding to his supplications.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The picture that you saw,&#8221; he swept on torrentially,
+&#8220;was that of a girl whose father employs me. He&#8217;s a
+leader in big affairs and to be his son-in-law meant,
+in a business sense, to be raised to royalty. Vivien
+is a splendid woman and yet I doubt if either of us
+has&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; he fumbled a bit for his next words and then
+floundered on with self-conscious awkwardness, &#8220;has
+thought of the other with real sentiment. Until now,
+I haven&#8217;t known what real sentiment meant. Until
+now I haven&#8217;t appreciated the true values. I discovered
+them out there in the road when you came
+into my arms&mdash;and into my heart. From now on my
+arms will always ache for you&mdash;and my heart will be
+empty without you.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But&mdash;,&#8221; Glory&#8217;s eyes were deeper than ever as she
+whispered laboriously, &#8220;but if you&#8217;re plighted to
+her&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not,&#8221; he protested hotly. &#8220;There is no engagement
+except a sort of understanding with her
+father: a sort of condescending and tacit willingness
+on his part to let his successor be his son-in-law as
+well.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She lay for a space with the heavy masses of her
+hair on the rough pillow framing the pale and exquisite
+oval of her face, and her vivid eyes troubled
+with the longing to be convinced. Then her lips
+shaped themselves in a rather pitiful smile that lifted
+them only at one corner.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Maybe ye don&#8217;t ... know it Jack,&#8221; she murmured,
+&#8220;but ye&#8217;re jest seekin&#8217; ... ter let me ...
+die ... easy in my mind ... and happy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Before God I am <i>not</i>,&#8221; he vehemently contradicted
+her. &#8220;I&#8217;m not trying to give but to take.
+Whether you get well or not, Glory, I want to fight
+for your life and your love. We&#8217;ve faced death, together.
+We&#8217;ve seen things nakedly&mdash;together. For
+neither of us can there ever be any true life&mdash;except
+together.&#8221;</p>
+<p>His breath was coming with the swift intensity that
+was almost a sob and, in the eyes that bent over her,
+Glory read the hunger that could not be counterfeited.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Anyhow,&#8221; she faltered, &#8220;we&#8217;ve had&mdash;this minute.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier rose at last and called the others back.
+He himself did not know when once more he took her
+hand and the preacher stood over them, whether her
+responses to the services would be affirmative or negative.</p>
+<p>To Spurrier marriage had always seemed an opportunity.
+It was a thing in which an ambitious man
+could no more afford yielding to uncalculating impulses
+than in the forming of a major business connection.
+Marriage must carry a man upward toward the
+peak of his destiny, and his wife must bring as her
+dowry, social reënforcements and distinction.</p>
+<p>Now, in the darkening room of a log house, with
+figures clad in patches and hodden-gray, he held the
+hand that was too weak to close responsively upon his
+own, and listened to the words of a shaggy-headed
+preacher, whose beard was a stubble and whose lips
+moved over yellow and fanglike teeth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></div>
+<p>Confusedly he heard the questions and his own firm
+responses to the simple service of marriage as rendered
+by the backwoods preacher, then his heart
+seemed to stop and stand as the words were uttered
+to which Glory must make her answer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you, Glory, have this man, John Spurrier&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>What would her answer be&mdash;assent or negation?</p>
+<p>The pause seemed to last interminably as he bent
+with supplication in his glance over her, and the breath
+came from his lips with an unconscious sibilance, like
+escaping steam from a strained boiler, when at last
+the head on the pillow gave the ghost of a nod.</p>
+<p>Even at that moment there lurked in the back of
+his mind, though not admitted as important, the ghost
+of realization that he was doing precisely the sort of
+thing which, in his own world, would not only unclass
+him but make him appear ludicrous as well.</p>
+<p>As for that world of lifted eye-brows he felt just
+now only a withering contempt and a scalding hatred.</p>
+<p>Almost as soon as the simple ceremony ended,
+Glory sank again into unconsciousness, and the father
+and preacher, sitting silent in the next room, were unable
+to forget that though there had been a wedding,
+they were also awaiting the coming of death.</p>
+<p>The night fell with the soft brightness of moon and
+stars, and through the tangled woods the searchers
+were following hard on the flight of the assailants&mdash;doggedly
+and grimly, with the burning indignation of
+men bent on vindicating the good name of their people
+and community. Yet, so far, the fugitive squad
+had succeeded not only in eluding capture or recognition,
+but also in carrying with them their wounded.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span></div>
+<p>From Lexington, where Spurrier had formed
+strong connections, a deputy sheriff was riding in a
+caboose behind a special engine as fast as the roadbeds
+would permit. The smokestack trailed a flat line
+of hurrying smoke and the whistle screamed startlingly
+through the night. At the officer&#8217;s knees, gazing
+up at him out of gentle eyes that belied their
+profession, crouched two tawny dogs with long ears&mdash;the
+bloodhounds that were to start from the cabin
+and give voice in the laurel.</p>
+<p>Waiting for them was a torn scrap of blue denim
+such as rough overalls are made of. It had been found
+in a brier patch where some fleeing wearer had snarled
+himself.</p>
+<p>Yet two days later the deputy returned from his
+quest in the timber, shaking his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry,&#8221; he reported. &#8220;I&#8217;ve done my best, but
+it&#8217;s not been good enough.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the trouble?&#8221; inquired Cappeze shortly,
+and the officer answered regretfully:</p>
+<p>&#8220;This country is zigzagged and criss-crossed with
+watercourses&mdash;and water throws the dogs off. The
+fugitives probably made their way by wading wherever
+they could. The longest run we made was up
+toward Wolf Pen Branch.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That was the direction, Spurrier silently reflected,
+of Sim Colby&#8217;s house, but he made no comment.</p>
+<p>Brother Hawkins, who was leaving that afternoon,
+laid a kindly hand on Spurrier&#8217;s shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thet&#8217;s bad news,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But I kin give ye better.
+I kin almost give ye my gorrantee thet ther
+gal&#8217;s goin&#8217; ter come through. Hit&#8217;s <i>wantin&#8217;</i> ter live
+thet does hit.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></div>
+<p>Spurrier&#8217;s eyes brightened out of the misery that
+had dulled them, and as to the failure of the chase he
+reassured himself with the thought that the dogs had
+started toward Sim Colby&#8217;s house, and that he himself
+could finish what they had begun.</p>
+<p>Those tawny beasts had coursed at the behest of a
+master who was bound by the limitations of the law,
+but he, John Spurrier, was his own master and could
+deal less formally and more condignly with an enemy
+to whom suspicion pointed&mdash;and there was time
+enough.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XV' id='CHAPTER_XV'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+</div>
+<p>And yet on that day when the bobwhites had
+sounded and the blow had fallen, Sim Colby
+was nowhere near the opportunity hound&#8217;s
+house. He sat tippling in a mining town two days&#8217;
+journey away, and he had no knowledge of what went
+on at home. His companion was ex-Private Severance&mdash;once
+his comrade in arms.</p>
+<p>The town was one of those places which discredit
+the march of industry by the mongrelized character
+of its outposts. The wild aloofness of the hills and
+valleys was marred there by the shacks of the camp
+and its sky soiled by a black reek of coke furnaces.</p>
+<p>Filth physical and moral brooded along the unkempt
+streets where the foul buzz of swarming flies
+sounded over refuse piles, and that spirit of degradation
+lay no less upon the unclean tavern, where the
+two men who had once worn the uniform sat with a
+bottle of cheap whisky between them.</p>
+<p>Colby, who had need to maintain his reputation for
+probity at home, made an occasional pilgrimage hither
+to foregather with his former comrade and loosen the
+galling rein of restraint. Just about the time when
+the attack on Spurrier&#8217;s house had begun, he had
+leaned forward with his elbows on the table, his face
+heavy and his eyes inflamed, pursuing some topic of
+conversation which had already gained headway.</p>
+<p>&#8220;These hyar fellers that seeks ter git rid of Spurrier,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span>
+he confided, &#8220;kinderly hinted &#8217;round thet they&#8217;d
+like ter git me ter do ther job for &#8217;em, but I pretended
+like I didn&#8217;t onderstand what they war drivin&#8217; at, no
+fashion at all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t ye hearken ter &#8217;em?&#8221; questioned Severance
+practically. &#8220;Hit hain&#8217;t every day a man kin git
+paid fer doin&#8217; what he seeks ter do on his own hook.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Colby grinned with a crafty gleam in his eye
+and poured another drink.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What fer would I risk ther penitenshery ter do a
+killin&#8217; fer them fellers when, ef I jest sets still on my
+hunkers they&#8217;ll do <i>mine</i> fer me,&#8221; he countered.</p>
+<p>For a time after that whatever enemies Spurrier
+had seemed to have lost their spirit of eagerness. One
+might have presumed that to the rule of amity which
+apparently surrounded him, there was no exception&mdash;and
+so the mystery remained unsolved. Even blind
+Joe Givins made a detour in a journey to stop at Spurrier&#8217;s
+house and sing a ballad of his own composition
+anent the mysterious siege and to express his indignation
+at the &#8220;pizen meanness&#8221; of men who would father
+and carry forward such infamies.</p>
+<p>And Glory, who had penetrated so deeply into the
+shadow that life had seemed ended for her, was recovering.
+Into her pale cheeks came a new blossoming
+and into the smile of her lips and eyes a new light
+that was serene and triumphant. She had been too
+happy to die.</p>
+<p>While the summer waned and the beauties of autumn
+began to kindle, the young wife grew strong, and
+her husband, seemingly, had nothing to do except to
+wander about the hills with her and discover in her
+new charms. Neighborly saws and hammers were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span>
+ringing now as his place was transformed from its
+simple condition to the &#8220;hugest log house on seven
+creeks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In some respects he wished that his factitious indolence
+were real, for he felt no pride in the occult fashion
+in which he was directing the activities of his
+henchmen. And yet a few months ago this progress
+would have been food for satisfaction&mdash;almost
+triumph.</p>
+<p>His plans, as outlined to Martin Harrison were by
+no means at a standstill. They were going forward
+with an adroit drawing in and knitting together of
+scattered strands, and the warp and woof of this
+weaving were coming into definite order and pattern.</p>
+<p>The dual necessity was: first to slip through a legislature
+which was supposedly under the domination of
+American Oil and Gas, a charter which should wrest
+from that concern the sweet fruits of monopoly, and
+secondly, to secure at paltry prices the land options
+that would give the prospective pipe line its right of
+way.</p>
+<p>As this campaign had been originally mapped and
+devised it had not been simple, but now it was complicated
+by a new and difficult element. In those first
+dreams of conquest the native had been no more considered
+than the red Indian was considered in the
+minds of the new world settlers. Spurrier himself
+had brushed lightly aside this aspect of the affair.
+Every game has and must have its &#8220;suckers.&#8221; And
+their sorry destiny it is to be despoiled. Now the very
+term that he had used in his thoughts, brought with
+it an amendment. It is not every game that must have
+its suckers but every bunco game.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span></div>
+<p>Martin Harrison did not know it, but his lieutenant
+had redrawn his plans, and redrawn them in a
+fashion which the chief would have regarded as insubordinate,
+impractical and sentimental.</p>
+<p>Spurrier intended that when the smoke cleared
+from the field upon which the forces of Harrison and
+those of Trabue had been embattled, the Harrison
+banners should be victoriously afloat and the Trabue
+standards dust trailed. But also he intended that the
+native land-holders, upon whom both combatants had
+looked as mere unfortunate onlookers raked by the
+cross fire of opposing artillery, should emerge as real
+and substantial gainers.</p>
+<p>Of late the man had not escaped the penalty of one
+who faces responsibility and wields power. He had
+abandoned as puerile his first impulse, after his marriage,
+to throw up his whole stewardship to the Wall
+Street masters. That would have amounted only to
+an ostentation of virtue which would have surrendered
+the situation into the merciless hands of A. O.
+and G., and would have left the mountain folk unprotected.</p>
+<p>Yet he could not escape the realization that he
+would stand with all the seeming of a traitor and a
+plunderer to any of his simple friends who learned
+of his activities&mdash;for as yet he could confide to no one
+the plans he was maturing.</p>
+<p>It was when the refurnished and enlarged place had
+been completed that the neighbors came from valley,
+slope, and cove to give their blessing at the housewarming
+which was also, belatedly, the &#8220;infaring.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That homely, pioneer observance with which the
+groom brings home his bride, had not been possible
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+after the wedding, but now Aunt Erie Toppitt had
+come over and prepared entertainment on a lavish if
+homely scale since Glory was not yet well.</p>
+<p>To the husband as he stood greeting the guests who
+arrived in jeans and hodden-gray, in bright shawls and
+calicoes, came the feeling of contrast and unreality,
+as though this were all part of some play quaintly and
+exaggeratedly staged to reflect a medieval period. In
+the drawing rooms of Martin Harrison and his confreres
+he had moved through a social atmosphere,
+quiet, contained, and reflecting such a life as the
+dramatist uses for background in a comedy of manners.
+Closing his eyes now he could see himself as
+he had been when, starting out for such an entertainment,
+he had paused before the cheval glass in his
+club bedroom, adding a straightening touch to his
+white tie, adjusting the set of his waistcoat and casting
+a critical eye over the impeccable black and white
+of his evening dress. Here, flannel shirted and booted,
+corduroy breeched and tanned brown, he stood by the
+door watching the arrival of guests who seemed to
+have stepped out of pioneer America or Elizabethan
+England. There were women riding mules or tramping
+long roads on foot and trailing processions of
+children who could not be left at home; men feeling
+overdressed and uncomfortable because they had
+donned coats and brushed their hats; even wagons
+plodding slowly behind yokes of oxen and one man
+riding a steer in lieu of a horse!</p>
+<p>So they came to give Godspeed to his marriage&mdash;and
+they were the only people on God&#8217;s green earth
+who thought of him in any terms of regard save that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+regard which sprung from self-interest in his ability
+to serve beyond others!</p>
+<p>Men who were blood enemies met here as friends,
+because his roof covered a zone of common friendship
+and under its protection their hatreds could no
+more intrude on such a day than could pursuit in the
+Middle Ages follow beyond the sanctuary gates of a
+cathedral. Inside sounded the minors of the native
+fiddlers and the scrape of feet &#8220;running the sets&#8221; of
+quaint square dances.</p>
+<p>The labors of preparation had been onerous. Aunt
+Erie stood at the open door constituting, with Spurrier
+and his wife, a &#8220;receiving line&#8221; of three, and her
+wrinkled old face bore an affectation of morose exhaustion
+as to each guest she made the same declaration:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hopes an&#8217; prays ye all enjoys this hyar party&mdash;Gawd
+knows <i>my</i> back&#8217;s broke.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Spurrier had not in his letters to Harrison mentioned
+his marriage, and to Vivien he had not written
+at all. He thought they would hardly understand,
+and he preferred to make his announcement when he
+stood face to face with them, relying on the force
+of his own personality to challenge any criticism and
+proclaim his own independence of action. Just now
+there was no virtue in needlessly antagonizing his
+chief.</p>
+<p>Among the guests who came to that housewarming
+was one chance visitor who was not expected. He
+came because the people under whose roof he was
+being sheltered, had &#8220;fetched him along,&#8221; and he was
+Wharton, the man whose purpose hereabouts had set
+gossip winging aforetime.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span></div>
+<p>It seemed to some of the local visitors that despite
+his entire courtesy, Spurrier did not evince any profound
+liking for this other &#8220;furriner,&#8221; and since they
+had come to accept their host as a trustworthy oracle,
+they took the tip and were prepared to dislike Wharton,
+too.</p>
+<p>That evening, while blind Joe Givins fiddled, and
+dancers &#8220;ran their sets&#8221; on the smooth, new floor, a
+group of men gathered on the porch outside and
+smoked. Among them for a time were both Spurrier
+and Wharton.</p>
+<p>The latter raised something of a laugh when he
+confidently predicted that the oil prosperity, for all
+its former collapse and present paralysis, was not
+permanently dead.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The world needs oil and there&#8217;s oil here,&#8221; he declared
+with unctuous conviction. &#8220;Men who are willing
+to gamble on that proposition will win out in the
+end.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stranger,&#8221; responded Uncle Jimmy Litchfield, taking
+his pipestem from between his teeth and spitting
+contemptuously at the earth, &#8220;ye sees, settin&#8217; right
+hyar before ye a man that &#8217;lowed he was a millionaire
+one time, &#8217;count of this hyar same oil ye&#8217;re discoursin&#8217;
+so hopeful about. Thet man&#8217;s me. I&#8217;d been dirt-pore
+all my days, oftentimes hurtin&#8217; fer ther plum&#8217; needcessities
+of life. I&#8217;m mighty nigh thet pore still.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you strike oil in the boom days?&#8221; demanded
+Wharton as he bent eagerly forward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I owned me a farm, them days, on t&#8217;other side ther
+mounting,&#8221; went on the narrator, &#8220;an&#8217; them oil men
+came along an&#8217; wanted ter buy ther rights offen me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you sell?&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></div>
+<p>Uncle Billy chuckled. &#8220;They up an&#8217; offered me a
+royalty of one-eighth of ther whole production. They
+proved hit up ter me by &#8217;rithmetic an&#8217; algebry how hit
+would make me rich over an&#8217; above all avarice&mdash;but
+I said no, I wouldn&#8217;t take no eighth. I stud out fer a
+<i>sixteenth</i> by crickety!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Both Spurrier and Wharton smothered their laughter
+as the latter inquired gravely: <a name='TC_9'></a><ins title='Guessed at missing text'>&#8220;Did they play one</ins>
+of them royalty games.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They done better&#8217;n thet. They said, &#8216;We&#8217;ll give ye
+two sixteenths,&#8217; an&#8217; thet&#8217;s when I &#8217;lowed I was es good
+es a Pierpont Morgan. I wouldn&#8217;t nuver hurt fer no
+needcessity no more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And what was the outcome of it all?&#8221; asked Wharton.</p>
+<p>Uncle Jimmy&#8217;s face darkened. &#8220;The come-uppance
+of ther whole blame business war thet a lot of pore
+devils what hed done been content with poverty found
+hit twice as hard ter go on bein&#8217; pore because they&#8217;d
+got to entertainin&#8217; crazy dreams ther same as me.
+Any man thet talks oil ter me now&#8217;s got ter buy outright
+an&#8217; pay me spot cash. I ain&#8217;t playin&#8217; no more
+of them royalty <a name='TC_10'></a><ins title="Was single quote">games.&#8221;</ins></p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s fair enough,&#8221; said Wharton. &#8220;But it seems
+to me that you people are taking the wrong tack. Because
+the boom collapsed once, you are shutting the
+door against the possibility of its coming again&mdash;and
+it&#8217;s going to come again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A man kin git stung once,&#8221; volunteered another
+native, &#8220;an&#8217; hit&#8217;s jest tough luck or bewitchment. Ef
+he gits stung twicet on ther same trumpery, he ain&#8217;t
+no more then a plum&#8217;, daft fool.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span></div>
+<p>Wharton lighted a fresh cigar and turned toward
+Spurrier.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Spurrier here, is a man you all know and
+trust&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; he hazarded. &#8220;I understand that he&#8217;s seen
+oil fields in the West and Mexico. I wonder what he
+thinks about it all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>On the dark porch Spurrier looked at his visitor for
+a few minutes in silence and his first reply was a quiet
+question.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did I tell you I&#8217;d seen oil fields in operation?&#8221; he
+inquired, and Wharton stammered a little.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was under that impression,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Possibly
+I am wrong.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;you are right enough,&#8221; answered the other
+evenly. &#8220;I just didn&#8217;t remember mentioning it. What
+is your question exactly?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I have a hunch that oil holds a future here and
+am willing to back that hunch, don&#8217;t you think I am
+acting wisely to do it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The host sat silent while he seemed to weigh the
+question with judicial deliberation, and during the
+pause he realized that the little group of men were
+waiting intently for his utterance as for the voice of
+the Delphic oracle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have seen oil operation and oil development,&#8221; he
+said at last. &#8220;I have lived here for some time and
+know the history of the former boom, but I have not
+bought a foot of ground. That ought to make my
+opinion clear.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you don&#8217;t believe in the future?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think, Mr. Wharton,&#8221; inquired Spurrier
+coolly and, his listeners thought, with a shaded note
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
+of contempt, &#8220;that what I&#8217;ve already said, answers
+your question? If I <i>did</i> believe in it, wouldn&#8217;t I be
+likely to seek investment at the present stage of land
+prices?&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier was glad that it was dark out there.
+He knew that the mountain men awaited his judgment
+as something carrying the sanction of finality and he
+felt like a Judas. He himself knew that back of his
+seeming betrayal was a determination to safeguard
+their rights, but the whole game of maneuvering and
+dissembling was as impossible to play proudly as it
+would have been to undertake the duties of a spy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll admit,&#8221; observed Wharton modestly, &#8220;that if I
+lost some money, it wouldn&#8217;t break me&mdash;and I&#8217;m a
+stubborn man when I get a hunch. Well, I&#8217;m going
+in to watch them dance.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He rose and went indoors and Uncle Jimmy, when
+he put a question acted, in effect, as spokesman for
+them all.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What does ye think of thet feller, Mr. Spurrier?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; said the opportunity hound crisply, &#8220;that
+he&#8217;s a fool, and Scripture says, &#8216;a fool and his money
+are soon parted.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; ef he seeks ter buy?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sell&mdash;by all means&mdash;if the price is right!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The next day when they were alone Glory said:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like that man Wharton. He&#8217;s got sneaky
+eyes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her husband laughed. &#8220;I can&#8217;t say that he struck
+me pleasantly,&#8221; he admitted. &#8220;We talked oil out on
+the porch. He was the optimist and I the pessimist.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And it was to happen that the first rift in Glory&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span>
+lute of happiness was to come out of Wharton&#8217;s
+agency, though she did not recognize it as his.</p>
+<p>For in these times, despite a happiness that made
+her sing through the days, something like the panic
+of stage fright was settling over her: a thing yet of
+the future, but some day to be faced.</p>
+<p>So long as life ran quietly, like the shaded streams
+that went down until they made the rivers of the
+greater and outer world, she was confident mistress of
+her life and had no forebodings. Spurrier loved her
+and she worshiped him&mdash;but out there beyond the
+ridges, the activities of his larger life were calling&mdash;or
+would call. Then they must leave here and she
+began to dread the thousand little mistakes and the
+humiliations that might come to him because of her
+unfamiliarity with that life. Since the bearings of
+achievement are delicate, she even feared that she
+might throw out of gear and poise the whole machinery
+of his success, and in secret Glory was poring over
+absurd books on etiquette and deportment. That these
+stereotyped instructions would only hamper her own
+naturally plastic spirit, she did not know when she
+read and reread chapters headed, &#8220;How to Enter a
+Drawing-room&#8221; and &#8220;Hints upon Refined Conversation.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That Spurrier would suggest going without her to
+any field into which his work called him, she did not
+dream. That he would leave her to wait for him
+here, as the companion only of his backwoods hours,
+her pride never contemplated.</p>
+<p>Yet in the fall Spurrier did just that thing, and to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span>
+the letter which induced its doing was signed the name
+of George Wharton. The latter wrote:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;We must begin to lay out lines for work with the next
+legislature. There are people in Louisville and Lexington
+whom you should meet and talk with. I think you had
+better make your headquarters at one of the Louisville clubs,
+and when you get here I will put you in touch with the
+proper bearings.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>That much might have puzzled any of the mountaineers
+who had taken their own cues from Spurrier&#8217;s
+thinly concealed manner of hostility to Wharton,
+but the last part of the letter would have explained
+that, too:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;The little game down at your house was nothing short
+of masterly. Your acting was superb, and though you were
+the star, I think I may claim to have played up to you well.
+The device of gaining their confidence so that, of their own
+accord, they turned to you for counsel&mdash;and then seeming
+to gloom on me when I talked oil, was pretty subtle. I
+could openly preach buying and instead of turning away
+from me in suspicion, they fell on me for a sucker. I&mdash;and
+others acting for me&mdash;have, as the result, secured a good
+part of the options we need&mdash;and you appear to be of all
+men, the least interested.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Spurrier read the thing twice, then crushed it savagely
+in his clenched hand and cursed under his
+breath. &#8220;The damned jackals,&#8221; he muttered. &#8220;That&#8217;s
+the pack I&#8217;m running with&mdash;or rather I&#8217;m running
+with them and against them at once.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But when Spurrier had kissed Glory good-by and
+she had waved a smiling farewell, she turned back
+into her house and covered her face with her hands.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want to believe it,&#8221; she declared. &#8220;I won&#8217;t
+believe it&mdash;but it looks like he&#8217;s ashamed to take me
+with him. Not that I blame him&mdash;only&mdash;only I&#8217;ve
+got to make myself over. He&#8217;s <i>got</i> to be proud of
+me!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVI' id='CHAPTER_XVI'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+</div>
+<p>When he came back for a short stay in the
+hills between periods of quiet but strenuous
+affairs in Louisville, he brought gifts that delighted
+Glory and a devotion that made her forget her
+misgivings. She had him back, and he found the
+house expressing in many small ways a taste and discrimination
+which brought to him a flush of pleasurable
+surprise. Glory knew the menace that hung over
+Spurrier. She knew of the malevolent and elusive
+enmities to which her own life had so nearly become
+forfeit, and the old terror of the mountain woman for
+her man became the cross that she must carry with
+her. Because of her militant father&#8217;s antagonisms
+she had been inured from childhood to the taut moment
+of suspense that came with every voice raised at
+the gate and every knock sounding on the door.</p>
+<p>There was an element of possible threat in each
+arrival. She had become, as one has need to be, under
+such circumstances, somewhat fatalistic as to the old
+dangers. Now that the fear embraced her husband as
+well as her father, the philosophy which she had cultivated
+failed her. Yet their happiness was so strong
+that it threw off these things and drew upon the
+treasury of the present.</p>
+<p>Spurrier, who talked little of his own dangers, was
+far from forgetting. His suspicion of Colby strengthened,
+and he looked forward to the day as inevitable
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span>
+when there must be a reckoning between them, which
+would not be a final reckoning unless one of them
+died, and for that encounter he went grimly prepared.</p>
+<p>One thing puzzled him. Of Sim Colby he had
+thought as a somewhat solitary character, whose relations
+with his neighbors, though amicable, were yet
+rather detached. He had seemed to have few intimates,
+yet if he had led this attack, he was palpably
+able to muster at his back a considerable force of
+men for a desperate project. That meant that the infection
+of hatred against himself had spread from a
+single enmity to the number, at least, of the men who
+had joined in the battle, and it had been a battle in
+which more than one had fallen. Before, he had
+recognized a single enemy. Henceforth he must acknowledge
+plural enmities.</p>
+<p>And along that line of reasoning the next step followed
+logically.</p>
+<p>Who would suggest himself as so natural a leader
+for a murder enterprise as Sam Mosebury, whose
+record was established in such matters? Certainly if
+this suspicion were well-founded it would be safest to
+know.</p>
+<p>Spurrier, despite all he had heard of Sam Mosebury,
+was reluctant to entertain the thought. The
+man might be, as Cappeze painted him, the head and
+front of an infamously vicious system, yet there was
+something engaging and likable about him, which
+made it hard to believe that for hire or any motive
+not nearly personal he would have conspired to do
+murder.</p>
+<p>So among the many claims upon Spurrier&#8217;s attention
+was the effort to find out where Sam Mosebury
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+stood, and it was while he was thinking of that problem
+that he encountered the object of his thoughts in
+person. The spot was one distant from his own house.
+Indeed it was near Colby&#8217;s cabin&mdash;still apparently
+empty&mdash;that the meeting took place.</p>
+<p>The opportunity hound had made several trips over
+there of late, because he required to know something
+of Colby&#8217;s activities, and, of course, when he came
+he observed a surreptitious caution which sought to
+guard against any hint leaking through to Colby of his
+own surveillance. He firmly believed that Sim was
+&#8220;hiding out,&#8221; and that despite the seeming emptiness
+of his habitation he was not far away.</p>
+<p>So it was Spurrier, the law-abiding man, who was
+skulking in the laurel while the notorious Mosebury
+walked the highway &#8220;upstanding&#8221; and openly&mdash;and
+the man in the thicket stooped low to escape discovery.
+But his foot slipped in the tangle and a rotting
+branch cracked under it, giving out a sound which
+brought Mosebury to an abrupt halt with his head
+warily raised and his rifle poised. He, too, had enemies
+and must walk in caution.</p>
+<p>There had been times when Sam&#8217;s life had hinged
+on just such trivial things as the snapping of a twig,
+and now, peering through the thickets Spurrier saw
+a flinty hardness come into his eyes.</p>
+<p>Sam stepped quietly but swiftly to the roadside and
+sheltered himself behind a rock. He said no word,
+but he waited, and Spurrier could feel that his eyes
+were boring into his own place of concealment with a
+scrutiny that went over it studiously and keenly, foot
+by foot.</p>
+<p>He hurriedly considered what plan to pursue. If
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+Mosebury was in league with Colby, to show himself
+would be almost as undesirable a thing as to show
+himself to Colby direct. Yet if he stayed there with
+the guilty seeming of one in hiding, Mosebury would
+end by locating him&mdash;and might assume that the hiding
+was itself a proof of enmity. He decided to declare
+himself so he shouted boldly: &#8220;It&#8217;s John Spurrier,&#8221;
+and rose a moment later into view.</p>
+<p>Then he came forward, thinking fast, and when the
+two met in the road, mendaciously said:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess it looks queer for a man with a clear conscience
+to take to the timber that way, Mr. Mosebury&mdash;but
+you may remember that I was recently attacked,
+and I don&#8217;t know who did it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Mosebury nodded. &#8220;I&#8217;d be ther last man ter fault
+ye fer thet,&#8221; he concurred. &#8220;I was doin&#8217; nigh erbout
+ther same thing myself, but I didn&#8217;t know ye often
+fared over this way, Mr. Spurrier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, it&#8217;s off my beat.&#8221; Spurrier was now lying
+fluently in what he fancied was to be a game of wits
+with a man who might have led the siege upon his
+house. &#8220;I was just going over to Stamp Carter&#8217;s
+place. He wanted me to advise him about a property
+deal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a space Sam stood gravely thoughtful, and
+when he spoke his words astonished the other.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Seein&#8217; we <i>hev</i> met up, accidental-like, I&#8217;ve got hit
+in head ter tell ye somethin&#8217; deespite hit ain&#8217;t rightly
+none of my business.&#8221; Again he paused, and it was
+plain that he was laboring under embarrassment, so
+Spurrier inquired:</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course, I&#8217;ve done heered ther talk erbout yore
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
+bein&#8217; attacked. Don&#8217;t ye really suspicion no special
+man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suspicion is one thing, Mr. Mosebury, and knowledge
+is another.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, thet&#8217;s Bible truth, an&#8217; yit I wouldn&#8217;t marvel
+none yore suspicions went over thet-away&mdash;an&#8217; came
+up not fur off from hyar.&#8221; He nodded his head toward
+Sim Colby&#8217;s house, and Spurrier, who was
+steeled to fence, gave no indication of astonishment.
+He only inquired:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why should Mr. Colby hold a grudge against
+me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t got no power of knowin&#8217; thet.&#8221; Mosebury
+spoke dryly. &#8220;An&#8217; es I said afore, hit ain&#8217;t none of
+my business nohow&mdash;still I does know thet ye&#8217;ve been
+over hyar some sev&#8217;ral times, an&#8217; every time ye came,
+ye came quietlike es ef ye sought ter see Sim afore
+Sim seed <i>you</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You think I&#8217;ve been here before?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, sir, I don&#8217;t think hit. I knows hit. I seed
+ye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Saw me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, sir, seed ye. Hit&#8217;s my business to keep a
+peeled eye in my face.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So Spurrier&#8217;s careful secrecy had been transparent
+after all, and if this man was an ally of Colby&#8217;s, Colby
+already shared his knowledge. More than ever Spurrier
+felt sure that his suspicions of the man whose eyes
+had changed color, were grounded in truth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howsomever,&#8221; went on Mosebury quietly, &#8220;I ain&#8217;t
+nuver drapped no hint ter Sim erbout hit. I ain&#8217;t,
+gin&#8217;rally speakin&#8217;, no meddler, but ef so be I kin forewarn
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+ye ergainst harm, hit would pleasure me ter do
+hit.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a cordial ring of sincerity in the manner
+and voice, which it was hard to doubt, so the other
+said gravely:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you. I did suspect Colby, but I have no
+proof.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know whether Sim grudges ye or not,&#8221; continued
+Mosebury. &#8220;He ain&#8217;t nuver named ther matter
+ter me nowise, guise, ner fashion&mdash;but Sim <i>wasn&#8217;t
+with ther crowd thet went atter ye</i>. He didn&#8217;t even
+know nothin&#8217; erbout hit. Sometimes a man comes to
+grief by barkin&#8217; up ther wrong tree.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again suspicion came to the front. This savored
+strongly of an attempt to alibi a confederate, and
+Spurrier inquired bluntly:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Since you broached this subject, I think it&#8217;s fair to
+ask you another question. You tell me who <i>didn&#8217;t</i>
+come. Do you know who <i>did</i>?&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a moment Mosebury&#8217;s face remained blank,
+then he spoke stiffly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said I&#8217;d be glad ter warn ye&mdash;but I didn&#8217;t say
+I war willin&#8217; ter name no names. Thet would be
+mighty nigh ther same thing es takin&#8217; yore quarrel
+onto myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then that&#8217;s all you can tell me&mdash;that it wasn&#8217;t
+Colby?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Spurrier,&#8221; rejoined the mountaineer seriously,
+&#8220;ye <i>knows</i> jedgmatically an&#8217; p&#8217;intedly thet ye&#8217;ve
+got enemies that means business. I ain&#8217;t nuver
+seed a man yet in these hills what belittled a peril sich
+as yourn thet didn&#8217;t pay fer hit&mdash;with his life.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t belittle it, but what can I do?&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span></div>
+<p>Sam Mosebury stood with a gaze that wandered off
+over the broken sky line. So grave was his demeanor
+that when his words came they carried the shock of inconsistent
+absurdity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thar&#8217;s a witch woman, thet dwells nigh hyar. Ef
+I war in youre stid, I&#8217;d git her ter read ther signs fer
+me an&#8217; tell me what I had need guard ergainst most.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221; answered Spurrier, repressing his contempt
+with difficulty, &#8220;I&#8217;m too skeptical to pin my
+faith to signs and omens.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again the mountain man was looking gravely across
+the hills, but for a moment the eyes had flashed
+humorously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon we don&#8217;t need ter cavil over thet, Mr.
+Spurrier. I don&#8217;t sot no master store by witchcraft
+foolery my ownself. Mebby ye recalls thet oncet I
+told ye a leetle story erbout my cat an&#8217; my mockin&#8217;
+bird.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Spurrier began to understand now. &#8220;You
+sometimes speak in allegory. But this time I don&#8217;t get
+the meaning.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Waal, hit&#8217;s this fashion. I <i>don&#8217;t</i> know who ther
+men war thet tried ter kill ye. Thet&#8217;s God&#8217;s truth,
+but I&#8217;ve got my own notions an&#8217; mebby they ain&#8217;t fur
+wrong. I ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; ter name no names&mdash;but ef so
+be ye wants ter talk ter ther witch woman, <i>I&#8217;ll</i> hev
+speech with her fust. What comes outen magic
+kain&#8217;t hardly make me no enemies&mdash;but mebby hit
+<i>mout</i> enable ye ter discern somethin&#8217; thet would profit
+ye to a master degree.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier stood looking into the face of the other
+and then impulsively he thrust out his hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Mosebury,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll be honest with you.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+I half suspected you&mdash;because I&#8217;d met you at Colby&#8217;s
+and I knew you hated Cappeze. I owe you an apology,
+and I&#8217;m glad to know I was wrong.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Spurrier,&#8221; replied the other, &#8220;ef I <i>hed</i> attempted
+yore life I wouldn&#8217;t hev failed, an&#8217;, moreover,
+I don&#8217;t hate old Cappeze. Ther man thet wins
+out don&#8217;t hev no need ter harbor hatreds. He hates
+me because he sought ter penitentiary me&mdash;an&#8217;
+failed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When shall we go to consult the oracle?&#8221; asked
+Spurrier, and Mosebury shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon mebby I mout seem over cautious&mdash;even
+timorouslike ter ye, in bein&#8217; so heedful erbout keepin&#8217;
+outen sight in this matter,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But them thet
+knows my record, knows I <i>ain&#8217;t</i>, jest ter say easy
+skeered. You go home an&#8217; wait an&#8217; afore long I&#8217;ll
+write ye a letter, tellin&#8217; ye when ter go an&#8217; how ter go.
+Then ye kin make ther journey by yoreself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That looks like common sense to me,&#8221; declared the
+other, and he went home, forgetting the witch woman
+on the way, because of the other and lovelier witchcraft
+that he knew awaited him in his own house.</p>
+<p>Spurrier, despite his dangers, responsibilities, and
+conflict of purposes, was happy. He was happy in a
+simpler and less complicated way than he had ever
+been before, because his heart was in the ascendancy,
+and Glory, he thought, was &#8220;livin&#8217; up to her name.&#8221;</p>
+<p>If he could have thrust some other things into the
+same dark cupboard of half-contemptuous philosophy
+to which he relegated his own dangers, he might have
+been even happier. But a mentor who had rarely
+troubled him in past years became insistent and audible
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+through the silences&mdash;speaking with the voice of conscience.</p>
+<p>He remembered telling Vivian Harrison, over the
+consommé, that pearls did not make oysters happy
+and that these illiterates of the hills might have hidden
+wealth in the shells of their isolation and gain
+nothing more than the oyster. Indeed, he had thought
+of them no more than the pearl fisherman thinks of the
+low form of life whose diseased state gives birth to
+treasure. They inhabited a terrain over which he and
+the forces of American Oil and Gas were to do battle,
+and like birds nesting on a battlefield, they must take
+their chances.</p>
+<p>It was no longer possible to maintain that callous
+indifference. These men, to whom he could not, without
+disclosing his strategy and defeating his purpose,
+tell the truth, had befriended him.</p>
+<p>They were human and in many ways lovable. If he
+succeeded, they would, upon his own advice, have sold
+their birthrights.</p>
+<p>However, he gave an anodyne to his conscience with
+the thought that if victory came to him there would
+be wealth enough for all to share. Having won his
+conquest, he could be generous, rendering back as a
+gift a part of what should have been theirs by right.
+The means of doing this he had worked out but he
+could confide to no one. He had embarked as cold
+bloodedly as Martin Harrison had ever started on any
+of the enterprises that had made him a money baron.
+Indeed it had been Spurrier who had fired the chief
+with interest in the scheme, and if the thing were
+culpable the culpability had been his own. Then he
+had come to realize that in the human equation was a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+factor that he had ignored: the rights of the ignorant
+native. He had fought down that recognition as the
+voice of sentimentality until at last he had no longer
+been able to fight it down. Between those two states
+of mind had been a war of mental agony and conflict,
+of doubt, of vacillation. The conclusion had not
+been easily reached. Now he meant to carry on the
+war he had undertaken unaltered as to its objective of
+winning a victory for Harrison over Trabue and the
+myrmidons of A. O. and G., but he meant to bring in
+that victory in such a guise that the native would
+share in the division of the spoils. He knew that
+Harrison, if he had an intimation of such an amendment
+of plan, would sharply veto it, but when the
+thing was done it would be too late to object&mdash;and
+meanwhile Spurrier regarded himself no less the trustee
+of the mountain-land holder than the servant of
+Martin Harrison. He was willing to shoulder, out of
+his own stipulated profits, the chief burden of this
+division, and in the end he would have driven a better
+bargain for his simple friends than they could have
+hoped to attain for themselves.</p>
+<p>Yet in him was being reborn an element of character,
+which had long been repressed.</p>
+<p>And there in the other section of the State where
+political connections had to be established and the
+skids of intrigue greased, much stood waiting to be
+done. Already most of what could be accomplished
+here on the ground had progressed to a point from
+which the end could be seen.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier, the seeming idler, could control almost
+all the territory needful for his right of way&mdash;all
+except a tract belonging to Brother Bud Hawkins,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span>
+cautiously left for the last because he wished to
+handle that himself and did not yet wish to appear
+in the negotiations.</p>
+<p>In the intricate workings of such a project by a
+campaign of secrecy, the matter was not only one of
+acquiring a certain expanse of a definite sort of property
+in a given region, but of acquiring holdings that
+commanded the only practicable route through passable
+gaps. This special lie and trend of ground he
+thought of and spoke of, in his business correspondence,
+as &#8220;the neck of the bottle.&#8221; When he held it,
+it mattered little who else had liquid in the bottle. It
+could come out only through his neck and, therefore,
+under his terms. Yet even when that was achieved,
+there remained the need of the corkscrew without
+which he himself could make no use of his range-wide
+jug of crude petroleum. That corkscrew was the
+charter to be had from a legislature where American
+Oil and Gas was supposed to have sentinels at the
+door.</p>
+<p>He could not take Glory with him on these trips, because
+Glory was of the hills, and loyal to the hills&mdash;and
+he could not yet take the natives into his confidence.
+For the same reason he could give her only
+business reasons of the most general and evasive character
+for leaving her behind.</p>
+<p>But the work that Spurrier had done so far was
+only the primary section of a broader design. What
+he had accomplished affected the oil field on the remote
+side of Hemlock Mountain, the part of the field
+that the earlier boom had never touched, and his
+entire project looked to a totality embracing also the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+&#8220;nigh&#8221; side, where his operations still existed only in
+projection.</p>
+<p>It was while this situation stood that there came
+to him one day two letters calling upon him for two
+irreconcilable courses of action. One was from Louisville,
+urging him to return there at once to busy himself
+with political plannings; the other was a rude
+scrawl from Sam Mosebury setting an appointment
+with the &#8220;witch woman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier was reluctant to go to Louisville. It meant
+laying aside the little paradise of the present for the
+putting on of heavy harness. It necessitated another
+excuse to Glory, and more than that, being away from
+Glory. Yet that was the bugle call of his mission,
+and he fancied that whatever threatened him here in
+the hills was a menace of local effect. If that were
+true he would not need the warning which the unaccountable
+desperado, Sam Mosebury, meant to relay
+to him through channels of alleged magic, until he
+came back.</p>
+<p>Therefore, the witch could wait. But in that detail
+Spurrier erred, and when he answered the summons
+that called him to town without his occult consultation,
+he unwittingly discarded a warning which
+he needed there no less than in the hills.</p>
+<p>He was called upon to choose a turning without
+pause, and he followed his business instincts. It happened
+that instinct misled him.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVII' id='CHAPTER_XVII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>One afternoon Trabue, the unadvertised dictator
+of American Oil and Gas, sat with several
+of his close subordinates in a conference that
+had to do with Martin Harrison, the man he assumed
+to ignore.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Unless some unforeseen thing sends oil soaring,&#8221;
+ventured Oliver Morris, &#8220;this fellow Spurrier is having
+his trouble for his pains. My idea is that he&#8217;s
+seeking to tease us into counter activity&mdash;and trail
+after us in the profits.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And if something <i>should</i> send oil soaring,&#8221; crisply
+countered Cosgrove, &#8220;he&#8217;d have us distanced with a
+runaway start.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who is this man Spurrier?&#8221; demanded Trabue
+himself. &#8220;What does our research department report?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a protégé of Martin Harrison&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Trabue appeared to find the words illuminating,
+and a shrewd irony glinted in his brief smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he&#8217;s Harrison&#8217;s man, he&#8217;s out to knife me&mdash;and
+he has resources at his back. Tell me more about
+him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cosgrove took from his portfolio a neatly typed
+memorandum, and read from it aloud:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Former army officer who gained the sobriquet of &#8220;Plunger&#8221;
+Spurrier: Court-martialed and convicted upon charge of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span>
+murder, and pardoned through efforts of Senator Beverly.
+Associated with various enterprises as a general investigator
+and initiative expert. Rumor has it that Harrison is grooming
+him as his own successor.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;If his reputation is that of a plunger,&#8221; argued
+Morris, &#8220;my guess is that he&#8217;s playing a long-shot
+bet for a killing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you guess wrong. If Harrison has picked
+this fellow to wear his own mantle, the man is more
+than a gambling tout. It is only lunacy to underestimate
+him or dismiss him with contempt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cosgrove nodded his concurrence and amplified it.
+&#8220;In my judgment he&#8217;s something of a genius with a
+chrome-nickeled nerve, but he&#8217;s adroit as well as bold.
+He has operated only through others and has kept
+himself inconspicuous. Except for an accident, we
+should have had no warning of his activities.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If he were to get bitten by a rattlesnake,&#8221; growled
+Morris savagely, &#8220;it would be a lucky thing for us.
+Of course, we might beguile him into our own camp.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Trabue shook his head in a decisive negation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That would only notify him that we recognize his
+effort and fear it. If the game&#8217;s big enough, we don&#8217;t
+want him.&#8221; He paused, then added with a grim
+facetiousness: &#8220;As for your other suggestion, we
+have no rattlesnakes in our equipment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The dynamic-minded master of strategy sat balancing
+a pen-holder on his extended forefinger for a
+few moments, then he inquired as if in afterthought:
+&#8220;By the way, I feel curious as to how the tip came to
+us that this conspiracy was on foot. You say that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span>
+except for an accident we should not have known
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cosgrove smiled. &#8220;It came to this office through
+the regular channels of our local agencies&mdash;and I
+didn&#8217;t inquire searchingly into the details. I gathered,
+though, that the trail was picked up by a sort of
+information tout&mdash;a fellow who was hurt and compromised
+a damage suit against us. It seems that he
+is supposed to be blind&mdash;but he could nonetheless see
+well enough to read some memoranda that chanced to
+come his way.&#8221; The gentleman cleared his throat almost
+apologetically as he added: &#8220;As I remarked I
+didn&#8217;t learn the particulars. I merely took the information
+for what it might be worth, and set our
+men to watching.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see,&#8221; Trabue made dry acknowledgment. &#8220;And
+what is being done toward watching him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I understand we have a man there who is assuming
+an enmity toward us and who is ostensibly helping
+Spurrier to build up political influence.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see,&#8221; said Trabue once more, with even a shade
+more dryness in his voice.</p>
+<p>That conversation had taken place quite a long
+while before the present, but it set into quiet motion
+the wheels of a large and powerful organization.</p>
+<p>The knowledge that John Spurrier was objectionable
+to A. O. and G. had filtered through to more local,
+yet confidential, officials, and through them to &#8220;men in
+the field,&#8221; and it is characteristic of such delegations
+of authority, that each department suits the case referred
+to it to the practical workings of its own environment.</p>
+<p>Gentlemen of high business standing in lower
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span>
+Broadway could permit themselves no violence of language,
+beyond the intimation that this upstart was a
+nuisance. Translated into the more candid brutality
+of camp-following parasites in the wildness of the
+hills, that mild declaration became: &#8220;The man needs
+killin&#8217;. Let&#8217;s git him!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Now, Spurrier found that the visit to Louisville
+and Lexington, which had promised to be the matter
+of weeks, must stretch itself into months, and that
+until the convening and adjournment of the assembly
+itself, his presence would be as requisite as that of a
+ship&#8217;s officer on the bridge. In one respect he was
+gratified. American Oil and Gas seemed serenely unsuspicious
+of any danger. Vigilance seemed lapsed.
+Those men whose duty it was to watch the corporation&#8217;s
+interest and to hold in line the needed lawmakers,
+appeared to regard legislative protection as a
+thing bought and paid for and safe from trespass.</p>
+<p>And Spurrier, knowing better, was secretly triumphant,
+but without Glory he was far from happy.</p>
+<p>Had he known what influences were at work with
+cancerlike corrosions upon her loyalty, what food was
+nourishing her anxiety, he would have stolen the time
+to go to her. Hers was an anxiety which she did not
+acknowledge. Even to herself she denied its existence
+and against any outside suggestion of inner hurt pride
+would have risen in valiant resentment.</p>
+<p>But in her heart it talked on in whispers that she
+could not hush. At night she would waken suddenly,
+wide-eyed with apprehension and seek to reassure herself
+by the emphasis of her avowals: &#8220;He&#8217;s <i>not</i>
+ashamed of me. He&#8217;s not leaving me because of that!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+He&#8217;s a big man with big business, and some day he&#8217;ll
+take me with him, everywhere!&#8221;</p>
+<p>When old Cappeze, a man not given to unreflecting
+or careless speech, flatly questioned: &#8220;Glory&mdash;why
+doesn&#8217;t John ever take you with him?&#8221; she flinched
+and fell into exculpations that limped.</p>
+<p>The old man was quick to note the pained rawness
+of the nerve he had touched, and he began talking of
+something else, but when he was alone once more his
+old eyes took on that fanatic absorption that came
+of his deep love for his daughter, and he shook his
+head dubiously over her future.</p>
+<p>One day a neighborhood woman came by Glory&#8217;s
+house and found her standing at the door. Tassie
+Plumford neither claimed nor was credited with powers
+of magic, but she, too, might have been called a
+&#8220;witch woman.&#8221; In curdled disposition and shrewishness
+of tongue, she merited the title.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Waal, waal, Glory Cappeze,&#8221; she drawled in her
+rasping, nasal voice. &#8220;Yore man hes done built ye a
+right monstrous fine house, hyar, ain&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come in and see it, Mrs. Plumford,&#8221; invited the
+young wife. &#8220;But my name&#8217;s Glory Spurrier now&mdash;not
+Cappeze.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In the gesture with which the woman drew her
+shawl tighter about her lean shoulders, she contrived
+to convey the affront of suspicion and disbelief.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I reckon I ain&#8217;t got ther power ter tarry now,&#8221;
+she declined. &#8220;I don&#8217;t git much time fer gaddin&#8217;, an&#8217;
+be yore name whatsoever hit may, there&#8217;s them hyar-abouts
+es &#8217;lows yore man lavishes everything on ye but
+his own self. He&#8217;s away from ye most of his time,
+albeit I reckon he&#8217;s got car fare aplenty fer two.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span></div>
+<p>Glory stiffened, and without a word turned her back
+on her ungracious visitor. She went into the house
+with the tilted chin of one who disdains to answer
+insolent slanders, but in the tenderness of her heart
+the barb had nonetheless sunk deep. So people were
+saying that!</p>
+<p>Over at Aunt Erie Toppitt&#8217;s the shrew again halted&mdash;and
+there it seemed that she did have time to
+&#8220;tarry,&#8221; and roll the morsel of gossip under tongue.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mebby she&#8217;s ther furriner&#8217;s lawful wife an&#8217; then
+ergin mebby she ain&#8217;t nuthin&#8217; but his woman,&#8221; opined
+Tassie Plumford. &#8220;Hit ain&#8217;t none of my business
+nohow, but a godly woman hes call ter be heedful
+whar she visits at.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A godly woman!&#8221; Aunt Erie&#8217;s tone stung like a
+hornet attack. &#8220;What has godliness got ter do with
+<i>you</i>, anyhow, Tassie Plumford? The records of ther
+high cote over at Carnettsville hes got <i>yore</i> record fer
+a witness thet swears ter perjury.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Plumford trembled with rage but, prudently,
+she elected to ignore the reference to her legal status.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ef they was rightfully married,&#8221; she retorted, &#8220;hit
+didn&#8217;t come ter pass twell old man Cappeze diskivered
+her alone with him&mdash;in his house&mdash;jest ther two of
+&#8217;em&mdash;an&#8217; they wouldn&#8217;t nuver hev <i>been</i> diskivered
+savin&#8217; an&#8217; exceptin&#8217; fer ther attack on ther furriner.&#8221;
+In the self-satisfaction of one who has scored, she
+added: &#8220;I&#8217;ll be farin&#8217; on now, I reckon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; don&#8217;t nuver come back,&#8221; stormed Aunt Erie,
+whose occasional tantrums were as famous as her
+usual good humor. &#8220;Unless ye seeks ter hev ther
+dawgs sot on ye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>While the spiteful and forked little tongues of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span>
+gossip were doing their serpent best to poison what
+had promised to be an Eden for Glory at home in the
+hills, the husband who was charged with neglecting
+her was miserable in town.</p>
+<p>His work had been the breath of life to him until
+now, bringing the zestful delight of prevailing over
+stubborn difficulties, and building bridges that should
+carry him across to his goal of financial power. Now
+he found it a necessity that exiled him from a place
+to which he had come half-contemptuously and to
+which his converted thoughts turned as the prayers of
+the true believer turn toward Mecca.</p>
+<p>He who had been urban in habit and taste found
+nothing in the city to satisfy him. The smoke-filled
+air seemed to stifle him and fill him with a yearning
+for the clean, spirited sweep of the winds across the
+slopes. He knew that these physical aspects were
+trivial things he would have swept aside had they not
+stood as emblems for a longing of the heart itself&mdash;a
+nostalgia born of his new life and love.</p>
+<p>But all the plans that had built one on the other
+toward a definite end of making an oil field of the
+barren hills were drawing to a focus that could not be
+neglected. He could no more leave these things undone
+than could his idol Napoleon have abandoned
+his headquarters before Austerlitz, and the sitting of
+the legislature could not be changed to suit his wishes.
+Neither could the lining up of forces that were to
+guide his legislation to its passage be left unwatched.</p>
+<p>So the absence that he had thought would be brief,
+or at worst a series of short trips away from home,
+was prolonging itself into a winter in Louisville and
+Frankfort. He found himself as warily busy as a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span>
+collie herding a panicky flock, and as soon as one
+danger was met and averted, a new one called upon
+him from a new and unsuspected quarter.</p>
+<p>Much of the deviousness of playing underground
+politics disgusted him, and yet he knew he would have
+regarded it only as an amusing game for high stakes
+before his change of heart. But now that it was to be
+a battle for the mountain men as well as for Martin
+Harrison and for himself, it could be better stomached.</p>
+<p>The effort to pick out men who could be trusted in
+an enterprise where they had to be bought, was one
+which taxed both his insight into human nature and
+his self-esteem.</p>
+<p>Senator Chew, himself a mountaineer, who had
+come from a ragged district to the state assembly and
+who seemed to harbor a hatred against A. O. and G.
+of utter malevolence, was almost as his other self,
+furnishing him with eyes with which to see and ears
+with which to hear, and familiarity with all the devious,
+unlovely tricks of lobby processes.</p>
+<p>But Senator Chew, a countryman, who had capitalized
+his shifty wits and hard-won education, bent his
+knee to the brazen gods of cupidity and ambition.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t just see,&#8221; he demurred petulantly to Spurrier,
+&#8220;why you go about this thing the way you do.
+You&#8217;ve got unlimited capital behind you and yet in
+going after these options you ain&#8217;t hardly got hold of
+any more land than just enough to let your pipe line
+through. You could get all a man&#8217;s property just as
+cheap per acre as part of it&mdash;and when I&#8217;ve sweated
+blood to give you your charter and you&#8217;ve sweated
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
+blood to grab your right-of-way, that God-forsaken
+land will be a Klondike.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope so,&#8221; smiled Spurrier, and his ally went
+on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right, but why have nothing out of it except
+a pipe-line? Why not have the whole damn business
+to split three ways, among Harrison&#8217;s crowd,
+yourself&mdash;and the crowd I&#8217;ve got to handle?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re a mountain man, Senator,&#8221; the opportunity
+hound reminded him. &#8220;You know that in every
+other section of the hills to which development has
+come, the native has reaped only a heart-ache and an
+empty belly. I am purposely taking only a part of
+each man&#8217;s holding, so that when the oil flows there
+what he has left will be worth more to him than all
+of it was before.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hell,&#8221; growled the politician. &#8220;The men you
+ought to think about making money for, are the men
+you need&mdash;like me, and the men who back you, like
+Harrison. These local fellows won&#8217;t thank you, and
+in my opinion you&#8217;re a fool, if you&#8217;ll permit me to
+talk plain.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Talk as plain as you like, Senator,&#8221; smiled the
+other. &#8220;But I think I&#8217;m acting with right sound
+sense. Our field can be more profitably developed
+among friends than among enemies&mdash;even if no consideration
+other than the practical enters into the problem.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was not until Christmas time that Spurrier broke
+away from his activities in Louisville, and then he
+came bearing gifts and with a heart full of eagerness.
+He came elated, too, at the fair promise of his prospects,
+and confident of victory.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></div>
+<p>So Glory hid the fears that had been growing in
+her heart and, because of the tidal power of personal
+fascination and contact, she found it an easy task.
+While Spurrier was with her, those fears seemed to
+lose their substance and to stand out as absurdities.
+They were delirious miasmas dissipated by the sun and
+daylight of companionship.</p>
+<p>Spurrier kept most of his valuable papers in a
+safety vault in Louisville, but for purposes of reference
+here, he maintained a complete system of carbon
+copies, and these must be stored in some place where
+he could feel sure they were immune from any prying
+eye. The entire record of his proceedings would be
+clear to any reader of those memoranda.</p>
+<p>While Glory was away one day, he removed a section
+of the living-room wall and fashioned something
+in the nature of a secret cabinet, upon which he could
+rely for these purposes. Before he went away again
+he shared that secret with her, since in certain exigencies
+it might be needful that some one should be
+able to act on wired instructions. He showed her the
+bit of molding that was removable and which gave
+entrance to the hidden recess.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In that strong box,&#8221; he told her, &#8220;are papers of
+vital importance. If I haven&#8217;t taken you entirely
+into my confidence about them all, dear, it&#8217;s because
+they concern other people more closely than myself.
+All my own affairs are yours&mdash;but in the service of
+others, I must obey instructions and those instructions
+are rigid.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He took out one envelope, though, plainly marked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This,&#8221; he said, &#8220;is a paper to be used only in case
+of extreme emergency. It is an order on the safety-deposit
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span>
+people in Louisville to open my vault to the
+bearer. In the event of my death, or if I should wire
+you from a distance, I would want you to use it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Even that admittance into the veiled sanctum of
+his business life pleased Glory, and she nodded her
+head gravely.</p>
+<p>She did not tell him, and he did not guess, that
+tongues were wagging in his absence, and that people
+said she was good enough only for that part of
+his life in which he shed his white collar and his
+&#8220;fine manners&#8221; and donned the rougher habiliments
+of the backwoods.</p>
+<p>Even when she learned that his coming back had
+been only to spend the holidays with her and that he
+must leave again to be gone for weeks, at least, she
+let none of the disquiet that smouldered in her find
+an utterance in words.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>On a fine old Blue Grass estate, which exhaled the
+elegance and ease of the Old South, lived Colonel
+Merriwell, a life-long friend of Dyke Cappeze. In
+years long gone he had more than once sought to
+have Cappeze transfer his activities to a wider field.
+Now, timber interests called him to the mountains,
+and though the cold weather had set in, his daughter
+chose to come with him. She had heard much of the
+strange and retarded life of the mountains, and because
+it was so different from the refinements with
+which she had always been surrounded, she wanted to
+see it.</p>
+<p>When they arrived after traveling conditions that
+warranted every conception of quaintness, but violated
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+every demand of comfort, the girl from the
+Bluegrass found Glory a discovery.</p>
+<p>At once she recognized that into any drawing-room
+this wilderness-bred girl could be safely dropped, and
+that even though she stood in a corner, she would
+soon become its center.</p>
+<p>Helen Merriwell was fascinated by the anomaly of
+an inherent aristocracy in an encompassing life which
+was almost squalid, and a bond of sympathy sprang
+into instant being. The Bluegrass woman knew by
+instinct, though through no utterance from the loyal
+lips, that the other was lonely, and when Colonel
+Merriwell announced his intention of returning home,
+the daughter decided to continue her visit and its
+companionship.</p>
+<p>To Spurrier&#8217;s house, too, during the crisp, clear
+weather of late winter came, without announcement
+or expectation another visitor. They were two other
+visitors to be exact, but one so overshadowed his
+companion in importance that the second became
+negligible.</p>
+<p>At the Carnettsville station the daily train drew up
+one morning and uncoupled, on a siding, the first private
+car that had ever run over that piece of roadbed.
+Its chef and valet gazed superciliously down upon the
+assembled loungers, but the two gentlemen who
+alighted and gave their names as Martin Harrison
+and his secretary, Mr. Spooner, were to all appearances
+&#8220;jest ordinary folks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory was housecleaning on the day of Harrison&#8217;s
+coming, and, in neatly patched gingham and dust-protected
+crown, she came nearer seeming the typical
+mountain woman than she had for many days before.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span>
+Her fresh beauty was hard to eclipse, but she was less
+presentable than she wished to be when her husband&#8217;s
+great patron saw her for the first time and contrasted
+her with such women as his own daughter.</p>
+<p>When she heard the name, without previous warning,
+a sort of panic possessed her and for once she
+became tongue-tied and awkward, so that after the
+first, Helen Merriwell stepped into the breach and did
+the talking.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My name is Martin Harrison,&#8221; said the great man
+with simple cordiality. &#8220;I thought John Spurrier
+lived here&mdash;but I seem to be mistaken.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&mdash;he does live here,&#8221; stammered Glory, catching
+the swiftly stifled amazement of the magnate&#8217;s
+disapproving eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here?&#8221; He put the question blankly as if only
+politeness prevented a greater vehemence of surprise.
+&#8220;But I expected to find a bachelor establishment.
+There are ladies here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory fell back a step as if in retreat under attack.
+If this statement were true, Spurrier had never acknowledged
+her to the employer with whom his relations
+were intimately close. In her own eyes, she
+stood as one who had lost caste and been repudiated&mdash;and
+all self-confidence abandoned her, giving way to
+trepidation.</p>
+<p>Harrison stood bewilderedly looking at this country
+girl who had turned tremulous and pale, and Helen
+Merriwell stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you didn&#8217;t know that Mr. Spurrier was married?&#8221;
+she smilingly inquired.</p>
+<p>The money baron transferred his glance to her as
+his shadowed face lightened into relief. This young
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
+woman had the poise and ease of his own world, which
+made communication facile. If Spurrier had not been
+candid with him, at all events he had, perhaps, not
+unclassed himself. The other was presumably a local
+servant of whom he need think no more.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Spurrier,&#8221; he answered easily, &#8220;had not mentioned
+his marriage, probably because our recent correspondence
+has all related to business. However, I
+hold it unhandsome of him not to have done so.&#8221;
+He paused, then added deferentially: &#8220;Of course, I
+am better prepared now to felicitate him&mdash;since I have
+seen you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Helen Merriwell laughed and laid a hand on
+Glory&#8217;s shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You do me too much honor, Mr. Harrison,&#8221; she
+assured him. &#8220;<i>This</i> is Mrs. Spurrier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The financier&#8217;s ingrained politeness for once failed
+him. It was not for long, but in the breached instant
+he stiffened arrogantly as his eyes went back to Glory,
+and betrayed themselves in half-contemptuous hostility.
+The lieutenant whom he had chosen as his own
+successor in the world of lofty affairs had not only
+deceived him but had thrown himself wantonly away
+upon a stammering daughter of illiterates!</p>
+<p>Martin Harrison bowed again, but this time with a
+precise formality.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t notify Mr. Spurrier of my coming, since
+I felt sure I would find him here,&#8221; he explained briefly,
+directing himself pointedly to Helen Merriwell. &#8220;I
+am on my way south, so now I&#8217;ll defer seeing him
+until another time&mdash;unless you expect him back
+shortly?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Helen turned inquiringly to Glory and Glory shook
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+her head. The episode, confirming her own anxieties,
+had unnerved her steadfast courage into collapse.</p>
+<p>Had any warning come to her in advance of the
+event her bearing toward this stranger would have
+been a different one. The pride that bowed submissively
+to no one except in love, would have sustained
+her. The natural dignity which was the gift of her
+blood would have been the thing that any observer
+must have first and last recognized. With a chance to
+have shaped her attitude, Glory would have received
+Harrison as a Barbarian princess might have met an
+ambassador from Rome, but no such chance had been
+afforded her and she stood as distraught and as
+panicky as a stage-struck child whose speech fails.</p>
+<p>She even slid back into the rough-hewn vernacular
+that had been so completely banished from her lips
+and custom.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t got ther power ter say,&#8221; she faltered, &#8220;when
+he&#8217;ll git back. He&#8217;s goin&#8217; ter Frankfort first.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll write to him there,&#8221; said the capitalist.</p>
+<p>Harrison departed with the stiff dignity of an
+affronted sachem, and Helen Merriwell, looking after
+him, smiled with amusement for the incident which
+she so well understood, until she turned and saw Glory.</p>
+<p>The girl had wilted back against the wall and stood
+there as if she had been stricken. Her great, violet
+eyes were brimming with the spirit of tragedy and
+held the despair of one who has blithely returned
+home&mdash;to find his house in ruin and ashes.</p>
+<p>Glory stole away to her own room, escaping the
+embrace of sympathetic arms, as soon as she could.
+&#8220;He&#8217;s done denied me ter his friends,&#8221; she told herself
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+wildly. &#8220;He dast&#8217;n&#8217;t acknowledge me ter fine
+folks!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then through the first, torpid misery of hurt pride,
+crept a more terrifying thought. Spurrier had been
+practically engaged to this man&#8217;s daughter. He had
+been diverted from his purpose by motives of pity, and
+now that Harrison knew, he might be ruined&mdash;probably
+would be ruined. If so disaster would come to
+him because of her&mdash;and at last she rose from the
+chair where she had dropped down, collapsed, with a
+light of new resolution in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If that&#8217;s all I&#8217;m good for,&#8221; she declared tempestuously,
+&#8220;he&#8217;s got to be rid of me.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII' id='CHAPTER_XVIII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>During the sitting of the legislature John
+Spurrier was a sporadic onlooker, and his
+agents were as vigilant as sentinels in a danger
+zone. The last day of the term drew to a wintry
+sunset, and when the clock registered midnight the
+body would stand automatically adjourned until gavel
+fall two years hence.</p>
+<p>Spurrier, outwardly a picture of serenity, but inwardly
+tensed for the final issue, sat in the visitors&#8217;
+gallery of the Senate chamber. The charter upon
+which all his hopes hung as upon a fulcrum was all
+but in his grasp. Seemingly the enemy slept on. Presumably
+in those last tired hours the authorizing bill
+would slip through to passage with the frictionless
+ease of well-oiled bearings.</p>
+<p>The needed men had been won over. Carping critics
+might prate, here and there, of ugly means that
+savored of bribery, but that was academic. The
+promise of forth-coming victory remained. Methods
+may be questionable. Results are not, and Spurrier
+was interested in results.</p>
+<p>A. O. and G. had corrupted and suborned certain
+public servants. He had discovered their practice and
+played their own cards to their undoing. His ostensible
+clients were perhaps little cleaner-handed than their
+adversaries, but certainly, those other clients who did
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
+not even know themselves to be represented stood with
+no stain on their claims.</p>
+<p>Those native men and women had not asked him to
+safeguard them, and had they been able to see what
+he was doing they would have guessed only that, after
+winning their faith, he was bent on swindling them.
+But Spurrier knew not only the seeming facts but
+those which lay beneath and he fought with a definite
+sense of stewardship.</p>
+<p>First the <i>coup</i> must succeed, since that success was
+the foundation of all the rest, and the moment was at
+hand.</p>
+<p>For this he had slaved, faced dangers and deprived
+himself of the contentment of home and the society of
+his wife. Now it was about to end in victory.</p>
+<p>The enemy had been caught napping, and the victory
+would be his. Certainly he had been as fair as
+the foe. What now remained was a perfunctory confirmation
+by the Senate, and in these final wearied
+hours it would slip through easily in the general
+wind-up of uncontested affairs.</p>
+<p>Spurrier had not slept for two days&mdash;or had slept
+little. When this ended he would go to his bed and
+lie there in sunken hours of restoration the clock
+around&mdash;and after that back to Glory. Already he
+carried in his pocket the brief message which he
+meant to put upon the wires to Harrison, at the moment
+of midnight and success. Characteristically it
+read: &#8220;Complete victory. Spurrier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Now as the clerk droned through the mass of unfinished
+matters that burdened the schedule, the
+clock stood at ten in the evening, and a spirit of disordered
+peevishness proclaimed itself in the chamber.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+Seats were vacated. Voices rose in unparliamentary
+clamor.</p>
+<p>From the desk where a mountain senator sat in
+touseled disarray, a flask was drawn and tipped with
+scant regard to senatorial dignity. Then the chairman
+of the committee which had the steering of Spurrier&#8217;s
+affairs arose and handed a paper to the clerk.</p>
+<p>Spurrier himself maintained the same unemotional
+cast of countenance with which, years before, he had
+watched a horse in the stretch battling for more than
+he could afford to lose, but Wharton, who sat at his
+side, chewed nervously on an unlighted cigar. Sleepy
+reporters yawned at the press tables as the clerk droned
+out his sing-song, &#8220;An act entitled an act conferring
+charter rights upon the Hemlock Pipe Line Company
+of Kentucky.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The reading of the measure seemed devoid of interest
+or attention. It went forward in confusion,
+yet when it was ended the mountain man who had
+taken the swig out of his flask, came slowly to his
+feet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. President of the Senate,&#8221; he drawled, &#8220;I
+want to address a few incongruvial remarks to the
+senators in regards to this here proposed measure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>With a sudden sense of premonition Spurrier found
+himself sitting electrically upright.</p>
+<p>That man was Senator Chew who had sat in council
+with him and advised him; his right hand in action
+and his fox-brain in planning, yet now, with every
+moment invaluable he was burning up time!</p>
+<p>He was a pygmy among small men, and as he
+drooled on he seemed to urge no pertinent objection.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span>
+Yet before he had been five minutes on his feet his
+intent was clear and his success assured.</p>
+<p>Out of the hands of their recognized lieutenants
+A. O. and G. had taken the matter of serving them.
+Into the hands of this obscure and loutish Solon who
+was ostensibly pledged to their enemies, they had
+thrust their commission, and now with the clock creeping
+forward toward adjournment, he meant to talk
+the charter measure to death by holding the floor until
+the opportunity for a vote had elapsed.</p>
+<p>Tediously and inanely he meandered along, and no
+one knew what he was talking about. In extravagant
+metaphor and florid simile he indulged himself&mdash;and
+the clock worked industriously, an ally not to be
+unduly hurried.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen of the Senate&mdash;&#8221; he drooled, &#8220;most
+of us have been raised in a land that knows little of
+the primitive features that make up life with us, and
+though it may not at first seem germane or pertinent,
+I want you to go with me as your guide, while I try
+to make you see the life of those steep counties that
+are affected by the measure before you; counties that
+lie behind the barriers and sleep the ancient sleep of
+the forgotten.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Men yawned while his tediousness spun itself into
+a tawdry flow of slow words, but the Honorable Mr.
+Chew talked on.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Many the day, as a lad, have I lain by a rushing
+brook,&#8221; he declaimed, &#8220;where the water gushes with
+the sparkle of sunlit crystal and watched the deer
+come down on gingerly lifted feet to drink his fill.
+Now I reckon mighty few of you gentlemen have seen
+a deer come down to drink&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span></div>
+<p>The minute hand of the clock, in comparison with
+this windy deliberation seemed to be racing between
+the dial characters.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In God&#8217;s name,&#8221; exclaimed Spurrier, &#8220;isn&#8217;t there
+any way to shut that fool up? He&#8217;s ruining us. Get
+some of our leaders up here, Wharton. We&#8217;ve got
+to stop him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How?&#8221; demanded Wharton with a fallen jaw.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t give a damn how! Kill him&mdash;buy him.
+Anything!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too late,&#8221; responded Wharton grimly. &#8220;He&#8217;s
+already bought. We&#8217;ve walked into their trap. We
+might as well go home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier sent for his whip, but he had come to the
+end of his resourcefulness and shook a dejected head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you want to shoot him down as he stands
+there,&#8221; said the gentleman testily, &#8220;I dare say it
+would stop him short. I know no other way. He
+is having resort to the senatorial privilege of filibuster.
+We have let them slip up on us. A. O. and
+G. has outbid you, that&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But how in God&#8217;s name did they get wise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The other laughed grimly. &#8220;Wise?&#8221; he snorted.
+&#8220;My guess is that they&#8217;ve been wise all the time and
+that hayseed Iscariot has been playing us along for
+suckers.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Held by a deadly fascination, Spurrier sank back
+into his seat. The clock over the speaker&#8217;s desk traveled
+once, almost twice around the dial, and yet that
+nasal voice wandered on in an endless stream of
+grotesque bombast&mdash;talking the charter to a slow
+death by strangulation.</p>
+<p>Now, reflected Spurrier bitterly, his connection
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
+with the enterprise must seem to any eye that viewed
+it that only of Harrison&#8217;s jackal and lobbyist, who had
+signally failed in his attempt to raid A. O. and G.</p>
+<p>To the mountain folk themselves, if the facts ever
+percolated into the hills, his seeming would be far
+from heroic and with nothing tangible accomplished,
+it would do no good to tell them that he had made
+his fight with their interests at heart. Such a claim
+would only stamp him in the face of contrary evidence
+as taking a coward&#8217;s refuge in lies.</p>
+<p>Then when it seemed to him that he could no longer
+restrain himself, Spurrier heard the gavel fall. It
+was a light sound, but it crashed on his brain with
+thunders of destruction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen,&#8221; declared the presiding officer, &#8220;The
+Senate stands adjourned, <i>sine die</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Had John Spurrier gone to see the &#8220;witch woman&#8221;
+when Mosebury advised it, his course from that point
+on would have brought him to a different ending.</p>
+<p>In looking back on that night, he could never quite
+remember it with consecutive distinctness. Gaps of
+forgetfulness were fitfully shot through with disconnected
+scraps of recollection. When events began to
+marshal themselves into orderly sequence, the windowpanes
+of his hotel room were turning a dirty gray
+with the coming of dawn, and he was sitting in a
+straight-backed chair. His bed had not been touched.
+Back of that lay a chaotic sense of irremediable disaster
+and despair.</p>
+<p>At last he caught a glimpse of himself in the
+mirror, and that picture of disheveled wildness
+startled him and brought him back to realization.</p>
+<p>Then self-contempt swept in on him. He had been
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
+called a man of iron nerve; a plunger who never
+turned a hair under reversals of fortune&mdash;and now he
+stood looking through the glass at a broken gambler
+with frenzied eyes. It was such a face as one might
+see in the circle before the Casino at Monte Carlo&mdash;the
+place of suicides.</p>
+<p>The man who had seemed to come from nowhere
+and who had talked last night with such destructive
+volubility, had been a pure shyster. To be outwitted
+by such a clown carried the sting of chagrin, quite
+apart from the material disaster. Yet into his disordered
+thoughts came the realization that the senator
+had been only a puppet. His actuating wires had been
+pulled by the fingers of A. O. and G. and the men who
+sat as overlords of A. O. and G. were only shysters
+of a greater caliber. The men whom he, himself,
+served were no better. Compared to this backwoods
+statesman he, John Spurrier, was as a smooth and
+sophisticated confidence man paralleled with a pickpocket.
+Ethically, they were cut from the same cloth,
+though to differing patterns&mdash;one rustic and the other
+urban.</p>
+<p>He had been engaged in a tawdry game, for all its
+gilding of rich prospects, but in the face of defeat a
+man cannot change his colors.</p>
+<p>Had he been able to undertake this fight as his own
+man and choose his own methods&mdash;changing them as
+he grew in stature&mdash;there might have been a man&#8217;s
+zest in the game.</p>
+<p>Now, less than ever, could he speak open truth to
+these simple friends who had trusted him. Now he
+must fight out a damaged campaign to the end along
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+the lines to which he stood committed, and until the
+end there was nothing to say.</p>
+<p>Perhaps if he could avert total ruin, he might yet
+have opportunity to reclaim the confidence of these
+Esaus who had traded for a mess of pottage. Certainly
+they had nothing to hope for from the myrmidons
+of Trabue.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier forced his shoulders back into military
+erectness. He compelled his lips into the stiff
+and counterfeited curvature of a smile.</p>
+<p>Not only had every resource he could muster gone
+into the scrapped enterprise, leaving him worse than
+bankrupt, but through him Martin Harrison had been
+led into the sinking of a fortune.</p>
+<p>Harrison would, in all likelihood, be less bitter
+about the money loss, than the thought of the triumphant
+smile on Trabue&#8217;s thin lips, but it was quite in
+the cards that, with his contempt for failure, he
+would wash his hands of Spurrier.</p>
+<p>That, of course, spelled ruin. The exhibition skater
+had gone through the thin ice.</p>
+<p>Harrison could, if he chose, do more than dismiss
+John Spurrier. He had seen to it that his lieutenant
+was bound to his standards by debts he could not pay,
+save out of some future enrichment contingent on success.
+If he chose to call those loans he would leave
+his employee shattered beyond hope of recovery.</p>
+<p>But when Spurrier went down to the hotel dining
+room at breakfast time, a cold bath and a superhuman
+exertion of will power had transformed him. His
+bearing was a nice blending of the debonair and the
+dignified.</p>
+<p>To no eye of observation was there any trace of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span>
+collapse or reversal. He seemed the man who demanded
+the best from life and who got it.</p>
+<p>At a table not far from his own sat Senator Chew
+with a companion whom Spurrier did not know. The
+traitor glanced up and his eye met that of the man he
+had betrayed, then fell flinching.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the mountaineer expected the dining room
+to stage such a scene of recrimination and violence as
+it had in the past on more than one occasion, for his
+crafty face went brick red, then darkened into truculence
+as he half pushed back his chair and his hand
+swept tentatively toward his hip.</p>
+<p>But the plunger had still his pride left, or its remnant,
+and it was no part of his plan to stand the self-confessed
+and vanquished victim, by any patent demonstration
+of wrath. He met the eyes of the politician
+who had played on both sides of the same game, and
+smiled, and if there was contempt in the expression,
+it was recognized only by the man who knew its
+cause.</p>
+<p>Later he wrote a telegram to Harrison. It was not
+the thing he had expected to say, yet in it went no
+whine of despair:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Have suffered a temporary reversal.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Those were the words that the capitalist read when
+the message, after being decoded from its cipher, was
+laid on his desk.</p>
+<p>Harrison, recently returned from his Southern trip,
+thought truculently of that nearby office in which
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span>
+Trabue was also receiving telegraphic information,
+and he writhed in the wormwood of chagrin.</p>
+<p>The curtness of his response scorched the wires:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Explain in person if you can. Otherwise we separate.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>So John Spurrier packed his bag and caught the
+first train for the mountains. He must say good-by
+to Glory, before facing this final ordeal, and he believed
+that in that clarifying air he could brace himself
+for the encounter that awaited him in New York.</p>
+<p>As he turned into the yard of his own house he
+paused, and something about his heart tightened until
+it unsteadied him. Here alone, in all the world, he
+had known what home meant, and in his heart and
+veins rose an intoxicating tumult like that of wine.</p>
+<p>Back of that emotional wave though lurked a misery
+of self-reproach. Glory had made the magic of his
+brief happiness, but there was a background, too, of
+kindly souls and a ruggedly genuine welcome. He
+had learned to know these people and to revise his
+first, false views of them. In them dwelt the stout
+honesty and real strength of oak and hickory.</p>
+<p>First he had striven to plunder them, then sought to
+lift the yoke of poverty from their long-bowed shoulders.
+In both efforts he had failed.</p>
+<p>But had he failed, after all? Certainly he stood
+under the black shadow of a major disaster, but had
+not others retrieved disasters and made final victory
+only the brighter for its contrast with lurid misfortune?</p>
+<p>He had been the plunger who seemed strongest
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+when he was weakest, and these enduring hills spoke
+their message of steadfastness to him as he stood surrounded
+by their lofty crests of spruce and pine.</p>
+<p>Then he had reached the door and flung it open
+and Glory was in his arms, but unaccountably she had
+burst into a tempest of tears.</p>
+<p>Before he had had time to speak of the necessity
+that called him East she was telling of the visit of
+Martin Harrison and his indignant departure.</p>
+<p>Despite his all-consuming absorption of a moment
+before, Spurrier drew away, chilled by that announcement,
+and Glory read in his eyes a momentary agony
+of apprehension.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In God&#8217;s name,&#8221; he demanded in a numbed voice,
+&#8220;why didn&#8217;t you write me about that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He said,&#8221; responded the wife simply, &#8220;that <i>he</i>
+would write to you at Frankfort. I thought you
+knew.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I should have thought you&#8217;d have spoken of
+his coming and going&mdash;like that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her head came up with a brief little flash of hurt
+pride.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You hadn&#8217;t ever told him&mdash;about me,&#8221; she said,
+though without accusation. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t want to talk to
+you about it until you were ready to suggest it. It
+might have seemed&mdash;disloyal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier again braced his shoulders. After a moment
+he took her in his arms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory, my sweetheart, I&#8217;ve been playing a game
+for big stakes. I&#8217;ve had to do some things I didn&#8217;t
+relish. I&#8217;ve got to do another now. I&#8217;m summoned
+to Harrison&#8217;s office in New York, at once&mdash;and I
+have no choice.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
+<p>Glory drew away and looked with challenging directness
+into his eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose&mdash;you&#8217;ll go alone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I must. Business affairs are at a crisis, and I need
+a free hand. But, God granting me a safe return, it&#8217;s
+to be our last separation. I swear that. I am always
+wretched without you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Always before when disappointment or disquiet had
+riffled the deeps of her eyes, it had taken only a word
+and a smile from this man to dispel them and bring
+back the serenity of content. Her moments of panic
+when she had seemed to drop down, down into pits
+of foreboding until she had plumbed the depth of
+despair, had been moments to which she had surrendered
+in his absence and of which he had been
+given no hint.</p>
+<p>Now with a gravity that was bafflingly unreadable
+she stood silent and looked about the room, and the
+man&#8217;s eyes followed hers.</p>
+<p>Why was it, he almost fiercely demanded of himself,
+that this cottage set in remote hills shed about
+him a feeling of soul-satisfaction that he had never encountered
+in more luxurious places?</p>
+<p>Now as he looked at it the thought of leaving it
+cramped his heart with a sort of breathless agony.</p>
+<p>Yet, of course, there was no question after all.
+It was because in everything it was reflection of
+Glory&#8217;s own spirit and to him Glory stood for the
+only love that had ever been bigger to him than himself.</p>
+<p>The simplicity and good taste of the small house,
+standing in a land of squalid cabins like a disciple of
+quiet elegance among beggars, had been the result
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span>
+of their collaboration. Glory had had the instinct
+of artistic perception and true values and he had been
+able to guide her from his sybarite experience.</p>
+<p>The stone fireplace with its ingle-nook, built by their
+own hands from rocks they had selected and gathered
+together, seemed to him a beautiful thing. The natural
+wood of the paneling, picked out at the saw-mill with
+a critical eye for graining and figuration, satisfied the
+eye, and the few pictures that he had brought from
+the East were all landscapes that meant something to
+each of them&mdash;lyric bits of canvas with singing skies.
+To every object a memory had attached itself; a
+memory that had also a tendril in their hearts.</p>
+<p>But now Glory, too, was looking at all these things
+as though she as well as himself were leaving them.
+There was something of farewell in the glance that
+lingered on them and caressed them, as if of leave-taking
+and into Spurrier&#8217;s heart crept the intuition
+that despite his declaration just made that this should
+be their last separation, she was seeing in it a threat
+of permanence.</p>
+<p>And that was the thought that was chilling Glory&#8217;s
+heart and muting the song of happiness which his
+coming had awakened. This place which had been
+founded with all the promise of home and companionship
+was beginning to hold for her the foreboding
+of loneliness and something like abandonment. He
+knew it only when they were together here, but she
+had been in it alone and frightened more than in times
+of shared happiness.</p>
+<p>And why was this true? Why could it be either
+true or necessary unless, as she had told herself in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+panic moments and denied so persistently, she was
+a misfit in his broader life and a woman whom he
+could enjoy in solitude but dared not trust to comparison
+with others?</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIX' id='CHAPTER_XIX'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+</div>
+<p>At last she turned abruptly away, in order that the
+misery which would no longer submit to concealment
+might not show itself in her eyes, and
+stood looking out of the window.</p>
+<p>Spurrier crossed with anxious swiftness and took
+her again into his arms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When I have finished this business trip,&#8221; he declared
+fervently, &#8220;our separations shall end. They
+have been too many and too long&mdash;but I&#8217;ve paid for
+them in loneliness, dear. This call, that I&#8217;m answering
+now, is unexpected but it&#8217;s imperative and I can&#8217;t
+disobey it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned then, slowly and gravely, but with no
+lightening of the burdened anxiety in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not just that you have to go away, Jack,&#8221; she
+told him. &#8220;It&#8217;s a great deal more than that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What else is there, dearest?&#8221; His question was
+intoned with surprise. &#8220;When we are together, I
+have nothing else to ask of life. Have you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The place has been changed&mdash;mightily changed,&#8221;
+she went on musingly as though talking to herself
+rather than to him. &#8220;And yet the walls are the same
+as they were that day&mdash;when we both thought we
+had to die here together.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They are the dearer for that,&#8221; he exclaimed fervently.
+&#8220;That was what made us see things truly.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder,&#8221; she questioned, then meeting his eyes
+steadily she went on as though determined to say
+what must be said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you called Brother Hawkins in to marry
+us, I was afraid. I was afraid because I thought you
+were only doing it out of kindness, and that afterward
+you&#8217;d be ashamed of me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ashamed of you,&#8221; he echoed with indignant incredulity.
+&#8220;In God&#8217;s name how could I be?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or if not ashamed of me that you couldn&#8217;t help
+knowing that I was&mdash;what I am&mdash;all right here in
+the hills but that outside&mdash;I wouldn&#8217;t do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you were ever afraid of that, it was only because
+you were undervaluing yourself. You surely
+haven&#8217;t any ghost of such a fear left now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a little she stood silent again torn between the
+loyalty that hesitated to question him and the pride
+that was hurt.</p>
+<p>Finally she said simply: &#8220;It&#8217;s a bigger fear now.
+Unless I&#8217;m unpresentable, why do you&mdash;never take
+me anywhere with you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier laughed, vastly relieved that the
+mountain of her anxiety had resolved itself, as he
+thought, into a mole-hill. He could laugh because
+he had no suspicion of the chronic soreness of her
+heart and his answer was lightly made.</p>
+<p>&#8220;These trips have all been in connection with the
+sort of business, Glory, that would have meant keeping
+me away from you whether you had gone to town
+or not. When we travel together&mdash;and I want that
+we shall travel a great deal&mdash;I must be free to devote
+myself to you. I want to show the world to you
+and I want to show you to the world.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span></div>
+<p>That declaration he fancied ought to resolve her
+fears of his being ashamed of her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you were afraid I&#8217;d seem out of place,&#8221; she
+assured him, &#8220;I might be right sorry&mdash;and yet I think
+I&#8217;d understand. I&#8217;m not a fool and I know I&#8217;d make
+mistakes, but I was raised a lawyer&#8217;s daughter and
+I&#8217;ve got a pretty good business head&mdash;yet you&#8217;ve
+never told me anything of what this business is that
+calls you away. You always treat me as if there
+were no use in even trying to make me understand it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man no longer laughed. He could not explain
+that it was rather because she might understand too
+well than not well enough. Even to her, until he was
+ready to prove his intent by his actual deeds, it seemed
+impossible to give that story without the seeming of
+the plunderer of her people.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When the time comes that releases me from my
+pledge of absolute secrecy, dear,&#8221; he told her earnestly,
+&#8220;I mean to tell you all about my business&mdash;and
+I think you&#8217;ll approve, then. Now I don&#8217;t talk because
+I have no right to.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again there was silence, after which Glory said in
+a voice of still resolution which he had never heard
+from her before:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m ignorant and uncultivated, Jack, but to me
+marriage is a full partnership&mdash;or it isn&#8217;t anything.
+When Mr. Harrison came, I saw for the first time just
+how I looked to men like him. I was just &#8216;pore white
+trash.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did he&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; Spurrier broke off and his face
+went abruptly white with passion. Had Harrison
+been there at that moment he would have stood in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+danger at the hands of his employee, but Glory shook
+her head and hastened to quiet him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He wasn&#8217;t impolite, Jack. It wasn&#8217;t that&mdash;only
+I read in his eyes what he tried to hide. I only told
+you that because I wanted you to understand me.
+People here say that you give me everything but yourself;
+that I&#8217;m not good enough for you except right
+here where there&#8217;s nothing better.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is a damned lie,&#8221; he expostulated. &#8220;Who
+says it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Only women-folks and gossipy grannies that you
+can&#8217;t fight with, Jack,&#8221; she answered steadily. &#8220;But
+I&#8217;ve thought about it lots. I&#8217;ve come to think, dear,
+that maybe you ought to be free&mdash;and if you ought,&#8221;
+she paused, then the final assertion broke from her
+with an agonized voice, &#8220;then, I love you enough to
+set you free.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier seized her in his arms and his words came
+choked with vehement feeling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want you, Glory. I want you always and I
+couldn&#8217;t live without you. When I have to go away I
+endure it only by thinking of coming back to you.
+If you ever set me free as you call it, it will be only
+because <i>you</i> don&#8217;t want <i>me</i>. I suppose in that case I&#8217;d
+try to take my medicine&mdash;but I think it would about
+kill me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no danger of that, dear,&#8221; she declared.</p>
+<p>The man drew away for a moment and fumbled
+for words. His aptness of speech had deserted him
+and at last he spoke clumsily:</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s hard to explain just now, when you&#8217;ve accused
+me of not taking you into my confidence, but I stand
+at a point, Glory, where I&#8217;ve got the hardest fight
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+ahead of me I ever made. I stand to be ruined or to
+make good. I&#8217;ve got to use every minute and every
+thought in competition with quick brains and enormous
+power. Until its over I must be a machine
+with one idea ... and I&#8217;ll fail, dear, unless I can
+take with me the knowledge that you trust me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She looked up into his face and the misery in her
+eyes gave place to confidence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go ahead, Jack,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I believe in you and
+I&#8217;m not even afraid of your failing.&#8221; After a moment
+she clasped her arms tightly about him and
+added vehemently: &#8220;But whether you succeed or fail,
+come back to me, dear, because, except for your sake,
+it won&#8217;t make any difference to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That same afternoon Spurrier found time to visit
+the &#8220;witch woman.&#8221; It had dawned upon him since
+that night in the Senate chamber that, after all, Sim
+Colby might have been the least dangerous of his
+enemies, and the thought made him inquisitive.</p>
+<p>The old crone made her magic with abundant grotesquerie,
+but at its end she peered shrewdly into his
+eyes, and said:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reads hyar in the omends thet mebby ye comes
+too late.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier smiled grimly. He thought that himself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I dis&#8217;arns,&#8221; went on the hag portentously, &#8220;thet a
+blind man impereled ye mightily&mdash;a blind man thet
+plays a fiddle&mdash;but thars others beside him thet dwells
+fur away an&#8217; holds a mighty power of wealth.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A blind man! Spurrier&#8217;s remembrance flashed back
+to the visit of blind Joe Givins and the papers incautiously
+left on his table. Yet if he was genuinely
+blind they could have meant nothing to him&mdash;and if
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span>
+he was not genuinely blind it was hard to conceive of
+human nerves enduring without wincing that test of
+the gun thrust against the temple.</p>
+<p>Spurrier rose and paid his fee. Had he seen her
+in time, this warning would have averted disaster.
+Now it was something of a post-mortem.</p>
+<p>At the door of Martin Harrison&#8217;s office several days
+later Spurrier drew back his shoulders and braced
+himself. It was impossible to ignore the fact that
+he stood on the brink of total ruin; that his sole hope
+lay in persuading his principal that with more time
+and more money he would yet be able to succeed&mdash;and
+Harrison was as plastic to persuasion as a brass
+Buddha.</p>
+<p>But he had steeled himself for the interview&mdash;and
+now he turned the knob and swung back the mahogany
+door.</p>
+<p>Spurrier was familiar enough with the atmosphere
+of that office to read the signs correctly. The hushed
+air of nervousness that hung over it now betokened a
+chief in a mood which no one sought to stir to further
+irritation.</p>
+<p>Always in the past Spurrier had been deferentially
+ushered into a private office and treated as the future
+chief. Now, as though he were already a disinherited
+heir, he was left in the general waiting room, and he
+was left there for an hour. That cooling of the
+heel, he recognized as a warning of the cold reception
+to come&mdash;and an augury of ruin.</p>
+<p>At last he was called in, but he went with an unruffled
+demeanor which hid from the principal&#8217;s eye
+how near to breaking his inward confidence was
+strained.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I wired you to come at once,&#8221; began Harrison
+curtly, and Spurrier smiled as he nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I came at once, sir, except that I hadn&#8217;t been
+home for some time, and it was necessary to make a
+stop there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Home,&#8221; Martin&#8217;s brows lifted a trifle. &#8220;You mean
+the mountains.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly&mdash;for the time being, I&#8217;m located there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We may as well be honest with each other,&#8221; asserted
+the magnate. &#8220;I consider that under the circumstances
+you behaved with serious discourtesy and
+without candor.&#8221; For a casual moment his glance
+dwelt on the portrait of Vivien which stood on his
+table.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I disagree with you, sir. I preferred relating the
+full circumstances, which were unusual, when there
+was an opportunity to do so in person. I was kept
+there by your interests as well as my own.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That recital,&#8221; said the older man dryly, &#8220;is your
+concern. Now that I know the facts I find myself
+uninterested in the details. You have chosen your
+way. The question is whether we can travel it together.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I presume that the first point of that question
+demands a full report upon the business
+operations.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So far as I can see, they have collapsed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They have by no means collapsed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Suddenly the wrath that had been smoldering in
+Harrison&#8217;s eyes burst into tempest. He brought his
+clenched fist down upon his desk until inkwells and
+accessories rattled.</p>
+<p>This man&#8217;s moments of equinox were terrifying to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+those who must bow to his will&mdash;and his will held
+sway over broad horizons. If John Spurrier had not
+been intrepid he must have collapsed under the withering
+violence of the passion that rained on him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Before God,&#8221; cried Harrison, <a name='TC_13'></a><ins title='Was pacink'>pacing</ins> his floor like
+a lion that lashes itself to frenzy, &#8220;you undertook to
+avenge me on Trabue. You have drawn on me with
+carte-blanche liberties and spent fortunes like a prodigal!
+You have assured me that you had, at all times,
+the situation well in hand. Then, through some
+damned blunder, you failed. Let the money loss slide.
+Damn the money! I&#8217;m the laughingstock of the business
+world. I&#8217;m delivered over to Trabue&#8217;s enjoyment
+as a boob who failed. I&#8217;m an absurdity, and you&#8217;re
+responsible!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you&#8217;ve finished, sir,&#8221; said Spurrier quietly,
+&#8220;I shall endeavor to show you that none of those
+things have happened&mdash;that our failure is temporary
+and that when you undertook this enterprise you were
+in no impetuous haste as to the time of its accomplishment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The legislature doesn&#8217;t meet for two years,&#8221; Harrison
+barked back at him. &#8220;That will be two years
+of preparation for Trabue. Now he&#8217;s fully warned,
+where do we get off?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At our original point of destination, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The opportunity hound began his argument. His
+demeanor of unruffled calm and entire confidence
+began to exercise its persuasive force. Harrison
+cooled somewhat, but Spurrier was fighting, beneath
+his pose, as a man who has cramps in deep water
+fights for his life. These few minutes would determine
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span>
+his fate, and he was totally at the mercy of
+this single arbiter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have now all the options we need on the far
+side of Hemlock Mountain,&#8221; Spurrier summarized at
+last. &#8220;All except one tract which belongs to Bud
+Hawkins, who is a preacher and a friend of mine.
+He must have more generous terms, but I will be able
+to do business with him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You talk of the options on the far side of the
+ridge,&#8221; Harrison broke in belligerently. &#8220;That is the
+minor field.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be able to repeat that performance on the near
+side.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You will not! A repetition of your performance
+is the last thing we crave. Any movement now would
+be only a piling up of warnings. For the present you
+will give every indication of having abandoned the
+project.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is my idea, sir. I was not speaking of immediate
+but future activities. Also&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; In spite
+of his desperation of plight the younger man&#8217;s bearing
+flashed into a challenging undernote of its old
+audacity, &#8220;when I used the word &#8216;repeat&#8217; I referred
+to the successful portion of my effort. There was no
+failure on the land end. It was the charter that went
+wrong&mdash;through the deceit of a man we had to trust.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A man whom you selected,&#8221; Harrison caught him
+up. &#8220;You understood, in advance, the chances of your
+game. It was agreed upon your own insistence that
+your hand should be absolutely free&mdash;and freedom
+of method carries exclusiveness of responsibility.
+Traitors exist. They don&#8217;t furnish excuses.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor am I making them. I am merely stating facts
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span>
+which you seem inclined to confuse. I grant the
+failure but I also claim the partial success.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Harrison seated himself, and as the interview
+stretched Spurrier&#8217;s nerves stretched with it under the
+placid surface of his plunger&#8217;s camouflage. He had,
+as yet, no way of guessing how the verdict would go,
+and now the capitalist&#8217;s face was hardened in discouragement.
+It was a face of merciless inflexibility. The
+sentence had been prepared in the judge&#8217;s mind.
+There remained only its enunciation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing is to be gained by mincing my words,
+Spurrier,&#8221; declared Spurrier&#8217;s chief. &#8220;We know precisely
+where you stand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Harrison extended his hand with its fingers spread
+and closed it slowly into a clenched fist. &#8220;I hold
+you&mdash;there! I can crush you to a pulp of absolute
+ruin. You know that. The only question is whether
+I want, or not, to do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And whether, or not, you can afford to do it,&#8221;
+amended the other with an audacity that he by no
+means felt. &#8220;You must decide whether you can afford
+to accept tamely and as a final defeat, a mere reversal,
+which I&mdash;and no one else&mdash;can turn into eventual
+victory.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have duly considered that. I had implicit confidence
+in your abilities. You have struck at my
+personal feeling for you by a silence that was not
+frank. You have allied yourself with the mountain
+people by marriage, and we stand on opposite sides of
+the line of interest. You have all the while been
+watched by our enemies, and I regard you as a defeated
+man. If I choose to cast you aside, you go to
+the scrap heap. You will never recover.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span></div>
+<p>That was an assertion which there was neither
+health nor wisdom in contradicting and Spurrier
+waited. His last card was played.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I am going to cast you aside&mdash;bankrupt you&mdash;ruin
+you!&#8221; blazed out Harrison, &#8220;unless you absolutely
+meet my requirements during a period of probation.
+That period will engage you in a very different matter.
+For the present you are through with the Kentucky
+mountains. The new task will be a difficult one, and
+it should put you on your mettle. It is one that can&#8217;t
+be accomplished at all unless you can do it. You have
+that one chance to retrieve yourself. Take it or
+leave it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are your terms?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You will sail to-morrow for Liverpool. I will give
+you explicit instructions to-night. Go prepared for an
+extended stay abroad.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For the first time Spurrier&#8217;s face paled and insurrection
+flared in his pupils.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sail for Europe to-morrow!&#8221; he exclaimed
+vehemently. &#8220;I&#8217;ll see you damned first! Doesn&#8217;t it
+occur to you that a man has his human side? I have
+a wife and a home and when I am ordered to leave
+them for an indefinite time I&#8217;m entitled to a breathing
+space in which to set my own affairs in shape. I am
+willing enough to undertake your bidding&mdash;but not
+to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier paused at the end of his outbreak and
+stood looking down at the seated figure, which to
+all intents and purposes might have been the god that
+held, for him, life and death in his hand.</p>
+<p>And as he looked Spurrier thought he had never
+seen such glacial coldness and merciless indifference
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+in any human face. He had known this man in the
+thundering of passion before which the walls about
+him seemed to tremble, but this manifestation of adamant
+implacability was new, and he realized that he
+had invited destruction in defying it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As you please,&#8221; replied Harrison crisply, &#8220;but it&#8217;s
+to-morrow or not at all. I&#8217;ve already outlined the
+alternative and since you refuse, our business seems
+concluded. Next time you feel disposed to talk or
+think of what you&#8217;re entitled to, remember that my
+view is different. All your claims stand forfeit in
+my judgment. You are entitled to just what I choose
+to offer&mdash;and no more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The chief glanced toward the door with a glance
+of dismissal, and the door became to Spurrier the emblem
+of finality. Yet he did not at once move toward
+it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I appreciate the need of prompt obedience, where
+there is an urge of haste,&#8221; he persisted, &#8220;but if a few
+days wouldn&#8217;t imperil results, I want those days to
+make a flying trip to Kentucky and to my wife.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The face of the seated man remained obdurately set
+but his eyes blazed again with a note of personal anger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;At a time when I was reasonably interested, you
+chose to leave me unenlightened about your domestic
+arrangements. Now I can claim no concern in
+them. Most wives, however, permit their husbands
+such latitude of movement as business requires. If
+yours does not it is your own misfortune. I think
+that&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier knew that the jaws of the trap were closing
+on him. He had been too hasty in his outburst
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span>
+and he turned toward the door, but as his hand fell
+on the bronze knob Harrison spoke again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Think it over, Spurrier. I can&mdash;and will ruin you&mdash;unless
+you yield. It is no time for maudlin sentiment,
+but until five-thirty this afternoon, I shall not
+consider your answer final. Up to that hour you
+may reconsider it, if you wish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will notify you at five,&#8221; responded the lieutenant
+as he let himself out and closed the door behind him.</p>
+<p>That day the opportunity hound spent in an agony
+of conflicting emotions. That the other held a bolt
+of destruction and was in the mood to launch it he
+did not pretend to doubt. If it were launched even
+the land upon which his cottage stood would no longer
+be his own. He must either return to Glory empty-handed
+and bankrupt, or strain with a new tax, the
+confidence he had asked of her, with the pledge that
+he would return soon and for good.</p>
+<p>But if, even at the cost of humbled pride and Glory&#8217;s
+hurt, he maintained his business relations, the path to
+eventual success remained open.</p>
+<p>As long as the cards were being shuffled chance
+beckoned and at five o&#8217;clock Spurrier went into a
+cigar-store booth and called a downtown telephone
+number.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You hold the whip hand, sir,&#8221; he announced curtly
+when a secretary had put Harrison on the wire.
+&#8220;When do I report for final instructions?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come to my house this evening,&#8221; ordered the
+master.</p>
+<p>Most of the hours of that evening, except the two
+in Harrison&#8217;s study, Spurrier spent in writing to Glory,
+tearing up letter after letter while the nervous moisture
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span>
+bedewed his brow. It was so impossible to give
+her any true or comprehensive explanation of the
+pressing weight of compulsion. His messages must
+have the limp of unreason. He was crossing the ocean
+without her and she would read into it a sort of
+abandonment that would hurt and wound her. He
+had taxed everything else in life, and now he was
+overtaxing her loyalty.</p>
+<p>Yet he believed that if in his depleted treasury of
+life there was one thing left upon which he could draw
+prodigally and with faith, it was that love; a love
+that would stand staunch though he were forced to
+hurt it once again.</p>
+<p>So Spurrier sailed and, having arrived on European
+soil, took up the work that threw him into relations
+with men of large caliber in Capel Court and Threadneedle
+Street. His mission carried him to the continent
+as well; from Paris to Brussels and from Brussels
+to Hamburg and Berlin, where the quaint customs
+of the Kentucky Cumberlands seemed as remote as
+the life of Mars&mdash;remote but, to Spurrier, as alluring
+as the thought of salvation to a recluse who has foresworn
+the things of earth.</p>
+<p>In terms of dead reckoning, Berlin is as far from
+Hemlock Mountain as Hemlock Mountain is from
+Berlin, but in terms of human relations Glory felt
+the distance as infinitely greater than did her husband.
+To him the Atlantic was only an ocean three thousand
+miles wide; often crossed and discounted by familiarity.
+To her it was a measureless waste separating
+all she knew from another world. To him continental
+dimensions were reckoned in hours of commonplace
+railway journeying, but to her the &#8220;measured mile&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
+was both lengthwise and perpendicular, and when she
+passed old friends she fancied that she detected in
+their glances either pity for her desertion or the smirk
+of &#8220;I-told-you-so&#8221; malevolence.</p>
+<p>It even crept to her ears that &#8220;some folks&#8221; spoke
+of her as &#8220;the widder Spurrier&#8221; and that Tassie Plumford
+had chuckled, &#8220;I reckon he&#8217;s done gone off an&#8217;
+left her fer good an&#8217; all this time. Folks says he&#8217;s
+fled away cl&#8217;ar acrost ther ocean-sea.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory told herself that she had promised faith and
+that she was in no danger of faltering, but as the
+weeks lengthened into months and the months followed
+each other, her waiting became bitter.</p>
+<p>In Berlin John Spurrier passed as a British subject,
+bearing British passports. That had been part
+of the careful plan to prevent discovery of what
+American interests he represented and it had proven
+effective. He had almost accomplished the difficult
+task of self-redemption, set him by the man whose confidence
+he had strained.</p>
+<p>Then came the bolt out of heaven. The inconceivable
+suddenness of the war cloud belched and
+broke, but he remained confident that he would have
+a chance to finish up before the paralysis cramped
+bourse and exchange.</p>
+<p>England would not come in, and he, the seeming
+British subject, would have safe conduct out of
+Germany.</p>
+<p>Now he must get back. This would mean the
+soaring of oil prices, and along new lines the battle
+must be pitched back there at home, before it was too
+late.</p>
+<p>So Spurrier finished his packing. He was going out
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
+onto the streets to watch the upflame of the war spirit
+and to make railway reservations.</p>
+<p>There was a knock at the door and the man opened
+it. Stiffly erect, stood a squad of military police and
+stiffly their lieutenant saluted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are Herr John Spurrier?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+<p>The man nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is, perhaps, in the nature of a formality, which
+you will be able to arrange,&#8221; said the officer. &#8220;But I
+am directed to place you under arrest. England is
+in the war. You are said to be a former soldier.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XX' id='CHAPTER_XX'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Over the ragged lands that lay on the &#8220;nigh
+side&#8221; of Hemlock Mountain breathed a spirit
+of excitement and mighty hope. It had been
+two years since John Spurrier had left the field he had
+planned to develop, and in those years had come the
+transition of rebirth.</p>
+<p>Along muddy streets the hogs still wallowed, but
+now they were deeply rutted by the teaming of ponderous
+oil gear, and one saw young men in pith helmets
+and pig-skin puttees; keen-faced engineers and oil
+prospectors drawn in by the challenge of wealth from
+the far trails of Mexico and the West. One heard the
+jargon of that single business and the new vocabulary
+of its devotees. &#8220;Wild-catters&#8221; following surface indications
+or hunches were testing and well-driving.
+Gushers rewarded some and &#8220;dry holes&#8221; and &#8220;dusters&#8221;
+disappointed others. Into the mediæval life of hills
+that had stood age-long unaltered and aloof came the
+infusion of hot-blooded enterprise, the eager questing
+after quick and miraculous wealth.</p>
+<p>In Lexington and Winchester oil exchanges carried
+the activity of small bourses. In newspapers a new
+form of advertisement proclaimed itself.</p>
+<p>Oil was king. Oil and its by-product, gasoline, that
+the armies needed and that the thousands of engines
+on the earth and in the air so greedily devoured.</p>
+<p>But over on the far side of the ridge men only
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span>
+fretted and chafed as yet. They had the oil under
+their feet, but for it there was no outlet. Like a land
+without a seaport, they looked over at neighbors growing
+rich while they themselves still &#8220;hurted fer needcessities.&#8221;</p>
+<p>American Oil and Gas had locked them in while it
+milked the other cow. It had its needed charters for
+piping both fields, but a man who was either dead or
+somewhere across the world held the way barred in
+a stalemate of controlled rights of way.</p>
+<p>Glory thought less about the wonderful things that
+were going forward than did others about her, because
+she had a broken heart. No letters came from
+Spurrier, and the faith that she struggled to hold high
+like a banner nailed to the masthead of her life, hung
+drooping. In the end her colors had been struck.</p>
+<p>If John Spurrier returned in search of her now
+she would go into hiding from him, but it was most
+unlikely that he would return. He had married her
+on impulse and under a pressure of excitement. He
+had loved her passionately&mdash;but not with a strong
+enough fidelity to hold him true&mdash;and now she believed
+he had turned back again to his old idols. She
+was repudiated, and she ought to hate him with the
+bitterness of her mountain blood, yet in her heart&#8217;s
+core, though she would never forgive him and never
+return to him, she knew that she still loved him and
+would always love him.</p>
+<p>She no longer feared that she would have hampered
+him in the society of his more finished world.
+She had visited Helen Merriwell and had come to
+know that other world for herself. She found that
+the gentle blood in her veins could claim its own
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
+rights and respond graciously. Hers had been a submerged
+aristocracy, but it had come out of its
+chrysalis, bright-winged.</p>
+<p>Then one day something happened that turned
+Glory&#8217;s little personal world upside down and brought
+a readjustment of all its ideas.</p>
+<p>Sim Colby owned a little patch of land beside his
+homestead place, over cross the mountain, and he was
+among those who became rich. He was not so rich
+as local repute declared him, but rich enough to set
+stirring the avarice of an erstwhile friend, who owned
+no land at all.</p>
+<p>So ex-Private Severance came over to the deserter&#8217;s
+house with a scheme conceived in envy and born of
+greed. He was bent on blackmail.</p>
+<p>When he first arrived, the talk ran along general
+lines, because &#8220;Blind Joe,&#8221; the fiddler, was at the
+house, and the real object of the visit was confidential.
+Blind Joe had also been an oil beneficiary, and he and
+Sim Colby had become partners in a fashion. During
+that relationship Blind Joe had told Sim some things
+that he told few others.</p>
+<p>But when Joe left and the pipes were lighted Severance
+settled himself in a back-tilted chair and gazed
+reflectively at the crest of the timber line.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You an&#8217; me&#8217;s been partners for a right long spell,
+Bud Grant, ain&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Colby started. The use of that discarded name
+brought back the past with its ghosts of fear. He
+had almost forgotten that once he had been Bud Grant,
+and a deserter from the army. It was all part of a
+bygone and walled-in long ago. Though they were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+quite alone he looked furtively about him and spoke
+in a lowered voice:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t call me by thet name. Thar ain&#8217;t no man
+but you knows erbout&mdash;what I used to be.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thet&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been studyin&#8217; erbout. Nobody
+else but me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Severance sat silent for a while after that announcement,
+but there was a meaning smile on his lips, and
+Colby paled a shade whiter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>I</i> reckon I kin trust ye; I always hev,&#8221; he declared
+with a specious confidence.</p>
+<p>Severance nodded. &#8220;I was on guard duty an&#8217; I
+suffered ye ter escape,&#8221; he went reminiscently on. &#8220;I
+knows thet ye kilt Captain Comyn, an&#8217; I&#8217;ve done kept
+a close mouth all these years. Now ye&#8217;re a rich man
+an&#8217; I&#8217;m a pore one. Hit looks like ter me ye owes
+me a debt an&#8217; ye&#8217;d ought ter do a leetle something
+for me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So that was it! Colby knew that if he yielded at
+all, this man&#8217;s avarice and his importunities would
+feed on themselves increasingly and endlessly. Yet
+he dared not refuse, so he sought to temporize.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon thar&#8217;s right smart jestice in what ye says,&#8221;
+he conceded, &#8220;but I don&#8217;t know jest yit how I stands
+or how much money I&#8217;m wuth. Ye&#8217;ll have ter give
+me a leetle time ter find out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But when Severance mounted his mule and rode
+away, Sim Colby gave him only a short start and
+then hurried on foot through the hill tangles by a short
+cut that would intercept his visitor&#8217;s course.</p>
+<p>He knew that Severance would have to ride through
+the same gorge in which Sim had waylaid Spurrier,
+and he meant to get there first, rifle-armed.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
+<p>It was sunset when, quite unsuspecting of danger, at
+least for the moment, Severance turned his mule into
+the gorge. He was felicitating himself, since without
+an acre of land or a drop of oil he had &#8220;declared himself
+in&#8221; on another&#8217;s wealth. His mule was a laggard
+in pace, and the rider did not urge him. He was content
+to amble.</p>
+<p>Back of the rock walls of the great cleft, the woods
+lay hushed and dense in the closing shadows. An owl
+quavered softly, and the water among the ferns whispered.
+All else was quiet.</p>
+<p>But from just a little way back, a figure hitched forward
+as it lay belly-down in the &#8220;laurel hell.&#8221; It
+sighted a rifle and pressed a finger.</p>
+<p>The mule snorted and stopped dead with a flirt of
+ears and tail and with no word, without even a groan,
+the rider toppled sidewise and slid from the saddle.</p>
+<p>The man back in the brush peered out. He noted
+how still the crumpled figure lay between the feet of
+the patient, mouse-colored beast, that switched at
+flies with its tail. It lay twisted almost double with
+one arm bent beneath its chest.</p>
+<p>So Colby crept closer. It would be as well to haul
+the body back into the tangle where it would not be
+so soon discovered, and to start the beast along its
+way with a slap on the flank.</p>
+<p>But just as the assassin stooped, Severance&#8217;s right
+hand darted out and, as it did so, there was a quick
+glint of blue steel, and three instantly successive
+reports.</p>
+<p>Colby staggered backward with a sense of betrayal
+and a horrible realization of physical pain. His rifle
+dropped from a shattered hand and jets of blood broke
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span>
+out through his rent clothing. Each of those three
+pistol balls had taken effect at a range so close that he
+had been powder-burned. He knew he was mortally
+hurt, and that the other would soon be dead if he
+was not so already.</p>
+<p>Colby began crawling. He was mangled as if by
+an explosion, but instinct drove him. Twice he fainted
+and recovered dim consciousness and still dragged
+himself tediously along.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Glory was alone in her house. Her father, who had
+been living with her of late, had gone to the county
+seat overnight.</p>
+<p>The young woman sat in silence, and the sewing
+upon which she had been busied lay in her lap forgotten.
+In her eyes was the far-away look of one
+who eats out one&#8217;s heart in thoughts that can neither
+be solved nor banished.</p>
+<p>Then she heard a faint call. It was hardly more
+than a gasped whisper, and as she rose, startled, and
+went to the door she saw striving to reach it a shape
+of terrible human wreckage.</p>
+<p>Sim Colby&#8217;s clothes were almost torn from him and
+blood, dried brown, and blood freshly flowing,
+mingled their ugly smears upon him. His lips were
+livid and his face gray.</p>
+<p>Glory ran to him with a horrified scream. She did
+not yet recognize him, and he gasped out a plea for
+whisky.</p>
+<p>With the utmost effort of her young strength she
+got him in, and managed to straighten out the mutilated
+body with pillows under its head.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span></div>
+<p>But after a little the stimulant brought a slight reviving,
+and he talked in broken and disjointed phrases.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit war Severance,&#8221; he mumbled. &#8220;I fought back&mdash;I
+reckon I kilt him, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory gazed in bewildered alarm about the house.
+Brother Bud Hawkins was at Uncle Jimmy Litchfield&#8217;s
+place, and she must get medical help, though she
+feared that the wounded man would be dead before
+her return.</p>
+<p>When she came back with the preacher, who also
+&#8220;healed human bodies some,&#8221; Colby was still alive
+but near his passing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ef thar&#8217;s aught on your conscience, Sim,&#8221; said
+the old preacher gently, &#8220;hit&#8217;s time ter make yore peace
+with Almighty God, fer ye&#8217;re goin&#8217; ter stand afore
+him in an hour more. Air ye ready ter face Him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The dying man looked up, and above the weakness
+and the suffering that filled his eyes, showed a dominating
+expression of terror. If ever a human being
+needed to be shriven he thought it was himself.</p>
+<p>They had to bend close to catch his feeble syllables,
+as he said: &#8220;Git paper&mdash;write this down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The preacher obeyed, kneeling on the floor, and
+though the words were few, their utterance required
+dragging minutes, punctuated with breaks of silence
+and gasping.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit warn&#8217;t John Spurrier&mdash;thet kilt Captain
+Comyn back tha&#8217;r in the Philippines.... I knows
+who done hit&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; He broke off there, and the girl
+closed her hands over her face. &#8220;I sought ter kill
+Spurrier&mdash;but I warn&#8217;t with them&mdash;thet attackted him
+hyar&mdash;an&#8217; wounded ther woman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Once more a long hiatus interrupted the recital and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span>
+then the mangled creature went on: &#8220;Hit was ther
+oil folks thet deevised thet murder scheme.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The preacher was busily writing the record of this
+death-bed statement and Glory stood pale and distraught.</p>
+<p>The words &#8220;oil people&#8221; were ringing in her ears.
+What connection could Spurrier have had with them:
+what enmity could they have had for him?</p>
+<p>But out of the confusion of her thoughts another
+thing stood forth with the sudden glare of revelation.
+This man might die before he finished and if he could
+not tell all he knew, he must first tell that which would
+clear her husband&#8217;s name. Though that husband had
+turned his back on her, her duty to him in this matter
+must take precedence over the rest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Joe Givins&mdash;&#8221; began Colby once more in laborious
+syllables, but peremptorily the girl halted him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind Joe Givins just now,&#8221; she commanded
+with as sharp a finality as though to her had been
+delegated the responsibility of his judgment. &#8220;You
+said you knew who killed Captain Comyn. Who
+was it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The eyes in the wounded and stricken face gazed up
+at her in mute appeal as a sinner might look at a
+father confessor, pleading that he be spared the bitterest
+dregs of his admission.</p>
+<p>Glory read that glance and her own delicate features
+hardened. She leaned forward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I brought you in here and succored you,&#8221; she
+asserted with a sternness which she could not have
+commanded in her own behalf. &#8220;You&#8217;re going before
+Almighty God&mdash;and unless you answer that question
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+honestly&mdash;no prayers shall go with you for forgiveness.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory!&#8221; The name broke in shocked horror from
+the bearded lips of the preacher. &#8220;Glory, the mercy
+of God hain&#8217;t ter be interfered with by mortals.
+Ther man&#8217;s dying!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Upon him the young woman wheeled with blazing
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;God calls on his servants for justice to the living
+as well as mercy to the dying,&#8221; she declared. &#8220;Sim
+Colby, who killed Captain Comyn?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I done hit,&#8221; came the unwillingly wrung confession.
+&#8220;My real name&#8217;s Grant.... Severance aided
+me.... Thet&#8217;s why I sought to kill Spurrier. I
+deemed he war a huntin&#8217; me down.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; ordered the young woman, &#8220;what about
+Joe Givins?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again a long pause, then: &#8220;Blind Joe Givins&mdash;only
+he ain&#8217;t no blinder than me&mdash;read papers hyar&mdash;he
+diskivered thet Spurrier was atter oil rights&mdash;he
+tipped off ther oil folks&mdash;he war their spy all ther
+time&mdash;shammin&#8217; ter be blind&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; There the speaker
+struggled to breathe and let his head fall back with
+the utterance incomplete. Five minutes later he was
+dead.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit don&#8217;t seem ter me,&#8221; said Brother Hawkins a
+short time later, while Glory still stood in dazed and
+trance-like wonderment, &#8220;es ef what he said kin be
+true. Why ef hit be, John Spurrier was aimin&#8217; ter
+plunder us hyar all ther time! He was counselin&#8217; us
+ter sell out&mdash;an&#8217; he was buyin&#8217;. I kain&#8217;t believe that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Glory had drawn back to the wall of the room
+and into her eyes had come a new expression. The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+expression of one who must tear aside a veil and
+know the truth, and who dreads what that truth
+may be.</p>
+<p>She had said that justice, no less than mercy, was
+God&#8217;s command laid upon mortals. She had, almost
+by the extremity of withholding from Colby his hope
+of salvation until he spoke, won from him the declaration
+which would give back to John Spurrier an unsmirched
+name. Once Spurrier had said that was his
+strongest wish in life. But now justice called again:
+this time justice to her own people and perhaps it
+meant the unveiling of duplicity in the man she had
+married.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Brother Hawkins,&#8221; she declared in a low but fervent
+voice, &#8220;if it&#8217;s not true, it&#8217;s a slander that I can&#8217;t
+let stand. If it <i>is</i> true, I must undo the wrong he&#8217;s
+sought to do&mdash;if I can. Please wait.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then she was tearing at the bit of paneling that
+gave access to the secret cabinet, and poring over
+papers from a broken and rifled strong box.</p>
+<p>There was the uncontrovertible record, clear writ,
+and at length her pale face came up resolutely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand it all yet,&#8221; she told the preacher.
+&#8220;But he was buying. He bought everything that&#8217;s
+been sold this side the ridge. He was seeking to influence
+the legislature, too. I&#8217;ve got to talk to my
+father.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>It was the next night, when old Dyke Cappeze had
+ridden back from the county seat, that he sat under
+the lamp in the room where Sim Colby had died, and
+on the table before him were spread the papers that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span>
+had lain unread so long in John Spurrier&#8217;s secret
+cabinet.</p>
+<p>Across from him sat Glory with her fingers spasmodically
+clutched and her eyes riveted on his face as
+he read and studied the documents, which at first he
+had been loath to inspect without the permission of
+their owner. He had been convinced, however, when
+Glory had told the story of the dying confession and
+had appealed to him for counsel.</p>
+<p>&#8220;By what you tell me,&#8221; the old lawyer had summarized
+at the end of her recital, &#8220;you forced from
+this man his admission which cleared John Spurrier
+of the charge that&#8217;s been hanging over him. You set
+out to serve him and refused to be turned aside when
+Colby balked.... But that confession didn&#8217;t end
+there. It went on and besides clearing Jack in that
+respect it seems to have involved him in another way.
+You can&#8217;t use a part of a confession and discard the
+balance. Perhaps we can serve him as well as others
+best by going into the whole of the affair.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So now Glory interrupted by no word or question,
+despite her anxiety to understand and her hoping
+against hope for a verdict which should leave John
+Spurrier clean of record.</p>
+<p>But if she refrained from breaking in on the study
+that engrossed her father and wrinkled his parchment-like
+forehead, she could not help reading the expression
+of his eyes, the growing sternness and indignation
+of his stiffening lips&mdash;and of drawing the moral
+that when he spoke his words must be those of condemnation.</p>
+<p>The strident song of the katydids came in through
+the windows and the moon dropped behind the hill
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+crests before Dyke Cappeze spoke, and Brother Hawkins,
+who was spending the night at that house,
+smoked alone on the porch, unwilling to intrude on
+the confidences that these two might wish to exchange.</p>
+<p>Finally the lawyer folded the last paper and
+looked up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you want the whole truth, little gal?&#8221; he inquired
+bluntly. &#8220;How much do you still love this
+man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory flushed then paled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess,&#8221; she said and her words were very low
+and soft, &#8220;I&#8217;ll love him so long as I live&mdash;though I
+hate myself for doing it. He wearied of me and
+forgot me&mdash;but I can&#8217;t do likewise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then her chin came up and her voice rang with a
+quiet finality.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I want the truth ... the whole truth without
+any softening.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then as I see it, it&#8217;s simply this. A war was on
+between two groups of financiers. American Oil and
+Gas had held a monopoly and maintained a corrupt
+control in the legislature that stifled competition.
+That&#8217;s why the other oil boom failed. The second
+group was trying to slip up on these corruptionists
+and gain the control by a campaign of surprise. Jack
+Spurrier appears to have been the ambassador of that
+second group&mdash;and he seems to have failed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The wife nodded. Even yet she unconsciously held
+a brief for his defense.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So far as you&#8217;ve gone,&#8221; she reminded her father,
+&#8220;you show him to have been what is commonly called
+a &#8216;practical business man&#8217;&mdash;but no worse than the
+men he fought.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span></div>
+<p>Cappeze bowed his head gravely and his next words
+came reluctantly. &#8220;So far, yes. Of course he could
+have done none of the things he did had he not first
+won the confidence of those poor ignorant folk that
+are our neighbors and our friends. Of course it was
+because they believed in him and followed his counsel
+that they sold their birthrights to men with whom he
+pretended to have no connection&mdash;and yet who took
+their orders from him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; Glory started, halted and leaned forward
+with her hands against her breast and her utterance
+was the monotone of a voice forced to a hard question:
+&#8220;Then what I feared was true? He lived
+among us and made friends of us&mdash;only to rob us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If by &#8216;us&#8217; you mean the mountain people, I fear
+me that&#8217;s precisely what he did. I can see no other
+explanation. Which ever of these two groups won
+meant to exploit and plunder us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a little she made no answer, but the delicate
+color of her cheeks was gone to an ivory whiteness
+and the violet eyes were hardening.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps we oughtn&#8217;t to judge him too harshly
+for these things,&#8221; said the father comfortingly. &#8220;The
+scroll of my bitterness against him is already heavy
+enough and to spare. He has broken your heart and
+that&#8217;s enough for me. As to the rest there are many
+so-called honorable gentlemen who are no more scrupulous.
+We demand clean conduct here in these
+hills,&#8221; a fierce bitterness came into his words, &#8220;but
+then we are ignorant, backwoods folk! There are
+many intricate ins and outs to this business and I don&#8217;t
+presume to speak with absolute conclusiveness yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Outside the katydids sang their prophecies of frost
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+to come and an owl hooted. Glory Spurrier sat staring
+ahead of her and at last she said aloud, in that
+tone which one uses when a thought finds expression,
+unconscious that it has been vocal: &#8220;So he won our
+faith&mdash;with his clear eyes and his honest smile&mdash;only
+to swindle and rob us!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My God, if I were a younger man,&#8221; broke out the
+father passionately, rising from his chair and clenching
+the damaging papers in his talon-like fingers, &#8220;I&#8217;d
+learn the oil game. I&#8217;d take this information and use
+it against both their gangs&mdash;and I believe I could
+force them both to their knees.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He paused and the momentary fire died out of his
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m too old a dog for new tricks though,&#8221; he added
+dejectedly, &#8220;and there&#8217;s no one else to do it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How could it be done?&#8221; demanded Glory rousing
+herself from her trance. &#8220;Between them they
+hold all the power, don&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;As far as I can make out,&#8221; Cappeze explained
+with the interest of the legalistic mind for tackling
+an abstruse problem, &#8220;Spurrier had completed his
+arch as to one of his two purposes&mdash;all except its
+keystone. He had yet to gain a passage way through
+Brother Hawkins&#8217; land. With that he would have
+held the completed right-of-way&mdash;and it&#8217;s the only
+one. The other gang of pirates hold the ability to get
+a charter but no right of way over which to use it.
+Now the man who could deliver Brother Hawkins&#8217;
+concession would have a key. He could force Spurrier&#8217;s
+crowd to agree to almost anything, and with
+Spurrier&#8217;s crowd he could wring a compromise from
+the others. Bud Hawkins is like the delegate at a convention
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span>
+who can break a deadlock. God knows I&#8217;d
+love to tackle it&mdash;but it&#8217;s too late for me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory had come to her feet, and stood an incarnation
+of combat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not too late for me,&#8221; she said quietly. &#8220;Perhaps
+I&#8217;m too crude to go into John Spurrier&#8217;s world
+of cultivated people but I&#8217;m shrewd enough to go
+into his world of business!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You!&#8221; exclaimed the father in astonishment, then
+after a moment an eager light slowly dawned in his
+eyes and he broke out vehemently: &#8220;By God in
+Heaven, girl, I believe you&#8217;re the man for the job!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Call Brother Hawkins in,&#8221; commanded Glory.
+&#8220;We need his help.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Before he reached the door old Cappeze turned on
+his heel.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory,&#8221; he said, &#8220;we&#8217;ve need to move out of this
+house and go back to my place. Here we&#8217;re dwelling
+under a dishonest roof.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to leave it,&#8221; she responded quickly, &#8220;but
+I&#8217;m going farther away than that. I&#8217;m going to study
+oil and I&#8217;m going to do it in the Bluegrass lowlands.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXI' id='CHAPTER_XXI'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+</div>
+<p>John Spurrier stepped from the train at Carnettsville
+into a life that had been revolutionized.
+At last he had succeeded in leaving his German
+exile. His own country was in the war but he, with the
+equipment of a soldier, bore a dishonored name, which
+would bar him from a commission. Here he found
+the development of his dreams realized, but by other
+hands than his own.</p>
+<p>Above all, he must see Glory. He had cabled her
+and written her, so she would be expecting him. Now
+he gazed about streets through which teemed the new
+activity.</p>
+<p>Here was the thing he had seen in his dreams when
+he stood on wooded hills and thought in the terms
+of the future. Here it stood vivid and actual before
+the eyes that had visioned it.</p>
+<p>With a groan he turned into the road homeward on
+a hired horse. He still meant to fight, and unless the
+Bud Hawkins property had escaped him, he would
+still have to be accounted with&mdash;but great prizes had
+slipped away.</p>
+<p>At the gate of his house, his heart rose into his
+throat. The power of his emotion almost stifled him.
+Never had his love for Glory flickered. Never had he
+thought or dreamed of anything else or any one else
+so dearly and so constantly as of her.</p>
+<p>He stood at the fence with half-closed eyes for a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+moment, steadying himself against the surges of up-welling
+emotion, then, raising his eyes, he saw that
+the windows and the door were nailed up. The chimney
+stood dead and smokeless.</p>
+<p>Panic clutched at his throat as with a physical grasp.
+Before him trooped a hundred associations unaccountably
+dear. They were all memories of little
+things, mostly foolish little things that went into the
+sacred intimacy of his life with Glory.</p>
+<p>Now there was no Glory there.</p>
+<p>He rode at the best speed left in his tired horse over
+to old Cappeze&#8217;s house, and, as he dismounted, saw
+the lawyer, greatly aged and broken, standing in the
+door.</p>
+<p>One glance at that face confirmed all the fears with
+which he had been battling. It was a face as stern as
+those on the frieze of the prophets. In it there was
+no ghost of the old welcome, no hope of any relenting.
+This old man saw in him an enemy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Glory?&#8221; demanded Spurrier as he hurried
+up to the doorstep, and the other looked accusingly
+back into his eyes and answered in cold and bitterly
+clipped syllables.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wherever she is, sir, it&#8217;s her wish to be there
+alone.&#8221; Suddenly the old eyes flamed and the old
+voice rose thin and passionate. &#8220;If I burned in hell
+for it to the end of eternity, I would give you no
+other word of her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She&mdash;she is not dead, then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;but dead to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Cappeze,&#8221; said Spurrier steadily, &#8220;are you
+sure that I may not have explanations that may change
+her view of me?&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;We know,&#8221; said the lawyer in a voice out of which
+the passion had passed, but which had the dead quality
+of an opinion inflexibly solidified, &#8220;that since
+your marriage, you never made her the companion of
+any hour that was not a backwoods hour. We know
+that you never told us the truth about yourself or your
+enterprises&mdash;that you came to us as a friend, won our
+confidence, and sought to exploit us. Your record is
+one of lies and unfaithfulness, and we have cast you
+out. That is her decision and with me her wish is
+sacred.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The returned exile stood meeting the relentless eyes
+of the old man who had been his first friend in these
+hills and for a few moments he did not trust himself
+to speak.</p>
+<p>The shock of those shuttered windows and that
+blankly staring front at the house where he had looked
+for welcome; the collapse of all the dreams that
+had sustained him while a prisoner in an internment
+camp and a refugee hounded across the German border
+were visiting upon him a prostration that left him
+trembling and shaken.</p>
+<p>Finally he commanded his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To me, too, her wish is sacred&mdash;but not until I hear
+it from her own lips. She alone has the right to
+condemn me and not even she until I have made my
+plea to her. Great God, man, my silence hasn&#8217;t been
+voluntary. I&#8217;ve been cut off in a Hun prison-camp.
+I&#8217;ve kept life in me only because I could dream of her
+and because though it was easier to die, I couldn&#8217;t die
+without seeing her and explaining.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was from her own lips that I took my orders,&#8221;
+came the unmoved response. &#8220;Those orders were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span>
+that through me you should learn nothing. You had
+the friendship of every man here until you abused it&mdash;now
+I think you&#8217;ll encounter no sympathy. I told
+you once how the wolf-bitch would feel toward the
+man who robbed her of her young. You chose to disregard
+my warning&mdash;and I&#8217;ll ask you to leave my
+house.&#8221;</p>
+<p>John Spurrier bowed his head. He had lost her!
+If that were her final conclusion, he could hardly seek
+to dissuade her. At least he could lose the final happiness
+out of his life&mdash;from which so much else had already
+been lost&mdash;as a gentleman should lose.</p>
+<p>And he knew that however old Cappeze might feel,
+he would not lie. If he said that was Glory&#8217;s deliberately
+formed decision, that statement must be accepted
+as true.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have never loved any one else,&#8221; said Spurrier
+slowly. &#8220;I shall never love any one else. I have been
+faithful despite appearances. The rest of your charges
+are true, and I make no denial. I gambled about as
+fairly as most men gamble. That is all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A stiffening pride, made flinty by the old man&#8217;s hostility,
+shut into silence some things that Spurrier
+might have said. He scorned the seeming of whine
+that might have lain in explanations, even though the
+explanations should lighten the shadow of his old
+friend&#8217;s disapproval. He offered no extenuation and
+breathed nothing of the changes that had been
+wrought in himself by the tedious alchemy of time and
+reflection.</p>
+<p>He had begun under the spur of greedy ambition,
+but changes had been wrought in him by Glory&#8217;s love.</p>
+<p>He was still ambitious, but in a different way. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span>
+wanted to salvage something for the equitable beneficiaries.
+He wanted to stand, not among the predatory
+millionaires, but to be his own man, with a clean
+name and solvent.</p>
+<p>Before he could attain that condition he must render
+unto Harrison the things that were Harrison&#8217;s
+and wipe out his own tremendous liabilities&mdash;but his
+heart was in the hills.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier went slowly and heavy heartedly
+back to the house which he had refashioned for his
+bride; the house that had become to him a shrine to
+all the dear, lost things of life.</p>
+<p>The sun fell in mottled luminousness across its
+face of tempered gray and from the orchard where
+the lush grass grew knee-high came the cheery whistle
+of a Bob-white.</p>
+<p>At the sound the man groaned with a wrench of his
+heart and throat, and his thoughts raced back to that
+day when the same note had come from the voices of
+hidden assassins and when Glory had exposed her
+breast to rifle-fire to send out the pigeon with its call
+for help.</p>
+<p>The splendid oak that had shaded their stile had
+grown broader of girth and more majestic in the
+spread of its head-growth since he had stood
+here before, and in the flower beds, in which Glory
+had delighted, a few forlorn survivors, sprung up as
+volunteers from neglected roots, struggled through a
+choke of dusty weeds.</p>
+<p>The man looked about the empty yard and his
+breath came like that of a torture victim on the rack.
+The desolation and ache of a life deprived of all that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+made it sweet struck in upon him with a blight beside
+which his prison loneliness had been nothing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If she knew the whole truth&mdash;instead of only half
+the truth,&#8221; he groaned, &#8220;she might forgive me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He ripped the padlock from the door and let himself
+in. He flung wide a shutter and let the afternoon
+sun flood the room, and once inside a score of little
+things worked the magic of memory upon him and
+tore afresh every wound that was festering.</p>
+<p>There hung the landscapes that he and she had
+loved and as he looked at them her voice seemed to
+sound again in his ears like forgotten music. From
+somewhere came the heavy fragrance of honeysuckle
+and old nights with her in the moonlight rushed back
+upon him.</p>
+<p>Then he saw an apron on a peg&mdash;hanging limp and
+empty, and again he saw her in it. He went and
+opened a drawer in which his own clothes had been
+kept&mdash;and there neatly folded by her hand were things
+of his.</p>
+<p>John Spurrier, whose iron nerve had once been café
+talk in the Orient, sat down on a quilted bed and tearless
+sobs racked him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he said to himself at last. &#8220;No, if she wants
+her freedom I can&#8217;t pursue her. I&#8217;ve hurt her enough&mdash;and
+God knows I&#8217;m punished enough.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Unless he were tamely to surrender to the despair
+that beset him, John Spurrier had one other thing to
+do before he left the hills. He must come to such an
+agreement with Bud Hawkins as would give him a
+right of way over that single tract and complete his
+chain of holdings. Thus fortified the field beyond
+the ridge would be safe against invasion by his enemies
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span>
+and even the other field would have readier outlet
+to market by that route. In the Hawkins property
+lay the keystone of the arch. With it the position was
+impregnable. Without it all the rest fell apart like an
+inarticulated skeleton.</p>
+<p>It happened that Spurrier met Hawkins as he went
+away from his lonely house, and forcing his own miseries
+into the background, he sought to become the
+business man once more. He began with a frank
+statement of the facts and offered fair and substantial
+terms of trade.</p>
+<p>Both because his affection for the old preacher
+would have tolerated nothing less and because it would
+have been folly now to play the cheaper game, he
+spoke in the terms of generosity.</p>
+<p>But to his surprise and discomfiture, Brother Hawkins
+shook a stubborn head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thar ain&#8217;t skeercely no power on &#8217;arth, Mr. Spurrier,&#8221;
+he declared, &#8220;thet could fo&#8217;ce me inter doin&#8217; no
+business with ye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But, Brother Hawkins,&#8221; argued the opportunity
+hound, &#8220;you are cutting your own throat. You and I
+standing together are invincible. Separate, we are
+lost. I&#8217;m almost willing to let you name the terms of
+agreement&mdash;to write the contract for yourself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve done been pore a right long while already,&#8221;
+the preacher reminded him as his eyes kindled with
+the zealot&#8217;s fire. &#8220;Long afore my day Jesus Christ
+was pore an&#8217; ther Apostle Paul, an&#8217; other righteous
+men. I ain&#8217;t skeered ter go on in likewise ter what
+I&#8217;ve always done.&#8221; He paused and laid a kindly hand
+on the shoulder of the man who offered him wealth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t seekin&#8217; ter fault ye unduly, John Spurrier.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+Mebby ye&#8217;ve done follered yore lights&mdash;but we don&#8217;t
+see with no common eye, ner no mutual disc&#8217;arnment.
+Ye&#8217;ve done misled folk thet swore by ye, ef I sees hit
+a&#8217;right. Now ye offers me wealth, much ther same as
+Satan offered hit ter Jesus on a high place, an&#8217; we
+kain&#8217;t trade&mdash;no more then what they could trade.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The old preacher&#8217;s attitude held the trace of kindliness
+that sought to drape reproof in gentleness and to
+him, as had been impossible with Cappeze, Spurrier
+poured out his confidence. At the outset, he confessed,
+he had deliberately dedicated himself to the
+development of wealth for himself and his employers,
+with no thought of others. Later, in a fight between
+wary capitalists where vigilance had to be met with
+vigilance, the seal of secrecy had been imperative.
+Frankness with the mountain men would have been a
+warning to his enemies. Now, however, his sense of
+responsibility was awake. Now he wanted to win
+back his status of confidence in this land where he
+had known his only home. Now what weight he had
+left to throw into the scales would be righteously
+thrown. Even yet he must move with strict, guarded
+secrecy.</p>
+<p>But the old circuit rider shook his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hit&#8217;s too late, now, ter rouse faith in me, John,&#8221;
+he reiterated. &#8220;Albeit I&#8217;d love ter credit ye, ef so-be
+I could. What&#8217;s come ter pass kain&#8217;t be washed out
+with words.&#8221; He paused before he added the simple
+edict against which there was no arguing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mebby I mout stand convinced even yit ef I didn&#8217;t
+know thet ther devil was urgin&#8217; me on with prospects
+of riches.&#8221;</p>
+<p>One thing remained to him; the pride that should
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span>
+stiffen him in the presence of his accusers and judges.
+When he went into the eclipse of ruin, at least he
+would go with unflinching gallantry.</p>
+<p>And it was in that mood that Spurrier reached his
+club in New York and prepared himself for the ordeal
+of the next day&#8217;s interview.</p>
+<p>He had wired Harrison of his coming, but not of
+his hopelessness, and when his telephone jangled and
+he heard the voice of the financier, he recognized in it
+an undercurrent of exasperation, which carried omen
+of a difficult interview.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That you, Spurrier? This is Harrison. Be at my
+office at eleven to-morrow morning. Perhaps you can
+construe certain riddles.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of what nature, sir?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of a nature that won&#8217;t bear full discussion over
+the wire. We have had an anonymous letter from
+some mysterious person who claims to come with the
+situation in a sling. It may be a crank whom we&#8217;ll
+have to throw out&mdash;or some one we dare not ignore.
+At all events, it&#8217;s up to you to dispose of him. He&#8217;s in
+your province. If you fail, we lose out and, as I
+said once before, you go to the scrap heap.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier hung up the phone and sat in a nerveless
+trepidation which was new and foreign to his nature.
+This interview of to-morrow morning would call for
+the tallest bluffing he had ever attempted, and the
+chances would, perhaps, turn on hair-trigger elements
+of personal force.</p>
+<p>He must depend on his coolness, audacity, and
+adroitness to win a decision, and, except by guesswork,
+he could not hope to formulate in advance the terrain
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+of battle or the nature of counter-attack with which
+he must meet his adversary.</p>
+<p>That evening he strolled along Broadway and found
+himself yielding to a dangerous and whimsical mood.
+He wondered how many other men outwardly as self-assured
+and prosperous as himself were covertly confessing
+suicide as one of to-morrow&#8217;s probabilities.</p>
+<p>Over Longacre Square the incandescent billboards
+flamed and flared. The darning-wool kitten disported
+itself with mechanical abandon. The woman who
+advertised a well-known corset and the man who exploited
+a brand of underwear brilliantly made and
+unmade their toilets far above the sidewalk level.
+Motors shrieked and droned and crowds drifted.</p>
+<p>Before a moving-picture theater, his introspective
+eye was momentarily challenged by a gaudy three-sheet.
+The poster proclaimed a popular screen star
+in a &#8220;fight fuller of punch than that of &#8216;The Wreckers.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>What caused Spurrier to pause was the composition
+of the picture&mdash;and the mental comparison which
+it evoked. A man crouched behind a heavy table,
+overthrown for a barricade&mdash;as he had once done.</p>
+<p>Fallen enemies lay on the floor of a crude Western
+cabin. Others still stood, and fought with flashing
+guns and faces &#8220;registering&#8221; desperation, frenzy, and
+maniac fury. The hero only, though alone and outnumbered,
+was grimly calm. The stress of that inferno
+had not interfered with the theatric pose of head
+and shoulders&mdash;the grace and effect of gesture that
+was conveyed in the two hands wielding two smoking
+pistols.</p>
+<p>Spurrier smiled. It occurred to him that had a director
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span>
+stood by while he himself had knelt behind a
+table he would have bawled out many amendments
+which fact had overlooked. Apparently he and his
+attackers had, by these exacting standards of art,
+missed the drama of the situation.</p>
+<p>Over him swept a fresh flood of memory, and it
+brought a cold and nervous dampness to his temples.
+Again he saw Glory rising at the broken window with
+a pigeon to release&mdash;and a life to sacrifice, if need be.
+On her face had been no theatric expression which
+would have warranted a close-up.</p>
+<p>Spurrier hastened on, turning into a side street
+where he could put the glare at his back and find a
+more mercifully dark way.</p>
+<p>He was seeing, instead of dark house fronts, the
+tops of pine trees etched against an afterglow, and
+Glory standing silhouetted against a hilltop. Above
+the grind of the elevated and the traffic, he was hearing
+her voice in thrushlike song, happy because he
+loved her.</p>
+<p>The agony of loss overwhelmed him, and he actually
+longed, as for a better thing, for that moment to
+come back when behind an overturned table he had
+endured the suspense which death had promised to end
+in an instant filled and paid for with revenge.</p>
+<p>Then through his disturbed brain once more flashed
+lines of verse:</p>
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<p>&#8220;I was ever a fighter, so&mdash;one fight more,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>The best and the last!</p>
+<p>I should hate that Death bandaged my eyes and forebore,</p>
+<p class='indent2'>And bade me creep past.&#8221;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>At all events he would, in the figurative sense, die
+fighting to-morrow. He knew his mistakes now. If
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span>
+he lived on he hoped to atone for them, but if he died
+he would go out without a whine.</p>
+<p>And if he must die, there was one way that seemed
+preferable to others. The army would have none of
+him, as an officer, because he stood besmirched of
+honor. But he knew the stern temper of the mountaineers.
+They would rise in unanimous response to
+the call of arms. He could go with them, not with
+any insignia on his collar, but marching shoulder
+against shoulder into that red hell of Flanders and
+France, where a man might baptize himself, shrive
+himself, and die. And in dying they would leave a
+record behind them!</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXII' id='CHAPTER_XXII'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+</div>
+<p>Down along the creekbeds back of Hemlock
+Mountain young Jimmy Litchfield, a son of
+old Uncle Jimmy, had been teaming with a
+well-boring outfit and his wagon had bogged down
+in deep mud. He had failed to extricate himself so
+he tramped three hard, steep miles and telephoned for
+an extra team. While he awaited deliverance he
+found himself irked and, to while away the time, set
+his drill down haphazard and began to bore.</p>
+<p>It would be some hours before help arrived, and
+when he had worked a while he had forgotten all
+about help.</p>
+<p>His drill had struck through soft gravel to an oil
+pool lying close to the surface, and the black tide
+gushed crazily.</p>
+<p>Young Jimmy sat back watching the dark jet that
+he had no means of stemming or containing, and
+through his simple soul flowed all the intoxication of
+triumph.</p>
+<p>He was the discoverer of a new&mdash;and palpably a
+rich field!</p>
+<p>Hereafter oil men would speak of the Snake Creek
+field as copper men spoke of Anaconda or gold men
+of the Yukon.</p>
+<p>And that night word went by wire to the opportunity
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300' name='page_300'></a>300</span>
+hound who had just gone east, that the &#8220;fur&#8221;
+side was to the &#8220;nigh&#8221; side as gold is to silver.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>&#8220;What do you make of it?&#8221; demanded Harrison,
+when Spurrier, secure in his seeming of undaunted
+assurance, arrived at his office and the response came
+smilingly: &#8220;I think it means a bluff.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Read that,&#8221; snapped the financier as he flung a letter
+across his desk.</p>
+<p>Spurrier took the sheet of paper and read in a hand,
+evidently disguised!</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>You find yourself in a cul-de-sac. I hold the key to a
+way out. My terms are definite and determined in advance.
+I shall be at your office at noon, Tuesday. We will do business
+at that time, or not at all.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;I repeat,&#8221; said Spurrier, &#8220;that this seems to me a
+brass-bound bluff. I make only the request that I be
+permitted to talk with this brigand alone; to sound
+him out with no interference and to shape my policy
+by the circumstances. I&#8217;m not at all frightened.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Harrison answered snappily:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I agree to that&mdash;but if you fail you fail finally.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So on Tuesday forenoon Spurrier sat cross-legged
+in Harrison&#8217;s office and their discussion had come to
+its end. Now, he had only to await the unknown
+person who was to arrive at noon bearing alleged
+terms, a person who claimed to be armed for battle
+if battle were needed.</p>
+<p>At Harrison&#8217;s left and right sat his favored lieutenants,
+but Spurrier himself occupied a chair a little
+bit apart, relegated to a zone of probation.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301' name='page_301'></a>301</span></div>
+<p>Then a rap sounded on the door, and Spurrier
+smiled with a ghost of triumph as he noted that he
+alone of the small group did not start at the signal.
+For all their great caliber and standing, these men
+were keyed to expectancy and exasperated nervousness.</p>
+<p>The clerk who appeared made his announcement
+with the calculated evenness of routine: &#8220;A lady is
+waiting. She says her name doesn&#8217;t matter. She has
+an appointment for twelve.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A lady!&#8221; exclaimed Harrison in amazement. &#8220;My
+God, do we have to fight this thing out with a
+woman?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The tableau of astonishment held, until Spurrier
+broke it:</p>
+<p>&#8220;What matter <a name='TC_12'></a><ins title='Was personalties'>personalities</ins> to us?&#8221; he blandly inquired.
+&#8220;We are interested in facts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The chief lifted his hand and gave curt direction.
+&#8220;Show her in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then through the door came a woman whose beauty
+would have arrested attention in any gathering. Just
+now what these men, rising grudgingly from their
+chairs, noted first, was the self-possession, the poise,
+and the convincing evidence of good breeding and
+competency which characterized her.</p>
+<p>She was elegantly but plainly dressed, and her manner
+conveyed a self-assurance in nowise flustered by
+the prospect of impending storm.</p>
+<p>No one there, save Spurrier, recognized her, for to
+Martin Harrison carrying the one disapproving impression
+of a mountain girl in patched gingham, the
+transformation was complete.</p>
+<p>And as for Spurrier himself, after coming to his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302' name='page_302'></a>302</span>
+feet, he stood as a man might be expected to stand if
+a specter of death had suddenly materialized before
+him.</p>
+<p>For the one time in his life all the assumption of
+boldness, worn for other eyes, broke and fell away
+from him, leaving him nakedly and starkly dumbfounded.
+He presented the pale and distressed aspect
+of a whipped prize fighter, reeling groggily
+against the ropes, and defenseless against attack.</p>
+<p>It was a swift transformation from audacious
+boldness to something which seemed abject, or that
+at least was the aspect which presented itself to Martin
+Harrison and his aides, but back of it all lay reasons
+into which they could not see.</p>
+<p>It was no crumbling and softening of battle metal
+that had wrought this astonishing metamorphosis but
+a thing much nearer to the man&#8217;s heart. At that moment
+there departed from his mind the whole urgent
+call of the duel between business enemies&mdash;and he
+saw only the woman for whom he had sought and
+whom he had not found.</p>
+<p>In the cumulative force and impact of their heart-breaking
+sequence there rushed back on him all the
+memories that had been haunting him, intensified to
+unspeakable degree at the sight of her face&mdash;and if
+he thought of the business awaiting them at all, it was
+only with a stabbing pain of realization that he had
+met Glory again only in the guise of an enemy.</p>
+<p>Harrison gave him one contemptuous glance and
+remarked brutally:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madam, this gentleman was to talk with you, but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303' name='page_303'></a>303</span>
+he seems scarcely able to conduct any affair of moment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory was looking at the broken man, too, and into
+her splendid eyes stole a pity that had tenderness back
+of it.</p>
+<p>Old memories came in potent waves, and she closed
+her lids for a moment as though against a painful
+glare, but with quick recovery she spoke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is imperative, gentlemen, that I have a few
+words first&mdash;and alone&mdash;with Mr. Spurrier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you insist, but&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; Harrison&#8217;s shoulders stiffened.
+&#8220;But we do not guarantee that we shall abide
+by his declarations.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do insist&mdash;and I think you will find that it is I
+who am in the position to dictate terms.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Harrison gave a sharply imperative gesture toward
+the door through which the others filed out, followed
+by the chief himself, leaving the two alone.</p>
+<p>Then John Spurrier rose, and supported himself by
+hands pressed upon the table top. He stood unsteadily
+at first and failed in his effort to speak. Then,
+with difficulty, he straightened and swept his two
+hands out in a gesture of surrender.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m through,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I thought there was still
+one fight left in me&mdash;but I can&#8217;t fight you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She did not answer and, after a little, with a slight
+regaining of his self-command, he went on again:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Glory! What a name and what a fulfillment!
+You have always been Glory to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Out of his eyes slowly went the apathy of despair
+and another look of even stronger feeling preëmpted
+its place: a look of worship and adoration.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304' name='page_304'></a>304</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know,&#8221; admitted Glory softly, &#8220;that I was
+to meet you here. I didn&#8217;t know that the fight was
+to be between us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have ruined me,&#8221; he answered. &#8220;I&#8217;m a sinking
+ship now, and those rats out there will leave me&mdash;but
+it&#8217;s worth ruin to see you again. I want you to
+take this message with you and remember it. All my
+life I&#8217;ve gambled hard and fought hard. Now I
+fail hard. I lost you and deserved to lose you, but
+I&#8217;ve always loved you and always shall.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her eyes grew stern, repressing the tenderness and
+pity that sought to hold them soft.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You abandoned me,&#8221; she said. &#8220;You sought to
+plunder my people. I took up their fight, and I shall
+win it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spurrier came a step toward her and spread his
+hands in a gesture of surrender, but he had recovered
+from the shock that had so unnerved him a few minutes
+ago and there was now a certain dignity in his
+acceptance of defeat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I break my sword across my knee,&#8221; he declared,
+&#8220;and since I must do it, I&#8217;m glad you are the victor.
+I won&#8217;t ask for mercy even from you&mdash;but when you
+say I abandoned you, you are grievously wrong.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you say I sought to plunder your people, you
+speak the truth about me&mdash;as I was before I came to
+love you. From that time on I sought to serve your
+people.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sought to serve them?&#8221; she repeated in perplexity,
+&#8220;The record shows nothing of that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And since the record doesn&#8217;t,&#8221; he answered steadily,
+&#8220;any assertions and protestations would be without
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305' name='page_305'></a>305</span>
+proof. I&#8217;ve told you, because my heart compelled
+me. I won&#8217;t try to convince you. At all events, since
+I failed, my motives don&#8217;t matter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your motives are everything. I took up the fight,&#8221;
+she said, &#8220;because I thought a Spurrier had wronged
+them. I wanted a Spurrier to make restitution.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At first I saw only the game, dear heart,&#8221; he confessed,
+&#8220;never the unfairness. I&#8217;m ready to pay the
+price. Ruin me&mdash;but in God&#8217;s name, believe that I
+love you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her hand came out waveringly at that, and for a
+moment rested on his shoulder with a little gesture of
+tenderness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought I hated you,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I tried to hate
+you. I&#8217;ve dedicated myself to my people and their
+rights&mdash;but if you trust me enough, call them in and
+let me talk with them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Trust you enough!&#8221; he exclaimed passionately,
+then he caught her to him, and, when he let her go, he
+stood again transformed and revivified into the man
+he had seemed before she appeared in the doorway.
+It was as though the touch of her lips had given him
+the fire from which he rose ph&oelig;nixlike.</p>
+<p>With an unhesitant step he went to the door and
+opened it, and the men who had gone out trooped
+back and ranged themselves again about the table.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Spurrier did all in your interests that a man
+could do,&#8221; said Glory. &#8220;He failed to secure your
+charter and he failed to secure the one tract that serves
+as the key. I am a mountain woman seeking only to
+protect my people. I hold that tract as trustee for Bud
+Hawkins. I mean to do business, but only at a fair
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306' name='page_306'></a>306</span>
+price. It&#8217;s for you to determine whether I deal with
+you or your competitors.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A look of consternation spread over the faces of
+the lesser men, but Harrison inquired with a grim
+smile:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madam, haven&#8217;t I seen you somewhere before to-day?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Once before&mdash;down in the hills.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you are this man&#8217;s wife! Was this dramatic
+incident prearranged between you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She raised an imperative hand, and her voice admitted
+no question of sincerity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Make no such mistake. Mr. Spurrier knew nothing
+of this. He was loyal enough&mdash;to you. From
+him I never even learned the nature of his business.
+Without his knowledge <i>I</i> was loyal to my people.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then for ten minutes she talked clearly, forcefully,
+and with the ring of indubitable sincerity giving fire
+to voice and manner. She told of the fight she and
+her father had made to keep heart in mountain folk,
+enraged by what they believed to be the betrayal by a
+man they had trusted and attacked by every means
+of coercion at the disposal of American Oil and Gas.</p>
+<p>She told of small local reservoirs, mysteriously
+burned by unknown incendiaries; of neighborhood
+pipe lines cut until they spilled out their wealth again
+into the earth; of how she herself had walked these
+lines at night, watching against sabotage.</p>
+<p>As she talked with simple directness and without
+self-vaunting, they saw her growing in the trust of
+these men whose wrath had been, in the words of old
+Cappeze, &#8220;Like that of the wolf-bitch robbed a second
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307' name='page_307'></a>307</span>
+time of her whelps.&#8221; They recognized the faith that
+had commissioned her to speak as trustee, and to act
+with carte-blanche powers.</p>
+<p>Harrison and his subordinates were not susceptible
+men, easily swayed by a dramatic circumstance, so
+they cross-examined and heckled her with shrewd and
+tripping inquiries, until she reminded them that she
+had not come as a supplicant, but to lay before them
+terms, which they would, at their peril, decline to accept.</p>
+<p>The realization was strong in them that she had
+spoken only the truth when she declared that she held
+the key. When they were convinced that she realized,
+in full, the strength of her position, they had no wish
+to antagonize longer.</p>
+<p>The group of financiers drew apart, but after a brief
+consultation Harrison came forward and offered his
+hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mrs. Spurrier,&#8221; he announced crisply, &#8220;we have
+gone too far to draw back. After all, I think you
+come rather as a rescue party than an attacker. Spurrier,
+you have married a damned brilliant woman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Glory accepted the extended hand of peace, and
+Harrison, with a jerk of his head to the door, led
+his followers out, leaving them alone again.</p>
+<p>Then Glory held out her arms, and into the bright
+depths of her eyes flashed the old bewitching merriment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thar&#8217;s a lavish of things I needs ter know, Jack,&#8221;
+she said. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got to l&#8217;arn &#8217;em all ter me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I come now, not as teacher but as pupil, dear
+heart,&#8221; he declared, &#8220;and I come humbly.&#8221;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308' name='page_308'></a>308</span></div>
+<p>Then her face grew serious and her voice vibrant
+with tenderness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have another gift for you, Jack, besides myself,
+I can give you back an untarnished name.&#8221;</p>
+<p class='center padtop larger'>THE END</p>
+<div class="trnote">
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p><b>Transcribers Note</b></p>
+<p>Typographical inconsistencies have been changed and are
+<ins title="Was 'hgihligthed'">highlighted</ins> and
+listed below.</p>
+<p>Hyphenation standardized.</p>
+<p>Other archaic and variable spelling and hyphenation is preserved, including the author&#8217;s use of eying and eyeing,
+Quizote, Otello, and langour.</p>
+<p class='padtop'><b>Transcriber Changes</b></p>
+<p>The following changes were made to the original text:</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_1'>Page 86</a>: Was sterterously (he sat there breathing <b>stertorously</b> while the untended fire died away)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_2'>Page 90</a>: Was plausiblity (One explanation only presented itself with any color of <b>plausibility</b>)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_3'>Page 96</a>: Was mistly (there was a dreamy violet where it merged <b>mistily</b> with the skyline ridges)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_4'>Page 118</a>: Was there (&#8220;It is well established by the evidence befo&#8217; <b>ther</b> co&#8217;te&#8221;)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_5'>Page 120</a>: Was impusively (the girl broke out <b>impulsively</b>)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_6'>Page 124</a>: Removed extra quote (Still Spurrier cursed himself for a careless <b>fool</b>)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_7'>Page 162</a>: Was it&#8217;s (you&#8217;ll recall that <b>its</b> longer name is <i>Datura stramonium</i>)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_8'>Page 180</a>: Was inperceptible (pair of shoulders that hunched slowly forward with almost <b>imperceptible</b> movement)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_9'>Page 208</a>: Guessed at missing text (the latter inquired gravely: <b>&#8220;Did they play one</b> of them royalty games&#8221;)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_10'>Page 208</a>: Was single quote (I ain&#8217;t playin&#8217; no more of them royalty <b>games&#8221;</b>)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_13'>Page 263</a>: Was pacink (&#8220;Before God,&#8221; cried Harrison, <b>pacing</b> his floor like a lion)</p>
+<p><a href='#TC_12'>Page 301</a>: Was personalties (&#8220;What matter <b>personalities</b> to us?&#8221;)</p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.21k3 -->
+<!-- timestamp: 2010-11-04 18:26:28 -0500 -->
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Law of Hemlock Mountain, by Hugh Lundsford
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+</pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Law of Hemlock Mountain, by Hugh Lundsford
+
+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: The Law of Hemlock Mountain
+
+Author: Hugh Lundsford
+
+Illustrator: Douglas Duer
+
+Release Date: November 4, 2010 [EBook #34208]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAW OF HEMLOCK MOUNTAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Katherine Ward, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LAW OF HEMLOCK MOUNTAIN
+
+BY HUGH LUNDSFORD
+
+Frontispiece by DOUGLAS DUER
+
+
+ New York
+ W. J. Watt & Company
+ PUBLISHERS
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
+ W. J. WATT & COMPANY
+
+ PRESS OF
+ BRAUNWORTH & CO.
+ BOOK MANUFACTURERS
+ BROOKLYN, N.Y.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "I am sorry," declared Spurrier, humbly. "I didn't know
+they were pets. They behaved very much like wild birds."]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The officer whose collar ornaments were the winged staff and serpents
+of the medical branch, held what was left of the deck in his right
+hand and moistened the tip of his thumb against the tip of his
+tongue.
+
+"Reenforcements, major?" he inquired with a glance to the man at his
+left, and the poker face of the gentleman so addressed remained
+impervious to expression as the answer was given back:
+
+"No, I'll stand by what I've got here."
+
+If the utterance hung on a quarter second of indecision it was a
+circumstance that went unnoted, save possibly by a young man with the
+single bars of a lieutenant on his shoulder straps--and Spurrier gave
+no flicker of recognition of what had escaped the others.
+
+Between the whitewashed walls of the room where the little group of
+officers sat at cards the Philippine night breeze stirred faintly with
+a fevered breath that scarcely disturbed the jalousies.
+
+The pile of poker chips had grown to a bulkiness and value out of
+just proportion to the means of army officers below field rank--and
+except for the battalion, commander and the surgeon none there held
+higher grade than a captaincy. This jungle-hot weather made men
+irresponsible.
+
+One or two of the faces were excitedly flushed; several others were
+morosely dark. The lights guttered with a jaundiced yellow and sweat
+beaded the temples of the players. Sweat, too, made slippery the
+enameled surfaces of the pasteboards. Sweat seemed to ooze and simmer
+in their brains like the oil from overheated asphalt.
+
+These men had been forced into a companionship of monotony in a
+climate of unhealth until their studied politeness, even their forced
+jocularity was rather the effort of toleration than the easy play of
+comradeship. Their arduously wooed excitement of draw-poker, which had
+run improvidently out of bounds, was not a pleasure so much as an
+expedient against the boredom that had rubbed their tempers threadbare
+and put an edgy sharpness on their nerves.
+
+Captain Comyn, upon whose call for cards the dealer now waited, was
+thinking of Private Grant out there under guard in the improvised
+hospital. The islands had "gotten to" Private Grant and "locoed" him,
+and he had breathed sulphurous maledictions against Captain Comyn's
+life--but it was not those threats that now disturbed the company
+commander.
+
+Of late Captain Comyn had been lying awake at night and wondering if
+he, too, were not going the same way as the unfortunate file. Horribly
+quiet fears had been stealing poisonously into his mind--a mind not
+given to timidities--and the word "melancholia" had assumed for him a
+morbid and irresistible compulsion. No one save the captain's self
+knew of these secret hauntings, born of climate and smoldering fever,
+and he would not have revealed them on the torture rack. For them he
+entertained the same shame as that of a boy grown too large for such
+weakness, who shudders with an unconfessed fear of the dark. But he
+could no more shake them loose and be free of them than could the
+Ancient Mariner rid himself of the bird of ill-omen tied about his
+neck. Now he pulled himself together and tossed away a single card.
+
+"I'll take one in the place of that," he commented with studied
+carelessness, and Lieutenant John Spurrier, with that infectious smile
+which came readily to his lips, pointed a contrast with the captain's
+abstraction by the snappy quickness of his announcement:
+
+"If I'm going to trail along, I'll need three. Yes, three, please,
+major."
+
+"When Spurrier sits in the game," commented a player who, with a
+dolorous glance at the booty before him, threw down his hands, "we at
+least get action. Myself, I'm out of it."
+
+The battalion commander studied the ceiling with a troubled furrow
+between his brows which was not brought there by the hazards of luck.
+He was reflecting that whenever a game was organized it was Spurrier
+who quickened its tempo from innocuous amusement to reckless
+extravagance. Spurrier, fitted for his life with so many soldierly
+qualities, was still, above all else, a plunger. That spirit seemed a
+passion that filled and overflowed him. Temperate in other habits, he
+played like a nabob. The major remembered hearing that even at West
+Point Jack Spurrier had narrowly, escaped dismissal for gambling in
+quarters, though his class standing had been distinguished and his
+gridiron record had become a tradition.
+
+This sort of game with "the roof off and deuces wild," was not good
+for the _morale_ of his junior officers, mused the major. It was like
+spiking whisky with absinthe. Yes, to-morrow he would have Spurrier at
+his quarters and talk to him like a Dutch uncle.
+
+There were three left battling for the often sweetened pot now, with
+three more who had dropped out, looking on, and a tensity enveloped
+the long-drawn climax of the evening's session.
+
+Captain Comyn's cheek bones had reddened and his irascible frown lines
+deepened. For the moment his fears of melancholia had been swallowed
+up in a fitful fury against Spurrier and his smiling face.
+
+At last came the decisive moment of the final call and the show-down,
+and through the dead silence of the moment sounded the distant
+sing-song of a sentry:
+
+"Corporal of the guard, number one, relief!"
+
+Over the window sill a tiny green lizard slithered quietly and
+hesitated, pressing itself flat against the whitewash.
+
+Then the major's cards came down face upward--and showed a queen-high
+straight.
+
+"Not quite good enough, major," announced Comyn brusquely as his
+breath broke from him with a sort of gasp and he spread out a heart
+flush.
+
+But Spurrier, who had drawn three cards, echoed the captain's words:
+"Not quite good enough." He laid down two aces and two deuces, which
+under the cutthroat rule of "deuces wild" he was privileged to call
+four aces.
+
+Comyn came to his feet and pushed back his chair, but he stood
+unsteadily. The fever in his bones was playing queer pranks with his
+brain. He, whose courtesy had always been marked in its punctilio,
+blazed volcano-fashion into the eruption that had been gathering
+through these abnormal days and nights.
+
+Yet even now the long habit of decorum held waveringly for a little
+before its breaking, and he began with a queer strain in his voice:
+
+"You'll have to take my IOU. I've lost more than I can pay on the
+peg."
+
+"That's all right, Comyn," began the victor, "Pay when----" but before
+he could finish the other interrupted with a frenzy of anger:
+
+"No, by God, it's not all right! It's all wrong, and this is the last
+game I sit in where they deal a hand to you."
+
+Spurrier's smiling lips tightened instantly out of their infectious
+amiability into a forbidding straightness. He pushed aside the chips
+he had been stacking and rose stiffly.
+
+"That's a statement, Captain Comyn," he said with a warning note in
+his level voice, "which requires some explaining."
+
+The abrupt bursting of the tempest had left the others in a tableau of
+amazement, but now the authoritative voice of Major Withers broke in
+upon the dialogue.
+
+"Gentlemen, this is an army post, and I am in command here. I will
+tolerate no quarrels."
+
+Without shifting the gaze of eyes that held those of the captain,
+Spurrier answered insistently:
+
+"I have every respect, major, for the requirements of discipline--but
+Captain Comyn must finish telling why he will no longer play cards
+with me."
+
+"And I'll tell you _pronto_," came the truculent response. "I won't
+play with you because you are too damned lucky."
+
+"Oh!" Spurrier's tensity of expression relaxed into something like
+amusement for the anticlimax. "That accusation can be stomached, I
+suppose."
+
+"Too damned lucky," went on the other with a gathering momentum of
+rancor, "and too continuously lucky for a game that's not professional.
+When a man is so proficient--or lucky if you prefer--that the card table
+pays him more than the government thinks he's worth, it's time----"
+
+Spurrier stepped forward.
+
+"It's time for you to stop," he cautioned sharply. "I give you the
+fairest warning!"
+
+But Comyn, riding the flood tide of his passion--a passion of
+distempered nerves--was beyond the reach of warnings and his words
+came in a bitter outpouring:
+
+"I dare say it was only luck that let you bankrupt young Tillsdale,
+but it was as fatal to him as if it bore an uglier name."
+
+The sound in Spurrier's throat was incoherent and his bodily impulse
+swift beyond interference. His flat palm smote Captain Comyn's cheek,
+to come away leaving a red welt behind it, and as the others swept
+forward to intervene the two men grappled.
+
+They were torn apart, still struggling, as Major Withers, unaccustomed
+to the brooking of such mutinies, interposed between them the bulk of
+his body and the moral force of his indignantly blazing eyes.
+
+"I will have no more of this," he thundered. "I am not a prize-fight
+referee, that I must break my officers out of clinches! Go to your
+quarters, Comyn! You, too, Spurrier. You are under arrest. I shall
+prefer charges against you both. I mean to make an example of this
+matter."
+
+But with a strange abruptness the fury died out of Comyn's face. It
+left his passion-distorted features so instantly that the effect of
+transformation was uncanny. In a breathing space he seemed older and
+his eyes held the dark dejection of utter misery. His anger had flared
+and died before that grimmer emotion which secretly haunted him--the
+fear that he was going the way of climate-crazed Private Grant.
+
+When they released him he turned dispiritedly and left the room in
+docile silence. He was not thinking of the charges to be preferred.
+They belonged to to-morrow. To-night was nearer, and to-night he must
+face those hours of sleeplessness that he dreaded more than all the
+penalties enunciated by the Articles of War.
+
+Spurrier, too, bowed stiffly and left the room.
+
+Though it was late when Captain Comyn entered his own quarters, he did
+not at once throw himself on the army cot that stood against the
+whitewashed wall.
+
+For him the cot held no invitation--only the threat of insomnia and
+tossing. His taut nerves had lost the gracious art of relaxation, and
+before his thoughts paraded hideously grotesque memories of the few
+faces he had ever seen marred by the dethronement of reason.
+
+Already he had forgotten the violent and discreditable scene with
+Spurrier, and presently he dropped himself inertly into the camp chair
+beside the table at the room's center and opened its drawer.
+
+Slowly his hand came out clutching a service revolver, and his eyes
+smoldered unnaturally as they dwelt on it. But after a little he
+resolutely shook his head and thrust the thing aside.
+
+He sat in a cold sweat, surrounded by the silence of the Eastern
+night, a comprehensive silence which weighed upon him and oppressed
+him.
+
+In the thatching of the single-storied adobe building he heard the
+rustling of a house snake, and from without, where moonlight seemed to
+gush and spill against the cobalt shadows, shrilled the small voice
+from a lizard's inflated, crimson throat.
+
+It was all crazing him, and his nails bit into his palms as he sat
+there, silent and heavy-breathed. Then he heard footsteps nearer and
+louder than those of the pacing sentries, followed by a low rapping of
+knuckles on his own door. Perhaps it was Doctor James. He had the
+kindly habit of besetting men who looked fagged with the offer of some
+innocuous bromide. As if bromides could soothe a brain in which
+something had gone _malo_!
+
+"Come in," he growled, and into the room stepped not Major James, but
+Lieutenant Spurrier.
+
+Slowly and with an infinite weight of weariness, Comyn rose to his
+feet. He might be afraid of lunacy, but not of lieutenants, and his
+lips smiled sneeringly.
+
+"If you've come to ask a retraction," he declared ungraciously, "I've
+none to offer. I meant all I said."
+
+The visitor stood inside the door calmly eyeing the man who was his
+own company commander.
+
+"I didn't come to insist on apologies," he replied after a moment's
+silence with an off-hand easiness of tone. "That can wait till you've
+gotten over your tantrum. It was another thing that brought me."
+
+"I want to be left alone."
+
+"Aside from the uncomplimentary features of your tirade," went on
+Spurrier placidly and he strolled around the table and seated himself
+on the window sill, "there was a germ of truth in what you said. We've
+been playing too steep a game." He paused and the other man who
+remained standing by his table, as though he did not wish to encourage
+his visitor by seating himself, responded only with a short, ironic
+laugh.
+
+"See here, Comyn," Spurrier's voice labored now with evident
+embarrassment. "What I'm getting at is this: I don't want your IOU for
+that game. I simply want you to forget it."
+
+But the captain took an angry step forward.
+
+"Do you think I'm a charity patient?" he demanded, as his temper again
+mounted to storm pressure. "Why, damn your impertinence, I don't want
+to talk to you. I don't want you in my quarters!"
+
+Spurrier slipped from his seat and an angry flush spread to his cheek
+bones.
+
+"You're the hell of a--gentleman!" he exclaimed.
+
+The two stood for a few moments without words, facing each other,
+while the lieutenant could hear the captain's breath rising and
+falling in a panting thickness.
+
+Surgeon James returning from a visit to a colic sufferer was trudging
+sleepily along the empty _calle_ when he noted the light still burning
+in the captain's window, and with an exclamation of remembrance for
+the officer's dark-ringed and sleepless eyes, he wheeled toward the
+door. Just as he neared it, a staccato and heated interchange of
+voices was borne out to him, and he hurried his step, but at the same
+instant a pistol shot bellowed blatantly in the quiet air and into his
+nostrils stole the acrid savor of burned powder.
+
+The door, thrown open, gave him the startling picture of Comyn sagged
+across his own table and lying grotesque in the yellow light; and of
+Spurrier standing, wide-eyed by the window, with the green and cobalt
+background of the tropic night beyond his shoulders. While he gazed
+the lieutenant wheeled and thrust his head through the raised sash,
+under the jalousy.
+
+"Halt!" cried James excitedly, leaping forward to possess himself of
+the pistol which Comyn had taken from his drawer and thrust aside.
+"Halt, Spurrier, or I'll have to fire!"
+
+The other turned back and faced his captor with an expression which it
+was hard to read. Then he shook his shoulders as though to disentangle
+himself from an evil dream and in a cool voice demanded:
+
+"Do you mean to intimate, James, that you suspect me of killing
+Comyn?"
+
+"Do you mean to deny it?" countered the other incredulously.
+
+"Great God! I oughtn't to have to. That shot was fired through the
+window. The bullet whined past my ear while my back was turned. That
+was why I looked out just now. Moreover, I am, as you see, unarmed."
+
+"God grant that you can prove these things, Spurrier, but they will
+need proof." The doctor turned to bend over the prostrate figure, and
+as he did so voices rose from the _calle_ where already had sounded
+the alarm and response of running feet. "Or, perhaps," added the
+doctor with stubborn suggestiveness, "you acted in self-defense."
+
+Presently the door opened and the corporal of the guard entered and
+saluted. His eyes traveled rapidly about the room and he addressed
+Spurrier, since James was not a line officer.
+
+"I picked this revolver up, sir, just outside the window," he said,
+holding out a service pistol. "It was lying in the moonlight and one
+chamber is empty."
+
+Spurrier took the weapon, but when the man had gone James suggested in
+an even voice: "Don't you think you had better hand that gun to me?"
+
+"To you? Why?"
+
+"Because this looks like a case for G. C. M. It will have a better
+aspect if I can testify that, after the gun was brought in, it wasn't
+handled by you except while I saw you?"
+
+"It seems to me"--a belligerent flash darted in the lieutenant's
+eyes--"that you are singularly set on hanging this affair around my
+neck."
+
+"You were with him and no one else was. If I were you, I'd go direct
+to the major and make a statement of facts. He'll be getting reports
+from other sources by now."
+
+"Perhaps you are right. Is _he_ dead?"
+
+The surgeon nodded, and Spurrier turned and closed the door softly
+behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+The situation of John Spurrier, who was Jack Spurrier to every man in
+that command, standing under the monstrous presumption of having
+murdered a brother officer, called for a reaccommodation of the
+battalion's whole habit of thought. It demanded a new and unwelcome
+word in their vocabulary of ideas, and against it argued, with the hot
+advocacy of tested acquaintance, every characteristic of the man
+himself, and every law of probability. For its acceptance spoke only
+one forceful plea--evidence which unpleasantly skirted the actuality
+of demonstration. Short of seeing Spurrier shoot his captain down and
+toss his pistol through the open window, Major James could hardly have
+witnessed a more damaging picture than the hurriedly opened door had
+framed to his vision.
+
+Within the close-drawn cordon of a post, held to military accountability,
+facts were as traceable as entries on a card index--and these facts
+began building to the lieutenant's undoing. They seemed to bring out
+like acid on sympathetic ink the miracle of a Mr. Hyde where his
+comrades had known only a Doctor Jekyll.
+
+The one man out of the two skeleton companies of infantry stationed
+in the interior town who remained seemingly impervious to the
+strangulating force of the tightening net was Spurrier himself.
+
+In another man that insulated and steady-eyed confidence might have
+served as a manifest of innocence and a proclamation of clean
+conscience. But Spurrier wore a nick-name, until now lightly
+considered, to which new conditions had added importance.
+
+They had called him "The Plunger," and now they could not forget the
+nickeled and chrome-hardened gambling nerve which had won for him the
+sobriquet. There had been the _coup_ at Oakland, for example, when a
+stretch finish had stood to ruin him or suddenly enrich him--an
+incident that had gone down in racing history and made cafe talk.
+
+Through a smother of concealing dust and a thunder of hoofs, the field
+had struggled into the stretch that afternoon, tight-bunched, with its
+snapping silks too closely tangled for easy distinguishing--but the
+cerise cap that proclaimed Spurrier's choice was nowhere in sight. The
+bookmakers pedestalled on their high stools with field glasses glued
+to their eyes had been more excited than the young officer on the
+club-house lawn, who put away his binoculars while the horses were
+still in the back stretch and turned to chat with a girl.
+
+Three lengths from the finish a pair of distended nostrils had thrust
+themselves ahead of the other muzzles to catch the judges' eyes, and
+bending over steaming withers had nodded a cerise cap.
+
+But the lieutenant who had escaped financial disaster and won a
+miniature fortune had gone on talking to the girl.
+
+Might it not be suspected in these circumstances that "Plunger"
+Spurrier's refusal to treat his accusation seriously was only an
+attitude? He was sitting in a game now with his neck at stake and the
+cards running against him. Perhaps he was only bluffing as he had
+never bluffed before. Possibly he was brazening it out.
+
+It was not until the battalion had hiked back through bosque and over
+mountains to Manila that the lieutenant faced his tribunal: a court
+whose simplified methods cut away the maze of technicalities at which
+a man may grasp before a civilian jury of his peers.
+
+If, when he actually sat in the room where the evidence was heard, his
+assurance that he was to emerge clean-shriven began to reel under
+blows more powerful than he had expected, at least his face continued
+to testify for him with an outward serenity of confidence.
+
+Doctor James told his story with an admirable restraint and an
+absolute absence of coloring. He had meant to go to Comyn, because he
+read in his eyes the signs of nerve waste and insomnia; the same
+things that had caused too many suicides among the men whose nervous
+constitutions failed to adapt themselves to the climate.
+
+Before he had carried his purpose to fulfillment--perhaps a half hour
+before--he had gone to look in on the case of Private Grant, who was
+suffering from just such a malady, though in a more serious degree.
+That private, a mountaineer from the Cumberland hills of Kentucky, had
+been to all appearances merely a lunatic, although it was a case which
+would yield to treatment or perhaps come to recovery even if left to
+itself. On this night he had gone to see if Grant needed an opiate,
+but had found the patient apparently sleeping without restlessness,
+and had not roused him. At the door of the place where Grant was
+under guard, he had paused for a word with Private Severance who
+stood there on sentry duty.
+
+It had been a sticky night following a hot day, and in the _calle_
+upon which lay the command in billets of nipa-thatched houses, no one
+but himself and the sentries were astir during the twenty minutes he
+had spent strolling in the moonlight. On rounding a corner he had seen
+a light in Comyn's window, and he had gone around the angle of the
+adobe house, since the door was on the farther side, to offer the
+captain a sleeping potion, too. That was how he chanced on the scene
+of the tragedy, just a moment too late for service.
+
+"You say," began Spurrier's counsel, on cross-examination, "that you
+visited Private Grant about half an hour before Captain Comyn was
+killed and found him apparently resting naturally, although on
+previous nights you had thought morphia necessary to quiet his
+delirium?"
+
+The major nodded, then qualified slowly:
+
+"Grant had not, of course, been continuously out of his head nor had
+he always slept brokenly. There had been lucid periods alternating
+with exhausting storm."
+
+"You are not prepared to swear, though, that this seeming sleep might
+not have been feigned?"
+
+"I am prepared to testify that it is most unlikely."
+
+"Yet that same night he did make his escape and deserted. That is
+true, is it not?"
+
+The major bowed. "He had sought to escape before. That was symptomatic
+of his condition."
+
+"And since then he has not been recaptured, though he was in your
+opinion too ill and deranged to have deceived you by feigning sleep?"
+
+"Quite true."
+
+"Have you ever heard Grant threaten Captain Comyn's life?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Whether he had made such threats to your knowledge or not, he did
+come from that hill county of the Kentucky mountains commonly called
+Bloody Brackton, did he not?"
+
+"I believe so. His enlistment record will answer that."
+
+"You do know, though, that the man on guard duty--the man with whom
+you spoke outside--was Private Severance, also from the so-called
+Kentucky feud belt and a friend of the sick man?"
+
+"I can testify of my own knowledge only that he was Private
+Severance and that he and Grant were of the same platoon--Lieutenant
+Spurrier's."
+
+The defense advocate paused and carefully framed a hypothetical
+question to be answered by the witness as a medical expert.
+
+"I will now ask you to speak from your knowledge of blood tendencies
+as affected or distorted by mental abnormalities. Suppose a man to
+have been born and raised under a code which still adheres to feudal
+violence and the private avenging of personal grievances both real and
+fancied. Suppose such a man to have conceived a bitter hatred against
+his commanding officer and to have brooded over that hatred until it
+had become a fixed idea--a monomania--a determination to kill; suppose
+such a man to have known only the fierce influences of his retarded
+hills until he came into the army and to have encountered there a
+discipline which seemed to him a tyranny. I will ask you whether such
+a man might not be apt to react to a homicidal mania under nervous
+derangement, and whether such a homicidal mania might not develop its
+own craftiness of method?"
+
+"Such," testified the medical officer, "is a conceivable but a highly
+imaginative possibility."
+
+Then Private Severance was called and came into the room, where he
+stood smartly at attention until instructed to take the witness chair.
+This dark-haired private from the Cumberlands looked the soldier from
+crown to sole leather, yet his features seemed to hold under their
+present repose an ancient stamp of sullenness. It was an intangible
+quality rather than an expression, as though it bore less relation to
+his present than to some unconquerable survival from generations that
+had passed on; generations that had been always peering into shadows
+and searching them for lurking perils.
+
+In his speech lingered quaintly remnants of dialect from the laureled
+hills that army life had failed to eradicate, and in his manner one
+could note a wariness of extreme caution. That was easy to understand,
+because Private Severance, too, stood under the charge of having
+permitted a prisoner to escape, and his evidence would confront him
+later when he in turn occupied the dock.
+
+"I didn't have no speech with Bud Grant that night," he testified,
+"but I'd looked in some several times through the window. It was a
+barred window, an' every time I peeked through it I could see Bud
+layin' there asleep. The moon fell acrost his cot so I could see him
+plain."
+
+"When did you see him last?"
+
+"After Major James had been in and come out--a full fifteen minutes
+later. I'm able to swear to that, because I noticed the moon just as
+the major went out, and, when I looked in through the window the last
+time, the moon was a full quarter hour lower down to'rds settin'."
+
+After a moment's pause the witness volunteered in amplification:
+"Where I come from we don't have many clocks or watches. We goes by
+the sun and moon."
+
+"Then you can swear that if Private Grant fired the shot that killed
+Captain Comyn, he must have escaped and eluded your sight; armed
+himself, crossed the plaza; turned the corner; accomplished the act
+and gotten clean away, all within the brief period of five minutes?"
+
+"I can swear to more than that. He didn't get past me till _after_ the
+pistol went off. There wasn't no way out but by the one door, and I
+was right at that door all the time until I left it."
+
+"When did you leave?"
+
+The witness gave response without hesitation, yet with the same
+serious weighing of his words.
+
+"I was standing there, sorter peerin' up at the stars an' beginning to
+feel right smart tired when I heard the shot. I heard the shout of the
+corporal of the guard, too, an' then it was that I made my mistake."
+He paused and went on evenly. "I hadn't ought to have stirred away
+from my post, but it seemed like a sort of a general alarm, an' I went
+runnin' to'rds it. That was the first chanst Bud had to get away.
+When I got back he was gone."
+
+"You are sure he was still there when the shot sounded?"
+
+"As God looks down, I can swear he was!"
+
+Then the defense took the witness.
+
+"When does your enlistment expire?"
+
+"Two months, come Sunday."
+
+"You know to the day, don't you? You are keenly anxious for that day
+to come, aren't you?"
+
+"Why wouldn't I be? I've got folks at home."
+
+"Haven't you and Grant both been malcontents throughout your entire
+period of service?"
+
+"It's news to me, if it's true."
+
+"Haven't you often heard Private Grant swear vengeance against Captain
+Comyn?"
+
+"Not no more than to belly-ache some little."
+
+"Is it not a fact that since you and Grant ran amuck on the transport
+coming over, and Comyn put you both in irons, the two of you had sworn
+vengeance against him; that you had both taken the blood oath to get
+him?"
+
+Severance looked blankly at his questioner and blankly shook his
+head.
+
+"That's all new tidings ter me," he asserted with entire calmness.
+
+"Don't you know that you deliberately let Grant out immediately after
+the visit of Major James and slipped him the pistol with which he
+fired the shot? Didn't you do that, knowing that when the report
+sounded you could make it your excuse for leaving your post, and then
+perjure yourself as to the time?"
+
+"I know full well," asserted the witness with an unshaken composure,
+"that nothing like that didn't happen."
+
+Fact built on fact until even the defendant's counsel found himself
+arguing against a growing and ugly conviction. The pistol had been
+identified as Spurrier's, and his explanation that he had left it
+hanging in his holster at his quarters, whence some unknown person
+might have abstracted it, lacked persuasiveness. The defense built a
+structure of hypothesis based upon the fact that the open door of
+Spurrier's room was visible from the house where Grant had been
+tossing on his cot. The claim was urgently advanced that a skulking
+lunatic might easily have seen the glint of blued steel, and have been
+spurred in his madness by the temptation of such an implement ready to
+his hand. But that, too, was held to be a fantastic claim. So the
+verdict was guilty and the sentence life imprisonment. It must have
+been death, had the case, for all its warp of presumption and woof of
+logic, been other than circumstantial.
+
+The defendant felt that this mitigation of the extreme penalty was a
+misplaced mercy. The disgrace could be no blacker and death would at
+least have brought to its period the hideousness of the nightmare
+which must now stretch endlessly into the future.
+
+It was to a prisoner, sentenced and branded, that Major Withers came
+one afternoon when the court-martial of Lieutenant Spurrier had run
+its course as topic-in-chief for the Officers' Club at Manila. Other
+matters were already crowding it out of the minds it had profoundly
+shocked.
+
+"I want to talk to you, Jack," began the major bluntly. "I want to
+talk to you with a candor that grows out of the affection we all felt
+for you--before this damnable thing upset our little world. My God,
+boy, you had life in your sling. You had every quality that makes the
+soldier; you had every social requisite except wealth. This besetting
+passion for gambling has brought the whole train of disaster--as
+logically as if you had killed him at the card table itself."
+
+"You are overlooking the fact, major," interrupted the prisoner dryly,
+"that I didn't kill him. Moreover, it's too late now for the warning
+to benefit me. I dare say in Leavenworth I shall have no trouble
+curbing my passion for gaming." He paused and added with an irony of
+despairing bitterness: "But I suppose I should thank you and say, like
+the negro standing on the gallows, 'dis hyar is surely g'wine to be a
+great lesson ter me.'" Suddenly the voice broke and the young man
+wheeled to avert his face. "My God," he cried out, "why didn't you let
+them hang me or shoot me? Any man can stiffen his legs and his spine
+for five minutes of dying--even public dying--but back of those walls
+with a convict's number instead of a name----" There he broke off and
+the battalion commander laid a hand on his heaving shoulder.
+
+"I didn't come to rub in preachments while you stood at the edge of
+the scaffold or the jail, Jack. My warning may not be too late, after
+all. We've passed the matter up to the war department with a strong
+recommendation for clemency. We mean to pull every wire that can
+honorably be pulled. We're making the most of your good record
+heretofore and of the conviction being based on circumstantial
+evidence."
+
+He paused a moment and then went on with a trifle of embarrassment in
+his voice:
+
+"You know that Senator Beverly is at the governor general's
+palace--and that his daughter is with him."
+
+Spurrier wheeled at that and stood facing his visitor with eyes that
+had kindled, but in which the light at once faded as he commented
+shortly:
+
+"Neither the senator nor Augusta has made any effort to see me since I
+was brought to Manila."
+
+"Perhaps the senator thought that was best, Jack," argued Withers.
+"For the daughter, of course, I'm not prepared to speak--but I know
+that Beverly has been keeping the cable hot in your behalf. Your name
+has become so familiar to the operators between here and Washington
+that they don't spell it out any more: they only need to rap out Sp.
+now--and if I needed a voice to speak for me on Pennsylvania Avenue or
+on Capitol Hill, there's no man I'd pick before the senator."
+
+When he had gone Spurrier sat alone and to his ears came the distant
+playing of a band in the plaza. Somewhere in that ancient town was the
+girl who had not been to see him, nor written to him, even though,
+just before his battalion had gone into the bosques across the
+mountains, she had let him slip a ring on her finger, and had answered
+"yes" to his question--the most personal question in the world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+There was a more assured light in Major Withers' eyes when he next
+came as a visitor into the prison quarters, and the heartiness of his
+hand clasp was in itself a congratulation.
+
+"The thing was carried up to the president himself," he declared.
+"Washington is sick of you, Spurrier. Because of you miles of red tape
+have been snarled up. Departments have worked overtime until the
+single hope of the United States government is that it may never hear
+of you again. You don't go to prison, after all, my boy."
+
+"You mean I am pardoned?"
+
+Then, remembering that the rose of his bringing carried a sharp thorn
+the senior proceeded with a note of concern sobering his voice.
+
+"The red tape has not only been tangled because of you--but it has
+tangled you in its meshes, too, Spurrier. Yes, you are pardoned. You
+are as free as I am--but 'in view of the gravely convincing evidence,
+et cetera, et cetera'--it seems that some sort of compromise was
+deemed necessary."
+
+Spurrier stood where he had risen from his seat and his eyes held
+those of his informant with a blending of inquiry and suspense.
+
+"What sort of compromise, major?"
+
+"You leave the army with a dishonorable discharge. The world is open
+to you and you've got an equipment for success--but you might as
+well recognize from the start that you're riding with a heavy
+impost in your saddle clothes, my boy." He paused a moment and then,
+dropping his race-track metaphor, went hurriedly on: "For myself, I
+think you're guilty or innocent and you ought to be hanged or
+clean-shriven. I don't get this dubious middle ground of freedom with
+a tarnished name. It's going to crop up to crab things for you just
+when they hang in the balance, and I'm damned if I can see its
+fairness! It will cause men to look askance and to say 'he was saved
+from rope-stretching only by wire-pulling.'"
+
+The major ended somewhat savagely and Spurrier made no answer. He was
+gazing out at the patch of blue that blazed hotly through the high,
+barred window and, seeing there reminders of the bars sinister that
+would henceforth stand between himself and the sky.
+
+The battalion chief interrupted the long pause to suggest:
+
+"The _Empress_ sails on Tuesday. If I were you I'd take passage on
+her. I suppose you will, won't you?"
+
+"That depends," answered the liberated man hesitantly. "I've got to
+thank the senator--and, though she hasn't sent me any message, there's
+a question to ask a girl."
+
+"It's none of my business, of course, Spurrier," came the advising
+voice quietly. "But the Beverlys have engaged passage on the
+_Empress_. If I were you, I'd drop a formal note of gratitude and
+leave the rest until you meet them aboard."
+
+After a moment's thought the other nodded. "I'll follow that
+suggestion. It may be less embarrassing for--them."
+
+"The other fellows are going to send a sort of a hamper down to the
+boat. There won't be any cards, but you'll know that a spirit of
+Godspeed goes with the stirrup cup."
+
+For an instant Spurrier looked puzzled and the major, whose note of
+embarrassment had been growing until it seemed to choke him, now
+spluttered and sought to bury his confusion under a forced paroxysm of
+coughing.
+
+Then impulsively he thrust out his hand and gripped that of the man of
+whom just now he could remember only gallant things; soldierly
+qualities and gently bred charm.
+
+"In a fashion, Jack, you must shake hands with all of them through me.
+I come as their proxy. They can't give you a blowout, you know. They
+can't even come to see you off. I can say what I like now. The papers
+aren't signed up yet, but afterward--well, you know! Damn it, I forget
+the exact words that the Articles of War employ--about an officer who
+goes out--this way."
+
+"Don't bother, major. I get your meaning." Spurrier took the proffered
+hand in both his own. "No officer can give me social recognition. I
+believe the official words are that I shall be 'deemed ignominious.'
+Tell the boys I understand."
+
+On the sailing day John Spurrier, whose engagingly bold eyes had not
+yet learned to evade the challenge of any glance, timed his arrival on
+board almost as surreptitiously as a stowaway. It was from behind the
+closed door of his own stateroom that he listened to the deck
+commotion of laughter and leave-taking and heard, when the whistle had
+shrieked its warning to shore-going visitors, the grind of anchor
+chain on winch and windlass.
+
+That evening he dined in an inconspicuous corner by arrangement with
+the dining-saloon steward, and bolted his meal with nervous haste.
+
+From afar, as he had stood in a companionway, he had glimpsed a
+panama-hatted girl--a girl who did not see him, and who had shown only
+between the shifting heads and shoulders of the crowd. He could not
+have told even had he been closer whether her gloved left hand still
+wore upon its third finger the ring that he had put there--before
+things had happened.
+
+He must face the issue of questioning her and being questioned, and he
+hoped that he might have his first meeting with her alone--free from
+the gaze of other eyes that would torture him, and perhaps mortify
+her.
+
+So when the moon had risen and the band had begun its evening concert
+he slipped out on deck and took up his station alone at the stern
+rail. It was not entirely dark even here, but the light was mercifully
+tempered, and upon the promenaders he turned his back, remaining in a
+seclusion from which, with sidewise glances, he appraised each figure
+that drifted by.
+
+Once his eyes encountered those of a tall and elderly gentleman in
+uniform upon whose shoulder straps glittered the brigadier's single
+star.
+
+For an instant Spurrier forgot the sadly altered color of his status
+and his hand, answering to instinct, rose in salute, while his lips
+parted in a smile.
+
+But the older man, who fortunately was alone, after an embarrassed
+instant went on, pretending an absent-mindedness that ignored the
+salutation. Spurrier could feel that the general was scarcely more
+comfortable than himself.
+
+Slowly, at length, he left his outlook over the phosphorescent wake
+and drifted isolatedly about the decks, giving preference to the spots
+where the shadows lay heaviest. But when his wandering brought him
+again to the place he had abandoned at the stern, he found that it had
+been preempted by another. A figure stood there alone and so quiet
+that at first he hardly distinguished it as separate from the black
+contour of a capstan.
+
+But with the realization he recognized a panama hat, from under whose
+brim escaped a breeze-stirred strand of dark hair, and promptly he
+stepped to the rail, his rubber-soled shoes making no sound.
+
+The girl did not hear him, nor did she, as he found himself
+reflecting, feel his presence as lovers do in romances, and turn to
+greet him before he announced himself. But as she stood there in the
+shadow, with moonlight and starlight around her, his pulses quickened
+with an insupportable commotion of mingled hope and fear.
+
+Her beauty was that of the aristocrat. It was this patrician quality
+which had first challenged his interest in her and answered to his own
+inordinate pride of self-confidence.
+
+He had liked the lightness with which her small feet trod the earth
+and the prideful tilt of her exquisitely modeled chin.
+
+After all, he had known her only a short time--and now he realized
+that he did not know her well: certainly not well enough to estimate
+with any surety how they would meet again, after an interval which had
+tarnished the name that had come to him from two generations of
+accrued distinction.
+
+He bent forward, and, in a low voice, spoke her name, and she turned
+without a start so that she stood looking into his eyes.
+
+"I suppose you know," he began, and for once he spoke without
+self-assurance, "that I didn't hunt you out sooner because I wanted to
+spare you embarrassment. I knew you were sailing by this boat--and so
+I took it, too."
+
+She nodded her head, but remained silent. Her eyes met his and
+lingered, but they were like curtained windows and told him nothing.
+It was as if she wished to let him pitch the plane of their meeting
+without interference, and he was grateful.
+
+"I don't suppose," he began, forcing himself to speak with forthright
+directness, "I need protest my innocence to you--and I don't suppose I
+need confess that the stigma will stick to me--that in--some
+quarters--it will mean ostracism. I wanted to meet you the first time
+alone as much for your sake as my own."
+
+"I know----" she agreed faintly, but there was no rush of confidence,
+of sympathy that thought only of the black situation in which he
+stood.
+
+"I know, too," he went on with the same steadiness, "that but for your
+father's efforts I should have had to spend the rest of my life in
+prison. Above all, I know that your father made those efforts because
+you ordained it."
+
+"It was too horrible," she whispered with a little shudder. "It was
+inconceivable."
+
+"It still is," he reminded her. "There is a question, then, to be
+asked--a question for you to answer."
+
+The girl's hands dropped on the rail and her fingers tightened as her
+eyes, deeply pained, went off across the wake. She seemed unable to
+help him, unable to do more than give back monosyllabic responses to
+the things he said.
+
+"Of course, I can't assume that the promise you gave me--before all
+this--still stands, unless you can ratify it. I'm the same man, yet
+quite a different man."
+
+At last she turned, and he saw that her lashes were wet with tears.
+
+"Some day," she suggested almost pleadingly, "some day surely you will
+be able to clear your name--now that you're free to give yourself to
+it."
+
+He shook his head, "That is going to be the purpose of my life," he
+answered. "But God only knows----"
+
+"When you have done that," she impetuously exclaimed, "come back to
+me. I'll wait."
+
+But Spurrier shook his head and stiffened a little, not indignantly,
+but painfully, and his face grew paler than it had yet been.
+
+"That is generous of you," he said slowly. "That is the best I had the
+right to hope for--but it's not enough. It would be a false position
+for you--with a mortgage of doubt on your future. I've got to face
+this thing nakedly. I've got to depend only on those people who don't
+need proof--who simply know that I must be innocent of--of _this_
+because it would be impossible for me to be guilty of it--people," he
+added, his voice rising with just a moment's betrayal of boyish
+passion, "who will take the seeming facts, just as they are, and still
+say, 'Damn the facts!'"
+
+"Can I do that?" She asked the question honestly, with eyes in which
+sincere tears glistened, and at last words came in freshet volume.
+"Can I ignore the fact that father is in public life, where his
+affairs and those of his family are public property? You know he is
+talked of as presidential timber. Can I ask him to move heaven and
+earth to give you back your liberty--and then have his critics say
+that it was all for a member of his own family--a private use of
+public power?"
+
+"Then you want your promise back?" he demanded quietly.
+
+Suddenly the girl carried her hands to her face, a face all the
+lovelier for its distress. "I don't--know what--I want," she gasped.
+
+Her lover stood looking down at her, and his temples grew coldly moist
+where the veins stood out.
+
+"If you don't know what you want, dear, I know one thing that you
+can't do," he said. "Under these circumstances, your only chance of
+happiness would lie in your wanting one thing so much that the rest
+wouldn't count." He paused, and then he, too, moved aside and stood
+with her, leaning on the rail while in the phosphorescent play of the
+water and the broken reflections of the low-hung stars he seemed to
+find a sort of anodyne.
+
+"I said that what you offered was the most I had the right to hope
+for. That was true. Your father's objections are legitimate. I owe you
+both more than I can ever pay--but I won't add to that debt."
+
+"I thought," said the girl miserably, "that I loved you--enough for
+anything. The shock of all this--has made my mind swirl so that
+now--I'm not sure of anything."
+
+"Yes," he said dully, "I understand."
+
+Yet perhaps what he understood, or thought he understood, just then
+was either more or less than implied in the deferential compliance of
+his voice. This girl had given her promise to an officer and a
+gentleman with two generations of gallant army record behind him and a
+promising future ahead. She was talking now to one who, in the words
+of the Articles of War was neither an officer nor a gentleman and who
+had been saved from life imprisonment only by influence of her own
+importuning.
+
+Her own distress of mind and incertitude were so palpable and pathetic
+that the man had spoken with apology in his voice, because through him
+she had been forced into her dilemma. Yet, until now, he had been
+young enough and naive enough to believe in certain tenets of
+romance--and, in romance, a woman who really loved a man would not be
+weighing at such a time her father's aspirations toward the White
+House. In romance, even had he been as guilty as perdition, he would
+have stood in her eyes, incapable of crime. Palpably life and romance
+followed variant laws and, for a bitter moment, Spurrier wished that
+the senator had kept hands off, and left him to his fate.
+
+He had heard the senator himself characterized as a man cold-bloodedly
+ambitious and contemptuous of others and, having seen only the genial
+side of that prominent gentleman, he had resentfully denied such
+statements and made mental comment of the calumny that attaches to
+celebrity.
+
+Yet, Spurrier argued to himself, the girl was right. Quite probably if
+he had a sister similarly placed, he would be seeking to show her the
+need of curbing impulse with common sense.
+
+From a steamer chair off somewhere at their backs came a low peal of
+laughter, and the orchestra was busy with a fox trot. For perhaps five
+minutes neither of them spoke again, but at last the girl twisted the
+ring from her finger. At least her loyalty had kept it there until she
+could remove it in his presence. She handed it to him and he turned it
+this way and that. The moonlight teased from its setting a jet of cold
+radiance.
+
+Then Spurrier tossed it outward and watched the white arc of its
+bright vanishing. He heard a muffled sob and saw the girl turn and
+start toward the companionway door. Instinctively he took a step
+forward following, then halted and stood where he was.
+
+Later, Spurrier forced himself toward the smoke room where already
+under cigar and cigarette smoke, poker and bridge games were in
+progress, and where in little groups those men who were not playing
+discussed the topics of East and West. He was following no urge of
+personal fancy in entering that place, but rather obeying a resolution
+he had made out there on deck. Now that he had asked his question and
+had his answer there was nothing from which he could afford to hide.
+He knew that he came heralded by the advance agency of gossip and that
+it behooved him from the start to meet and give back glance for
+glance: to declare by his bearing that he had no intention of
+skulking, and no apologies to make.
+
+Yet, having reached the entrance from the deck, he hesitated, and
+while he still stood, with his back to the lighted door of the smoke
+room, he reeled under a sudden impact and was thrown against the rail.
+Recovering himself with an exclamation of anger, Spurrier found
+himself confronting a man rising from his knees, whose awkwardness had
+caused the collision.
+
+But the stumbling person having regained his feet, stood seemingly
+shaken by his fall, and after a moment, during which Spurrier eyed him
+with hostile silence, exclaimed:
+
+"Plunger Spurrier!"
+
+"That is not my name, sir," retorted the ex-officer hotly. "And it's
+not one that I care to have strangers employ."
+
+The man drew back a step, and the light from the doorway fell across a
+face a little beyond middle age; showing a broad forehead and strongly
+chiseled features upon which sat an expression of directness and
+force.
+
+"My apology is, at least, as ready as was my exclamation," declared
+the stranger in a pleasant voice that disarmed hostility. "The term
+was not meant offensively. I saw you at Oakland one day when a race
+was run, and I've heard certain qualities of yours yarned about at
+mess tables in the East. I ask your pardon."
+
+"It's granted," acceded Spurrier of necessity. "And since you've heard
+of me, you doubtless know enough to make allowances for my short
+temper and excuse it."
+
+"I _have_ heard your story," admitted the other man frankly. "My name
+is Snowdon. It's just possible you may have heard of me, too."
+
+"You're not Snowdon the engineer: the Panama Canal man, the Chinese
+railway builder, are you?"
+
+"I had a hand in those enterprises," was the answer, and with a slight
+bow the gentleman went his way.
+
+The spot where the two men had stood talking was far enough aft to
+look down on the space one deck lower and one degree farther astern,
+where, as through a well space, showed the meaner life of the
+steerage. There was a light third-class list on this voyage, and when
+Spurrier moved out of the obscurity which had been thrown over him by
+the life boat's shadow, he stood gazing idly down on an empty
+prospect. He gazed with an interest too moodily self-centered for easy
+inciting.
+
+He himself stood now clear shown under the frosted globe of an
+overhead light and, after a little, roused to a tepid curiosity, he
+fancied he could make out what seemed to be a human figure that clung
+to the blackest of the shadows below him.
+
+He even fancied that in that lower darkness he caught the momentary
+dull glint of metal reflecting some half light, and an impression of
+furtive movement struck in upon him. But after a moment's scrutiny,
+which failed to clarify the picture, he decided that his imagination
+had invented the vague shape out of nothing more tangible than shadow.
+If there had been a man there he seemed to have dissolved now.
+
+So Spurrier turned away.
+
+Had his eyes possessed a nearer kinship to those of the cat, which can
+read the dark, he would have altered his course of action from that
+instant forward. He would, first, have gone to the captain and
+demanded permission to search the steerage for an ex-private of the
+infantry company that had lately been his own; a private against whose
+name on the muster roll stood the entry: "Dead or deserted."
+
+Yet when he turned on his heel and passed from the lighted area he
+unconsciously walked out of range of a revolver aimed at his
+breast--thereby temporarily settling for the man who fingered the
+trigger his question, "to shoot or not to shoot."
+
+For Private Grant, a fleeing deserter, convalescent from fever and
+lunacy, had been casting up the chances of his own life just then and
+debating the dangers and advantages of letting Spurrier live.
+Recognizing his former officer as he himself looked out of his hiding,
+his first impulse had been one of panic terror and in Spurrier he had
+seen a pursuer.
+
+The finger had twitched nervously on the trigger--then while he
+wavered in decision the other had calmly walked out of range. Now, if
+he kept out of sight until they reached Frisco, the deserter told
+himself, a larger territory would spread itself for his escape than
+the confines of a steamer, and he belonged to a race that can bide its
+time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Spurrier entered the smoke room and stood for a moment in its
+threshold.
+
+There were uniforms there, and some men in them whom he had known,
+though now these other-time acquaintances avoided his eye and the
+necessity of an embarrassment which must have come from meeting it.
+
+But from an alcove seat near the door rose a stocky gentleman, well
+groomed and indubitably distinguished of guise, who had been tearing
+the covering from a bridge deck.
+
+"Spurrier, my boy," he exclaimed cordially, "I'm glad to see you. I
+read your name on the list. Won't you join us?"
+
+This was the man who had rolled away the mountains of official inertia
+and saved him from prison; who had stipulated with his daughter that
+she should not write to him in his cell; and who now embraced the
+first opportunity to greet him publicly with cordial words. Here,
+reflected the cashiered soldier, was poise more calculated than his
+own, and he smiled as he shook his head, giving the answer which he
+knew to be expected of him.
+
+"No, thank you, senator." Then he added a request: "But if these
+gentlemen can spare you for a few minutes I would appreciate a word
+with you."
+
+"Certainly, my boy." With a glance about the little company which
+made his excuses, Beverly rose and linked his arm through Spurrier's,
+but when they stood alone on deck that graciousness stiffened
+immediately into manner more austere.
+
+"I've seen Augusta," began the younger man briefly, "and told her I
+wouldn't seek to hold her to her promise. I suppose that meets with
+your approval?"
+
+The public man, whom rumor credited with presidential aspirations,
+nodded. "Under the circumstances it is necessary. I may as well be
+candid. I tried vainly to persuade her to throw you over entirely, but
+I had to end in a compromise. She agreed not to communicate with you
+in any manner until your trial came to its conclusion."
+
+The cashiered officer felt his temples hammering with the surge of
+indignant blood to his forehead. This man who had so studiedly and
+successfully feigned genuine pleasure at seeing him, when other eyes
+were looking on, was telling him now with salamander coolness that he
+had urged upon his daughter the policy of callous desertion. The
+impulse toward resentful retort was almost overpowering, but with it
+came the galling recognition that, except for Beverly's bull-dog
+pertinacity, Spurrier himself would have been a life-termer, and that
+now humility became him better than anger.
+
+"Did you seek to have Augusta throw me over, without even a
+farewell--because you believed me guilty, sir?" His inquiry came
+quietly and the older man shook a noncommittal head.
+
+"It's not so much what I think as what the world will think," he made
+even response. "To put it in the kindest words, Spurrier, you rest
+under a cloud."
+
+"Senator," said the other in measured syllables, "I rest, also, under
+a great weight of obligation to you, but, there were times, sir, when
+for a note from her I'd willingly have accepted the death penalty."
+
+"I won't pretend that I fail to understand--even to sympathize with
+you," came the answer. "You must see none the less that I had no
+alternative. Augusta's husband must be--well, like Caesar's wife."
+
+"There is nothing more to be said, I think," admitted Spurrier, and
+the senator held out his hand.
+
+"In every other matter, I feel only as your friend. It will be better
+if to other eyes our relations remain cordial. Otherwise my efforts on
+your behalf would give the busy-bodies food for gossip. That's what we
+are both seeking to avoid."
+
+Spurrier bowed and watched the well-groomed figure disappear.
+
+The cloudless days and the brilliant nights of low-hung stars and
+phosphor waters were times of memorable opportunity and paradise for
+other lovers on that steamer. For Spurrier they were purgatorial and
+when he realized Augusta Beverly's clearly indicated wish that he
+should leave her free from the embarrassment of any tete-a-tete, he
+knew definitely that her silence was as final as words could have made
+it. The familiar panama hat seen at intervals and the curve of the
+cheek that he had once been privileged to kiss seemed now to belong to
+an orbit of life remote from his own with an utterness of distance no
+less actual because intangible.
+
+The young soldier's nature, which had been prodigally generous, began
+to harden into a new and unlovely bitterness. Once he passed her as
+she leaned on the rail with a young lieutenant who was going to the
+States on his first leave from Island duty, and when the girl met his
+eyes and nodded, the cub of an officer looked up--and cut him dead
+with needless ostentation.
+
+For the old general, who had pretended not to see him, Jack Spurrier
+had felt only the sympathy due to a man bound and embarrassed by a
+severe code of etiquette, but with this cocksure young martinet, his
+hands itched for chastisement.
+
+Throughout the trying voyage Spurrier felt that Snowdon, the engineer,
+was holding him under an interested sort of observation, and this
+surveillance he mildly resented, though the entire politeness of the
+other left him helpless to make his feeling outspoken. But when they
+had stood off from Honolulu and brought near to completion the last
+leg of the Pacific voyage, Snowdon invited him into his own stateroom
+and with candid directness spoke his mind.
+
+"Spurrier," he began, "I'd like to have a straight talk with you if
+you will accept my assurance of the most friendly motive."
+
+Spurrier was not immediately receptive. He sat eying the other for a
+little while with a slight frown between his eyes, but in the end he
+nodded.
+
+"I should dislike to seem churlish," he answered slowly. "But I've had
+my nerves rubbed raw of late, and they haven't yet grown callous."
+
+"You see, it's rather in my line," suggested Snowdon by way of
+preface, "to assay the minerals of character in men and to gauge the
+percentage of pay-dirt that lies in the lodes of their natures. So
+I've watched you, and if you care to have the results of my
+superficial research, I'm ready to report. No man knows himself until
+introduced to himself by another, because one can't see one's self at
+sufficient distance to gain perspective."
+
+Spurrier smiled. "So you're like the announcer at a boxing match," he
+suggested. "You're ready to say, 'Plunger Spurrier, shake hands with
+Jack Spurrier--both members of this club.'"
+
+"Precisely," assented Snowdon as naturally as though there had been no
+element of facetiousness in the suggestion. "And now in the first
+place, what do you mean to do with yourself?"
+
+"I have no idea."
+
+"I suppose you have thought of the possibilities open to a West Point
+man--as a soldier of fortune?"
+
+"Yes," the answer was unenthusiastic. "Thought of them and discarded
+them."
+
+"Why?"
+
+The voice laughed and then spoke contemptuously.
+
+"A man's sword belongs to his flag. It can no more be honorably hired
+out than a woman's love. I can see in either only a form of
+prostitution."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed Snowdon heartily. "I couldn't have coached you to a
+better answer. Are you financially independent?"
+
+"On the contrary, I have nothing. Until now there was my pay and----"
+He paused there but went on again with a dogged self-forcing. "I might
+as well confess that the gaming table has always left a balance on my
+side of the ledger."
+
+"I haven't seen you playing since you came aboard."
+
+"No. I've cut that out----"
+
+"Good again--and that brings us to where I stop eliciting information
+about yourself and begin giving it. I had heard of your gambling
+exploits before I saw you. I found that you had that cold quality of
+nerve which a few gamblers have, fewer than are credited with it, by
+far! Incidentally, it's precisely the same quality that makes notable
+generals--and adroit diplomats--if they have the other qualities to
+support it. It's sublimated self-control and boldness. You were using
+it badly, but it was because you were seeking an outlet through the
+wrong channels. So I studied you, quite impersonally. Your situation
+on board wasn't easy or enviable. You knew that eyes followed you and
+tongues wagged about you with a morbid interest. You saw chatting
+groups fall abruptly silent when you approached them and officers you
+had once fraternized with look hurriedly elsewhere. In short, my young
+friend, you have faced an acid test of ordeal, and you have borne
+yourself with neither the defiance of braggadocio, nor the visible
+hint of flinching. If I were looking for a certain type of specialized
+ability, I should say you had qualified."
+
+A flush spread on the face of the listener.
+
+"You are indeed introducing me to some one I haven't known," he said.
+
+"I know, too," went on Snowdon, "that there has been a girl--and," he
+hastened to add as his companion stiffened, "I mention her only to
+show you that my observations have not been _too_ superficial. Those
+qualities which I have catalogued have engaged my attention, because
+they are rare--rare enough to be profitably capitalized."
+
+"All this is parable to me, sir."
+
+"Quite probably. I mean to construe it. There are men who originate or
+discover great opportunities of industry--and they need capital to
+bring their plans to fruition--but capital can be approached only
+through envoys and will receive only ambassadors who can compel
+recognition. The man who can hope to be successfully accredited to the
+court of Big Money must possess uncommon attributes. Pinch-beck
+promoters and plausible charlatans have made cynics of our lords of
+wealth."
+
+"What would such a man accomplish," inquired Spurrier, "aside from a
+sort of non-resident membership in the association of plutocrats?"
+
+"He would," declared Snowdon promptly, "help bridge the chasm between
+the world's unfinanced achievers, and its unachieving finances."
+
+"That," conceded the ex-soldier, "would be worth the doing."
+
+"John Law at twenty-one built a scheme of finance for Great Britain,"
+the engineer reminded him. "He could come into the presence of a king
+and in five minutes the king would urge him to stay. Force and
+presence can make such an ambassador, and those things are the veins
+of human ore I've assayed in you in paying quantities."
+
+Spurrier looked across at the strange companion whom chance had thrown
+across his path with a commotion of pulses which his face in no wise
+mirrored into outward expression. It had begun to occur to him that if
+a man is born for an adventurous life even the Articles of War cannot
+cancel his destiny.
+
+"It would seem," he suggested casually enough, "that this need of
+which you speak is for fellows, in finance, who can carry the message
+to Garcia, as it were. Isn't that it?"
+
+"That's it, and messengers to Garcia don't tramp on each other's
+heels. Yet I have spoken of only one phase of the career I'm
+outlining. It has another side to it as well, if one man is going to
+unite in himself the whole of the possibility."
+
+Snowdon broke off there a moment and seemed to be distracted by some
+thought of his own, but presently he began again.
+
+"My hypothetical man would act largely as a free lance, knocking about
+the world on a sort of constantly renewed exploration. He would be the
+prospector hunting gold and the explorer searching for new continents
+of industrial development, only instead of being just the one or the
+other he would be a sort of sublimation. His job would sometimes call
+him into the wildernesses, but more often, I think, his discoveries
+would lie under the noses of crowds, passed by every day by clever
+folk who never saw them--clever folk who are not quite clever
+enough."
+
+"It would seem to me that those discoveries," demurred Spurrier
+thoughtfully, "would come each time to some highly trained technician
+in some particular line."
+
+Snowdon shook his head again. "That's why they have come slowly
+heretofore," he declared with conviction. "That man I have in mind is
+one with a sure nose for the trail and a power of absorbing readily
+and rapidly what he requires of the other man's technical knowledge.
+It's the policy that Japan has followed as a nation. They let others
+work the problems out over there--then they appropriate the results.
+I'm not commending it as a national trait, but for this work it's the
+first essential. Having made his discovery, this new type of business
+man will enlist for it the needful financial support." He paused again
+and Spurrier, lighting a fresh cigarette, regarded him through eyes
+slit-narrowed against the flare of the match.
+
+"He must be a sort of opportunity hound," continued Snowdon smilingly.
+"He would go baying across the world in full cry and come back to the
+kennel at the end of each chase."
+
+Spurrier laughed. "If you'll pardon me, sir," he hazarded, "you make a
+very bad metaphor. I should fancy that the opportunity hound would do
+the stillest sort of still hunting."
+
+The older man smiled and bowed his head affirmatively.
+
+"I accept the amendment. The point is, do I give you the concept of
+the work?"
+
+"In a broad, extremely sketchy way, I think I get the picture,"
+replied Spurrier. "But could you give me some sort of illustration
+that would make it a shade more concrete?"
+
+His companion sat considering the question for a while and at last
+inquired: "Do you know anything about oil? I mean about its
+production?"
+
+"I've been on the Pennsylvania Railroad, coming west," testified the
+former lieutenant. "And I've run through ragged hills where on every
+side, stood clumsy, timber affairs like overgrown windmills from which
+some victorious Don Quizote had knocked off the whirligigs. Then I've
+read a little of Ida Tarbell."
+
+"Even that will serve for a sort of background. Now, people in general
+think of striking oil as they might think of finding money on the
+sidewalk or of lightning striking a particular spire--as a matter of
+purest chance. To some extent that idea is correct enough, but the
+brains of oil production are less haphazard. In the office of a few
+gentlemen who hold dominion over oil and gas hangs a map drawn by the
+intelligence department of their general staff. On that map are traced
+lines not unlike those showing ocean currents, but their arrows point
+instead to currents far under ground, where runs the crude petroleum,
+discovered--and undiscovered."
+
+"Undiscovered?" Spurrier's brows were lifted in polite incredulity,
+but his companion nodded decisively.
+
+"Discovered and undiscovered," he repeated. "Geological surveys told
+the mapmakers how certain lines and structures ran in tendency. Where
+went a particular formation of Nature's masonry, there in probability
+would go oil. The method was not absolute, I grant you, but neither
+was it haphazard. Sitting in an office in Pittsburgh a certain man
+drew on his chart what has since been recognized as the line of the
+forty-second degree, running definitely from the Pennsylvania fields
+down through Ohio and into the Appalachian hills of Kentucky--thence
+west and south. Study your fields in Oklahoma, in old Mexico, and you
+will find that, widely separated as they are, each of them is marked
+by a cross on that map, and that each of them lies along the current
+trend which the Pittsburgh man traced before many of them were touched
+by a drill."
+
+"That, surely," argued Spurrier, "testifies for the highly skilled
+technician, doesn't it?"
+
+"So far. I now come to the chance of the opportunity hound. The
+present fields are spots of production here and there. Between them
+lie others, virgin to pump or rig. Much of that ground is, of course,
+barren territory, for even on an acre of proven location dry holes may
+lie close to gushers; one man's farm may be a 'duster' while his
+neighbor's spouts black wealth. But along that charted line run the
+probabilities."
+
+Into Spurrier's eyes stole the gleam of the adventuring spirit that
+was strong in him.
+
+"It sounds like Robert Louis Stevenson and buried treasure," he
+declared with unconcealed enthusiasm, but Snowdon only smiled.
+
+"Remember," he cautioned, "I'm illustrating--nothing more. Now in the
+foothills of the Kentucky Cumberlands, for example, some years ago men
+began finding oil. It lay for the most part in a country where the
+roads were creek beds--remote from railway facilities. It was an
+expensive sort of proposition to develop, but the cry of 'Oil! Oil!'
+has never failed to set the pack a-running, and it ran."
+
+"I don't remember hearing of that rush," admitted Spurrier.
+
+"No, I dare say you didn't. It was a flare-up and a die-down. The men
+who rushed in, plodded dejectedly out again, poorer by the time they
+had spent."
+
+"Then the boom collapsed?"
+
+"It collapsed--but why? Because the gentlemen who hold dominion over
+oil and gas caucussed and so ordained. They gathered around their map
+and stuck pins here and there. They said, 'This oil can come out in
+two ways only: by pipe line or tank cars. We will stand aloof and
+develop where the cost is less and the profit greater--and without us,
+it cannot succeed.'"
+
+"Were there no independent concerns to bring the stuff to market?"
+
+Snowdon laughed. "The gentlemen who hold dominion have their own
+defenses against competition. You may have heard of a certain dog in
+the manger? Well, they said as they sat about their table on which the
+map was spread, 'Some day other fields may run out. Some day something
+may set oil soaring until even this yield may be well worth our
+attention. We will therefore hold this card in reserve against that
+day and that contingency.' So quietly, inconspicuously, yet with a
+power that strangled competition, lobbies operated in State
+legislatures. The independents failed to secure needful charters--the
+lines were never laid. Those particular fields starved, and now the
+ignorant mountaineers who woke for a while to dreams of wealth, laugh
+at the man who says 'oil' to them. Yet at some properly, or improperly
+designated day, those failure fields will flash on the astonished
+world as something risen from the dead, and fortunes will blossom for
+the lucky."
+
+"Yes?" prompted the listener.
+
+"Now let us suppose our opportunity hound as willing to go
+unostentatiously into that country; as willing to spend part of each
+year there for a term of years; nipping options here and there,
+waiting patiently and watching his chance to slip a charter through
+one of those bound and gagged legislatures in some moment of relaxed
+vigilance. Such a man might find himself ultimately standing with the
+key to the situation in his own hand. It's just a story, but perhaps
+it serves to give you my meaning."
+
+"Did I understand you to suggest," inquired Spurrier with a forced
+calmness, "that you fancy you see in me the qualities of your
+opportunity hound?"
+
+"Our own concern," said Snowdon quietly, "is fortunate enough to have
+passed through the period of cooling its heels in the anterooms of
+capital, but we can still use a man such as I have described. There's
+a place for you with us if you want it."
+
+"When do I go to work?" demanded the former lieutenant rising from his
+seat, and Snowdon countered:
+
+"When will you be ready to begin?"
+
+"When we dock at 'Frisco," came the immediate response, "provided I be
+allowed time for an affair of my own, two months from now. A certain
+private in my old company will be discharged from the service then. I
+fancy he'll land there, and I want to be waiting for him when he steps
+ashore."
+
+"A reprisal?" inquired Snowdon in a disappointed tone, but the other
+shook his head.
+
+"He is the one man through whom there's a chance of clearing my name,"
+Spurrier said slowly. "I hope it won't call for violence."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+Private Grant had been bred of the blood of hatred and suckled in
+vindictiveness. He had come into being out of the heritage of feud
+fighting "foreparents," and he thought in the terms of his ancestry.
+
+When he had fled into the jungle beyond the island village, though he
+had been demented and enfeebled, the instinct of a race that had often
+"hidden out" guided him. That instinct and chance had led him to a
+native house where his disloyalty gave him a welcome, and there he had
+found sanctuary until his fever subsided and he emerged cadaverous,
+but free. Word had filtered through to him there of Spurrier's
+court-martial and its result.
+
+In the course of time, fever-wasted yet restored out of his
+semi-lunacy, he had made his way furtively but successfully toward
+Manila and there he had supplemented the sketchy fragments of
+information with which his disloyal native friends had been able to
+provide him.
+
+He knew now that the accused officer had pitched his defense upon an
+accusation of the deserter and the refugee's eyes smoldered as he
+learned that he himself had been charged with prefacing his flight
+with murder. He knew what that meant. The disgraced officer would move
+heaven and earth to clear his smirched name, and the condition
+precedent would be the capture of Private Grant and the placing of him
+in the prisoner's dock. To be wanted for desertion was grave enough.
+To be wanted both for desertion and the assassination of his company
+commander was infinitely worse, and to stand in that position and
+face, as he believed he would have to, a conspiracy of class feeling,
+was intolerable.
+
+Haunting the shadowy places about Manila, Grant had been almost crazed
+by his fears but with the lifting of the steamer's anchor, a great
+spirit of hope had brightened in him, feeding on the solace of the
+thought that, once more in the States, he could lose himself from
+pursuit and vigilance.
+
+Then he had seen, on the same ship, the face of the man whom, above
+all others, he had occasion to fear!
+
+For their joint lives the world was not large enough. One of them must
+die, and in the passion that swept over him with the dread of
+discovery. Grant had skirted a relapse into his recent mania.
+
+At that moment when Spurrier had looked down and he had looked up, the
+deserter had seen only one way out, and that was to kill. But when the
+other had moved away, seemingly without recognition, his thoughts had
+moved more lucidly again.
+
+Until he had tried soldiering he had known only the isolated life of
+forested mountains and here on a ship at sea he felt surrounded and
+helpless--almost timid. When he landed at San Francisco, if his luck
+held him undiscovered that long, he would have dry land under him and
+space into which to flee.
+
+The refugee had hated Comyn. Now Comyn was dead and Grant transferred
+his hatred from the dead captain to the living lieutenant, resolving
+that he also must die.
+
+The moment to which he looked forward with the most harrowing
+apprehension was that when the vessel docked and put her passengers
+ashore. Here at sea a comforting isolation lay between first and
+third cabin passengers and one could remain unseen from those deck
+levels that lay forward and above. But with the arrangements for
+disembarkation, he was unfamiliar, and for all he knew, the steerage
+people might be herded along under the eyes of those who traveled
+more luxuriously. He might have to march in such a procession,
+willy-nilly, over a gang-plank swept by a watchful eye.
+
+So Private Grant brooded deeply and his thoughts were not pretty. Also
+he kept his pistol near him and when the hour for debarkation arrived
+he was ripe for trouble.
+
+It happened that a group of steerage passengers, including himself,
+were gathered together much as he had feared they might be, and
+Grant's face paled and hardened as he saw, leaning with his elbows on
+a rail above him and a pipe in his mouth, the officer whom he
+dreaded.
+
+Grant's hand slipped unobtrusively under his coat and his eyes
+narrowed as his heart tightened and became resolved.
+
+Spurrier had not yet seen him but at any moment he might do so. There
+was nothing to prevent the wandering and casual glance from alighting
+on the spot where the deserter stood, and when it did so the
+mountaineer would draw and fire.
+
+But as the ex-officer's eyes went absently here and there a girl
+passed at his back and perhaps she spoke as she passed. At all events
+the officer straightened and stiffened. Across his face flashed
+swiftly such an expression as might have come from a sudden and
+stinging blow, and then, losing all interest in the bustle of the
+lower decks, the man turned on his heel and walked rapidly away.
+
+The deserter's hand stole away from the pistol grip and his breath ran
+out in a long, sibilant gasp of relief and reaction. When later he had
+landed safely and unmolested, he turned in flight toward the mountains
+that he knew over there across the continent--mountains where only
+bloodhounds could run him to earth.
+
+Beyond the rims of those forest-tangled peaks he had never looked out
+until he had joined the army, and once back in them, though he dare
+not go, for a while, to his own home county, he could shake off his
+palsy of fear.
+
+He traveled as a hobo, moneyless, ignorant, and unprepossessing of
+appearance, yet before the leaves began to fall he was at last
+tramping slopes where the air tasted sweeter to his nostrils, and the
+speech of mankind fell on his ear with the music of the accustomed.
+
+The name of Bud Grant no longer went with him. That, since it carried
+certain unfulfilled duties to an oath of allegiance, he generously
+ceded to the United States Army, and contented himself with the random
+substitute of Sim Colby.
+
+Now he tramped swingingly along a bowlder-broken creek bed which by
+local euphemism was called a road. When his way led him over the
+backbone of a ridge he could see, almost merged with the blue of the
+horizon, the smoky purple of a sugar loaf peak, which marked his
+objective.
+
+When he passed that he would be in territory where his journeying
+might end. To reach it he must transverse the present vicinity in
+which a collateral branch of his large family still dwelt, and where
+he himself preferred to walk softly, wary of possible recognition.
+
+To the man whose terror had seen in every casual eye that rested on
+him while he crossed a continent, a gleam of accusation, it was as
+though he had reached sanctuary. The shoulders that he had forced into
+a hang-dog slough to disguise the soldierly bearing which had become
+habitual in uniform, came back into a more buoyant and upright swing.
+The face that had been sullen with fear now looked out with something
+of the bravado of earlier days, and the whole experience of the
+immediate past; of months and even years, took on the unreality of a
+nightmare from which he was waking.
+
+The utmost of caution was still required, but the long flight was
+reaching a goal where substantial safety lay like a land of promise.
+It was a land of promise broken with ragged ranges and it was fiercely
+austere; the Cumberland mountains reared themselves like a colossal
+and inhospitable wall of isolation between the abundant richness of
+lowland Kentucky to the west, and Virginia's slope seaward to the
+east.
+
+But isolation spelled refuge and the taciturn silences of the men who
+dwelt there, asking few questions and answering fewer, gave promise of
+unmolested days.
+
+These hills were a world in themselves; a world that had stood,
+marking time for a hundred and fifty years, while to east and west
+life had changed and developed and marched with the march of the
+years. Sequestered by broken steeps of granite and sand stone, the
+human life that had come to the coves and valleys in days when the
+pioneers pushed westward, had stagnated and remained unaltered.
+
+Illiteracy and ignorance had sprung chokingly into weed-like
+prevalence. The blood-feud still survived among men who fiercely
+insisted upon being laws unto themselves. Speech fell in quaint
+uncouthness that belonged to another century, and the tides of progress
+that had risen on either hand, left untouched and uninfluenced the
+men and women of mountain blood, who called their lowland brethren
+"furriners" and who distrusted all that was "new-fangled" or
+"fotched-on."
+
+Habitations were widely separated cabins. Roads were creekbeds. Life
+was meager and stern, and in the labyrinths of honeycombed and
+forest-tangled wilds, men who were "hidin' out" from sheriffs, from
+revenuers, from personal enemies, had a sentimental claim on the
+sympathy of the native-born.
+
+This was the life from which the deserter had sprung. It was the life
+to which with eager impatience he was returning; a life of countless
+hiding places and of no undue disposition to goad a man with
+questioning.
+
+Through the billowing richness of the Bluegrass lowlands, he had
+hurried with a homing throb in his pulses. As the foothills began to
+break out of the fallow meadows and the brush to tangle at the fringe
+of the smoothness, his breath had come deeper and more satisfying.
+When the foothills rose in steepness until low, wet streamers of cloud
+trailed their slopes like shrapnel smoke, and the timber thickened and
+he saw an eagle on the wing, something like song broke into being in
+his heart.
+
+He was home. Home in the wild mountains where air and the water had
+zest and life instead of the staleness that had made him sick in the
+flat world from which he came. He was home in the mountains where
+others were like him and he was not a barbarian any longer among
+contemptuous strangers.
+
+He plodded along the shale-bottomed water course for a little way and
+halted. As his woodsman's eye took bearings he muttered to himself:
+"Hit's a right slavish way through them la'rel hills, but hit's a
+cut-off," and, suiting his course to his decision, he turned upward
+into the thickets and began to climb.
+
+An hour later he had covered the "hitherside" and "yon side" of a
+small mountain, and when he came to the highway again he found himself
+confronted by a half dozen armed horsemen whose appearance gave him
+apprehensive pause, because at once he recognized in them the
+officialdom of the law. The mounted travelers drew rein, and he halted
+at the roadside, nodding his greeting in affected unconcern.
+
+The man who had been riding at the fore held in his left hand the
+halter line of a led horse, and now he looked down at the pedestrian
+and spoke in the familiar phrase of wayside amenity.
+
+"Howdy, stranger, what mout yore name be?"
+
+"Sim Colby from acrost Hemlock Mountain ways, but I've done been west
+fer a year gone by, though, an' I'm jest broguein' along to'rds
+home."
+
+The questioner, a long, gaunt man with a face that had been scarred,
+but never altered out of its obstinate set, eyed him for a moment,
+then shot out the question:
+
+"Did ye ever hear tell of Sam Mosebury over thet-away?"
+
+It was lucky that the fugitive had given as his home a territory with
+which he had some familiarity. Now his reply came promptly.
+
+"Yes, I knows him when I sees him. Some folks used ter give him a
+right hard name over thar, but I reckon he's all right ef a man don't
+aim ter crowd him too fur."
+
+"I don't know how fur he mout of been crowded," brusquely replied the
+man with the extra horse, "but he kilt a man in Rattletown yestiddy
+noon an' tuck ter ther woods. I'm after him."
+
+The foot traveler expressed an appropriate interest, then added:
+
+"Howsomever, hit ain't none of my affair, an' seein' thet I've got a
+right far journey ahead of me, I'll hike along."
+
+But the leader of the mounted group shook his head.
+
+"One of my men got horse flung back thar an' broke a bone inside him.
+I'm ther high sheriff of this hyar county, an' I hereby summons ye ter
+go along with me an' ack as a member of my possy."
+
+Under his tan Private Grant paled a little. This mischance carried a
+triple menace to his safety. It involved riding back to the county
+seat where some man might remember his face, and recall that two
+years ago he had gone away on a three years' enlistment. But even if
+he escaped that contingency, it meant tarrying in this neighborhood
+through which he had meant to pass inconspicuously and rapidly. To be
+attached to a _posse comitatus_ riding the hills on a man hunt meant
+to challenge every passing eye with an interest beyond the casual.
+
+Finally, though he might well have forgotten him, the man whose trail
+he was now called to take in pursuit had once known him slightly, and
+if they met under such hostile auspices, might recognize and denounce
+him.
+
+But the sheriff sat enthroned in his saddle and robed in the color of
+authority. At his back sat five other men with rifles across their
+pommels, and with such a situation there was no argument. The law's
+officer threw the bridle rein of the empty-saddled mount to the man in
+the road.
+
+"Get up on this critter," he commanded tersely, "and don't let him git
+his head down too low. He follers buck-jumpin'."
+
+When Grant, alias Colby, found that the men riding with him were more
+disposed to somber silence than to inquisitiveness or loquacity, he
+breathed easier. He even made a shrewd guess that there were others in
+that small group who answered the call of the law as reluctantly as
+he.
+
+Sam Mosebury was accounted as dangerous as a rattlesnake, and Bud
+doubted whether even the high sheriff himself would make more than a
+perfunctory effort to come to grips with him in his present
+desperation.
+
+When the posse had ridden several hours, and had come to a spot in the
+forest where the trail forked diversely, a halt was called. They had
+traveled steep ways and floundered through many belly-deep fords. Dust
+lay gray upon them and spattered mud overlaid the dust.
+
+"We've done come ter a pass, now," declared the sheriff, "where hit
+ain't goin' ter profit us no longer ter go trailin' in one bunch. We
+hev need ter split up an' turkey tail out along different routes."
+
+The sun had long crossed the meridian and dyed the steep horizon with
+burning orange and violet when Bud Grant and Mose Biggerstaff, with
+whom he had been paired off, drew rein to let their horses blow in a
+gorge between beetling walls of cliff.
+
+"Me, I ain't got no master relish for this task, no-how," declared
+Mose morosely as he spat at the black loam of rotting leaves. "No man
+ain't jedgmatically proved ter me, yit, thet ther feller Sam kilt
+didn't need killin'."
+
+Bud nodded a solemn concurrence in the sentiment. Then abruptly the
+two of them started as though at the intrusion of a ghost and, of
+instinct, their hands swept holsterward, but stopped halfway.
+
+This sudden galvanizing of their apathy into life was effected by the
+sight of a figure which had materialized without warning and in
+uncanny silence in a fissure where the rocks dripped from reeking moss
+on either side.
+
+It stood with a cocked repeating rifle held easily at the ready, and
+it was a figure that required no heralding of its identity or menace.
+
+"Were ye lookin' fer me, boys?" drawled Sam Mosebury with a palpable
+enjoyment of the situation, not unlike that which brightens the eyes
+of a cat as it plays with a mouse already crippled.
+
+With swift apprehension the eyes of the two deputies met and effected
+an understanding. Mose Biggerstaff licked his bearded lips until their
+stiffness relaxed enough for speech.
+
+"Me an' Sim Colby hyar," he protested, "got summoned by ther high
+sheriff. We didn't hev no rather erbout hit one way ner t'other. All
+we've got ter go on air ther _dee_scription thet war give ter us--an'
+we don't see no resemblance atween ye an' ther feller we're atter."
+
+The murderer stood eying them with an amused contempt, and one could
+recognize the qualities of dominance which, despite his infamies, had
+won him both fear and admiration.
+
+"Ef ye thinks ye'd ought ter take me along an' show me ter yore high
+sheriff," he suggested, and the finger toyed with the trigger, "I'm
+right hyar."
+
+"Afore God, no!" It was Bud who spoke now contradicting his colleague.
+"I've seed Sam Mosebury often times--an' ye don't no fashion faver
+him."
+
+Sam laughed. "I've seed ye afore, too, I reckon," he commented dryly.
+"But ef ye don't know me, I reckon I don't need ter know _you_,
+nuther."
+
+The two sat atremble in their saddles until the apparition had
+disappeared in the laurel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gray-templed and seamed of face, Dyke Cappeze entered the courthouse
+at Carnettsville one day a few months later and paused for a moment,
+his battered law books under his threadbare elbow, to gaze around the
+murky hall of which his memory needed no refreshing.
+
+About the stained walls hung fly-specked notices of sheriff's sales,
+and between them stamped long-haired, lean-visaged men drawn in by
+litigation or jury service from branchwater and remote valley.
+
+Out where the sun lay mellow on the town square was the brick
+pavement, on which Cappeze's law partner had fallen dead ten
+years ago, because he dared to prosecute too vigorously. Across
+the way stood the general store upon which one could still see the
+pock-marking of bullets reminiscent of that day when the Heatons
+and the Blacks made war, and terrorized the county seat.
+
+Dyke Cappeze looked over it all with a deep melancholy in his eyes. He
+knew his mountains and loved his people whose virtues were more
+numerous, if less conspicuous, than their sins. In his heart burned a
+militant insurgency. These hills cried out for development, and
+development demanded a conception of law broader gauged and more
+serious than obtained. It needed fearless courts, unterrified juries,
+intrepid lawyers.
+
+He had been such a lawyer, and when he had applied for life insurance
+he had been adjudged a prohibitive risk. To-day the career of three
+decades was to end, and as the bell in the teetering cupola began to
+clang its summons he shook his head--and pressed tight the straight
+lips that slashed his rugged face.
+
+On the bench sat the circuit-riding judge of that district; a man to
+whom, save when he addressed him as "your honor," Dyke Cappeze had not
+spoken in three years. They were implacable enemies, because too
+often the lawyer had complained that justice waited here on
+expediency.
+
+Cappeze looked at the windows bleared with their residue of dust and
+out through them at the hills mantling to an autumnal glory. Then he
+heard that suave--to himself he said hypocritical--voice from the
+bench.
+
+"Gentlemen of the bar, any motions?"
+
+Wearily the thin, tall-framed lawyer came to his feet and stood erect
+and silent for a moment in his long, black coat, corroding into the
+green of dilapidation.
+
+"May it please your honor," he grimly declared. "I hardly know whether
+my statement may be properly called a motion or not. It's more a
+valedictory."
+
+He drew from his breast pocket a bit of coarse, lined writing paper
+and waved it in his talon-like hand.
+
+"I was retained by the widow Sales, whose husband was shot down by Sam
+Mosebury, to assist the prosecution in bringing the assassin to
+punishment. The grand jury has failed to indict this defendant. The
+sheriff has failed to arrest him. The court has failed to produce
+those witnesses whom I have subpoenaed. The machinery of the law which
+is created for the sole purpose of protecting the weak against the
+encroachments of the malevolent has failed."
+
+He paused, and through the crowded room the shuffling feet fell silent
+and heads bent excitedly forward. Then Cappeze lifted the paper in his
+hand and went on:
+
+"I hold here an unsigned letter that threatens me with death if I
+persist with this prosecution. It came to me two weeks ago, and since
+receiving it I have redoubled my energy. When this grand jury was
+impaneled and charged, such a note also reached each of its members. I
+know not what temper of soul actuates those men who have sworn to
+perform the duties of grand jurors. I know not whether these threats
+have affected their deliberations, but I know that they have failed to
+return a true bill against Sam Mosebury!"
+
+The judge fingering his gavel frowned gravely. "Does counsel mean to
+charge that the court has proven lax?"
+
+"I mean to say," declared the lawyer in a voice that suddenly mounted
+and rung like a trumpeted challenge, "that in these hills of Kentucky
+the militant spirit of the law seems paralyzed! I mean to say that
+terrorism towers higher than the people's safeguards! For a lifetime I
+have battled here to put the law above the feud--and I have failed. In
+this courthouse my partner fought for a recognition of justice and at
+its door he paid the penalty with his life. I wish to make no charges
+other than to state the facts. I am growing old, and I have lost heart
+in a vain fight. I wish to withdraw from this case as associate
+commonwealth counsel, because I can do nothing more than I have done,
+and that is enough. I wish to state publicly that to-day I shall take
+down my shingle and withdraw from the practice of law, because law
+among us seems to me a misnomer and a futile semblance."
+
+In a dead silence the elderly attorney came to his period and gathered
+up again under his threadbare elbow his two or three battered books.
+Turning, he walked down the center aisle toward the door, and as he
+went his head sagged dejectedly forward on his chest.
+
+He heard the instruction of his enemy on the bench, still suave:
+
+"Mr. Clerk, let the order be entered striking the name of Mr. Cappeze
+from the record as associate counsel for the commonwealth."
+
+It was early forenoon when the elderly attorney left the dingy law
+office which he was closing, and the sunset fires were dying when he
+swung himself down from the saddle at his own stile in the hills and
+walked between the bee-gums and bird boxes to his door. But before he
+reached it the stern pain in his eyes yielded to a brightening
+thought, and as if responsive to that thought the door swung open and
+in it stood a slim girl with eyes violet deep, and a beauty so
+alluring and so wildly natural that her father felt as if youth had
+met him again, when he had begun to think of all life as musty and
+decrepit with age.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+Except in that narrow circle of American life which follows the doings
+and interests of the army and navy, the world had forgotten, in the
+several years since its happening, the court-martial and disgrace of
+John Spurrier--but Spurrier himself had not been able to forget.
+
+His name had become forcefully identified with other things and, in
+the employ of Snowdon's company, he had been into those parts of the
+world which call to a man of energy and constructive ability of major
+calibre. But the joy of seeing mine fields open to the rush where
+there had been only desert before: of seeing chasms bridged into
+roadways had not been enough to banish the brooding which sprung from
+the old stigma. In remote places he had encountered occasional army
+men to remind him that he was no longer one of them and, though he was
+often doing worthier things than they, they were bound by regulations
+which branded him.
+
+So Spurrier had hardened, not into outward crustiness of admitted
+chagrin, but with an inner congealing of spirit which made him look on
+life as a somewhat merciless fight and what he could wrest from life
+as the booty of conquest.
+
+One day, in Snowdon's office after a more than usually difficult
+task had reached accomplishment, the chief candidly proclaimed
+justification for his first estimate of his aide, and Spurrier
+smiled.
+
+"It's generous of you to speak so, sir," he said slowly, "and I'm glad
+to leave you with that impression--because with many regrets I _am_
+leaving you."
+
+The older man raised his brows in surprise.
+
+"I had hoped our association would be permanent," he responded. "I
+suppose, though, you have an opening to a broader horizon. If so it
+comes as recognition well earned."
+
+"It's an offer from Martin Harrison, sir," came the reply in slowly
+weighed words. "There are objections, of course, but the man who gains
+Harrison's confidence stands in the temple of big money."
+
+"Yes. Of course Harrison's name needs no amplification." The man who
+had opened a door for Spurrier in what had seemed a blank wall, sat
+for a moment silent then broke out with more than his customary
+emphasis of expression. "Objection from me may seem self-interested
+because I am losing a valuable assistant. But--damn it all, Harrison
+is a pirate!"
+
+Spurrier's tanned cheeks flushed a shade darker but he nodded his
+head. His fine eyes took on that glint of hardness which, in former
+times, had never marred their engaging candor.
+
+"I'd like to have you understand me, sir. I owe you that much and a
+great deal more. I know that Harrison and his ilk of big money
+operators are none too scrupulous--but they have power and opportunity
+and those are things I must gain."
+
+"I had supposed," suggested Snowdon deliberately, "that you wanted two
+things above all else. First to establish your innocence to the
+world, and secondly, even if you failed in that, to make your name so
+substantially respected that you could bear--the other."
+
+"Until recently I had no other thought." The young man rose and stood
+with his fine body erect and as full of disciplined strength as that
+of a Praxiteles athlete. Then he took several restless turns across
+the floor and halted tensely before his benefactor.
+
+"I have let no grass grow under my feet. You know how I have run
+down every conceivable clue and how I stand as uncleared as the day
+the verdict was brought at Manila. I've begun to despair of
+vindication.... I am not by nature a beast of prey.... I prefer
+fair play and the courtesies of sportsmanlike conflict."
+
+He paused, then went forward again in a hardening voice: "But in this
+land of ours there are two aristocracies and only two--and I want to
+be an aristocrat of sorts."
+
+"I didn't realize we had even so much variety as that," observed
+Snowdon and the younger man continued.
+
+"The real aristocracy is that of gentle blood and ideals. Our little
+army is its true nucleus and there a man doesn't have to be rich. I
+was born to that and reared to it as to a deep religion--but I've been
+cast out, unfrocked, cashiered. I can't go back. One class is still
+open to me; the brazen, arrogant circles of wealth into which a
+double-fisted achiever can bruise his way. I don't love them. I don't
+revere them, but they offer power and I mean to take my place on their
+tawdry eminence. It's all that's left."
+
+"I'm not preaching humility," persisted Snowdon quietly. "I started
+you along the paths of financial combat and I see no fault in your
+continuing, but may I be candid to the point of bluntness?"
+
+He paused for permission and Spurrier prompted: "Yes, please go on."
+
+"Then," finished Snowdon, "since you've been with me I've watched you
+grow--and you _have_ grown. But I've also seen a fine chivalric sense
+gradually blunting; a generous predisposition hardening out of
+flexibility into something more implacable, less gracious. It's a
+pity--and Martin Harrison won't soften you."
+
+For a while Spurrier stood meditatively silent, then he smiled and
+once more nodded his head.
+
+"There isn't a thing you've said that isn't true, Mr. Snowdon,
+and you're the one man who could say it without any touch of
+offensiveness. I've counted the costs. God knows if I could go back
+to the army to-morrow with a shriven record, I'd rather have my
+lieutenant's pay than all the success that could ever come from
+moneyed buccaneers! But I can't do that. I can't think of myself
+as a fighting man under my own flag whose largest pay is his
+contentment and his honor. Very well, I have accepted Hobson's
+choice. I will join that group which fights with power, for power;
+the group that's strong enough to defy the approval they can't
+successfully court. I _have_ hardened but I've needed to. I hope I
+shan't become so flagrant, however, that you'll have to regret
+sponsoring me."
+
+Snowdon laughed.
+
+"I'm not afraid of that," he made hasty assurance. "And my friendliest
+wishes go with you."
+
+Since that day John Spurrier had come to a place of confidence in the
+counsels over which Harrison presided with despotic authority.
+
+The man in the street, deriving his information from news print, would
+have accorded Martin Harrison a place on the steering committee of the
+country's wealth and affairs, and in such a classification he would
+have been both right and wrong.
+
+There were exclusive coteries of money manipulation to which Harrison
+was denied an entree. These combinations were few but mighty, and
+until he won the sesame of admission to their supreme circle his
+ambition must chafe, unsatisfied: his power, greater than that of many
+kings, must seem to himself too weak.
+
+It must not be inferred that Harrison was embittered by the wormwood
+of failure. His trophies of success were numerous and tangible enough
+for every purpose except his own contentment.
+
+To-night he was smiling with baronial graciousness while he stood
+welcoming a group of dinner guests in his own house, and as his butler
+passed the tray of canapes and cocktail glasses the latest arrival
+presented himself.
+
+The host nodded. "Spurrier," he said, "I think you know every one
+here, don't you?"
+
+The young man who had just come was perfectly tailored and self-confident
+of bearing, and as vigorous of bodily strength as a wrestler in training.
+The time that had passed over him since he had left Snowdon's company for
+wider and more independent fields had wrought changes in him, and in so
+far as the observer could estimate values from the externals of life,
+every development had been upward toward improvement. Yet, between the
+man's impressive surface and his soul lay an acquired coat of cynicism and
+a shell of cultivated selfishness.
+
+John Spurrier, who had renounced the gaming table, was more
+passionately and coldly than ever the plunger, dedicated to the single
+religion of ambition. He had failed to remove the blot of the
+court-martial from his name, and, denied the soldier's ethical place,
+he had become a sort of moss-trooper of finance.
+
+Backed only by his personal qualifications, he had won his way into a
+circle of active wealth, and though he seemed no more a stranger there
+than a duckling in a pool, he himself knew that another simile would
+more truly describe his status.
+
+He was like an exhibition skater whose eye-filling feats are
+watched with admiration and bated breath. His evolutions and dizzy
+pirouettings were performed with an adroit ease and grace, but he
+could feel the swaying of the thin ice under him and could never
+forget that only the swift smoothness of his flight stood between
+himself and disaster.
+
+He must live on a lavish scale or lose step with the fast-moving
+procession. He must maintain appearances in keeping with his
+associations--or drop downscale to meaner opportunities and paltrier
+prizes. The wealth which would establish him firmly seemed always just
+a shade farther away than the reach of his outstretched grasp.
+
+"We were just talking about Trabue, Spurrier," his host enlightened
+him as he looked across the rim of his lifted glass, with eyes
+hardening at the mention of that name.
+
+Spurrier did not ask what had been said about Trabue, but he guessed
+that it savored of anathema. For Trabue, whose name rarely appeared in
+the public announcements of American Oil and Gas, was none the less
+the white-hot power and genius of that organization--its unheralded
+chief of staff. Just as A. O. and G. dominated the world of finance,
+so he dominated A. O. and G.
+
+Harrison laughed. "I'm not a vindictive man," he declared in humorous
+self-defense, "but I want his scalp as Salome wanted the head of John
+the Baptist."
+
+The newly arrived guest smiled quietly.
+
+"That's a large order, Mr. Harrison," he suggested, "and yet it's in
+line with a matter I want to take up with you. My conspiracy won't
+exactly separate O. H. Trabue from his scalp lock, but it may pull
+some pet feathers out of his war bonnet. I'm leaving to-morrow on a
+mission of reconnaissance--and when I come back----"
+
+The eyes of the elder and younger engaged with a quiet interchange of
+understanding, and Spurrier knew that into Martin's mind, as crowded
+with activities as a busy harbor, an idea had fallen which would grow
+into interest.
+
+When dinner was announced, the adventurer de luxe--for it was so that
+he recognized himself in the confessional of his own mind--took in the
+daughter of his host, and this mark of distinction did not escape the
+notice of several men.
+
+Spurrier himself was gravely listening to some low-voiced aside from
+the girl who nibbled at an olive, and who merited his attention.
+
+She was tall and undeniably handsome, and if her mentality sparkled
+with a cool and brilliant light rather than a warm and appealing glow,
+that was because she had inherited the pattern of her father's mind.
+
+If, notwithstanding her wealth and position, she was still unmarried
+three seasons after her coming-out, it was her own affair and
+possibly his good fortune. For when the Jack Spurrier of these days
+contemplated marriage at all, he thought of it as an aid to his career
+rather than a sentimental adventure.
+
+"I'm leaving in the morning," he was saying in a low voice, "for the
+Kentucky Cumberlands, where I'm told life hasn't changed much since
+the pioneers crossed over their divide. It's the Land of Do-Without."
+
+"The Land of Do-Without?" she repeated after him. "It's an expressive
+phrase, Jack. Is it your own or should there be quotation marks?"
+
+Spurrier laughed as he admitted: "I claim no credit; I merely quote,
+but the land down there in the steeps is one, from all I hear, to stir
+the imagination into terms more or less poetic."
+
+He leaned forward a little and his engaging face mirrored his own
+interest so that the girl found herself murmuring: "Tell me something
+about it, then."
+
+"It is," he assured her, "a stretch of unaltered mediaevalism entirely
+surrounded by modernity--yet holding aloof. Though the country has
+spread to the Pacific and it lies within three hundred miles of
+Atlantic tidewater, it is still our one frontier where pioneers live
+under the conditions that obtained in the days of the Indian."
+
+"That seems difficult to grasp," she demurred, and he nodded his
+head, abstractedly sketching lines on the damask cloth with his oyster
+fork.
+
+"When the nation was born," he enlightened, "and the questing spirit
+of the overland voyagers asserted itself, the bulk of its human tide
+flowed west along the Wilderness Road. Through Cumberland Gap lay
+their one discovered gate in the wall that nature had built to the sky
+across their path. It was a wall more ancient than that of the Alps
+and between the ridges many of them were stranded."
+
+"How?" she demanded, arrested by the vibrant interest of his own
+voice, and he continued with a shrug of the shoulder.
+
+"Many reasons. A pack mule fallen lame--a broken wagon-wheel; small
+things were enough in such times of hardship to make a family settle
+where it found itself balked. The more fortunate won through to 'take
+the west with the axe and hold it with the rifle.' Then came railroads
+and steamboats, going other ways, and the ridges were swallowed again
+by the wilderness. The stranded brethren remained stranded and they
+did not alter or progress. They remained self-willed, fiercely
+independent and dedicated to the creed 'Leave us alone.' Their life
+to-day is the life of two centuries ago."
+
+The girl lifted the brows that were dark enough to require no
+penciling.
+
+"That was the speech of a dreamer and a poet, Jack, and I thought you
+the most practical of men. What calls you into a land of poverty? I
+didn't know you ever ran on cold trails." She spoke with a delicately
+shaded irony, as though for the materialism of his own viewpoint, yet
+he knew that her interest in him would survive no failure of worldly
+attainment.
+
+He did not repeat to her the story told him so long ago by Snowdon,
+the engineer, nor confide to her that ever since then his mind had
+harked back insistently to that topic and its possibilities. Now he
+only smiled with diplomatic suavity.
+
+"Pearls," he said, "don't feed oysters into robustness. They make
+'em most uncomfortable. The poverty-stricken illiterates in these
+hills, where I'm going, might starve for centuries over buried
+treasure--which some one else might find."
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"In the stories," she answered, though she did not seem disturbed at
+the thought, "the stranger in the Cumberlands always arouses the ire
+of some whiskered moonshiner and falls in a creek bed pierced by a
+shot from the laurel."
+
+Spurrier grinned.
+
+"Or he falls in love with a barefoot Diana and teaches her to adore
+him in return."
+
+Miss Harrison made a satirical little grimace. "At least teach her to
+eat with a fork, too, Jack," she begged him. "It will contribute to
+your fastidious comfort when you come back here to sell your pearls at
+Tiffany's or in Maiden Lane, or wherever it is that one wholesales his
+treasure-trove."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If John Spurrier had presented the picture of a man to the manner born
+as he sat with Martin Harrison's daughter at Martin Harrison's table,
+he fitted into the ensemble, too, a week later, as he crossed the
+hard-tramped dirt of the street from the railway station at Waterfall
+and entered the shabby tavern over the way--for the opportunity hound
+must be adaptable.
+
+Here he would leave the end of the rails and travel by mule into a
+wilder country, for on the geological survey maps that he carried with
+him he had made tracings of underground currents which it had not been
+easy to procure.
+
+These red-inkings were exact miniatures of a huge wall chart in the
+headquarters of American Oil and Gas, and to others than a trusted few
+they were not readily accessible. How Spurrier had achieved his
+purpose is a separate story and one over which he smiled inwardly,
+though it may have involved features that were not nicely ethical.
+
+The tavern had been built in the days when Waterfall had attracted men
+answering the challenge of oil discovery. Now it had fallen wretchedly
+into decay, and over it brooded the depression of hopes and dreams
+long dead. Gladly Spurrier had left that town behind him.
+
+Now, on a crisp afternoon, when the hill slopes were all garbed in the
+rugged splendor of the autumn's high color, he was tramping with a
+shotgun on his elbow and a borrowed dog at his heels. He had crossed
+Hemlock Mountain and struck into the hinterland at its back.
+
+Until now he had thought of Hemlock Mountain as a single peak, but he
+had discovered it to be, instead, an unbroken range beginning at
+Hell's Door and ending at Praise the Lord, which zigzagged for a
+hundred miles and arched its bristling backbone two thousand feet into
+the sky. Along this entire length it offered only a few passes over
+which a traveler could cross except on foot or horseback.
+
+He had found entertainment overnight at a clay-chinked log-cabin,
+where he had shared the single room with six human beings and two
+dogs. This census takes no account of a razor-back pig which was
+segregated in a box under the dining table, where its feeding with
+scraps simplified the problem of stock raising.
+
+His present objective was the house of Dyke Cappeze, the retired
+lawyer, whose name had drifted into talk at every town in which he had
+stopped along the railroad.
+
+Cappeze was a "queer fellow," a recluse who had quit the villages and
+drawn far back into the hills themselves. He was one who could neither
+win nor stop fighting; who wanted to change the unalterable, and,
+having failed, sulked like Achilles in his tent. But whoever spoke of
+Cappeze credited him with being a positive and unique personality, and
+Spurrier meant to know him.
+
+So he pretended to hunt quail--in a country where a covey rose and
+scattered beyond gorges over which neither dog nor man could follow.
+One excuse served as well as another so long as he seemed sufficiently
+careless of the things which were really the core and center of his
+interest. And now Cappeze's place ought to be near by.
+
+Off to one side of the ragged way stretched a brown patch of stubble,
+and suddenly the dog stopped at its edge, lifted his muzzle with
+distended nostrils delicately aquiver, and then went streaking away
+into the rattling weed stalks, eagerly quartering the bare field.
+
+Spurrier followed, growling skeptically to himself: "He's made a stand
+on a rabbit. That dog's a liar and the truth is not in him!"
+
+But the setter had come to a halt and held motionless, his statuesque
+pose with one foreleg uplifted as rigid as a piece of bronze save for
+the black muzzle sensitively alert and tremulous.
+
+Then as the man walked in there came that startling little thunder of
+whirring wings with which quail break cover.
+
+The ground seemed to burst with a tiny drumming eruption of up-surging
+feathery shapes, and Spurrier's gun spoke rapidly from both barrels.
+Save for the two he had downed, the covey crossed a little rise beyond
+a thicket of blackberry brier where he marked them by the tips of a
+few gnarled trees, and the man nodded his head in satisfaction as the
+dog he had libeled neatly retrieved his dead birds and cast off again
+toward the hummock's ridge.
+
+Spurrier, following more slowly, lost sight of his setter and, before
+he had caught up, he heard a whimpering of fright and pain. Puzzled,
+he hastened forward until from a slight elevation, which commanded a
+burial ground, choked with a tangle of brambles and twisted fox
+grapes, he found himself looking on a picture for which he was
+entirely unprepared.
+
+His dog was crouching and crawling in supplication, while above him,
+with eyes that snapped lightning jets of fury, stood a slender girl
+with a hickory switch tightly clenched in a small but merciless hand.
+
+As the gunner came into sight she stood her ground, a little startled
+but obdurately determined, and her expression appeared to transfer
+her anger from the animal she had whipped to the master, until he
+almost wondered whether she might not likewise use the hickory upon
+him.
+
+He tried not to let the vivid and unexpected beauty of the apparition
+cloud his just indignation, and his voice was stern with offended
+dignity as he demanded:
+
+"Would you mind telling me why you're mistreating my dog? He's the
+gentlest beast I ever knew."
+
+The girl was straight and slim and as colorful as the landscape which
+the autumn had painted with crimson and violet, but in her eyes flamed
+a war fire.
+
+"What's that a-bulgin' out yore coat pocket, thar?" she demanded
+breathlessly. "You an' yore dog air both murderers! Ye've been
+shootin' into my gang of pet pa'tridges."
+
+"Pet--partridges?" He repeated the words in a mystified manner, as
+under the compulsion of her gaze he drew out the incriminating bodies
+of the lifeless victims.
+
+The girl snatched the dead birds from him and laid their soft breasts
+against her cheek, crooning sorrowfully over them.
+
+"They trusted me ter hold 'em safe," she declared in a grief-stricken
+tone. "I'd kept all the gunners from harmin' 'em--an' now they've done
+been betrayed--an' murdered."
+
+"I'm sorry," declared Spurrier humbly. "I didn't know they were pets.
+They behaved very much like wild birds."
+
+The dog rose from his cowering position and came over to shelter
+himself behind Spurrier, who just then heard the underbrush stir
+at his back and wheeled to find himself facing an elderly man with a
+ruggedly chiseled face and a mane of gray hair. It was a face that
+one could not see without feeling a spirit force behind it, and when
+the man spoke his sonorous voice, too, carried a quality of
+impressiveness.
+
+"He didn't have no way of knowin', Glory," he said placatingly to the
+girl. "Bob Whites are mostly wild, you know." Then turning back to the
+man again he courteously explained: "She fed this gang through last
+winter when the snows were heavy. They'd come up to the door yard an'
+peck 'round with the chickens. She's gifted with the knack of gentlin'
+wild things." He paused, then added with a grim touch of irony. "It's
+a lesson that it would have profited me to learn--but I never could
+master it. You're a furriner hereabouts, ain't you?"
+
+"My name is John Spurrier," said the stranger. "I was looking for Dyke
+Cappeze."
+
+"I'm Dyke Cappeze," said the elderly man, "an' this is my daughter,
+Glory. Come inside. Yore welcome needs some mendin', I reckon."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+As John Spurrier followed his host between rhododendron thickets that
+rose above their heads, he found himself wondering what had become of
+the girl, but when they drew near to an old house whose stamp of
+orderly neatness proclaimed its contrast to the scattering hovels of
+widely separated neighbors, he caught a flash of blue gingham by the
+open door and realized that the Valkyrie had taken a short cut.
+
+The dog, too, had arrived there ahead of its master and was
+fawning now on the girl, who leaned impulsively over to take the
+gentle-pointed muzzle between her palms.
+
+"I'm sorry I whopped ye," she declared in a silver-voiced contrition
+that made the man think of thrush notes. "Hit wasn't _yore_ fault
+no-how. Hit was thet--thet stuck-up furriner. I _hates_ him!"
+
+The setter waved its plumed tail in forgiveness and contentment, and
+the girl, discovering with an upward glance that she had been
+overheard, rose and stood for a moment defiantly facing the object of
+her denunciation, then, as embarrassment flooded her cheeks with
+color, fled into the house.
+
+The sense of having stepped back into an older century had been
+growing on John Spurrier ever since he had turned away from the town
+of Waterfall, and now it possessed him with a singular fascination.
+
+Here was a different world, somber under its shadow of frugality, and
+breathing out the heavy atmosphere of isolation. The spirit of this
+strange life looked out from the wearied eyes of Dyke Cappeze as he
+sat filling his pipe across the hearth, a little later, and it sounded
+in his voice when he announced slowly:
+
+"It's not for me to withhold hospitality in a land where a ready
+welcome is about all we have to offer, and yet you could hardly have
+picked a worse house to come to between the Virginia border and the
+Kaintuck ridges."
+
+Spurrier raised his brows interrogatively, and at the same moment he
+noticed matters hitherto overlooked. The windows were heavily
+shuttered and his host sat beyond the line of vision from the open
+door--with a rifle leaning an arm's length away.
+
+"Coming as a stranger," continued Cappeze, "you start without
+enmities--with a clean page. You might spend your life here and find a
+sincere welcome everywhere--so long as you avoided other men's
+controversies. But you come to me and that, sir, is a bad beginning--a
+very bad beginning."
+
+A contemplative cloud of smoke went up from the pipe, and the voice
+finished in a tone of bitterness.
+
+"I'm the most hated man in this region where hatreds grow like
+weeds."
+
+"You mean because you have stood out for the enforcement of law?"
+
+The other nodded, "It has taken me a lifetime," he observed, "to learn
+that the mountains are stronger, if not more obstinate, than I."
+
+"Is that the only reason they hate you?" inquired the visitor, and the
+lawyer, removing the pipe stem from his teeth, regarded him for a
+space in silence. Then he commented quietly:
+
+"If you knew this country better, you wouldn't have to ask that
+question. In Athens, I believe, they ostracized Aristides because he
+was 'too just a man.'"
+
+"Nonetheless, I'm glad I came to you."
+
+Cappeze smiled gravely. He had a rude sort of dignity which Spurrier
+found beguiling; a politeness that sprang from a deeper rooting than
+mere formula.
+
+"Merely coming to see me--once in a while--won't damn you, I reckon. A
+man has a license to be interested in freaks. But take my advice, and
+I sha'n't be offended. Tell every one that you hold no brief for me
+and listen with an open mind when they blackguard me."
+
+Spurrier laughed. "In a place where assassination is said to come
+cheap, you have at least been able to take care of yourself, sir."
+
+"That," said the other slowly, "is as it happens. My partner was less
+lucky. My own luck may break some day."
+
+"And yet you go on living here when you'd be safe enough anywhere
+else."
+
+"Yes, I go on living here. It's a land where a man's mind starves and
+where the great marching song of the world's progress is silent--and
+yet----" Again he paused to draw in and exhale a cloud of pipe smoke.
+"Yet there's something in the winds that blow here, in the air one
+breathes, that 'is native to my blood.' Elsewhere I should be
+miserable, sir, and my daughter----"
+
+He came to an abrupt stop and Spurrier took him up quickly. "She
+seems young and vital enough to crave all of life's variety."
+
+"But she is contented, sir." The elderly man spoke eagerly as though
+to convince himself and quiet troubling doubts. "She, too, would
+rather be here. We know this life and take it as we find it."
+
+Spurrier felt that the conversation was tending into channels too
+personal for the participation of a chance acquaintance, and he guided
+it to a less intimate subject.
+
+"I understand, Mr. Cappeze, that in the campaign just ended, you
+stumped this district whole-heartedly in behalf of one of the
+candidates for the circuit judgeship."
+
+Again the hawk-keen blaze flared in the eyes of his host.
+
+"You are mistaken, sir," he declared with heated emphasis. "It was
+less _for_ a candidate than _against_ one that I worked. The man whom
+circumstances compelled me to support was a poor thing, but he was
+better than his adversary."
+
+"Was it party spirit that prompted you, then?" inquired the guest,
+feeling that politeness called for some show of interest.
+
+"Sometimes I think," said the lawyer with a grim smile, "that from
+some men God withholds the blessed power of riding life's waves. All
+they can do is to buffet and fight and wear themselves out. Perhaps
+I'm that sort. The man who won--who succeeded himself on the bench--is
+an expedientist. So long as he presides, timid juries will return
+timid verdicts and the law will falter. I took the stump to brand him
+before the people as an apostate to his oath. I knew he would win,
+but I meant to make him wear his trade-mark of cowardice along with
+his smirk of self-righteousness!"
+
+As Spurrier listened, not to a feudist but to a man who had worn
+himself out fighting feudism, there came to him like a revelation an
+appreciation of the bitterness which runs in the grim undertow of this
+blood.
+
+"I believe," he suggested, glancing sidewise at the door beyond which
+he heard the thrushlike voice of the girl, "that you made an issue of
+a murder case which collapsed--a case in which you had been employed
+to prosecute."
+
+"Yes," Cappeze told him. "Because I believe it to be one in which the
+officers of the court lay down and quit like dogs. The defendant was a
+red-handed bully, generally feared--and the law was in timid keeping.
+I am still trying to have the grand jury call before it the
+prosecutor, the sheriff, and every deputy who served on that posse. I
+want to make them tell, on oath, just how hard they sought to
+apprehend the assassin--who still walks boldly and freely among
+us--unwhipped of justice."
+
+Spurrier rose, deeply impressed by the headstrong, willful courage of
+this old insurgent, whose daughter's eyes were so full of spring
+gentleness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Far up the dwindling thread of a small water course, where the forest
+was jungle-thick, a log cabin hung perched to a rocky cornfield that
+tilted like a steep roof, and under its shingles Sim Colby dwelt
+alone. Since his coming here he had been assimilated into the
+commonplace life of the neighborhood and the question of his
+origin was no longer discussed. The time had gone by when even an
+acquaintance of other days would be apt to calculate that his term of
+enlistment in the army had not run its full course. Moreover, there
+were no such acquaintances here; none who had known him before he
+changed his name from Grant to Colby. The shadow of dread which had
+once obsessed him had gradually and imperceptibly lightened until
+for weeks together he forgot how poignantly it had once haunted him.
+He had painstakingly established a reputation exemplary beyond the
+tendencies of his nature in this new habitat--since trouble might
+cause closed pages to reopen.
+
+Now on a November afternoon a deputy sheriff, serving summonses in
+that neighborhood dismounted at the door where Sim stood with his hand
+resting on the jamb, and the two mulled over what sparse gossip the
+uneventful neighborhood afforded.
+
+"Old Cappeze, he's a-seekin' ter rake up hell afresh an' brew more
+pestilence fer everybody," announced the deputy glumly.
+
+"What's he projeckin' at now?" asked Sim.
+
+"He's seekin' ter warm over thet ancient Sam Mosebury case afore ther
+grand jury. Come ter think of hit, Sim, ye rid with ther high sheriff
+yoreself thet time, didn't ye?"
+
+Moodily the other nodded. That was a matter he preferred to leave
+buried.
+
+"Waal, Cappeze is claimin' now thet ther possy didn't make no master
+effort ter lay hands on Sam. He aims ter hev all ye boys tell ther
+grand jury what ye knows erbout ther matter."
+
+The deputy turned away, but in afterthought he paused, thrashing idly
+with his switch at the weed stalks, as he retailed an almost forgotten
+item of news.
+
+"A furriner come ter town yistidday, an' sot out straightway acrost
+Hemlock Mountain fer old Cappeze's dwellin' house."
+
+"What manner of man war he, Joe?" Sim's interest was perfunctory. Had
+he been haled into the grand-jury room in those earlier days, the
+prospect would have bristled with apprehensions, but now he had behind
+him the background of respectability and Mose Biggerstaff, who alone
+knew of his craven behavior as a member of the posse, was dead. Sim
+felt secure in his mantle of virtue.
+
+"He war a right upstandin' sort of feller--ther furriner," enlightened
+the deputy. "He goes under ther name of Spurrier--John Spurrier."
+
+As though an electric wire of high tension had broken and brushed him
+in falling, Sim Colby's attitude stiffened and every muscle grew taut
+from neck to ankles as his jaw sagged.
+
+The deputy, with his foot already in the stirrup, missed the terror
+spasms of the face gone suddenly putty gray. He missed the gasp that
+contracted the throat and caused its breath to wheeze, and when he
+glanced back again from his saddle, the other had, with an effort of
+sheer desperation, regained his outward semblance of composure. He
+still leaned indolently against the door frame, but now he needed its
+support, because all his nerves jumped and a confusion like the
+swarming of angry bees filled his brain.
+
+Afterward he groped his way inside and dropped down into a low chair
+by the hearth. For a long time he sat there breathing stertorously
+while the untended fire died away to ashen dreariness. The sun went
+down beyond the pine tops and still he sat dully with his hands
+hanging over his knees, their fingers twitching in panic aimlessness.
+
+Out of a past that he had cut away from the present had arisen a ghost
+of hideous menace. Here into the laurel which had promised sanctuary
+his Nemesis had pursued him.
+
+Two men with the guilt of a murder standing between them had come into
+a radius too small to contain them both. It was as if they had met on
+a narrow log spanning a chasm where only one could pass and the other
+must fall.
+
+If old Cappeze dragged him to the courthouse now, he would be
+delivered over to Spurrier, waiting there to identify him, as a fox in
+a trap is delivered to the skinning knife. That must be the meaning of
+the stranger's visit to the lawyer.
+
+Sim Colby went to an ancient and dilapidated bureau and from a
+creaking drawer took out a memento which, for some reason, he had
+preserved from times not treasured in memory. He carried it to the
+open door and stood looking at it as it lay on the palm of his hand
+with the light glinting upon it.
+
+It was a sharpshooter's medal, for, whatever his military shortcomings,
+Private Grant had been an efficient rifleman, and as he looked at it
+now his lips twisted into a grim smile. Then he took his rifle from its
+corner and, sitting on the doorstep, polished it with a fond
+particularity, oiling its mechanism and burnishing its bore.
+
+Already Spurrier had made arrangements to ensconce himself under the
+roof of a house he had rented. Already the faces that he met in the
+road were, for the most part, familiar, and without exception they
+were friendly. Quick on the heels of his first disgust for the squalor
+of this lapsed and retarded life, had succeeded an exhilaration born
+of the wine-like sparkle of the air and the majestic breadth of vistas
+across ridge and valley. As he watched mile-wide shadows creep between
+sky-high lines of peaks, his dreams borrowed something of their
+vastness.
+
+Through half-closed lids imagination looked out until the range-broken
+spaces altered to its vision. Spurrier saw white roads and the glitter
+of rails running off into gossamer webs of distance. Where now stood
+virgin forests of hard wood he visualized the shaftings of oil
+derricks, the red iron sheeting of tanks, the belching stacks of
+refineries, and in that defaced landscape he read the triumph of
+conquest; the guerdon of wealth; the satisfaction of power.
+
+One afternoon Spurrier started over to the house he had rented, but
+into which he had not yet moved. The way lay for a furlong or more
+through a gorge deeply and somberly shaded. Even now, at midday, the
+sunlight of the upper places left it cloistered and the bowlders
+trooped along in ferny dampness, where the little waters whispered.
+
+Beside a bulky hummock of green-corroded sandstone the man halted and
+stood musingly, with eyes downcast and thoughts uplifted--uplifted
+to the worship of his one god: Ambition. At his feet was an oily
+sediment along the water's edge and the gravel was thick with
+"sand blossom"--tiny fossil formations that are prima facie evidence
+of oil. Then, without warning, he felt a light sting along his
+cheek and the rock-walled fissure reverberated under what seemed a
+volley of musketry.
+
+But the magnified and crumbling effect of the echo struck him with a
+less poignant realization than a slighter sound and a sharper one. As
+if a taut piano wire had been sharply struck, came the clear whang
+that he recognized as the flight song of a rifle bullet, and, whatever
+its origin it called for a prompt taking of cover.
+
+Spurrier side-stepped as quickly as a boxer, and stood, for the moment
+at least, bulwarked behind the rock that was so providentially close.
+
+"I'm John Spurrier--a stranger in these parts," he sung out in a
+confident voice of forced boldness and cheerfulness. "I reckon you've
+made a mistake in your man."
+
+There was no answer and Spurrier cautiously raised his hat on the end
+of a stick with the same deliberation that might have marked his
+action had it been his own head emerging from cover.
+
+Instantly the hidden rifle spoke again and the hat came down pierced
+through its band, while the rocks once more reverberated to multiplied
+detonations.
+
+"It would seem," the man told himself grimly, "that after all there
+was no mistake."
+
+He was unarmed and in no position to pursue investigations of the
+mystery, but by crawling along on his belly he could keep his body
+shielded behind the litter of broken stone that edged the brook until
+he reached the end of the gorge itself and came to safer territory.
+
+Slowly, Spurrier traveled out of his precarious position, flattening
+himself when he paused to rest and listen, as he had made his men
+flatten themselves over there in the islands when they were going
+forward without cover under the fire of snipers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Spurrier was not frightened, but he was deeply mystified, and when he
+reached the cabin which he was preparing for occupancy he sat down on
+the old millstone that served as a doorstep and sought enlightenment
+from reflection and the companionship of an ancient pipe.
+
+In an hour or two "Uncle Jimmy" Litchfield, under whose smoky roof he
+was being temporarily sheltered, would arrive with a jolt wagon and
+yoke of oxen, teaming over the household goods that Spurrier meant to
+install. Already the new tenant had swept and whitewashed his cabin
+interior and had let the clear winds rake away the mildew of its long
+vacancy. Now he sat smoking with a perplexity-drawn brow, while a
+tuneful sky seemed to laugh mockingly at the absurd idea of riflemen
+in ambush.
+
+Every neighbor had manifested a spirit of cordiality toward him. To
+many of them he was indebted for small and voluntary kindnesses, and
+he had maintained a diplomatic neutrality in all local affairs that
+bore a controversial aspect.
+
+Certainly, he could not flatter himself that as yet any premonition of
+danger had percolated to those distant centers of industry against
+which he was devising a campaign of surprise. One explanation only
+presented itself with any color of plausibility.
+
+That trickle of water might come to the gorge from a spot back in the
+laurel where, under the shelter of a felled hemlock top, some one
+tended a small "blockade" distillery; some one who resented an
+invasion of his privacy.
+
+Yet even that inference was not satisfactory. Only yesterday a man had
+offered him moonshine whisky, declaring quite unsuspiciously: "Ef
+ye're vouched fer by Uncle Jimmy, I ain't a'skeered of ye none. I made
+thet licker myself--drink hearty."
+
+Of the real truth no ghostly glimmer of suspicion came in even the
+most shadowy fashion to his mind.
+
+His efforts to trace to definite result some filament of fact that
+might prove the court-martial to have reached a conclusion at variance
+with the truth, had all ended in failure. That the matter was hopeless
+was an admission which he could not afford to make and which he
+doggedly denied, but with waning confidence.
+
+This state of mind prevented him from suspecting any connection
+between this present and mysterious enmity and those things which had
+happened across the Pacific.
+
+He had kept himself informed as to the movements of Private Severance
+and when that time-expired man had stepped ashore at San Francisco,
+John Spurrier had been waiting to confront him, even though it
+involved facing men who had once been brother officers and who could
+no longer speak to him as an equal.
+
+From the former soldier, who brought a flush to his cheeks by saluting
+him and calling him "Lieutenant," he had learned nothing. There had
+been no reason to hope for much. It was unlikely that he would be
+able to shake into a damaging admission of complicity--and any
+statement of value must have amounted to that--the witness who had
+come unscathed out of the cross-examination of two courts-martial.
+
+Indeed Spurrier had expected to encounter unveiled hostility in the
+attitude of the mountaineer, who had been doing sentry duty at the
+door through which the prisoner, Grant, had escaped. It might have
+followed logically upon the officer's defense, which had sought to
+involve that sentinel as an accomplice in the fugitive's flight, and
+even in the murder itself.
+
+But Severance had greeted him without rancor and with the disarming
+guise of candid friendliness.
+
+"I'd be full willin' ter help ye, Lieutenant--ef so be I could," he
+had protested. "I knows full well yore lawyers was plum obliged ter
+seek ter hang ther blame wharsoever they was able, an' I ain't
+harborin' no grudge because I happened ter be one they sought ter
+hurt. But I don't know nothin' that kin aid ye."
+
+"Do you think Grant escaped alive?" demanded Spurrier, and the other
+shook his head.
+
+"I feels so plum, dead sartain he died," came the prompt response,
+"thet when I gits back home I'm goin' ter tell his folks he did. Bud
+Grant was a friend of mine, but when he went out inter thet jungle he
+was too weakly ter keer fer hisself an' ef he'd lived they would hev
+done found him an' brought him back."
+
+Spurrier had come to embrace that belief himself. The one man whose
+admission, wrung from him by persuasion or compulsion, could give him
+back his clean name, must have perished there in the _bijuca_
+tangles. The hope of meeting the runaway in life had died in the
+ex-officer's heart and consequently it did not now occur to him to
+think of the deserter as a living menace.
+
+At length he rose and stood against the shadowy background of his
+door, which was an oblong of darkness behind the golden outer
+clarity.
+
+Off in the tangle of oak and poplar and pine a ruffed grouse drummed
+and a "cock of the woods" rapped its tattoo on a sycamore top.
+
+Once he fancied he heard a stirring in the rhododendron where its
+large waxen leaves banked themselves thickly a hundred yards distant,
+and his eyes turned that way seeking to pierce the impenetrable
+screen--but unavailingly. Perhaps some small, wild thing had moved
+there.
+
+Then, as had happened before that afternoon, the stillness broke to a
+rifle shot--this time clean and sharp, unclogged by echoes.
+
+Spurrier stood for an instant while a surprised expression showed in
+his out-staring eyes, then he swayed on his feet. His hands came up
+and clutched spasmodically at his left breast, and with a sudden
+collapse he dropped heavily backward, and lay full length, swallowed
+in the darkness that hung beyond the door.
+
+Over the rhododendron thicket quiet settled drowsily again, but
+through the toughness of interlaced branches stole upward and outward
+an acrid powder smell and a barely perceptible trickle of smoke.
+
+Crouched there, his neutral-hued clothing merging into the earth tones
+about him, a man peered out, but he did not rise to go forward and
+inspect his work. Instead, he opened the breech block of his piece
+and with unhurried care blew through the barrel--cleansing it of its
+vapors.
+
+"I reckon thar ain't no needcessity to go over thar an' look at him,"
+he reflected. "When they draps down _thet_-away, they don't git up no
+more--an' some person from afar mout spy me crossin' ther dooryard."
+
+So he edged backward into the tangle, moving like a crawfish and
+noiselessly took up his homeward journey.
+
+When the slow plodding ox team came at last to the dooryard and Uncle
+Billy stood shouting outside the house, Sim Colby, holding to tangles
+where he would meet no chance wayfarer, was already miles away and
+hurrying to establish his alibi against suspicion, in his own
+neighborhood--where no one knew he had been absent.
+
+Though it be an evil thing and shameful to confess, ex-private Bud
+Grant, alias Sim Colby, traveled light-heartedly, roweled by no
+tortures of conscience, but blithe in the assurance of a ghost laid,
+and a peril averted.
+
+He would have been both amazed and chagrined had he remained peering
+from his ambuscade, for when Uncle Billy's shadow fell through the
+open door the man to whom he had come rose from a chair to meet him,
+and he presented no mangled or blood-stained breast to the eyes of his
+visitors.
+
+"Ye ain't jest a-quippin' with me, be ye?" demanded the old
+mountaineer incredulously when he had heard the story in all its
+detail. "This hyar's a right serious-soundin' matter--an' ye ain't
+got no enemies amongst us thet I've heered tell of."
+
+Spurrier pointed out the spot in the newly whitewashed wall where the
+bullet lay imbedded with its glint of freshly flattened lead.
+
+"After the first experience," he explained, "I'd had some time to
+think. I was standing in the door so I fell down--and played dead." He
+added after a pause quietly: "I've seen men shot to death, and I
+happened to know how a man drops when it's a heart hit. I fell inside
+where I'd be out of sight, because I was unarmed, and all I could do
+was to wait for you. I watched through the door, but the fellow never
+showed himself."
+
+"Come on, boys," commanded the old mountaineer in a determined voice.
+"Let's beat thet la'rel while ther tracks is still fresh. Mebby we
+mout l'arn somethin' of this hyar monstrous matter."
+
+But they learned nothing. Sim Colby had spent painstaking thought upon
+his effort and he had left no evidence written in the mold of the
+forest.
+
+"Hit beats all hell," declared the nonplussed Uncle Billy at last.
+"I ain't got ther power ter fathom hit. Ef I war you I wouldn't
+talk erbout this ter no man save only me an' old Dyke Cappeze.
+Still-huntin' lands more game then blowin' a fox horn." And
+Spurrier nodded his head.
+
+Though Spurrier for a few days after that slipped through the gorge
+with the stealth of a sharpshooter, covering himself behind rocks as
+he went, he heard no sound there more alarming than the chatter of
+squirrels or the grunt of a strayed razor-back rooting among the
+acorns. Gradually he relaxed his vigilance as a man will if his
+nature is bold and his dreams too sweeping to be forever hobbled by
+petty precautions.
+
+The purpose which he privately served called for ranging the country
+with a trained eye, and with him went the contour maps upon which were
+traced red lines.
+
+One day he came, somewhat winded from a stiff climb, to an eminence
+that spread the earth below him and made of it a panorama. The bright
+carnival of the autumn was spending itself to its end, but among trees
+already naked stood others that clung to a gorgeousness of color the
+more brilliant in the face of death. Overhead was flawless blue, and
+there was a dreamy violet where it merged mistily with the skyline
+ridges.
+
+"All that it needs," mused the man whimsically and aloud, "is the
+music of Pan's pipes--and perhaps a small chorus of dryads."
+
+Then he heard a laugh and, wheeling suddenly, discovered Glory Cappeze
+regarding him from the cap of a towering rock where, until he had
+reached this level, she had been hidden from view. Now she flushed
+shyly as the man strode over and confronted her.
+
+"Do you still hate me?" he inquired.
+
+"I reckon thet don't make no master differ ter ye, does hit?" The
+musical voice was painfully diffident, and he remembered that she had
+always been shy with him except on that first meeting when the leaping
+anger in her eyes had burned away self-consciousness.
+
+"You know," he gravely reminded her, "when I first saw you, you were
+on the point of thrashing me. You had me cowed and timid. Since then
+I've come to think of you as the shooting star."
+
+He paused, waiting for her to demand an elucidation of that somewhat
+obscure statement, but she said nothing. She only sat gazing over his
+head toward the horizon, and her cheeks were excitedly flushed from
+the delicate pink of apple bloom to the warmer color of peach
+blossom.
+
+"Since you don't ask what I mean," he continued easily, "I shall tell
+you. I've been to your house perhaps four or five times. From afar,
+each time, I've seen a scrap of color. Sometimes it has been blue,
+sometimes red, but always it has vanished with the swiftness of a
+shooting star. It is a flash and it is gone. Sometimes from beyond a
+door I also hear a voice singing."
+
+He leaned his elbows on the rock at her feet and stood gazing into the
+eyes that would not meet his own, and still she favored him with no
+response. After a little silence the man altered his tone and spoke
+argumentatively:
+
+"You forgave the dog, you know--why not the man?"
+
+That question carried her thoughts back to the murdered quail and a
+gusty back-flash of resentment conquered her diffidence. Her sternness
+of tone and the thrushlike softness of her voice, mingled with the
+piquancy of paradox.
+
+"A dawg don't know no better."
+
+"Some dogs are very wise," he assured her. "And some men very
+foolish."
+
+"The dawg," she went on still unplacated, "got right down on his
+stomach and asked my pardon. I _hed_ ter fergive him, when he humbled
+hisself like that."
+
+"I'm willing," John Spurrier amiably assured her, "to get right down
+on my stomach, too."
+
+Then she laughed, and though she sought to retreat again into her
+aloofness, the spell was broken.
+
+"Am I forgiven?" he demanded, and she shook her head doubtfully though
+no longer with conviction.
+
+"No," she told him; then she added with a startlingly exact mimicry of
+her father's most legalistic manner: "No. The co'te will take the case
+under advisement an' defer jedgment."
+
+"I forgot," he said, "that you are a lawyer's daughter. What were you
+looking at across there--so fascinatedly?"
+
+"Them hills," she enlightened succinctly.
+
+Spurrier studied her. Her deep eyes had held a glow of almost
+prayerful enchantment for which her laconic words seemed inadequate.
+
+Watching her out of the tail of his eye he fell into borrowed phrases:
+"'Violet peaks uplifted through the crystal evening air.'"
+
+She shot a glance at him suddenly, eagerly; then at once the lids
+lowered, masking the eyes again as she inquired:
+
+"Thet thar's poetry, ain't hit?"
+
+"I'm prepared to go to the mat with any critic who holds the
+contrary," he assured her.
+
+"Hit's comin' on ter be night. I've got ter start home," she
+irrelevantly announced, as she slid from her rough throne, and the man
+fell boldly in step at her side.
+
+"When your honor rules on the matter under advisement," he said
+humbly before their paths separated, "please remember that the
+defendant was a poor wretch who didn't know he was breaking the law."
+
+For the first time their glances engaged fully and without avoidance,
+and a twinkle flashed in the girl's pupils.
+
+"_Ignorantia legis neminem excusat_," she serenely responded, and
+Spurrier gasped. Here was a girl who could not steer her English
+around the shoals of illiteracy, giving him his retort in Latin:
+"Ignorance of the law excuses no one." Of course, it meant only that
+her quick memory had appropriated and was parroting legal phrases
+learned from her father, but it struck the chord of contrasts, and to
+the man's imagination it dramatized her so that when she had gone on
+with the lissome grace of her light stride, he stood looking after
+her.
+
+Rather abruptly after that the autumn fires of splendor burned out to
+the ashes of coming winter, and then it was that Spurrier went north.
+As his train carried him seaward he had the feeling that it was also
+transporting him from an older to a younger century, and that while
+his mind dwelt on the stalwart and unsophisticated folk with whom he
+had been brushing shoulders, the life resolved itself into an austere
+picture against which the image of Glory stood out with the quick
+vividness of a red cardinal flitting among somber pine branches.
+
+Because she was so far removed from his own orbit he could think of
+her impersonally and enjoy the thought as though it were of a new type
+of flower or bird, recognizing her attractive qualities in a detached
+fashion.
+
+As Spurrier gave himself up to the relaxation of reminiscence with
+that abandon of train travel which admits of no sustained effort, he
+began comparing this life, left over from another era, with that he
+had known against more cultivated and complex backgrounds.
+
+Then in analytical mood he reviewed his own past, looking with a
+lengthening of perspective on the love affair that had been broken by
+his court-martial. His adoration of the Beverly girl had been youthful
+enough to surround itself with young illusions.
+
+That was why it had all hurt so bitterly, perhaps, with its ripping
+away of his faith in romantic conceptions of love-loyalty.
+
+He wondered now if he had not borne himself with the Quixotic
+martyrdom of callowness. He had sought to shield the girl from even
+the realization that her lack of confidence was ungenerous. He had
+sought to take all the pain and spare her from sharing it. But she had
+solaced herself with a swift recovery and a new lover, and had he been
+guilty she could not have abandoned him more cavalierly. Well, that
+softness belonged to an out-grown stage of development.
+
+He had seen himself then as obeying the dictates of chivalry. He
+thought of it now as inexperienced folly--perhaps, so far as she was
+concerned, as a lucky escape. His amours of the present were not so
+naively conducted. To Vivian he had paid his attentions with an eye
+watchful of material advantages. They belonged to a sophisticated
+circle which seasoned life's fare rather with the salt of cynicism
+than with the sugar of romanticism. Yet the thought of Vivian caused
+no pulse to flutter excitedly.
+
+The glimpse of Glory had been refreshing because she was so honest and
+sincere that she disquieted one's acquired cynicism of viewpoint. One
+might as well spout world-wisdom to a lilac bush as to Glory! Yet
+there was a sureness about her which argued for her creed of
+wholesome, simple things and old half-forgotten faiths which one would
+like to keep alive--if one could.
+
+Snow drifted in the air and made a nimbus about each arc light as
+Spurrier's taxi, turning between the collonade pillars of the
+Pennsylvania Station, gave him his first returning glimpse of New
+York. He had come East in obedience to a wired summons from Martin
+Harrison, brief to curtness as were all business messages from that
+man of few and trenchant words. The telegram had been slow crossing
+the mountain, but Spurrier had been prompt in his response.
+
+A tempered glare hung mistily above the Longacre Square district
+through the snow flurries to the north, and the rumbled voice of the
+town, after these months in quiet places, was to the returned pilgrim
+like the heavy breathing of a monster sleeping out a fever.
+
+At the room that he kept at his club in Fifth Avenue--for that was a
+part of the pretentious display of affluence made necessary by his
+ambitious scheme of things--he called up a number from memory. It was
+a number not included in the telephone directory, and, recognizing the
+voice that answered him, he said briefly:
+
+"Manners, this is Mr. Spurrier. Will you tell Mr. Harrison I'm on the
+wire?"
+
+"Hello, Spurrier," boomed a deep voice after an interval. "We're
+dining out this evening and we go to the opera afterward, but I want a
+word with you to-night. In fact, I want you to start for Russia on
+Wednesday. Drop into our box, and drive home with me for a few minutes
+afterward."
+
+Russia on Wednesday! Spurrier's unoccupied hand clenched in
+irritation, but his voice was as unruffled as if he had been asked to
+make ready for a journey to Hoboken. He knew enough of Harrison's
+methods to ask no questions. If they could have been answered over the
+phone Harrison could have found many men to send to Russia. It was
+because they were for his ear alone that he had been called to New
+York.
+
+That evening he listened to "Otello" with thoughts that wandered from
+the voices of the singers. They refused even to be chained by the
+novelty of a slender tenor as a new Russian star held the spotlight.
+He was studying the almost too regular beauty of Vivian Harrison's
+profile as she sat serene and self-confident with the horseshoe of the
+Metropolitan beyond her.
+
+At midnight Spurrier sat with Harrison in his study and listened to a
+crisp summarizing of the Russian scheme. It proved to be a project
+boldly conceived on a broad scale and requiring an ambassador
+dependable enough and resourceful enough to decide large matters as
+they arose, without cabling for instructions.
+
+In turn Spurrier talked of his own past doings, and through their
+cigar smoke the seeming idleness of those weeks assayed a wealth of
+exact information and stood revealed as the incubation period of a
+large conception. Keenly formulated plans emerged from his recitals so
+simply and convincingly that the greater financier leaned forward and
+let his cigar die.
+
+Then Harrison rose and paced the room.
+
+"You know something about me, Spurrier," he began. "When I came East
+they laughed at me--if they deigned to notice me at all. They said:
+'Here comes a bushleaguer who thinks he's good enough for the big
+game. It's one more lamb to the shearing shed.' That's the East,
+Spurrier! That's cocksure New York! They sneer at a Western-bred
+horse--or a Western-trained prize fighter--and when the newcomer licks
+the best they've got they straightway let out a holler that they
+taught him all he knows. Why, New York would die of lassitude and
+anaemia if it wasn't for blood infusions from the provinces!"
+
+Spurrier gazed interestedly at the tall figure of the man with
+the sandy red mustache, and the snapping eyes, who for all his
+impeccability of evening dress, might have taken a shovel or
+pick from a section hand and taught him how to level a road bed.
+Harrison laughed shortly.
+
+"They haven't inhaled me so far. I brought only a million with me to
+this town, and I've got--well, I've got plenty, but I can't call it a
+day quite yet. There's one buccaneer to be settled with first! He's
+got to go to the mat with me and come up bloody enough to admit that
+he's been in a ruction. He chooses to pretend that I'm nonexistent,
+and I won't stand being ignored! I want to leave my mark on that man,
+and with God's help--and yours--I'm going to do it!"
+
+"You mean Trabue?" asked Spurrier, and Harrison's head gave a decisive
+jerk of affirmation while the hot glow of his eyes made his companion
+think of smelting furnaces.
+
+"That's why this thing of yours interests me. That's why I'm willing
+to get behind you and back you to the hilt," the big fellow of finance
+went on. "A. O. and G. are trying to hold others out of this Kentucky
+field. That proves that they think enough of it to be hurt by having
+it torn from their teeth. All I need to know is what will hurt them!
+If you can take some teeth along with the bone, so much the better."
+He paused, then in a voice that had altered to cold steadiness,
+commanded: "Now, give me your facts."
+
+"At present prices of oil," summarized Spurrier, "the development
+back of Hemlock Mountain wouldn't pay. With higher market values, it
+_would_ pay, but less handsomely than other fields A. O. and G. can
+work. Once the initial cost is laid out, the profit will be
+constant. The A. O. and G. idea is to hold it in reserve and await
+developments--meanwhile keeping up the 'no trespass' sign."
+
+"Doesn't the range practically prohibit railroading?"
+
+"Possibly--but it doesn't prohibit pipe lines."
+
+Spurrier opened the packet he had brought in his overcoat pocket and
+spread a map under the flooding light of a table lamp.
+
+"I have traced there what seems to me a practical piping route," he
+explained. "I call it the neck of the bottle. There is a sort of gap
+through the hills and a porous formation caused by a chain of
+caverns. Nature is willing to help with some ready-made tunnels."
+
+"Why haven't they discovered that?"
+
+"The oil development of fifteen years ago never crossed Hemlock
+Mountain. It came the other way."
+
+Harrison stood thinking for a time, then demanded tersely: "Have you
+secured any land or options?"
+
+"Not an acre, nor an inch," laughed Spurrier. "This is a waiting game.
+I don't mean to appear interested. If any man offered to give me a
+farm I should say it wasn't worth State taxes."
+
+"How do we get the property into our hands then?"
+
+"The buying must be gradual and through men with whom we appear to
+have no connection."
+
+"And the State charter--how about that?"
+
+"There lies the chief problem," admitted Spurrier. "The charter must
+come from a legislature that A. O. and G. can, at present, control."
+
+"What," Harrison shot the question out like a cross-examiner, "is the
+present attitude of the natives toward oil and oil men?"
+
+"Indifference and skepticism." The reply was prompt but the
+amplification more deliberate. "Once they saw wealth ahead--then the
+boom collapsed, and they have no longer any faith in the magic of the
+word 'oil.'"
+
+"I presume," suggested Harrison, "you are encouraging that disbelief?"
+
+Spurrier's face clouded, but only for a moment. "I am the most
+skeptical of all the skeptics," he assented, "and yet I'm sorry that
+they can't be gainers. They are an honest, upstanding folk and they
+have always felt the pinch of privation. After all they are the
+rightful owners and development of their country ought to benefit
+them. Of course, though, to forecast the possibilities would kill the
+game. We can't take them into our confidence without sounding a
+warning to the enemy."
+
+"Growing sentimental?" queried Harrison dryly, and the younger man
+shook his head.
+
+"No," he responded slowly, "I can't afford that--yet."
+
+"And see that you don't," admonished the chief sharply. "Bear in mind,
+as you have in the past, that we don't want to depend on men of
+brittle resolution and temperamental squeamishness. We are in this
+thing toward a definite end and not as humanitarian dreamers.
+However----" He broke off abruptly and added in a milder voice, "I
+don't have to caution you. You understand the proposition."
+
+For some minutes the cigar smoke floated in a silent room, while
+Martin Harrison sat with the knitted brows of concentrated thought.
+Spurrier did not interrupt the mental process which he knew had the
+heat and power of an ore smelter, reducing to fluid amenability the
+hard metal of a stubborn proposition. He knew, too, that the fuel
+which fed the fire was his principal's animosity against Trabue,
+rather than the possibilities or extent of the loot. This, no less
+than the mountain vendetta, was, in last analysis, a personal feud and
+in the parlance of the Cumberlands a "war was in ther b'ilin'."
+
+At last Harrison straightened up and tossed away his cigar.
+
+"You are ambitious, Spurrier," he said. "Put this thing over and I
+should say that all your ambitions can come to realization."
+
+While he sat waiting Spurrier had lifted from the table a photograph
+of Vivien, appropriately framed in silver. He had taken it up idly
+because it was a new portrait and one that he had not before seen, but
+into the gesture the father read a deeper significance. It was as if
+Spurrier had asked "All my ambitions?" and had emphasized his question
+by laying his hands on the picture of the girl. That, thought
+Harrison, was an audacious suggestion, but it was Spurrier's audacity
+that recommended him.
+
+Slowly the capitalist's eyes lighted into an amused smile as their
+glance traveled from the younger face to the framed photograph, and
+slowly he nodded his head.
+
+"_All_ your ambitions," he repeated meaningly, then with the electric
+snap of warning in his voice he added an admonition: "But don't
+underestimate the difficulties of your undertaking. You are bucking
+the strongest and most relentless piracy in finance. You will incur
+enmities that will stop nowhere, and you must operate in a country
+where murderers are for 'hire.'"
+
+The threat of personal danger just at that moment disquieted John
+Spurrier less than the other curtailment of freedom implied in
+Harrison's words; the tacit acceptance of him as Vivien's suitor. It
+came to him abruptly that he did not love Vivien; that he wished to
+remain untrammeled. Heretofore, he had always postponed matrimonial
+thoughts for the misty future. Now they became embarrassingly near and
+tangible.
+
+But quick on this realization followed another. Here was an offered
+alliance of tremendous advantage and one not to be ignored. To be
+Vivien's husband might fail of rapture, but to be Martin Harrison's
+son-in-law meant triumph. It meant his own nomination as heir apparent
+and successor in that position of cardinal importance to which he had
+looked upward as to a throne.
+
+There was no trace of dubiety in his voice as he answered:
+
+"I have counted the handicaps, sir. I'm taking my chance with open
+eyes."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+Sim Colby, after that day when he had slipped through the laurel, had
+gone back to his own house and waited for the talk of John Spurrier's
+mysterious death to drift along the waterways where news is the only
+speedy traveler.
+
+There had been no such gossip and he had dared betray his interest by
+no inquiry, but he knew it could have only one meaning; that he had
+failed.
+
+Spurrier was alive, and obviously he was holding his counsel
+concerning his narrow escape. This silence seemed to Sim Colby an
+ominous thing indicative of some crafty purpose--as if the intended
+victim were stalking grimly as well as being stalked. Sim came of a
+race that knows how to bide its time and that can keep bright the edge
+of hatred against long-delayed reprisals. It was certainly to be
+presumed that Spurrier had taken some of his friends into his
+confidence and that under the mantle of silence over on Little Turkey
+Tail, these friends were now watchfully alert. The enterprise that had
+once failed could not be reundertaken at once. Sim must wait for the
+vigilance to "blow over," and while he waited the rancor of his hatred
+must fester with the thorn-prickings of a thousand doubts and
+apprehensions.
+
+Then he heard one day that Spurrier had left the mountains, and on
+another day the news was brought that the grand jury had declined to
+reopen the old issues of the murder case in which Mosebury had
+escaped justice. Both these things were comforting in themselves, but
+they failed of complete reassurance for the deserter.
+
+Men said that Spurrier was coming back again, so the day of reckoning
+was only deferred--not escaped.
+
+The determination with which Sim had set out on his mission of death
+had largely preempted his field of thought. Now, after weeks and
+months of brooding reflection, he himself had become only a sort of
+human garment worn by the sinister spirit of resolve.
+
+So all that winter while John Spurrier was away as the ambassador,
+practicing in Moscow and Odessa the adroit arts of financial
+diplomacy, the fixed idea of his assassination was festering in the
+mind of the man who lived, under an assumed name, at the head of
+Little Quicksand.
+
+That obsession took fantastic shapes and wove webs of grotesque
+patterns of hate as Colby, who had been Grant, sat brooding before his
+untidy hearth while the winter winds wailed about the eaves and lashed
+the mountain world into forlorn bleakness.
+
+And while Colby meditated unendingly on the absentee and built ugly
+plans against his return, so in another house and in another spirit,
+the ex-officer was also remembered.
+
+Winter in these well-nigh roadless hills meant a blockade and a siege
+with loneliness and stagnation as the impregnably intrenched
+attackers. The victims could only wait and endure until the rescue
+forces of spring should come to raise the chill and sodden barricade,
+with a flaunting of blossom-banners and the whispered song of warm
+victory.
+
+Glory Cappeze, for the first time in her life, suffered from
+loneliness. She had thought herself too used to it to mind it much,
+but John Spurrier had brought a new element to her existence and left
+behind him a void. She had been hardly more than an onlooker to his
+occasional visits with her father, but she had been a very interested
+onlooker. When he talked a vigorous mind had spoken and had brought
+the greater, unknown, outer world to her door. The striking face with
+its square jaw; the ingrained graces and courtesies of his bearing;
+the quickness of his understanding--all these things had been a light
+in the gray mediocrity of uneventful days and a flame that had fired
+her imagination to a splendid disquiet.
+
+The infectious smile and force of personality that had been a
+challenge to more critical women, had been almost dazzling qualities
+to the mountain girl of strangled opportunities.
+
+But it was that last meeting in which he had thawed her shyness into
+friendliness that Glory remembered most eagerly. That had seemed to
+make of Spurrier not only a hero admired from a distance but a hero
+who was also a friend, and she was hungry for friends.
+
+So it came to pass that to these two widely variant welcomes, neither
+of which he suspected, John Spurrier was returning from Russia when
+spring had lightly brushed the Cumberland slopes with delicate
+fragrance and the color of blossoming.
+
+In Louisville, in Frankfort, and in other Kentucky towns along his way
+the returning man had made stops and investigations, to the end that
+he came primed with certain information of an ex-cathedra sort.
+
+The fruits of this research included an abstract of the personnel of
+the legislature and the trend of oil influences in State politics, and
+he studied his notebook as he traveled from the rolling, almost
+voluptuous fertility of the bluegrass section to the piedmont where
+the foothills began to break the sky.
+
+On the porch of the dilapidated hotel at Waterfall a sparse crowd
+centered about a seated figure, and when he had reached the spot
+Spurrier paused, challenged by a sense of the medieval, that gripped
+him as tangibly as a hand clapped upon his shoulder.
+
+The seated man was blind and shabby, with a beggar's cup strapped to
+his knee, and a "fiddle" nestling close to the stubbled chin of a
+disfigured face. He sang in a weird falsetto, with minors that rose
+thin and dolorous, but he was in every essential the ballad singer who
+improvised his lays upon topical themes, as did Scott's last
+minstrel--a survival of antiquity.
+
+Now he was whining out a personal plaint in the words of his "song
+ballet."
+
+ "I used ter hev ther sight ter see ther hills so high an' green,
+ I used ter work a standard rig an' drill fer kero_sene_."
+
+The singer's lugubrious pathos appeared to be received with attentive
+and uncritical interest. Beyond doubt he took himself seriously and
+sadly.
+
+ "I used ter know a woman's love, an' read a woman's eyes,
+ An' look into my baby's face an' dwell in paradise,
+ Until a comp'ny foreman, plum' heedless in his mind
+ Let nitroglycer_een_ explode an' made me go stone blind."
+
+Spurrier, half-turning, saw a traveling salesman standing at his elbow
+with a repressed grin of amusement struggling in his glance.
+
+"Queer card, that," whispered the drummer. "I've seen him before; one
+of the wrecks left over from the oil-boom days. A 'go-devil' let loose
+too soon and blinded him." He paused, then added as though by way of
+apology for his seeming callousness: "Some people say the old boy is a
+sort of a miser and has a snug pile salted away."
+
+Spurrier nodded and went on into the office, but later in the day he
+sought out the blind fiddler and engaged him in conversation. The
+man's blinding had left him a legacy of hate for all oil operators,
+and from such relics as this of the active days Spurrier knew how to
+evoke scraps of available information. It was not until later that it
+occurred to him that he had answered questions as well as asked
+them--but, of course, he had not been indiscreet.
+
+With John Spurrier, riding across hills afoam with dogwood blossom and
+tenderly vivid with young green, went persistently the thought of the
+blind beggar who seemed almost epic in his symbolism of human wreckage
+adrift in the wake of the boom. Yet he was honest enough to admit
+inwardly that should victory fall to his banners there would be
+flotsam in the wake of his triumph, too; simple folk despoiled of
+their birthright. He came as no altruist to fight for the native
+born. He, no less than A. O. and G., sought to exploit them.
+
+When he went to the house of Dyke Cappeze he did not admit the
+curiosity, amounting to positive anxiety, to see again the little
+barbarian, who slurred consonants, doubled her negatives, split her
+infinitives and retorted in the Latin of Blackstone. Yet when Glory
+did not at once appear, he found himself unaccountably disappointed.
+
+"There's been another stranger in here since you went away," the old
+man smilingly told him. "What is he doing here? That's the one burning
+question debated along the highways when men 'meet and make their
+manners.'"
+
+"Well," laughed Spurrier, "what _is_ he doing here?"
+
+Cappeze shrugged his bent shoulders as he knocked the rubble from his
+pipe and a quizzical twinkle came into his eyes.
+
+"So far as I can make out, sir, he's as much a gentleman of leisure as
+you are yourself."
+
+Spurrier knew what an excellent subterfuge may sometimes lie in
+frankness, and now he had recourse to its concealment.
+
+"Good heavens, Mr. Cappeze, I'm no idler!" he declared. "I'm
+associated with capitalists who work me like a mule. Since I saw you,
+for example, I've been in Russia and I've been hard-driven. That's why
+I come here. If I couldn't get absolutely away from it all now and
+then, I'd soon be ready for a madhouse. Here I can forget all that and
+keep fit."
+
+Cappeze nodded. "That's just about the way I sized you up. At first,
+folks pondered about you, too, but now they take you on faith."
+
+"I hope so--and this new man? Has he stepped on anybody's toes?"
+
+"Not yet. He hasn't even bought any land, but there have been some
+several transfers of property, in other names, since he came. He _may_
+be some man's silent partner."
+
+"What sort of partnership would it be?"
+
+"God knows." For an instant the shrewd eyes leaped into a glint of
+feeling. "These poor benighted devils suspect the Greeks bearing
+gifts. Civilization has always come here only to leave its scar. They
+have been stung once--over oil. God pity the man who seeks to sting
+them again."
+
+"You think," Spurrier responded lightly, as one without personal
+interest, "they wouldn't take it kindly?"
+
+Once again the sonorous and kindly voice mounted abruptly to
+vehemence.
+
+"As kindly, sir, as a wolf bitch robbed, the second time, of her
+whelps. It's all a wolf bitch has."
+
+That evening as he walked slowly homeward with a neighbor whom he had
+met by the way, Spurrier came face to face with Wharton, the other
+stranger, and the mountaineer performed the offices of introduction.
+
+The two men from the outer world eyed each other incuriously and
+parted after an exchange of commonplaces.
+
+When Spurrier separated from his chance companion, the hillsman
+drawled: "Folks _says_ thet feller's buyin' land. God knows what fer
+he wants hit, but ef he _does_ hone fer hit, hit's kinderly probable
+thet hit's wuth holdin' on to."
+
+When the brook trout began to leap and flash Cappeze delegated Glory
+to act for him as Spurrier's guide, and as the girl led the way to the
+likeliest pools, the young, straight-growing trees were not more
+gracefully slender.
+
+The fragrance from the pink-hearted laurel and the locust bloom had no
+delicacy more subtle or provocative than that of her cheeks and hair.
+The breeze in the nodding poplar tops seemed scarcely freer or lighter
+than her movements. Like the season she was young and in blossom and
+like the hills she was wild of beauty.
+
+Spurrier admitted to himself that, were he free to respond to the
+pagan and vital promptings of impulse, instead of standing pledged to
+rigid and austere purposes, this girl would have made something ring
+within him as a tuning fork rings to its note.
+
+Since the days of Augusta Beverly's ascendency, he had never felt the
+need of raising any sort of defense between himself and a woman. At
+first he had believed himself, with youthful resentment, a woman-hater
+and more latterly he had become in this, as in other affairs, an
+expedientist. Augusta had proven weak in loyalty, under stress, and
+Vivian had been indifferent to the ostracism of his former comrades so
+long as her own aristocracy of money accepted him. Both had been snobs
+in a sense, and in a sense he too was a snob.
+
+But because this girl was of a simplicity that regarded all things in
+their primary colors and nothing in the shaded half-tones of politer
+usage, it was needful to guard against her mistaking his proffered
+comradeship for the attitude of the lover--and that would have been
+most disastrous. It would have made necessary awkward explanations
+that would wound her, embarrass him and arouse the old man's just ire.
+For people, he was learning, may be elementally uncouth and yet
+prouder than Lucifer, and except when he was here on their own ground
+there was no common meeting place between their standards of living.
+
+Yet Glory's presence was like a gypsy-song to his senses; rich and
+lyrical with a touch of the plaintive. Glory, he knew, would have
+believed in him when Augusta Beverly had doubted, and would have stood
+fast when Augusta had cut loose.
+
+This was the sort of thought with which it was dangerous to dally--and
+perhaps that was precisely why, under this tuneful sky, it pleased him
+to humor it. Certainly, whatever the cause, the sight of her made him
+step more elastically as she went on ahead.
+
+When they had whipped the streams for trout until hunger clamored,
+Spurrier sat, with a sandwich in his hand in grass that waved
+knee-high, and through half closed lids watched Glory as she moved
+about crooning an old ballad, and seemingly unconscious of himself,
+herself and all but the sunlit spirit of the early summer day.
+
+"Glory," he said suddenly, calling her by her given name for the first
+time and in a mood of experiment.
+
+As naturally as though she had not noted his lapsed formality, she
+turned toward him and answered in kind.
+
+"What air hit, Jack?"
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"What fer?"
+
+"For calling me Jack."
+
+Then her cheeks colored deeply and she wheeled to her work again. But
+after a little she faced him once more to say half angrily:
+
+"I called ye Jack because ye called me Glory. You've always put a Miss
+afore hit till now, an' I 'lowed ye'd done made up yore mind ter be
+friendly at last."
+
+"I've always wanted to be friendly," he assured her. "It was you who
+began with a hickory switch and went on with hard words in Latin."
+
+The girl laughed, and the peal of her mirth transmuted their status
+and dispelled her self-consciousness. She came over and stood looking
+down at him with violet eyes mischievously a-sparkle.
+
+"The co'te," she announced, "hes carefully weighed there evidence in
+ther case of Jack Spurrier, charged with ther willful murder of Bob
+White, and is ready to enter jedgment. Jack Spurrier, stand up ter be
+sentenced!"
+
+The man rose to his feet and stood with such well-feigned abjectness
+of suspense that she had to fight back the laughter from her eyes to
+preserve her own pose of judicial gravity.
+
+"It is well established by the evidence befo' ther co'te," she went
+solemnly on, "thet ther defendant is guilty on every count contained
+in the indictment." She checked off upon the fingers of the left hand
+the roster of his crime as she summarized it.
+
+"He entered inter an unlawful conspiracy with the codefendant Rover, a
+setter dawg. He made a felonious assault without provocation. He
+committed murder in the first degree with malice prepense."
+
+Spurrier's head sank low in mock despair, until Glory came to her
+peroration and sentence.
+
+"Yet since the defendant is amply proved to be a poor, ignorant
+wanderer upon the face of the earth, unpossessed of ordinary
+knowledge, the court is constrained to hold him incapable of
+discrimination between right an' wrong. Hence he is not fully
+responsible for his acts of violence. Mercy as well as justice lies in
+the province of the law, twins of a sacred parentage and equal before
+the throne."
+
+She broke off in a laugh, and so sudden was the transition from
+absolute mimicry that the man forgot to laugh with her.
+
+"Glory," he demanded somewhat breathlessly, "have you ever been to a
+theater in your life? Have you ever seen a real actress?"
+
+"No. Why?"
+
+"Because you _are_ one. Does this life satisfy you? Isn't there
+anything off there beyond the hills that ever calls you?"
+
+The dancing eyes grew abruptly grave, almost pained, and the response
+came slowly.
+
+"_Everything_ down thar calls ter me. I craves hit all!"
+
+Spurrier suddenly recalled old Cappeze's half-frightened vehemence
+when the recluse had inveighed against the awakening of vain longings
+in his daughter. Now he changed his manner as he asked:
+
+"I wonder if I'd offend you if I put a question. I don't want to."
+
+"Ye mout try an' see. I ain't got no power ter answer twell I hears
+hit."
+
+"All right. I'll risk it. Your father doesn't talk mountain dialect.
+His English is pure--and you were raised close to him. Why do _you_
+use--the other kind?"
+
+She did not at once reply and, when she did, the astonishingly
+adaptable creature no longer employed vernacular, though she spoke
+slowly and guardedly as one might who ventured into a foreign tongue.
+
+"My father has lived down below as well as here. He's a gentleman, but
+he aims--I mean he intends--to live here now till he dies."
+
+As she paused Spurrier prompted her.
+
+"Yes--and you?"
+
+"My father thinks that while I _do_ live here, I'd better fit into the
+life and talk in the phrases that don't seem high-falutin' to my
+neighbors."
+
+"I dare say," he assured her with forced conviction, "that your father
+is right."
+
+There was a brief silence between them while the warm stillness of the
+woods breathed its incense and its langour, then the girl broke out
+impulsively:
+
+"I want to see and hear and taste everything, out there!"
+
+Her hands swept outward with an all-embracing gesture toward the whole
+of the unknown. "There aren't any words to tell how I want it! What do
+you want more than anything else, Jack?"
+
+The man remained silent for a little, studying her under half-lowered
+lids while a smile hovered at the corners of his lips. But the smile
+died abruptly and it was with deep seriousness that he answered.
+
+"I think, more than anything else, I want a clean name and a
+vindicated reputation."
+
+Glory's eyes widened so that their violet depths became pools of
+wondering color and her lips parted in surprise.
+
+"A clean name!" she echoed incredulously. "What blight have you got on
+it, Jack?" Then catching herself up abruptly she flushed crimson and
+said apologetically: "That's a question I haven't any license to put
+to you, though. Only you broached the subject yourself."
+
+"And having broached it, I am willing to pursue it," he assured her
+evenly. "I was an army officer until I was charged with unprovoked
+murder--and court-martialed; dishonorably discharged from the service
+in which my father and grandfather had lived and died."
+
+For a moment or two she made no answer but her quick expressiveness of
+lip and eye did not, even for a startled interval, betray any shock of
+horror. When she did speak it was in a voice so soft and compassionate
+that the man thought of its quality before he realized its words.
+
+"Did the man that--that was _really_ guilty go scot free, whilst you
+had to shoulder his blame?"
+
+There had been no question of evidence; no waiting for any denial of
+guilt. She had assumed his innocence with the same certainty that her
+eye assumed the flawlessness of the overheard blue. Her interest was
+all for his wronging and not at all for his alleged wrong.
+
+The man started with surprise; the surprise of one who had trained
+himself into an unnatural callousness as a defense against what had
+seemed a universal proneness to convict. He had told himself that
+Glory would see with a straighter and more intuitive eye. He had told
+her baldly of the thing which he seldom mentioned out of an
+inquisitiveness to test her reaction to the revelation, but he was
+unprepared for such unhesitant belief.
+
+"I think you are the first human being, Glory," he said quietly but
+with unaccustomed feeling in his voice, "who ever heard that much and
+gave me a clean bill of health without hearing a good bit more. Why
+didn't you ask whether or not I was guilty?"
+
+"I didn't have to," she said slowly. "Some men could be murderers and
+some couldn't. You couldn't. You might have to _kill_ a man--but not
+murder him. You might do lots of things that wouldn't be right. I
+don't know about that--but those people that convicted you were
+fools!"
+
+"Thank you," he said soberly. "You're right, Glory. I was as innocent
+of that assassination as you are, yet they proved me guilty. It was
+only through influence that I escaped ending my days in prison."
+
+Then he gave her the story, which he had already told her father and
+no one else in the mountains. She listened, thinking not at all of the
+damaging circumstances, but secretly triumphant that she had been
+chosen as a confidant.
+
+But that night Spurrier looked up from a letter he was reading and let
+his eyes wander to the rafters and his thoughts to the trout stream.
+
+It was a letter, too, which should have held his attention. It
+contained, on a separate sheet of paper, a list of names which was
+typed and headed: "Confidential Memorandum." Below that appeared the
+notation: "Members of the general assembly, under American Oil and Gas
+influence. Also names of candidates who oppose them at the next
+election, and who may be reached by us."
+
+Spurrier lighted his pipe and his face became studious, but presently
+he looked up frowning.
+
+"I must speak to old Cappeze," he said aloud and musingly. "He's being
+unfair to her." And that did not seem a relevant comment upon the
+paper he held in his hand.
+
+Then Spurrier started a little as from outside a human voice sounded
+above the chorus of the frogs and whippoorwills.
+
+"Hallo," it sung out. "Hit's Blind Joe Givins. Kin I come in?"
+
+A few minutes later into the lamplight of the room shambled the beggar
+of the disfigured face, whom Spurrier had last seen at the town of
+Waterfall, led by a small, brattish boy. His violin case was tightly
+grasped under his arm, and his free hand was groping.
+
+"I'd done sot out ter visit a kinsman over at ther head of Big Wolfpen
+branch," explained the blind man, "but ther boy hyar's got a stone
+bruise on his heel an' he kain't handily go on, ter-night. We wonder
+could we sleep hyar?"
+
+Spurrier bowed to the law of the mountains, which does not deny
+shelter to the wayfarer, but he shivered fastidiously at the unkempt
+raggedness of his tramp-like visitor, and he slipped into his pocket
+the papers in his hand.
+
+That night before Spurrier's hearth, as in elder times before the
+roaring logs of some feudal castle, the wandering minstrel paid his
+board with song and music; his voice rising high and tremulous in
+quaint tales set to measure.
+
+But on the next morning the boy set out on some mission in the
+neighborhood and left his charge to await his return, seated in a low
+chair, and gazing emptily ahead.
+
+Spurrier went out to the road in response to the shout of a passing
+neighbor, and left his papers lying on the table top, forgetful of the
+presence of the sightless guest, who sat so negligibly quiet in the
+chimney corner.
+
+When he entered the room again the blind man had risen from his seat
+and moved across to the hearth. On the threshold the householder
+halted and stood keenly eyeing him while he groped along the mantel
+shelf as if searching with wavering fingers for something that his
+eyes could not discover--and the thought of the papers which he had
+left exposed caused an uneasy suspicion to dart into Spurrier's mind.
+Any eye that fell on that list would have gained the key to his whole
+strategy and intent, but, of course, this man could not see. Still
+Spurrier cursed himself for a careless fool.
+
+"I was jest seekin' fer a match," said Joe Givins as a slight sound
+from the other attracted his attention. "I aimed ter smoke for a
+leetle spell."
+
+The host struck a match and held it while the broken guest kindled his
+pipe, then he hurriedly glanced through his papers to assure himself
+that nothing had been disturbed--and though each sheet seemed as he
+had left it, the uneasiness in Spurrier's mind refused to be stilled.
+
+Presumably this bat-blind ragamuffin was no greater menace to the
+secrecy of his plans than a bat itself would have been, yet a glimpse
+of this letter would have been so fatal that he asked himself
+anxiously, "How do I know he's not faking?" The far-fetched
+apprehension gathered weight like a snowslide until suddenly out of it
+was born a grim determination.
+
+He would make a test.
+
+Noiselessly, while the ugly face that had been mutilated by a blasting
+charge gazed straight and sightlessly at him, Spurrier opened the
+table drawer and took from it a heavy calibered automatic pistol. It
+was a deadly looking thing and it needed no cocking; only the silent
+slipping forward of a safety catch. In this experiment Spurrier must
+not startle his guest by any ominous sound, but he must satisfy
+himself that his sight was genuinely dead.
+
+"I thought," said the host in a matter-of-fact voice as he searchingly
+studied the other face through narrowed lids, "that when sight went,
+the enjoyment of tobacco went with it." As he spoke he raised and
+leveled the cocked pistol until its muzzle was pointed full into the
+staring face. Deliberately he set his own features into the baleful
+stamp of deadly threat, until his expression was as wicked and ugly as
+a gargoyle of hatred.
+
+If the man were by any possibility shamming it would take cold nerve
+to sit there without any hint of confession as this unwarned
+demonstration was made against him--a demonstration that seemed
+genuine and murderous. For an instant Spurrier fancied that he heard
+the breath rasp in the other's throat, but that, he realized, must
+have been fancy. The face itself altered no line of expression,
+flickered no eyelid. It remained as it had been, stolid and blank, so
+that the man with the pistol felt ashamed of his suspicion.
+
+But Spurrier rose and leaned across the table slowly advancing the
+muzzle until it almost touched the bridge of the nose, just between
+the eyes he was so severely testing. Still no hint of realization came
+from the threatened guest. Then the voice of the blind man sounded
+phlegmatically:
+
+"That's what folks say erbout terbaccy an' blind men--but, by
+crickety, hit _ain't so_."
+
+John Spurrier withdrew his pistol and put it back in the drawer.
+
+"I guess," he said to himself, "he didn't read my letters."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+Across a tree-shaded public square from the courthouse and "jail
+house" at Carnettsville stood a building that wore the dejected guise
+of uncomforted old age, and among the business signs nailed about its
+entrance was the shingle bearing the name of "Creed Faggott, Atty. at
+Law."
+
+The way to this oracle's sanctum lay up a creaking stairway, and on a
+brilliant summer day not long after Spurrier had entertained his blind
+guest it was climbed by that guest in person, led by the impish boy
+whose young mouth was stained with chewing-tobacco.
+
+This precocious child opened the door and led his charge in and, from
+a deal table, Creed Faggott removed his broganned feet and turned sly
+eyes upon the visitors, out of a cadaverous and furtive face.
+
+"You don't let no grass grow under your feet, do you, Joe?" inquired
+the lawyer shortly. "When the day rolls round, you show up without
+default or miscarriage." He paused as the boy led the blind man to a
+chair and then facetiously capped his interrogation. "I reckon I don't
+err in surmisin' that you've come to collect your pension?"
+
+The blind man gazed vacantly ahead. "Who, me?" he inquired with
+half-witted dullness.
+
+"Yes, you. Who else would I mean?"
+
+"Hit's due, ain't hit--my money?"
+
+"Due at noon to-day and noon is still ten minutes off. I'm not sure
+the company didn't make a mistake in allowing you such a generous
+compensation for your accident." There was a pause, then Faggott added
+argumentatively: "Your damage suit would have come to naught, most
+likely."
+
+"Thet ain't ther way ye talked when I lawed ther comp'ny," whined the
+blind man. "Ye 'peared to be right ambitious ter settle outen co'te in
+them days, Mr. Faggott."
+
+"The company didn't want the thing hanging on. They got cold feet.
+Well, I'll give you your check."
+
+"I'd ruther have hit in cash money--silver money," stipulated the
+recipient of the compromise settlement. "I kin count _thet_ over by
+ther feel of hit."
+
+Faggott snorted his disgust but he deposited in the outstretched palm
+the amount that fell due on each quarterly pay day, and the visitor
+thumbed over every coin and tested the edges of all with his teeth.
+After that, instead of rising to go, he sat silently reflective.
+
+"That's all, ain't it," demanded the attorney, and something like a
+pallid grin lifted the lip corners in the blind man's ugly face.
+
+"Not quite all," replied Joe Givins as he shook his head. "No, thar's
+one other leetle matter yit. I'd love ter hev ye write me a letter ter
+ther comp'ny's boss-man in Looeyville. I kinderly aims ter go thar an'
+see him."
+
+This time it was the attorney who, with an incredulity-freighted
+voice, demanded: "Who, you?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Me."
+
+"The Louisville manager," announced Faggott loftily, "is a man of
+affairs. The company conducts its business here through its local
+counsel--that's me."
+
+"Nevertheless an' notwithstandin', I reckon hit'll kinderly pleasure
+ther boss-man ter talk ter _me_--when he hears what I've got ter tell
+him."
+
+A light of greed quickened in the shyster's narrow eyes. It was
+possible that Blind Joe had come by some scrap of salable information.
+It had been stipulated when his damage suit was settled, that he
+should, paradoxically speaking, keep his blind eyes open.
+
+"See here, Joe," the attorney, no longer condescending of bearing,
+spoke now with a wheedling insistence, "if you've got any tidings,
+tell 'em to me. I'm your friend and I can get the matter before the
+parties that hold the purse strings."
+
+Joe Givins stretched out a wavering hand and groped before him. "Lead
+me on outen hyar, boy," he gave laconic command to his youthful
+varlet. "I'm tarryin' overlong an' wastin' daylight."
+
+"What's daylight to you, Joe?" snapped Faggott brutally, but
+recognizing his mistake he, at once, softened his manner to a mollifying
+tone. "Set still a spell an' let's have speech tergether--an' a little
+dram of licker."
+
+Ten minutes of nimble-witted fencing ensued between the two sons
+of avarice, and at their end the blind man stumped out, carrying
+in his breast pocket a note of introduction to a business man
+in Louisville--whose real business was lobbying and directing
+underground investigations--but the lawyer was no wiser than he
+had been.
+
+And when eventually from the murky lobby of the Farmers' Haven Hotel,
+which sits between distillery warehouses in Louisville, the shabby
+mountaineer was led to the office building he sought, he was received
+while more presentable beings waited in an anteroom.
+
+It chanced that on the same day John Spurrier spoke to Dyke Cappeze of
+Glory.
+
+"When we went fishing," he said, "I asked her whether she never felt a
+curiosity for the things beyond the ridges--and her eagerness startled
+me."
+
+An abrupt seriousness overspread the older face and the answering
+voice was sternly pitched.
+
+"I should be profoundly distressed, sir," said Cappeze, "to have
+discontent brought home to her. I should resent it as unfriendly and
+disloyal."
+
+"And yet," Spurrier's own voice was quickened into a more argumentative
+timber, "she has a splendid vitality that it's a pity to crush."
+
+"She has," came the swift retort, "a contented heart which it's a pity
+to unsettle."
+
+The elder eyes hardened and looked out over the wall of obstinacy that
+had immured Dyke Cappeze's life, but his words quivered to a tremor of
+deep feeling.
+
+"I've given her an education of sorts. She knows more law than some
+judges, and if she's ignorant of the world of to-day she's got a
+bowing acquaintance with the classics. I'm not wholly selfish. If
+there was some one--down below that I could send her to--some one who
+would love her enough because she needs to be loved--I'd stay here
+alone, and willingly, despite the fact that it would well-nigh kill
+me." He paused there and his eyes were broodingly somber, then almost
+fiercely he went on: "I would trust her in no society where she might
+be affronted or belittled. I would rather see her live and die here,
+talking the honest, old crudities of the pioneers, than have her
+venture into a life where she could not make her own terms."
+
+"Perhaps she could make her own terms," hazarded Spurrier, and the
+other snapped his head up indignantly.
+
+"Perhaps--yes--and perhaps not. You yourself are a man of the world,
+sir. What would--one of your own sort--have to offer her out there?"
+
+Under that challenging gaze the man from the East found himself
+flushing. It was almost as though under the hypothetical form of the
+question, the father had bluntly warned him off from any interference
+unless he came as an avowed suitor. He had no answer and again the
+lawyer spoke with the compelling force of an ultimatum.
+
+"She must stay here with me, who would die for her, until she goes to
+some man who offers her everything he has to offer; some man who would
+die for her, too." His voice had fallen into tenderness, but a stern
+ring went with his final words. "Meanwhile, I stand guard over her
+like a faithful dog. I may be old and scarred but, by God, sir, I am
+vigilant and devoted!" He waved his thin hand with a gesture of
+dismissal for a closed subject, and in a changed tone added:
+
+"I've recently heard of two other travelers riding through--and they
+have taken up several land options."
+
+"What meaning do you read into it, Mr. Cappeze?"
+
+The lawyer shrugged his shoulders. If he had no explanation to offer,
+it was plain that he did not regard the coming of the strangers as
+meaningless.
+
+"I'm going," said Spurrier casually, "to make a trip up Snake Fork to
+the head of Little Quicksand. Is there any one up there I can call on
+for lodging and information?"
+
+The lawyer shook his head. "It's a mighty rough country and sparsely
+settled. You'll find a lavish of rattlesnakes--and a few unlettered
+humans. There's a fellow up there named Sim Colby who might shelter
+you overnight. He lives by himself, and has a roof that sheds the
+rain. It's about all you can ask."
+
+"It's enough," smiled Spurrier, and a few days later he found himself
+climbing a stiff ascent toward a point where over the tree-tops a
+thread of smoke proclaimed a human habitation.
+
+He was coming unannounced to the house of Sim Colby, but if he had
+expected his visit to be an entire surprise he was mistaken, and if he
+had known the agitation that went a little way ahead of him, he would
+have made a wide detour and passed the place by.
+
+Sim was hoeing in his steeply pitched field when he saw and recognized
+the figure which was yet a half-hour's walk distant, by the
+meanderings of the trail. The hoe fell from his hand and his posture
+stiffened so inimically that the hound at his feet rose and bristled,
+a low growl running half smothered in its throat.
+
+Doubtless, Colby reasoned, Spurrier was coming to his lonely house
+with a purpose of venom and punishment, yet he walked boldly and to
+the outward glance he seemed unarmed. Hence it must be that in the
+former army officer's plan lay some intent more complex than mere
+open-and-shut meeting and slaying: some carefully planned and guileful
+climax to be approached by indirection. Very well, he would also play
+the game out, burying his suspicion under a guise of artlessness, but
+watching every move--and when the moment came striking first.
+
+At a brook, as he hastened toward his house by a short cut, he knelt
+to drink, for his throat was damnably dry, and in the clear water the
+pasty pallor and terror of his face was given back to him, and warned
+him. But also the mirroring brought another thought and the thought
+fathered swift action. In the army he had been spare and clean-shaven
+and a scar had marked his chin. Now he was bearded. He carried a
+beefier bulk and an altered appearance.
+
+Could there be any possibility of Spurrier's failing to recognize
+him--of his having been, after all, ignorant of his presence here?
+
+Yet his eyes would be recognizable. They were arrestingly distinctive,
+for one of them was pale-blue and the other noticeably grayish.
+
+By the path he was following, stalks of Jimson weed grew rank, and
+Sim, rising from his knees, pulled off a handful of leaves and crushed
+them between his palms. When he had reached the house his first action
+was to force from this bruised leafage a few drops of liquid into a
+saucer and this juice he carefully injected into his eyes.
+
+Then he went to the door and squinted up at the sun. It would be
+fifteen minutes before Spurrier would arrive and fifteen minutes might
+be enough. He half closed his eyes, because they were stinging
+painfully, and sat waiting, to all appearances indolent and
+thoughtless.
+
+Spurrier plodded on, measuring the distance to the smoke thread until
+he came in view of the cabin itself, then he approached slowly since
+the stiff climb had winded him.
+
+Now he could see the shingle roof and the log walls, trailed over with
+morning-glory vines, and in the door the slouching figure of a man. He
+came on and the native rose lazily.
+
+"My name's John Spurrier," called out the traveler, "and Lawyer
+Cappeze cited you to me as a man who might shelter me overnight."
+
+The man who had deserted chewed nonchalantly on a grass straw and
+regarded the other incuriously--which was a master bit of dissembling.
+Between them, it seemed to Sim Colby who had once been Private Grant,
+lay the body of a murdered captain. Between them, too, lay the guilt
+of his assassination. To the Easterner's appraisal this heavy-set
+mountaineer with unkempt hair and ragged beard was merely a local type
+and yet in one respect he was unforgettable.
+
+It was his eyes. They were arrestingly uncommon eyes and, once seen,
+they must be remembered. What was the quality that made one notice
+them so instantly, Spurrier questioned himself. Then he realized.
+
+They were inkily black eyes, but that was not all. There seemed to be
+in them no line of demarcation between iris and pupil--only liquid
+pools of jet.
+
+The two men sat there as the shadows lengthened and talked "plumb
+friendly" as Colby later admitted to himself. They smoked Spurrier's
+"fotched-on" tobacco and drank native distillation from the demijohn
+that Colby took down from its place on a rafter. Yet the host was
+filling each tranquilly flowing minute with the intensive planning of
+a hospitality that was, like Macbeth's, to end in murder.
+
+Spurrier would sleep in an alcovelike room which could be locked from
+the outside. Back through the brush was a spot of quicksand where a
+body would leave no trace. One thing only troubled the planning brain.
+He wished he could learn just who knew of his guest's coming here;
+just what precautions that guest had taken before embarking on such a
+venture.
+
+From outside came a shout, interrupting these reflections, and Sim was
+at once on his feet facing the front door, with a surreptitious hand
+inside his shirt, and one eye covertly watching Spurrier, even as he
+looked out. A snarl, too, drew his lips into an unpleasant twist.
+
+The Easterner put down to mountain caution the amazing swiftness with
+which the other had come from his hulking proneness to upstanding
+alertness. But with equal rapidity, Sim's pose relaxed into ease and
+he shouted a welcome as the door darkened with a figure physically
+splendid in its spare strength and commanding height.
+
+Spurrier rose and found himself looking into a face with most engaging
+eyes and teeth that flashed white in smiling.
+
+For a moment as the newcomer gazed at Sim Colby his expression
+mirrored some sort of surprise and his lips moved as if to speak, but
+Spurrier could not see, because Colby's back was turned, the warning
+glance that shot between the two, and the big fellow's lips closed
+again without giving utterance to whatever he had been on the point of
+saying--something to do with eyes that had mystifyingly changed their
+color.
+
+"Mister Spurrier, this hyar's Sam Mosebury," announced the host.
+"Mebby ye mout of heered tell of him."
+
+Spurrier nodded. So this was the outlaw against whose terrorism old
+Cappeze had broken his Quixote lances, the windmill that had unhorsed
+him; the man with a criminal record at which a wild region trembled.
+
+"I've heered tell of Mr. Spurrier, too," vouchsafed the murderer
+equably. "He's a friend of old Dyke Cappeze's."
+
+The "furriner" made no denial. Though he had been sitting with his
+head in the jaws of death ever since he entered this door, it had been
+without any presentiment of danger. Now he felt the menace of this
+terrorist's presence, and that menace was totally fictitious.
+
+"Mr. Cappeze has befriended me," he answered stiffly. "I reckon that's
+not a recommendation to you, is it?"
+
+The man who had newly entered laughed. He drew a chair forward and
+seated himself.
+
+"I reckon, Mr. Spurrier, hit ain't none of my business one way ner
+t'other," he said. "Anyhow, hit ain't no reason why you an' me kain't
+be friends, is hit?"
+
+"It doesn't make any difficulty with me," laughed Spurrier in relief,
+"if it doesn't with you."
+
+Sam Mosebury looked at him, then his voice came with a dry chuckle of
+humor.
+
+"Over at my dwellin' house," he announced with a pleasant drawl, "I've
+got me a pet mockin'-bird--an' I've got me a pet cat, too. Ther three
+of us meks up ther fam'ly over thar."
+
+Spurrier looked at the strong-featured face as he prompted, "Yes?"
+
+"Waal," Sam Mosebury waved his hand, and even his gestures had a
+spacious bigness about them, "ef God Almighty didn't see fit fer
+thet thar bird an' thet thar cat ter love one another--I don't seek
+ter alter His plan. Nonetheless I sets a passel of store by both of
+'em." He filled his pipe, then his words became musing, possibly
+allegorical. "Mebby some day I'll _ree_lax a leetle mite too much in
+watchin' an' then I reckon ther cat'll kill ther bird--but thet's
+accordin' ter nature, too, an' deespite I'll grieve some, I won't
+disgust ther cat none."
+
+That night Spurrier lay on the same shuck-filled mattress with the
+man whom the law had not been strong enough to hang, and for a
+while he remained wakeful, reflecting on the strangeness of his
+bed-fellowship.
+
+But, had he known it, his life was saved that night because the
+murderer had arrived and provided an interfering presence when the
+plans on foot required solitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+Perhaps old Cappeze had spoken too late when he sounded his sharp
+warning to the newcomer against unsettling the simple contentment of
+his daughter's mind. Always realizing his transient status in the
+aloofness of this life, Spurrier had scrupulously guarded his contact
+with the girl who belonged to it and who had no prospect of escaping
+it. He had sought to behave to her as he might have behaved to a
+child, with grave or gay friendliness untouched by those gallantries
+that might have been misunderstood, yet treating her intelligence with
+full and adult equality.
+
+But his inclination to see more of her than formerly was one that he
+indulged because it gave him pleasure and because a failure to do so
+would have had the aspect of churlishness.
+
+Those self-confessed traces of snobbery that adhered to this courtier
+at the throne of wealth, were attributes of which the girl saw
+nothing. Neither did she see the shell of cynicism which Spurrier had
+cultivated and this was not because her insight failed of keenness,
+but because in these surroundings they were dormant qualities.
+
+The self that he displayed here was the self of the infectious smile,
+of the frank boldness and good humor that had made him beloved among
+his army mess-mates before these more gracious qualities had been
+winter-killed by misfortune.
+
+So he was the picturesque and charming version of himself, and he
+became to Glory an object of hero worship, whose presence made the day
+eventful and whose intervals of absence were filled with dreams of his
+next coming.
+
+It was about this time that John Spurrier, the "opportunity hound,"
+made a disquieting discovery. It came upon him one night as he sat on
+the porch of Dyke Cappeze's log house at twilight, with pipes glowing
+and seductive influences stealing into the senses. Daylight color had
+faded to the mistiness of tarnished silver except for a lemon
+afterglow above western ridges that were violet-gray, and the evening
+star was a single lantern hanging softly luminous, where soon there
+would be many others.
+
+Cadenced and melodious as a lullaby fraught with the magic of the
+solitudes, the night song of frog and whippoorwill rose stealingly out
+of silence, and the materialist who had been city bound so much since
+conviction of crime had shadowed his life discovered the thing which
+threatened danger.
+
+It came to him as his eyes met those of Glory, who sat in the doorway
+itself--since she, at least, need not fear to show her face to any
+lurking rifleman.
+
+The yellow lamplight from within outlined the lovely contour of her
+rounded cheek and throat and livened her hair, but it was not only her
+undeniable beauty that caused Spurrier sudden anxiety. It was the eyes
+and what he read in them. Instantly as their gazes engaged she dropped
+her glance but, in the moment before she had masked her expression,
+Spurrier knew that she had fallen in love with him. The eyes had said
+it in that instant when he had surprised them. They had immediately
+seized back their secret and hidden it away, but not in time.
+
+The opportunity hound rose and knocked the ash from his pipe. He
+wondered whether old Dyke Cappeze, sitting there inscrutable and dimly
+shaped in the shadows, had shared his discovery--that grizzled old
+watchdog who was not too far gone to fight for his own with the
+strength of his yellowed fangs.
+
+The visitor shook hands and walked moodily home, and as he went he
+sought to dismiss the matter from his mind. It was all a delusion, he
+assured himself; some weird psychological quirk born of a man's innate
+vanity; incited by a girl's physical allurement. He would go to sleep
+and to-morrow he would laugh at the moonshine problem. But he did not
+find it so easy to sleep. He remembered one of those men in the
+islands who had become a melancholiac. The fellow had been normal at
+one moment; then without warning something like an impenetrable shadow
+had struck across him. He had never come out of the shadow. So this
+disquiet--though it was abnormal elation rather than melancholy, had
+suddenly become a fact with himself, and instead of dismissing it
+Spurrier found himself reacting to it. Not only was Glory Cappeze in
+love with him but--absurdity of absurdities--he was in love with
+Glory!
+
+It was as irreconcilable with all the logic of his own nature as any
+conceivable thing could be, yet it was undeniably true.
+
+But Spurrier had been there in the hills when summer had overcome
+winter. He had seen trickles of water grow into freshets and feed
+rivers. He had seen clouds as large as one's hand swell abruptly into
+tempests that cannonaded mightily through the peaks, with the lashing
+of torrents, the sting of lightnings, and the onsweep of hurricanes.
+He had seen the pink flower of laurel and rhododendron make fragrant
+magic over wastes of chocolate and slag-gray mountain sides, and in
+himself something akin to these elemental forces had declared itself.
+He found himself two men, and though he swore resolutely that his
+brain should dominate and govern, he also recognized in himself the
+man of new-born impulses who drew the high air into his chest with a
+keen elation, and who wanted to laugh at the artificial things that
+life has wrought into its structure of accepted civilization.
+
+That insurgent part of himself found a truer congeniality in the
+company of grizzled old Dyke Cappeze than that of Martin Harrison; a
+stronger comradeship in the frank laugh of Glory than in the cool
+intelligence of Vivien's smile.
+
+Glory's brain was as alert as quicksilver, and her heart as high and
+clean as the hills. Yet in his own world these two would be as
+unplaced as gypsies strayed from their dilapidated caravan. Moreover,
+it was ordained that he was to win his game and upon him was to be
+conferred an accolade--the hand, in marriage, of his principal's
+daughter.
+
+Spurrier laughed a little grimly to himself. Of the woman whose hand
+had been half-promised him he could think dispassionately and of this
+other, whom he could not take with him into his world of artificial
+values, he could not think at all without a pounding of pulses and a
+tumult which he thought he had left behind him with his early youth.
+
+In character and genuine metal of mind, Glory was the superior of most
+of those women he knew, yet because she was country bred and trained
+to a code that did not obtain elsewhere, she could no more be removed
+from her setting than a blooming eidelweiss could be successfully
+transplanted in a conservatory. He himself was fixed into a certain
+place which he had attained by fighting his way, in the figurative
+sense at least, over the bodies of the less successful and the less
+enduring. It was too late for him to transplant himself, and he and
+she were plants of differing soil, as though one were a snow flower
+and one a tropic growth.
+
+Also there were immediate things of which to think, such as an
+unexpired threat upon his life.
+
+Already he had escaped the assassin's first effort, and he had no
+guess where the enmity lay which had actuated that attack. That it
+still existed and would strike again he had a full realization. He was
+not walking in the shadow of dread but, because he knew of the menace
+lurking where all the faces were friendly, he had begun to feel that
+companionship of suspense: that nearness of something in hiding under
+which men lived here; and under which women grew old in their
+twenties.
+
+And it is not given to a man to live under such conditions, and remain
+the man who fights only across mahogany tabletops in offices. Yet John
+Spurrier scornfully reasoned that if he could not remain himself even
+in a new and altered habitat, he was a weakling, and he had no
+intention of proving a weakling.
+
+His hand had grasped the plow-haft and, for the present, at least, his
+loyalty belonged to his undertaking.
+
+This inward conflict went with him as he rode across the singing hills
+to gather up his mail at the nearest post office and he told himself,
+"I am a fool to ponder it."
+
+Then his thoughts ran on: "It is dwelling on factitious things that
+gives them force. Life presents a Janus aspect of the double-faced at
+times, but a man must choose his way and ignore the turnings. Glory
+has pure charm. She has a quick mind and a captivating beauty, but so
+far as I'm concerned, she is simply out of the picture. I could be mad
+about her, if I let myself--but presumably I am not adrift on a gulf
+stream of emotionalism."
+
+When he had spent an hour in the dusty little town and turned again
+into the coolness of the hills, he dismounted under the shade of a
+"cucumber tree" and glanced through those letters that were still
+unopened. One envelope was addressed in a hand that tantalized memory
+with a half sense of the familiar, and Spurrier's brow contracted in
+perplexity.
+
+Then his face grew abruptly grave. "By heavens!" he exclaimed. "It's
+Withers--Major Withers! What can he be writing about?"
+
+He opened it and drew out the sheet of paper, and, as he read, his
+expression went through the gamut of surprise and incredulity to a
+settled sternness of purpose that made his face stony.
+
+"If it's true," he exclaimed, "the man is mine to kill! No, not to
+kill, either, but to take alive at all costs."
+
+He stood for a moment, his sinewy body answering to a tremor of deeply
+shaken emotion. Had he been mountain-bred and feud-nurtured, the
+sinister glitter of his eyes could have been no more relentless. He
+was for that moment a man dedicating himself to the blood oath of
+vengeance.
+
+Then he composed his features and smoothed out the letter that his
+clenched fingers had unconsciously crumpled. Again he read what Major
+Withers had to say:
+
+ I am writing because though I infer that you have succeeded in
+ material ways, I have heard nothing of your progress in clearing
+ your name and I know that until that is accomplished, no success
+ will be complete for you.
+
+ Quite recently I have had as my striker a fellow named Wiley, who
+ used to be in your platoon--and I have talked with him a good bit.
+ Not long ago he declared to me his belief that Private Grant who
+ is listed as officially dead, did _not_ die in the Islands.
+
+ He seems to think that Grant made a clean getaway and went back to
+ the Kentucky mountains from which he came. He confesses that he
+ gets this idea from nothing more tangible than casual hints
+ dropped by Private Severance, whose discharge came shortly after
+ you left us, yet his impression is so strong as to amount to
+ conviction. Possibly if you could trace Severance you might learn
+ something. It's a vague clew, I admit, but I pass it along to you
+ for whatever it may be worth.
+
+Slowly, as though his tireless limbs had grown suddenly old, Spurrier
+mounted and rode on with reins hanging. He was so deep in thought that
+he forgot the other unopened letters in his pocket.
+
+Grant might be in these same hills with himself; Grant upon whom his
+counsel had sought to place the blame for the murder of Captain
+Comyn. If they could meet alone for the period of a brief interview,
+either that question would be finally answered or in the reckoning one
+of them would have to die.
+
+But how to trace him in this ragged territory covering a great and
+broken area--a territory which God had seemed to build, as a haven and
+a hiding place for men who sought concealment? Grant would in all
+likelihood see him first and--he entertained no illusions as to the
+result--the deserter would kill him on sight. On the other hand, it
+would do Spurrier no good to kill Grant. If Grant were to serve him it
+must be with a confession wrung from living lips, and on oath.
+
+Of course, too, the years would have changed Grant so that if they
+came face to face he would probably fail to recognize the man he had
+known only in khaki.
+
+The scarred chin? A beard would obliterate that. The stature? Added
+weight or lost weight would make it seem another man's.
+
+By processes of elimination Spurrier culled over the possibilities
+until at length his glance brightened.
+
+In one particular Private Grant could scarcely disguise himself. His
+eyes were in a fashion mismated. One was light gray and one pale blue.
+Yes, if ever they met he would have his clew in that.
+
+And that memory reminded him that he had recently been impressed to an
+unusual degree by a pair of eyes. Whose were they? Oh, yes, he
+remembered now. It was the man at whose house he had met Sam
+Mosebury--Sim Colby who dwelt over beyond Clubfoot Branch.
+
+But Colby's eyes had been noticeable by reason of their extraordinary
+blackness. So that only helped him in so far as it enabled him to
+eliminate from all the thousands of possible men the one man, Sim
+Colby.
+
+The afternoon had spent itself toward sunset as he dismounted and
+stabled his horse, and it was with a face still somberly thoughtful
+that he fitted his key into the padlock which held his door and
+entered.
+
+The interior was dusky in contrast with the outer light, but from one
+window a shaft of golden radiance slanted inward and in it the dust
+motes danced.
+
+Spurrier paused and glanced about him, but before he had thrown down
+the hat he had taken from his perspiring forehead, a sound hideously
+unmistakable caused his heartbeat to miss its rhythm and pound in
+commotion.
+
+Every man has his one terror, or, at least, one antipathy which he is
+unable to treat with customary calmness. With Spurrier it was
+everything reptilian. In the islands he had dreaded the snake menace
+more than fever or head hunters. Now, from the darkened floor near his
+feet came the vicious whir of rattles, and as his eyes flashed toward
+the sound he saw coiled there a huge snake with its flat, arrow-shaped
+head sinuously waving from side to side.
+
+With an agility made lightning-quick by necessity, he leaped aside
+and, at the same instant, the snake launched itself with such venomous
+force that the sound of its striking and falling on the puncheon floor
+was like the lashing of a mule whip. The man had felt the disturbed
+air of its passing as of a sword stroke that had narrowly missed him.
+
+But he had no leisure to regain the breath that had caught startled
+in his throat, before, from his left, he heard again the ominous note
+of warning, and felt his scalp creep with horror. The place which he
+had left locked and believed to be mosquito proof, now seemed alive
+with the loathsome trespassers.
+
+As Spurrier leaped for his couch he heard again the sound of a living
+coil released and its hawserlike lashing of the floor. Now he could
+see more plainly and, calculating his distance, he jumped for the
+table from which he could reach the loaded shotgun that hung on his
+wall. If he fell short, he would come down at their mercy--but he
+landed securely and without capsizing his support. His elevation gave
+him a precarious sort of safety, but on the floor below him he counted
+three rattlesnakes, crawling and recoiling; their cold-blooded eyes
+following his movements with baleful intentness.
+
+Spurrier was conscious of his trembling hands as he leveled the
+weapon, and of a crawling sensation of loathing along his spine.
+
+Twice the gun roared, splintering the flooring and spattering its
+ricochetting pellets, and two of the rattlers twisted in convulsive
+but harmless writhings. But the third head--and it seemed the largest
+of the three--had withdrawn under the cot. He was not even sure that
+these three made up the total. There might be others.
+
+With painstaking care Spurrier came down and armed himself with a
+stout hickory flail which had been used in other days by some
+housewife in her primitive laundry work as a "battling stick."
+
+Then he advanced to the battle, swinging one end of the cot wide and
+shiftily sidestepping. The rattler which lay in piled circles of
+coppery length regarded him with steely venom, turning its swaying
+head deliberately as its enemy circled. With the startling abruptness
+of an electric buzzer it warned and sprang. He escaped by an
+uncomfortable margin and attacked it with the flail before it could
+rearrange its coils. Finally he stood panting with exertion over the
+scene of slaughter.
+
+As he searched the place with profoundest particularity his mind was
+analyzing the strange invasion. His house was as tight as he had
+thought it. There was no cranny that would have let in three large
+rattlers. How had they come there?
+
+Spurrier went out and studied his door. The hasps that held his
+padlock were in place, but the woodwork about them had been recently
+scarred. The lock fastenings had been pulled out and replaced.
+
+With a nervous moisture on his brow the man recognized the fiendish
+ingenuity of his mysterious enemy. These slithering creatures had come
+here by human agency as brute accomplices in the murder that had
+failed from the rifle muzzle. The pertinacity and cunning of the
+scheme's anonymous author gave promise of eventfulness hereafter.
+
+Had he been struck, according to the evident intention, as he entered
+his house, he would probably have died there, unsuccored, leaving the
+door open. The rattlers would either have found their way out after
+that, or, when his body was discovered, the open door would have
+explained their presence inside, and no suspicion of a man's
+conspiracy would have remained.
+
+One thing stood out clear in Spurrier's summing-up. Whatever the
+source of the enmity which pursued him, it had its nerve center in an
+ingenious brain and it threw about itself that element of mystery
+which a timid man would have found terrifying and unendurable. Also it
+operated with a patience which was a manifest of its unswerving
+determination. Effort might be expected to follow effort until success
+came--or the unknown plotter were discovered and disposed of.
+
+Yet the author of these malignant attempts worked with an unflurried
+deliberation, allowing passive intervals to elapse between activities,
+like the volcano that rests in the quiet of false security between
+fatal eruptions.
+
+Of course, the letter with the mention of Private Grant might be a
+clew of identity, yet calm reflection discounted that assumption as a
+wild and unconfirmed grasping out after something tangible.
+
+Perhaps Spurrier as nearly approached the absolute in physical
+fearlessness as it is given to man to come--but the mystery of a
+pursuing hatred which could not be openly faced, filled him with a
+sense of futility, and the futility inspired rage which was unsettling
+and must be combated.
+
+That night he lay long awake, and after he had fallen asleep he came
+often to a sudden and wide-eyed wakefulness again at the sound of an
+owl's call or the creaking of a tree limb.
+
+The next morning found him restless of spirit, and it occurred to him
+that his secret enemy might be lurking near to inspect the results of
+his handiwork, so he went down to the road and hung the three dead
+rattlesnakes along the fence where no passer-by could miss seeing
+their twisted and mutilated lengths. That should be his retort to any
+inquiring and hostile eye, that he was alive and the creatures put
+there to destroy him had paid with their lives.
+
+From a place screened from view he meant to watch that gruesome
+exhibit and mark its effect upon any one who paused to inspect it.
+Possibly in that way a clew might be vouchsafed--but he did not at
+once take cover in the thickets.
+
+It was a glorious morning. The sun had ripped away the mists that, in
+the mountains, always hang damp and veillike between gray dawning and
+colorful day. The cool forest recesses were vocal with the twitterings
+and song from feathered throats.
+
+Spurrier sat down by the road and gave himself up to thoughts that it
+was safer to banish: thoughts that came with those sights and sounds
+and that made long-stilled pulses awaken and throb in him.
+
+This morning made him feel Glory's presence and gave him a fine
+recklessness as to responsibility and consequence. Suddenly he came to
+himself and seemed to hear the cool cynicism of Martin Harrison's
+voice inquiring, as it had once actually inquired: "Growing
+sentimental?"
+
+He pulled himself together and stiffened his expression into one more
+suitable upon the face of a man who has taken the severe vows of
+service to a cold ambition.
+
+But a little later he heard a sound and looked up sidewise to see
+Glory herself standing near him in the road; a materialization of the
+truant dreams he had been entertaining.
+
+She wore a dress whose simplicity accentuated the slender erectness
+of her young body and the litheness of her carriage. Her hair hung in
+braids and the sunbonnet had fallen back from the brightness of her
+hair. In her eyes played the violet lights of a merriment that lifted
+and curved her lips beguilingly.
+
+Spurrier came to his feet, and perhaps Glory, who had succumbed to her
+moment of self-revelation there on the twilight porch, had her revenge
+now. For that first startled moment as their glances met, the eyes
+that looked into hers were lover's eyes, and their unspoken message
+was courtship. If he maintained the stoic's silence forever, as to
+words, at least his heart had spoken.
+
+"Before Heaven," said the man slowly, and the tremor of his voice was
+out of keeping with the ingrained poise of his usual self-command,
+"when they called you Glory, they didn't misname you!"
+
+The girl flushed pink, and he took a step toward her with the absorbed
+intensity of a sleep-walker.
+
+Glory stood there--watched him coming and did not move. To her, though
+she had sought to hide it, he had become the One Man. Her unconfessed
+love had magnified and deified him--and now his own eyes were blazing
+responsively with love for her!
+
+Suddenly she was shaken by a rapturous tremor that seemed almost like
+swooning or being lifted on some powerful wave that swept her clear of
+the earth, so that she made no effort at disguise, but let the
+laughing light in her eyes become softer, yet more glowingly intense.
+
+It was as if they had met in the free realm of dreams where there are
+no hamperings of impossibility. As he drew near her, his arms came
+out, and he halted so that, under that same delightful sense of
+irresponsibility, it seemed to her quite natural to step into their
+welcome.
+
+Possibly the happenings of yesterday and the sleepless hours of last
+night had left Spurrier momentarily light-headed. Certainly had one of
+the rattlers stung him and poisoned his reason, he could not be doing
+a thing more foreign to his program of intention.
+
+He felt his arms close about her; felt the fragrance of her breath,
+found himself pressing his kisses on lips that welcomed them, and
+forgot everything except that this was a moment of ecstasy and
+passion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+For a while they stood there together in the narrow road to whose
+edges the dense greenery came down massed and dewy. Their breath was
+quick with the excitement of that moment when the hills and the rocks
+that upheld them seemed to them palpitant and gloriously shaken. Then
+they heard the lumbering of wheels, and with one impulse that needed
+no expression in words they turned through a gorge which ran at right
+angles into the stillness of the woods--and away from interruption.
+
+Spurrier had, it seemed to him, stepped through a curtain in life and
+found beyond it a door of which he had not known. It seemed natural
+that he and Glory should be going hand in hand into that place of
+dreams like children at play and hearing joyous voices that were mute
+and nonexistent in the world of commonplace and fact.
+
+He did not even pause to reflect that this was a continuation of the
+same ravine in which an assassin's bullet had once so narrowly missed
+him. Yesterday, too, was forgotten.
+
+Just now he was young in his heart again, and had love for his
+talisman. Actuality had been dethroned by some dream wizardry and left
+him free of obligation to reason. Then he heard Glory's voice
+low-pitched and a little frightened.
+
+"It kain't--can't--be true. It's just a dream!"
+
+A flash of sanity, like the shock of a cold plunge, brought the
+thought that, from her lips, had sounded a warning. This was the
+moment, if ever, to draw back and take counsel of common sense. Now it
+would be easier than later to abase himself and confess that in this
+midsummer's madness was no substance or color of reality--that he
+stood unalterably pledged to her renunciation.
+
+But the earthquake does not still itself at the height of its tremor
+and the cyclone does not stop dead with its momentum unspent. Years of
+calculated and nerve-trying self-command were exacting their toll in
+the satisfaction of outbreak. Spurrier's emotional self was in
+volcanic eruption, the more molten and lava-hot for the prolonged
+dormancy of a sealed crater.
+
+He caught the girl again and pressed her so close that the commotion
+of her heart came throbbing against him through the yielding softness
+of her breast; and the agitation of her breath on his face was a
+little tempest of acquiescent sweetness.
+
+"Doesn't it seem real, now?" he challenged as he released her enough
+to let her breathe, yet held her imprisoned, and she nodded,
+radiant-eyed, and answered in a voice half bewildered and more than
+half burdened with self-reproach.
+
+"I didn't even hang back," she made confession. "I just walked right
+into your arms the minute you held them out. I didn't seem able to
+help myself."
+
+Suddenly her eyes, impenitent once more, danced with mischief and her
+smile broke like a sun flash over her face.
+
+"If I'd had the power of witchcraft, I'd have put the spell on you,
+Jack," she declared. "I had to make you love me. I just _had_ to do
+it."
+
+"I rather think you had--that power, dear."
+
+He laughed contentedly as a man may who shifts all responsibility for
+an indiscretion to a force stronger than his own volition.
+
+"You see," she went on as if seeking to make illogic seem logical.
+"From the first--I couldn't think of you except with storm thoughts. I
+couldn't keep my heart quiet, when I was with you."
+
+"At first," he reminded her, "you wanted to kill me. I heard you
+confiding to Rover."
+
+Her eyes grew seriously deep and undefensive in their frankness. It
+was the candor of a woman's pride in conquest.
+
+"I'm not sure yet," she said almost fiercely, "that I wouldn't almost
+rather kill you than--lose you to any other girl."
+
+Vaguely and as yet remotely, Spurrier's consciousness was pricked with
+a forecast of reality's veto, but the present spoke in passion and the
+future whispered weakly in platitudes.
+
+"You won't lose me," he protested. "I'm yours."
+
+"And yet," went on Glory, "you seemed a long way off. You were the man
+who did big things in the world outside. You were--always cool
+and--calculating."
+
+"Glory," his words came with the rush of impetuosity for already the
+whispers of warning were gaining in volume, and impulse was struggling
+for its new freedom, "the man you've seen to-day is one I haven't
+known myself before. Chilled calculation and self-repression have been
+the articles of my creed. I've been crusted with those obsessions
+like a ship's hull with barnacles. Did you know that when vessels pass
+through the Panama Canal, the barnacles drop off?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No," she said, and her lips twisted into something like wistfulness
+as she dropped unconsciously into vernacular. "There's a lavish of
+things I don't know. You've got to learn 'em all to me--I mean teach
+them to me."
+
+"Well," he went on slowly, "steamers that pass through the fresh
+water, from salt to salt, automatically cleanse their plates. You've
+been fresh water to me, Glory."
+
+"Jack," she declared with tempestuous anxiety, "you say I've changed
+you. I'll try to change myself, too, all the ways I can--all the ways
+you want."
+
+"I don't want you changed," he objected. "If you were changed, it
+wouldn't be you."
+
+"Maybe," she persisted, "you'd like me better if I were taller or had
+black eyes."
+
+"I wonder now," he teased with the whimsey of the moment, "what you
+would look like with black eyes? I can't imagine it. Will you do that
+for me?"
+
+"Come to our house to-night," she irrelevantly commanded. "Won't
+you?"
+
+"Yes," he said, "I'd come to-night if I had to swim the Hellespont."
+
+But when he had left her an hour later at the crossroads and started
+back, his eyes fell on the ugly shapes of the three rattlesnakes, over
+which he had forgotten to keep watch and which she had not even seen,
+and yesterday came back with the impact of undisguised realization.
+Yesterday and to-morrow stood out again in their own solid
+proportions and to-day stood like a slender wisp of heart's desire
+shouldered between uncompromising giants of fact.
+
+Spurrier could no longer deny that his personal world centered about
+Glory; that away from her would be only the unspeakable bleakness of
+lonely heart hunger.
+
+But it was equally certain that he could not abandon everything upon
+which he had underpinned his future, and in that structure was no
+niche which she could occupy.
+
+Sitting alone in his house with a chill ache at his heart and facing a
+dilemma that seemed without solution, he knew for once the tortures of
+terror. For once he could not face the future intrepidly.
+
+He had recognized when the army had stigmatized him and cast him out,
+that only by iron force and aggression could he break his way through
+to success. He was enlisted in a warfare captained by financiers of
+major caliber and committed to a struggle out of which victory would
+bring him not only wealth, but a place of his own among such
+financiers--a place which Glory could not share.
+
+He and his principals alike were fighting for the prizes of the
+looting victor in a battle without chivalry, and whether he won or was
+crushed by American Oil and Gas, the native landholder must be ground
+and bruised between the impact of clashing forces. In the trail of his
+victory, no less than theirs, would be human wreckage.
+
+Sitting before his dead hearth while the afternoon shadows slanted and
+lengthened, Spurrier wondered what agonies had wracked the heart of
+Napoleon when he was called upon to choose between Josephine and a
+dynasty. For even in his travail the egoist thought of himself and his
+ambitions in Napoleonic terms.
+
+As he sat there alone with silences about his lonely cabin that seemed
+speaking in still voices of vastness, the poignant personality of his
+thoughts brought him, by the strange anomaly of life, to realizations
+that were not merely personal.
+
+Glory had won his heart and it was as though in doing so she had also
+made his feelings quicken for her people: these people from whose
+poverty, hospitality and kindness had been poured out to him: these
+people who had taken him at first with reserve and then accepted him
+with faith.
+
+He had eaten their bread and salt. He had drunk their illicit whiskey,
+given to him with no fear that he would betray them even in the
+lawlessness which to them seemed honorable and fair.
+
+And yet his purpose here, was the single one of enabling a certain
+group of money-grabbing financiers to triumph over another group at
+the cost of the mountaineer land-holders. It was not because, if he
+succeeded, there would not be enough of legitimate profit to enrich
+all, but because in a campaign of secrecy he could make a confidant of
+no one. If the enterprise were carried through at all he must have
+secured, for principals who would abate nothing and give back nothing,
+the necessary property bought on the basis of barren farming land.
+Were it his own endeavor he could first plunder and develop and then
+make restitution, but acting as an agent he could no more do that
+than the soldier who has unconditionally surrendered, can subsequently
+demand terms.
+
+The man who had been a plunger at gaming table and race track, who had
+succeeded as an imitator of schemes that attracted major capital, was
+of necessity one of imagination. Perhaps had life dealt him different
+cards, Spurrier would have been a novelist or even a poet, for that
+imagination which he had put into heavy harness was also capable of
+flights into phantasy and endowed with something almost mystic.
+
+Now under the stress of this conflict in his mind, as he sat before
+his hearth in shadows that were vague of light and shape, that
+unaccustomed surrender to imagination possessed him, peopling the
+dimness with shapes that seemed actual.
+
+His eye fell upon the empty three-legged stool that stood on the
+opposite side of the hearth, and as though he were looking at one of
+those motion picture effects which show, in double negative one
+character confronting his dual and separate self, he seemed to see a
+figure sitting there and regarding him out of contemptuous eyes.
+
+It was the figure of a very young man clad in the tunic of a
+graduating West Point cadet and it was a figure that bore itself with
+the prideful erectness of one who regards his right to wear his
+uniform as a privilege of knighthood. For Spurrier was fancying
+himself confronted by the man he had been in those days of eager
+forward-looking, and of almost religious resolve to make of himself a
+soldier in the best meaning of the word. Then as his eyes closed for a
+moment under the vividness of the fancy, the figure dissolved into its
+surroundings of shadow and near the stool with folded arms and a
+bitterer scorn stood a lieutenant in khaki.
+
+"So this is what you have come to be," said the imaginary Spurrier
+blightingly to the actual Spurrier. "A looter and brigand no better
+than the false _amigos_ that I fought over there. I was a gentleman
+and you are a cad!"
+
+Had the man been dreaming in sleep instead of wakefulness, his vision
+could hardly have worn habiliments of greater actuality, and he found
+himself retorting in hot defensiveness.
+
+"Whatever I am you made me. It was you who was disgraced. It is
+because I was once you that I am now I. You left me no choice but to
+fight with the weapons that came to hand, and those weapons were
+predatory.... If I have deliberately hardened myself it is only as
+soldiers of other days put on coats of mail--because soft flesh could
+not survive the mace and broadsword."
+
+"And when you win your prizes, if you ever win them," the accusing
+vision appeared to retort, "you will have paid for them by spending
+all that was honorable in yourself; all that was generous and
+soldierly. When you were I, you led a charge across rice paddies
+without cover and under a withering fire. For that you were mentioned
+in dispatches and you had a paragraph in the Army and Navy Journal.
+Have you ever won a prize since then, that meant as much to you?"
+
+John Spurrier came to his feet, with a groan in his throat. His
+temples were moist and marked with a tracery of outstanding veins and
+his hands were clenched.
+
+"Good God!" he exclaimed aloud. "Give me back the name and the uniform
+I had then, and see how gladly I'll tell these new masters to go to
+hell!"
+
+Startled at the sound of his own voice arguing with a fantasy as with
+a fact, the man sank back again into his chair and covered his face
+with his spread hands. But shutting out sight did not serve to shut
+out the images of his fancy.
+
+He saw himself hired out to "practical" overlords and sent to prey on
+friends, then he rose and stood confronting the empty stool where the
+dream-accuser in uniform had stood and once more he spoke aloud. As he
+did so it seemed that the figure returned and stood waiting, stern and
+noncommittal, while he addressed it.
+
+"Give me the success I need, and the independence it carries, and I'll
+spend my life exonerating my name. I'll go back to the islands and
+live among the natives till I find a man who will tell the truth. I'll
+move heaven and earth--but that takes money. I've always stood, in
+this business, with wealth just beyond my grasp--always promised,
+never realized. Let me realize it and be equipped to fight for
+vindication. These men I serve have the prizes to dispense, but I am
+bound hand and foot to them. They take their pay in advance. Once
+victorious I can break with them."
+
+"And these people who have befriended you," questioned the mentor
+voice, "what of them?"
+
+"I love them. They are her people. I shall seem to plunder them, but
+if my plans succeed I shall be in a position to make terms--and my
+terms shall be theirs. Until I succeed I must seem false to them. God
+knows I'm paying for that too. I love Glory!"
+
+Suddenly Spurrier wiped a hand across a clammy forehead and stood
+looking about his room, empty save for himself. He seemed a man who
+had been through a delirium. But he reached no conclusion, and when
+twilight found him tramping toward the Cappeze house it was with a
+heart that beat with anticipation--while it sought refuge in postponed
+decision.
+
+When Glory received him in the lamp-lighted room he halted in
+amazement, for the girl who stood there with a mischievous smile on
+her lips no longer looked at him out of eyes violet-blue, but black as
+liquid jet.
+
+"How did you do that?" he demanded in a voice blank with astonishment.
+"It's a sheer impossibility!"
+
+"Maybe it's witchcraft, Jack," she mocked him.
+
+"Can you change them back?" he asked a little anxiously, and she shook
+her head.
+
+"No, but they'll change of themselves in a day or two."
+
+"I reckon," commented Dyke Cappeze, looking up from his book by the
+table, "I oughtn't to give away feminine secrets, but it's a right
+simple matter, after all. She just put some Jimson-weed juice in her
+eyes and the trick was done."
+
+"Jimson weed," echoed the visitor, and the elder nodded.
+
+"If you happen to remember your botany, you'll recall that its longer
+name is _Datura stramonium_--and it's a strong mydriatic. It swells
+the pupil and obliterates the iris."
+
+It was walking homeward with a low moon overhead that evening that
+Spurrier's thoughts found time to wrestle with other problems than
+those affecting himself and Glory. The incident of the black eyes had
+at first interested him only because they were _her_ eyes, but now he
+thought also of the episode of the rattlesnakes and the letter from
+Major Withers.
+
+In his first analysis of what that letter might mean to him he had
+decided that his man would be recognizable by his mismated eyes. He
+had recalled Sim Colby's black ones while thinking of unusual eyes in
+general and had, in passing, set him down as one who stood alibied.
+
+Now, in the light of this Jimson-weed discovery, those black eyes took
+on a new interest. Presumably it was a trick commonly known in these
+hills. _If_ Colby's eyes had been so altered--and they had seemed
+unnatural in their tense blackness--it must have been with a
+deliberate and sufficient motive. Sim Colby was not making his pupils
+smart and sting as a matter of vanity. A man resorting to disguises
+seeks first to change the most salient notes of his appearance.
+
+Spurrier recalled, with the force of added importance, the surprised
+look on Sam Mosebury's face when that genial murderer, upon his
+arrival, had stifled some impulse of utterance.
+
+Suspicion of Colby was perhaps far-fetched, but it took a powerful
+hold on Spurrier, and one from which he could not free himself. At all
+events, he must see this Sim Colby when Colby did not know he was
+coming--and look at his eyes again.
+
+So he made a second trip across the hills to the head of Little
+Quicksand, and for the sake of safeguarding against any warning going
+ahead of him, he spoke to no one of his intention.
+
+This time he went armed with an automatic pistol and a very grim
+purpose. When they met--if the mountaineer's eyes were no longer
+black--he would probably need both.
+
+But once again the opportunity hound encountered disappointment. He
+found a chimney with no smoke issuing from it and a door barred. The
+horse had been taken out of the stable and from many evidences about
+the untenanted place he judged that the man who lived alone there had
+been absent for several days.
+
+To make inquiries would be to proclaim his interest and prejudice his
+future chances of success, so he slipped back again as surreptitiously
+as he had come, and the determination which he had keyed to the
+concert pitch of climax had to be laid by.
+
+At home again he found that the love which he could neither accept nor
+conquer was demoralizing his moral and mental equipoise. He could no
+longer fix and hold his attention on the problems of his work. His
+spirit was in equinox.
+
+The only solution was to go to Glory and tell her the truth, for if he
+let matters run uncontrolled their momentum would become unmanageable.
+It was the simple matter of choosing failure with her or success
+without her, and he had at last reached his decision. It remained only
+to tell her so.
+
+It had pleased John Spurrier to find a house upon an isolated site
+from which he could work unobserved, while he maintained his careful
+semblance of idleness. His nearest neighbor was a mile away as the
+crow flew, and Dyke Cappeze almost two miles. Even the deep-rutted
+highroad, itself, lay beyond a gorge which native parlance called a
+"master shut-in."
+
+Now that remoteness pleased his enemies as well. Former efforts toward
+his undoing had been balked by accidents. One must be made that could
+have no chance to fail and an isolated setting made for success.
+Matters that required deft handling could be conducted by daylight
+instead of under a tricky moon. It was a good spot for a "rat-killing"
+and Spurrier was to be the rat.
+
+It was well before sunset on a Thursday afternoon that rifle-armed
+men, holding to the concealment of the "laurel hells," began
+approaching the high place above and behind Spurrier's house. They
+came from varying directions and one by one. No one had seen any
+gathering, for the plans had been made elsewhere and the details of
+liaison perfected in advance. Now they trickled noiselessly into their
+designated posts and slowly drew inward toward the common center of
+the house itself.
+
+Spurrier who rode in at mid-afternoon from some neighborhood mission
+commented with pleasure upon the cheery "Bob Whites" of the quail
+whistling back in the timber.
+
+They were Glory's birds, and this winter he would know better than to
+shoot them!
+
+But they were not Glory's birds. They were not birds at all, and those
+pipings came from human throats, establishing touch as the murder
+squad advanced upon him to kill him.
+
+The man opened a package which had come by mail and drew from its
+wrappings the portrait of a girl in evening dress with a rope of
+pearls at her throat. Its silver frame was a counterpart of the one
+which had stood on Martin Harrison's desk that night when Spurrier had
+lifted it and Vivien's father had so meaningly said: "Make good in
+this and _all_ your ambitions can be fulfilled."
+
+Now Spurrier set the framed picture on the table at the center of the
+room and it seemed to look out from that point of vantage with the
+amused indulgence of well-bred condescension upon the Spartan
+simplicity of his house--the rough table and hickory-withed chairs,
+the cot spread with its gray army blanket.
+
+The man gave back to the pictured glance as little fire of eagerness
+as was given out from it.
+
+Just now Vivien seemed to him the deity and personification of a creed
+that was growing hateful, yet one to which he stood still bound. He
+was like the priest whose vows are irrevocable but whose faith in his
+dogma has died, and to himself he murmured ironically, "'The idols are
+broke in the temple of Baal'--and yet I've got to go on bending the
+knee to the debris!"
+
+But when he turned on his heel and looked through the door his face
+brightened, for there, coming over the short-cut between Aunt Erie
+Toppit's and her own home, was Glory, carrying a basket over which was
+tied a bit of jute sacking.
+
+She came on lightly and halted outside his threshold.
+
+"I'm not comin' visitin' you, Mr. John Spurrier," she announced
+gravely despite the twinkle in her eyes. "I'm bent on a more seemly
+matter, but I'm crossin' your property an' I hope you'll forgive the
+trespass."
+
+"Since it's you," he acceded in the same mock seriousness, "I'll grant
+you the right of way. You paid the toll when you let me have a glimpse
+of you."
+
+"And this is your house," she went on musingly. "And I've never seen
+inside its door. It seems strange, somehow, doesn't it?"
+
+Spurrier laughed. "Now that you're here," he suggested, "you might as
+well hold an inspection. It's daylight and we can dispense with a
+chaperon for ten minutes."
+
+She nodded and laughed too. "I guess the granny-folk would go tongue
+wagging if they found it out. Anyhow, I'm going to peek in for just a
+minute."
+
+She stepped lightly up to the threshold and looked inside, and the
+slanting shaft from the window fell full on the new photograph of
+Vivien Martin, so that it stood out in the dim interior emphasized by
+the flash of its silver frame.
+
+Glory went over and studied the face with a somewhat cryptic
+expression, but she made no comment and at the door she announced:
+
+"I'll be goin' on. You can have three guesses what I've got in this
+basket."
+
+But Spurrier, catching sight of a bronze tail-quill glinting between
+the bars of the container, spoke with prompt certainty.
+
+"One guess will be enough. It's one of those carrier pigeons that
+Uncle Jimmy Litchfield gave you."
+
+"You peeped before you guessed," she accused. "I'm going to leave it
+with Aunt Erie and let her take it to Carnettsville with her to-morrow
+and set it free."
+
+"Compare your watches," advised the man, "and get her to note the time
+when she opens the basket. Then you can time the flight."
+
+Glory shook her head and laughed. "I don't own any watch," she
+reminded him. "And even if I did I misdoubt if Aunt Erie would have
+anything to compare it with--unless she carried her alarm clock along
+with her."
+
+"Wait a minute," admonished the man, as he loosened the strap of his
+wrist watch, "I've two as it happens--and a clock besides. You keep
+this one and give Aunt Erie my other. I'll get it for you and set it
+so that they'll be together to the second."
+
+He wheeled then and went into the room at the back and for a few
+minutes, bachelor-like he rummaged and searched for the time-piece
+upon which he had supposed he could lay his fingers in the dark.
+
+Yet Spurrier's thought was not wholly and singly upon the adventure of
+timing the flight of a carrier pigeon. In it there lurked a sense of
+half-guilty uneasiness, which would have been lighter had Glory asked
+some question when she gazed on the picture which sat in a seeming
+place of honor at the center of his room. Her silence on the subject
+had seemed casual and unimportant, yet his intuition told him that had
+it been genuinely so, she would have demanded with child-like interest
+to be told who the woman might be with the high tilted chin and the
+rope of pearls on her throat. The taciturnity had sprung, he fancied,
+less from indifference than from a fear of questioning, and when he
+came quietly to the door, he stood there for a moment, then drew back
+where he would not be so plainly visible.
+
+For Glory had returned to the table and stood with her eyes riveted on
+the framed portrait. Unconscious of being observed her face was no
+longer guarded of betrayal, and in the swift expressiveness of her
+delicate features the man read a gamut and vortex of emotion as
+eloquent as words. The jealousy which her pride sought to veto, the
+doubt which her faith strove to deny, the realization of her own
+self-confessed inferiority in parallel with this woman's aristocratic
+poise and cynical smile, flitted in succession across the face of the
+mountain girl and declared themselves in her eyes.
+
+For an instant the small hands clenched and the lips stirred and the
+pupils blazed with hot fires, so that the man could almost read the
+words that she shaped without sound: "He's mine--he ain't your'n--an'
+I ain't goin' ter give him up ter ye!"
+
+Spurrier remembered how she had declared she would almost rather see
+him die than surrender him to another girl.
+
+Then out of the face the passion faded and the deep eyes widened to a
+suffering like that of despair. The sweetly curved lips drooped in an
+ineffable wistfulness and the smooth throat worked spasmodically,
+while the hands went up and covered the face.
+
+Spurrier drew back into the room into which Glory could not see, and
+then in warning of his coming spoke aloud in a matter-of-fact voice.
+"I've found it," he declared. "It was hiding out from me--that
+watch."
+
+When, after that preface, he came back, Glory was standing again in
+the doorway and as she turned, she presented a face from which had
+been banished the storm of her recent agitation.
+
+He handed her the watch which she took with a steady hand, and a brief
+but cheery, "Farewell."
+
+As she started away Spurrier braced himself with a strong effort and
+inquired: "Glory, didn't you have any question to ask me--about the
+girl--in the frame?"
+
+She halted in the path and stood looking down. Her lowered lids hid
+her eyes, but he thought her cheeks paled a shade. Then she shook her
+head.
+
+"Not unless it's something--you want to tell--without my asking," she
+announced steadfastly.
+
+For over a week he had struggled to bring himself to his confession
+and had failed. Now a sudden impulse assured him that it would never
+be easier; that every delay would make it harder and blacken him with
+a heavier seeming of treason. Vivien's portrait served as a fortuitous
+cue, and he must avail himself of it.
+
+This was the logical time and place, when silence would be only an
+unuttered lie and when procrastination would strip him of even his
+residue of self-respect. To wait for an easy occasion was to hope for
+the impossible and to act with as craven a spirit as to falter when
+the bugle sounded a charge.
+
+Yet he remained so long silent that Glory, looking up and reading the
+hard-wrung misery on his face and the stiff movement of the lips that
+made nothing of their efforts, knew, in advance, the tenor of the
+unspoken message.
+
+She closed her eyes as if to shut out some sudden glare too painful
+to be borne, and then in a quietly courageous voice she helped him
+out.
+
+"You _do_ want to tell me, Jack. You want to take back--what you
+said--over there--don't you?"
+
+Spurrier moistened his lips, with his tongue. "God knows," he burst
+out vehemently, "I don't want to take back one syllable of what I
+said--about loving you."
+
+"What is it, then?"
+
+"Come inside, please," he pleaded. "I'll try to explain."
+
+He went stumblingly ahead of her and set a chair beside the table and
+then he leaned toward her and sought for words.
+
+"I love you, Glory," he fervently declared. "I love you as I didn't
+suppose I could love any one. To me you are music and starlight--but I
+guess I'm almost engaged to her." He jerked his head rebelliously
+toward the portrait.
+
+Glory was numb except for a dull, very present ache that started in
+her heart and filled her to her finger tips, and she made no answer.
+
+"Her father," Spurrier forced himself on, "is a great financier. I'm
+his man. I'm a little cog in a big machine. It's been practically
+understood that I was to become his son-in-law--his successor. I'm too
+deep in, to pull out. It's like a soldier in the thick of a campaign.
+I've got to go through."
+
+That seemed an easier and kinder thing to say than that she herself
+was not qualified for full admittance into the world of his larger
+life.
+
+"You knew this--the other day--as well as now," she reminded him,
+speaking in a stunned voice, yet without anger.
+
+"So help me God, Glory--I had forgotten--everything but--you."
+
+"And now," she half whispered in a dulled monotone, "you remember all
+the rest."
+
+She sat there with the basket on the puncheon floor at her feet, and
+her fingers twisted themselves tautly together. Her lips, parted and
+drooping, gave her delicate face a stamp of dumb suffering, and
+Spurrier's arms ached to go comfortingly around her, but he held
+himself rigid while the silence lengthened. The old clock on the
+mantel ticked clamorously and outside the calls of the bobwhites
+seemed to grow louder and nearer until, half-consciously, Spurrier
+noted their insistence.
+
+Then faintly, Glory said: "You didn't make me any promise. If you
+had--I'd give it back to you."
+
+She rose unsteadily and stood gathering her strength, and Spurrier,
+struggling against the impulse which assailed him like a madness to
+throw down the whole structure of his past and designed future and
+sweep her into his arms, stood with a metal-like rigidity of posture.
+
+Whatever his ultimate decision might be, he kept telling himself, no
+decision reached by surrender to such tidal emotion at a moment of
+equinox could be trusted. Glory herself would not trust it long.
+
+So while the room remained voiceless and the minds of the man and the
+girl were rocking in the swirl of their feelings, the physical senses
+themselves seemed, instead of inert, preternaturally keen--and
+something came to Spurrier's ears which forced its way to his
+attention through the barrier of his abstraction.
+
+Never had the calls of the quail been so frequent and incessant
+before, but this sound was different, as though some one in the nearby
+tangle had stumbled and in the effort to catch himself had caught and
+shaken the leafage.
+
+So the man went to the door and stood looking out.
+
+For a moment he remained there framed and exposed as if painted upon a
+target, and--so close that they seemed to come together--two rifles
+spoke, and two bullets came whining into the house. One imbedded
+itself with a soggy thud in the squared logs of the rear wall but one,
+more viciously directed by the chances of its course, struck full in
+the center of the glass that covered the pictured face of Vivien
+Harrison and sent the portrait clattering and shattered to the floor.
+
+In an instant Spurrier had leaped back, once more miraculously saved,
+and slammed the door, but while he was dropping the stanch bar into
+its sockets, a crash of glass and fresh roars from another direction
+told him that he was also being fired upon through the window. That
+meant that the house was surrounded.
+
+"Who are they, Jack?" gasped the girl, shocked by that unwarned
+fusillade into momentary forgetfulness of everything, except that her
+lover was beset by enemies, and the man who was reaching for his
+rifle, and whose eyes had hardened into points of flint, shook his
+head.
+
+"Whoever they are," he answered, "they want me--only me--but it would
+be death for you to go out through the door."
+
+He drew her to a shadowed corner out of line with both door and
+window, and seized her passionately in his arms.
+
+"If we--can't have each other----" he declared tensely, "I don't want
+life. You said you'd almost rather see me killed than lose me to
+another woman. Now, listen!"
+
+Holding her close to his breast, he drew a deep breath and his
+narrowed eyes softened into something like contentment.
+
+"If you tried to go out first, you'd die before they recognized you.
+They think I'm alone here and they'll shoot at the first movement. But
+if _I_ go out first and fight as long as I can then they'll be
+satisfied and the way will be clear for you."
+
+She threw back her head and her hysterical laugh was scornful.
+
+"Clear for me after _you're_ dead!" she exclaimed. "Hev ye got two
+guns? We'll both go out alive or else neither one of us."
+
+Then suddenly she drew away from him, and he saw her hurriedly
+scribbling on a scrap of paper. Outside it was quiet again.
+
+Glory folded the small sheet and took the pigeon from its basket and
+then, for the first time, Spurrier, who had forgotten the bird,
+divined her intent.
+
+He was busying himself with laying out cartridges, and preparing for a
+siege, and when he looked up again she stood with the bird against her
+cheek, just as she had held the dead quail on that first day.
+
+But before he could interfere she had drawn near the window and he saw
+that to reach the broken pane and liberate the pigeon she must, for a
+moment, stand exposed.
+
+He leaped for her with a shout of warning, but she had straightened
+and thrust the bird out, and then to the accompaniment of a horrible
+uproar of musketry that drowned his own outcry he saw her fall back.
+
+Spurrier was instantly on his knees lifting the drooping head, and as
+her lids flickered down she whispered with a pallid smile:
+
+"The bird's free. He'll carry word home--if ye kin jest hold 'em back
+fer a spell and----"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+The window through whose broken pane Glory had dispatched her
+feathered messenger could not be seen into from the exterior. That was
+a temporary handicap for the besiegers and one upon which, in all
+their forethought, they had not calculated. It happened that at this
+hour of the afternoon the slanting sun struck blindingly upon the
+glass that still remained unbroken and confused the ambushed eyes that
+raked the place from advantageous points along the upper slopes.
+
+So when Glory had risen there for an instant, against the window
+itself, the vigilant assassins had been able to make out only the
+unidentified shadow of a figure moving there, and upon that figure, at
+point-blank range, they had loosed their volley. Whose figure it was
+they could not tell, and since they believed their intended victim to
+be alone they did not question. In the confusion of the instant, with
+the glare on windowpanes, they missed the spot of light that rose
+phoenixlike as the pigeon took flight. The frightened bird mounted
+skyward unnoted and flustered by the bellowing of so much gunnery.
+
+But Spurrier's shout of horror was heard by the besiegers and
+misinterpreted as a cry wrung from him under a mortal wound.
+
+The assailants had not seen nor suspected Glory's approach because she
+had come from the front, and had arrived before they, drawing in from
+the rear and sides, had reached their stations commanding a complete
+outlook. They had assumed their victim to be in solitary possession
+and now they also assumed him to be helpless--perhaps already dead.
+
+Yet they waited, following long-revered precepts of wariness,
+before going onward across the open stretch of the dooryard for an
+ultimate investigation. He might die slowly--and hard. He might
+have left in him enough fight to take a vengeful toll of the oncoming
+attackers--and they could afford to make haste slowly.
+
+So they settled down in their several hiding places and remained as
+inconspicuous as grass burrowing field mice. The forest cathedral
+which they defiled seemed lifeless in the hushed stillness of the
+afternoon as the sun rode down toward its setting.
+
+John Spurrier, inside the house, living where he was supposed to be
+dead, at first made no sound that carried out to them across the
+little interval of space.
+
+He was kneeling on the floor with the girl's head cradled on his knees
+and in his throat sounded only smothering gasps of inarticulate
+despair. These low utterances were animal-like and wrung him with the
+agonies of heartbreak. He thought that she must have died just after
+the whisper and the smile with which she had announced her success in
+her effort to save him.
+
+Kneeling there with the bright head inert on his corduroy-clad knee,
+he fancied that the smile still lingered on her lips even after she
+had laid down her life for him five minutes from the time he had
+forsworn her.
+
+Now that she was gone and he about to go, he could recognize her as a
+serene and splendid star shining briefly above the lurid shoddiness of
+his own grasping life--and the star had set.
+
+At first a profoundly stunned and torpid feeling held him numb; a
+blunt agony of loss and guilt, but slowly out of that wretched
+paralysis emerged another thought. He was helpless to bring her back
+and that futility would drive him mad unless out of it could come some
+motive of action.
+
+She was not only dead, but dead by the hands of murderers who had come
+after him--and all that remained was the effort to avenge her. Like
+waters moving slowly at first but swelling into freshet power, wrath
+and insatiable thirst for vengeance swept him to a sort of madness.
+
+Here he was kneeling over the unstirring woman he had loved while out
+there were the murder hirelings who had brought about the tragedy. Her
+closed and unaccusing eyes, exhorting him as passionate utterances
+could not have done, incited him to a frenzy. At least some of these
+culprits must go unshriven, and by his own hand to the death that
+inevitably awaited himself.
+
+And as Spurrier's flux of molten emotions seethed about that
+determination a solidifying transition came over him and his brain
+cleared of the blind spots of fury into the coherency of a plan.
+
+Out there they would wait for a while to test the completeness of
+their success. If he gave way to his passion and challenged them as
+inclination clamored to do, they would dispatch him at leisure.
+
+Just now he was willing enough to die, but entirely unwilling to die
+alone. He craved company and a red journey for that final crossing. So
+once more he looked down into the face on which there was no stir of
+animation, then very gently bent and kissed the quiet lips.
+
+"If you could come back to me," he chokingly whispered, "I'd unsay
+everything, except that I love you. But if there's a meeting place
+beyond, I'll join you soon--when I've made them pay for you."
+
+He lifted her tenderly and, through his agitation, came a sudden
+realization of how light she was as he laid her gently on his army
+cot. After that he picked up his rifle and bulged out his pockets with
+cartridges.
+
+The cockloft above his room, which was reached by a ladder, had
+windows which were really only loopholes and from there he could
+better see into the tangle that sheltered his enemies.
+
+He entertained no vain hope of rescue. He asked for no deliverance.
+The story drew to its ending and he meant to cap it with the one
+climax to which the last half hour had left anything of significance.
+Since small things become vastly portentous when written into the
+margin between life and death, he hoped that before he died he might
+recognize the face of at least one of the men whom he meant to take
+with him across the River of Eternity.
+
+So, dedicating himself to that motive, he climbed the ladder.
+
+Peering out through first one and then the other of the loopholes of
+the cockloft, he waited, and it seemed to him that he waited
+eternally. He began to fear that his self-sure attackers would content
+themselves with an inactive vigil and that after all he was to be
+cheated.
+
+The sun was westering. The shadows were elongating. The sounds through
+the woods were subtly changing from the voices of day to those of
+approaching night.
+
+Still he waited.
+
+Outside also they were waiting; waiting to make sure that it was safe
+to go in and confirm their presumption that he had fallen.
+
+But when Spurrier had, in a little time as the watch recorded it,
+served out his purgatorial sentence, he sensed a stir in the massed
+banks of the laurel and thrust his rifle barrel outward in preparation
+for welcome. A moment afterward he saw a hat with a downturned brim--a
+coat with an upturned collar--a pair of shoulders that hunched slowly
+forward with almost imperceptible movement. His mind had become a
+calculating machine now, functioning with deliberate surety.
+
+The unrecognizable figure out there was a hundred yards away and the
+rifle he held would bore through the head under the hat crown at that
+range as a gimlet bores through a marked spot on soft pine.
+
+But a single shot would end the show. No one else would appear and
+even the dead man would be hauled back by his heels--unidentified. He
+would wait until he could make his bag of game more worth dying
+for--more worth _her_ dying for!
+
+Other ages seemed to elapse before the butternut figure showed
+stretched at length in the tall grass outside the thicket and a second
+hat appeared. Still Spurrier held his fire until three hats were
+visible and the first man, having crawled to a tree trunk, had half
+risen.
+
+He realized that he could not much longer hold it. At any moment they
+might rush the place in force of numbers, and from more than one side,
+smothering his defense--and once in contact with the walls they would
+need only a lighted torch.
+
+So he sighted with target-range precision and fired, following the
+initial effort with snap-shots at the second and third visible heads.
+
+He had the brief satisfaction of seeing the first man plunge forward,
+clawing at the earth with hands that dropped their weapon. He saw the
+second stumble, recover himself, stumble again and then start crawling
+backward with a disabled, crablike locomotion, while the third figure
+turned, unharmed, and ran to cover. But at the same moment he heard
+shouts and shots from the other side which called him instantly to the
+opposite loophole and, once there, kept him pumping his rifle against
+what appeared to be a charge of confused figures that he had no
+leisure to inspect. They, too, fell back under the vigor of his
+punishment, and Spurrier found himself reloading in a silence that had
+come as suddenly as the noise of the onrush.
+
+He had shot down two assailants, but both had been retrieved beyond
+sight by their confederates, and the besieged man groaned with a
+realization of defeated purpose. The sun was low now and soon it would
+be too dark to see. Then the trappers would close in and take the rat
+out of the trap. What he failed to do while daylight lasted, he would
+never do.
+
+In only one respect did his judgment fail him as he sought to forecast
+the immediate future. It seemed to him that he had spent hours there
+in the cockloft, whereas perhaps thirty minutes had elapsed.
+
+He had been thinking of the pigeon, but had put aside hope as to
+succor from that agency. Old Cappeze was not interested in pigeons.
+The bird would go to roost in its dovecote and sit all night with its
+head tucked placidly under its wing--and the plea for help unread on
+its leg--and the lawyer would never think of looking into the
+dovecote.
+
+Now, since he had failed and must die unavenged--for the wounding of
+two unidentified enemies failed of satisfaction--he must utilize what
+was left of life intensively. Once more before he died, he wanted to
+see the face of the woman whom he had forsworn; the woman who was
+worth infinitely more than the tawdry regards for which he had given
+her up.
+
+So he went down the ladder and knelt beside the cot.
+
+He laid his ear close to the bosom and could have sworn that it
+fluttered to a half heartbeat.
+
+Suddenly Spurrier closed his hands over his face and for the first
+time in years he prayed.
+
+"Almighty Father," he pleaded, "give her back to me! Give me one other
+chance--and exact whatever price Thy wisdom designates."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Toby Austin's meager farm, which abutted on that of Dyke Cappeze,
+that afternoon had trudged Bud Hawkins. In all the mountain region
+thereabout his name was well known and any man of whom you had asked
+information would have told you that Bud was "the poorest and the
+righteousest man that ever rode circuit."
+
+For Bud was among other things a preacher. To use his own words, "I
+farms some, I heals bodies some, an' I gospels some." And in each of
+his avocations he followed faithfully the lights of his conscience.
+
+His own farm lay a long way off, and now he was here as a visitor.
+This afternoon he fared over to the house of Dyke Cappeze as was his
+custom when in that neighborhood. He regarded Cappeze as a righteous
+man and a "wrastler with all evil," and he came bearing the greetings
+of a brotherhood of effort.
+
+The sun was low when he arrived, and the old lawyer confessed to a
+mild anxiety because of Glory's failure to return before the hour
+which her clean-cut regularity fixed as the time of starting the
+supper preparations.
+
+"She took a carrier pigeon over to Aunt Erie Toppit's," explained
+Dyke, "and I looked for her back before now."
+
+"I sometimes 'lows, Brother Cappeze," asserted the visitor with an
+enthusiasm of interest, "thet in these hyar days of sin when God don't
+show Hisself in signs an' miracles no more, erbout ther clostest thing
+ter a miracle we've got left, air ther fashion one of them birds kin
+go up in ther air from any place ye sots hit free at an' foller ther
+Almighty's finger pointin' home."
+
+Cappeze told him that there was just now only one pigeon in the
+dovecote, where the pair belonged, but that one he offered to show,
+and idly be led the way to the place back above the henroosts.
+
+It is, however, difficult for any man to sink his own absorptions in
+those of another, and so it fell about that on the way Cappeze stopped
+at the barn he was building and which was not yet quite complete.
+
+"Brother Hawkins," he said, "as we go along I want to show you the
+barn I've been planning for years--and at last have nearly realized."
+
+In the crude, unfinished life of the hills, lean-tos and even rock
+ledges are pressed into service as barns, but the man who has erected
+an ample and sound structure for such a purpose, stamps himself as one
+who "has things hung up," which is the mountain equivalent for
+wealth.
+
+"That barn," explained Cappeze, pausing before it in expansiveness of
+mood, "is a thing I've wanted ever since I moved over here. A good
+barn stands for a farm run without sloven make-shift--and that one
+cost me well-nigh as much money as my dwelling house. I reckon it
+sounds foolish, but to me that building means a dream come true after
+long waiting. I've skimped myself saving to build it, and it's the
+apple of my eye. If I saw harm come to it, I almost think it would
+hurt me more than to lose the house I live in."
+
+"I reckon no harm won't come ter hit, Brother Cappeze," reassured the
+other. "Yit hit mout be right foresighted to insure hit erginst fire
+an' tempest."
+
+"Of course I will--when it's finished," said the other as he led the
+way inside, and then as he played guide, he forgot the pigeons and
+swelled with the pride of the builder, while time that meant life and
+death went by, so that it was quite a space later that they emerged
+again and went on to the destination which had first called them.
+
+But having arrived there, the elder man halted and his face shadowed
+to a disturbed perplexity.
+
+"That's strange," he murmured. "One pigeon's inside--the hen--and
+there's the cock _trying_ to get in. It's the bird Glory took with
+her. It must have gotten away from her."
+
+"'Pears like ter me," volunteered the preacher, "hit's got some
+fashion of paper hitched on ter one leg. Don't ye dis'arn hit, Brother
+Cappeze?"
+
+Cappeze started as his eyes confirmed the suggestion. Hurriedly he ran
+up the ladder to the resting plank where the bird crooned and preened
+itself, plainly asking for admittance to its closed place of
+habitation. Perhaps his excited manner alarmed the pigeon, which would
+alight on Glory's shoulder without a qualm, for as the man reached out
+his hand for it, it flutteringly eluded him and took again to the
+air.
+
+But now his curiosity was aroused. Possibly Glory meant to stay the
+night at Aunt Erie's and had sent him her announcement in this form.
+He went for grain and scattered it, and after repeated efforts
+succeeded in capturing the messenger.
+
+But when he loosened the paper and read it his face went abruptly
+white and from his lips escaped an excited "Great God!"
+
+He thrust the note into the preacher's hand and rushed indoors,
+emerging after a few minutes with eyes wildly lit and a rifle in his
+hands. Bud Hawkins understood, for he had read in the interval the
+scribbled words:
+
+ Stopped at Jack Spurrier's house. It's surrounded. Men are
+ shooting at us on all sides.
+
+Dyke Cappeze was the one man to whom Spurrier had confided both the
+circumstances of his mysterious waylaying and the matter of the
+rattlesnakes and now the father was not discounting the peril into
+which his daughter had strayed.
+
+"I'm going on ahead, Brother Hawkins," he announced. "I want you to
+send out a general alarm and to follow me with all the armed men you
+can round up." There he halted in momentary bewilderment. In that
+sparsely peopled territory the hurried mustering of an adequate force
+on such short order was in itself almost an impossibility. There were
+no means of communication. Abruptly, the old lawyer wheeled and
+pointed a thin and quivering index finger toward his beloved barn.
+
+"There's just one way," he declared with stoical directness. "All my
+neighbors will come to fight a fire. I've got to set my own barn to
+get them here!"
+
+Five minutes later the structure sent up its black massed summons of
+smoke, shot with vermilion, as the shingles snapped and showed
+glowingly against the black background of vapor, even in the
+brightness of the afternoon.
+
+Dyke Cappeze himself was on his way, and the preacher remaining behind
+was meeting and dispatching each hurried arrival. As he did so his
+voice leaped as it sometimes leaped in the zealot's fervor of
+exhortation, and he sent the men out into the fight with rifle and
+shotgun as trenchantly as he expounded peace from the pulpit.
+
+When a dozen men had ridden away, scattering gravel from galloping
+hoofs, he rode behind the saddle cantle of the last, for it was not
+his doctrine to hold his hand when he sent others into battle. Also he
+might be needed there as a minister, a doctor, or both.
+
+As sunset began to wane to twilight the attackers who lay circled
+about Spurrier's cabin found themselves growing restive.
+
+And inside John Spurrier was a man reanimated by the faint signs of
+life which he had discovered in Glory.
+
+A pulse still fluttered in her heart, but it throbbed flickeringly and
+its life spark was pallid. Every moment this malevolent pack held its
+cordon close was as surely a moment of strangling her faint chance as
+if their fingers had been physically gripping her soft throat. And he
+could only kneel futilely beside her and wait!
+
+From his loopholes upstairs he saw once more two hats and gave their
+wearers shot for shot, but when they kept their rifles popping he
+suspected their purpose and dashed across the floor in time to send
+three rapidly successive bullets into a little group that had detached
+itself from the timber on that side and was creeping toward the house.
+One crawling body collapsed and lay sprawling without motion. Two
+others ran back crouching low and were lost to sight.
+
+So he swung pendulumlike from side to side, firing and changing base,
+and when his second turn brought him to the window through which he
+had shot his man, he saw that the body had already been removed from
+sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+It was a hopeless game and a grim one. He could not cover all the
+defenses long in single-handed effort, and the best he could hope for
+was to die in ample companionship. Now, two men had reached
+broad-girthed oaks, halfway between thicket and house. There they were
+safe for the next rush.
+
+So this was the end of the matter! Spurrier reloaded his rifle and
+went down the ladder. Hastily he carried Glory into the room at the
+back and overturned his heavy table to serve as a final barricade. He
+elected to die here when they swarmed the door from which he could no
+longer keep them, crowning the battle with a finale of punishment as
+they crowded through the breach.
+
+But the minutes dragged with irksome tension. He was keyed up now,
+wire-tight, for the finish, and yet silence fell again and denied him
+the relief of action. To Spurrier it was like a long and cruel delay
+imposed upon a man standing blindfolded and noosed on the scaffold
+trap. Then the quiet was ripped with a totally wasteful fusillade, as
+though every attacker outside were pumping his gun in a contest of
+speed rather than effect.
+
+Spurrier smiled grimly. Let them burn their powder--he would have his
+till they massed in front of his muzzle and the barrier fell.
+
+"When the barrier fell!" Crouched there behind the table where he
+meant to sell his life in that brief space that seemed long, the words
+brought with them the memory of one of the few poems that had ever
+meant much to him--and while he awaited death his mind seized upon the
+lines--a funeral address in soliloquy!
+
+ "For the journey is done and the summit attained,
+ And the barriers fall----"
+
+He strained his ears to his listening and then through his head ran
+other verses:
+
+ "I was ever a fighter, so--one fight more,
+ The best and the last!
+ I would hate that Death bandaged my eyes and forebore
+ And bade me creep past----"
+
+Was that a battering-ram against timber that he heard? He fingered the
+trigger.
+
+ "Then a light, then thy breast,
+ O thou soul of my soul! I shall clasp thee again,
+ And with God be the rest!"
+
+But the door did not fall. The rifle cracking became interspersed with
+alarmed outcries of warning and confusion. He could even hear the
+brush torn with the hurried tramping of running feet, and then the
+pandemonium abruptly stopped dead, and after a long period of inheld
+breath there followed a loud rapping on the door and a voice of
+agonized anxiety shouted:
+
+"In God's name open if ye're still alive. It's Cappeze--and friends!"
+
+The psychological effect of that recognized voice upon John
+Spurrier, and of its incredible meaning, was strange to the point
+of grotesquerie. Its sound carried a complete reversal of everything
+to which his mind had been focussed with a tensity which had keyed
+itself to the acceptance of a violent death, and with the reversal
+came reaction. There was no interim of preparation for the altered
+aspect of affairs. It was precisely as though a runaway train
+furiously speeding to the overhang of an unbridged chasm had
+suddenly begun dashing in the contrary direction with no shade of
+lessening velocity, and no grinding of breaks to a halt between time.
+
+Spurrier had taken no thought of physical strain. He had not known
+that he was wearied with nerve wrack and pell-mell dashing from firing
+point to firing point. He knew nothing of the picture he made with
+clothing torn from his scrambling rushes up-ladder and down-ladder and
+his crouching and shifting among the rough nail-studded spaces of the
+cockloft. Of the face, sweat-reeking and dust-smeared, he had no
+realization, but when that voice called out and he knew that rescuers
+were clamoring where assassins had laid siege, the stout knees under
+him buckled weakly, and the fingers that had fitted his rifle as
+steadily as part of its own metallic mechanism became so inert that
+they could scarcely maintain their grip upon the weapon.
+
+John Spurrier, emotionally stirred and agitated as he had never been
+in battle, because of the limp figure that lay under that roof, stood
+gulping and struggling for a lost voice with which to give back a
+reply. He rocked on his feet and then, like a drunken man went slowly
+and unsteadily forward to lift the bar of the door.
+
+When he had thrown it wide the rush of anxious men halted, backing up
+instinctively, as their eyes were confused by the inner murk and their
+nostrils assailed by the acrid stench of nitrate, from the vapors of
+burnt powder that hung stiflingly between the walls and ceiling
+rafters. Old Cappeze was at their front and when he saw before him the
+battle begrimed and drawn visage of the man, he looked wildly beyond
+it for the other face that he did not see, and his voice broke and
+rose in a high, thin note that was almost falsetto as he demanded:
+"Where is she? Where's Glory?"
+
+John Spurrier sought to speak but the best he could do was to indicate
+with a gesture half appealing and half despairing to the door of the
+other room, where she lay on his army cot. The father crossed its
+threshold ahead of him and dropped to his knees there with agonized
+eyes, and Bud Hawkins, the preacher and physician, not sure yet in
+which capacity he must act, was bent at his shoulder, while Spurrier
+exhorted him with a recovered but tortured voice, "In God's name, make
+haste. There's only a spark of life left."
+
+From the crowd which had followed and stood massed about the door came
+a low but unmistakable smother of fury, as they saw the unmoving
+figure of the girl, and those at the edge wheeled and ran outward
+again with the summary resoluteness that one sees in hounds cast off
+at the start of the chase.
+
+Upon those who remained Brother Hawkins wheeled and swept out his
+hands in a gesture of imperative dismissal.
+
+"Leave us alone, men," he commanded. "I needs ter work alone
+hyar--with ther holp of Almighty God."
+
+But he worked kneeling, tearing away the clothing over the wounded
+breast, and while he did so he prayed with a fervor that was fiercely
+elemental, yet abating no whit of his doctor's efficiency with his
+surprisingly deft hands, while his lips and heart were those of the
+religionist.
+
+"Almighty Father in Heaven," he pleaded, "spare this hyar child of
+Thine ef so be Thy wisdom suffers hit."
+
+There he broke off and as though a different man were speaking, shot
+over his shoulder the curt command: "Fotch me water speedily--Because
+Almighty Father, she's done fell a victim of evil men thet fears Thee
+not in th'ar hearts!"
+
+After a little Brother Hawkins dismissed even the father and Spurrier
+from the room and worked on alone, the voice of his praying sounding
+over his activity.
+
+Ten minutes later, in a crowded room, Bud Hawkins, preacher and
+physician, laid one hand on Spurrier's shoulder and the other on
+Cappeze's.
+
+"Men," he said in a hushed voice, "I fears me ther shot thet hit her
+was a deadener. Yit I kain't quite fathom hit nuther. She's back in
+her rightful senses ergin--but she don't seem ter _want_ to live,
+somehow. She won't put for'ard no effort."
+
+Spurrier wheeled to face them both and his voice came with tense,
+gasping earnestness.
+
+"Before she dies, Brother Hawkins," he pleaded, "you're a minister of
+the gospel--I want you to marry us." He wheeled then on the rescuers,
+who stood breathing heavily from exertion and fight.
+
+"Two of you men stay here as wedding witnesses," he commanded. "One of
+you ride hell-for-leather to the nearest telephone and call up
+Lexington. Have a man start with bloodhounds on a special train. The
+rest of you get into the timber and finecomb it for some scrap of
+cloth--or anything that will give the dogs a chance when they get
+here."
+
+Once more Spurrier was the officer in command, and snappily his
+hearers sprang to obedience, but when the place had almost emptied,
+the three turned and went into the back room, and, kneeling there
+beside the wounded girl, Spurrier whispered:
+
+"Dearest, the preacher has come--to wed us."
+
+Glory's eyes with their deeps of color were startlingly vivid as they
+looked out of the pallid face upon which a little while ago John
+Spurrier had believed the white stamp of death to be fixed.
+
+The features themselves, except the eyes, seemed to have shrunken from
+weakness into wistful smallness, and if the girl had returned, in the
+phrases of the preacher, "to her rightful senses" it had been as one
+coming out of a dream who realizes that she wakes to heartburnings
+which death had promised to smooth away.
+
+Now, as the man stretched out his hand to take hers and drew a ring
+from his own little finger, the violet eyes on the rough pillow became
+transfigured with a luminous and incredulous happiness. But at once
+they clouded again with gravity and pain.
+
+Spurrier was offering to marry her out of pity and gratitude. He was
+seeking to pay a debt, and his authoritative words were spoken from
+his conscience and not from his heart.
+
+So the lips stirred in an effort to speak, failed in that and drooped,
+and weakly but with determination Glory shook her head. She had been
+willing to die for him. She could not argue with him, but neither
+would she accept the perfunctory amends that he now came proffering.
+
+Spurrier rose, pale, and with a tremor of voice as he said to the
+others: "Please leave us alone--for a few moments." Then when no one
+was left in the room but the girl on the bed and the man on his knees
+beside it, he bent forward until his eyes were close to hers and his
+words came with a still intensity.
+
+"Glory, dearest, though I don't deserve it, you've confessed that you
+love me. Now I claim the life you were willing to lay down for me--and
+you can't refuse."
+
+There was wistfulness in her smile, but through her feebleness her
+resolution stood fast and the movement of her head was meant for a
+shake of refusal.
+
+"But why, dear," he argued desperately, "why do you deny me when we
+know there's only one wish in both our hearts?"
+
+His hands had stolen over one of hers and her weak fingers stirred
+caressingly against his own. Her lips stirred too, without sound, then
+she lay in a deathlike quiet for a moment or two summoning strength
+for an effort at speech, and he, bending close, caught the ghost of a
+whisper.
+
+"I don't seek payment ... fer what I done." A gasp caught her breath
+and silenced her for a little but she overcame it and finished almost
+inaudibly. "It was ... a free-will gift."
+
+John Spurrier rose and sat on the side of the bed. His voice was
+electrified by the thrill of his feeling; a feeling purged of all
+artificiality by the rough shoulder touch of death.
+
+"I'm asking another gift, now, Glory; the greatest gift of all. I'm
+asking yourself. Don't try to talk--only listen to me because I need
+you desperately. Except for you they would have killed me to-day--but
+my life's not worth saving if I lose you after all. I'm two men,
+dearest, rolled into one--and one of those men perhaps doesn't deserve
+much consideration, but there's some good in the other and that good
+can't prevail without you any more than a plant can grow without
+sun."
+
+With full realization, he was pitching his whole argument to the note
+of his own selfish needs and wishes, and yet he was guided by a sure
+insight into her heart. Brother Hawkins had said she had no wish to
+live and would make no fight, and he knew that he might plead
+endlessly and in vain unless he overcame her belief that he was
+actuated merely by pity for her. If she could be convinced that it was
+genuinely he who needed her more than she needed him, her woman
+quality of enveloping in supporting love the man who leaned on her,
+would bring consent.
+
+"I sought to strengthen myself for success in life," he went on, "by
+strangling out every human emotion that stood in the way of material
+results. I serve men who sneer at everything on God's earth except
+the practical, and I had come to the point where I let those men
+shape me and govern even my character."
+
+She had been listening with lowered lids and as he paused, she raised
+them and smiled wanly, yet without any sign of yielding to his
+supplications.
+
+"The picture that you saw," he swept on torrentially, "was that of a
+girl whose father employs me. He's a leader in big affairs and to be
+his son-in-law meant, in a business sense, to be raised to royalty.
+Vivien is a splendid woman and yet I doubt if either of us has----" he
+fumbled a bit for his next words and then floundered on with
+self-conscious awkwardness, "has thought of the other with real
+sentiment. Until now, I haven't known what real sentiment meant. Until
+now I haven't appreciated the true values. I discovered them out there
+in the road when you came into my arms--and into my heart. From now on
+my arms will always ache for you--and my heart will be empty without
+you.'"
+
+"But--," Glory's eyes were deeper than ever as she whispered
+laboriously, "but if you're plighted to her----"
+
+"I'm not," he protested hotly. "There is no engagement except a sort
+of understanding with her father: a sort of condescending and tacit
+willingness on his part to let his successor be his son-in-law as
+well."
+
+She lay for a space with the heavy masses of her hair on the rough
+pillow framing the pale and exquisite oval of her face, and her vivid
+eyes troubled with the longing to be convinced. Then her lips shaped
+themselves in a rather pitiful smile that lifted them only at one
+corner.
+
+"Maybe ye don't ... know it Jack," she murmured, "but ye're jest
+seekin' ... ter let me ... die ... easy in my mind ... and happy."
+
+"Before God I am _not_," he vehemently contradicted her. "I'm not
+trying to give but to take. Whether you get well or not, Glory, I want
+to fight for your life and your love. We've faced death, together.
+We've seen things nakedly--together. For neither of us can there ever
+be any true life--except together."
+
+His breath was coming with the swift intensity that was almost a sob
+and, in the eyes that bent over her, Glory read the hunger that could
+not be counterfeited.
+
+"Anyhow," she faltered, "we've had--this minute."
+
+Spurrier rose at last and called the others back. He himself did not
+know when once more he took her hand and the preacher stood over them,
+whether her responses to the services would be affirmative or
+negative.
+
+To Spurrier marriage had always seemed an opportunity. It was a
+thing in which an ambitious man could no more afford yielding to
+uncalculating impulses than in the forming of a major business
+connection. Marriage must carry a man upward toward the peak of his
+destiny, and his wife must bring as her dowry, social reenforcements
+and distinction.
+
+Now, in the darkening room of a log house, with figures clad in
+patches and hodden-gray, he held the hand that was too weak to
+close responsively upon his own, and listened to the words of a
+shaggy-headed preacher, whose beard was a stubble and whose lips moved
+over yellow and fanglike teeth.
+
+Confusedly he heard the questions and his own firm responses to the
+simple service of marriage as rendered by the backwoods preacher, then
+his heart seemed to stop and stand as the words were uttered to which
+Glory must make her answer.
+
+"Will you, Glory, have this man, John Spurrier----"
+
+What would her answer be--assent or negation?
+
+The pause seemed to last interminably as he bent with supplication in
+his glance over her, and the breath came from his lips with an
+unconscious sibilance, like escaping steam from a strained boiler,
+when at last the head on the pillow gave the ghost of a nod.
+
+Even at that moment there lurked in the back of his mind, though not
+admitted as important, the ghost of realization that he was doing
+precisely the sort of thing which, in his own world, would not only
+unclass him but make him appear ludicrous as well.
+
+As for that world of lifted eye-brows he felt just now only a
+withering contempt and a scalding hatred.
+
+Almost as soon as the simple ceremony ended, Glory sank again into
+unconsciousness, and the father and preacher, sitting silent in the
+next room, were unable to forget that though there had been a wedding,
+they were also awaiting the coming of death.
+
+The night fell with the soft brightness of moon and stars, and through
+the tangled woods the searchers were following hard on the flight of
+the assailants--doggedly and grimly, with the burning indignation of
+men bent on vindicating the good name of their people and community.
+Yet, so far, the fugitive squad had succeeded not only in eluding
+capture or recognition, but also in carrying with them their wounded.
+
+From Lexington, where Spurrier had formed strong connections, a deputy
+sheriff was riding in a caboose behind a special engine as fast as the
+roadbeds would permit. The smokestack trailed a flat line of hurrying
+smoke and the whistle screamed startlingly through the night. At the
+officer's knees, gazing up at him out of gentle eyes that belied their
+profession, crouched two tawny dogs with long ears--the bloodhounds
+that were to start from the cabin and give voice in the laurel.
+
+Waiting for them was a torn scrap of blue denim such as rough overalls
+are made of. It had been found in a brier patch where some fleeing
+wearer had snarled himself.
+
+Yet two days later the deputy returned from his quest in the timber,
+shaking his head.
+
+"I'm sorry," he reported. "I've done my best, but it's not been good
+enough."
+
+"What's the trouble?" inquired Cappeze shortly, and the officer
+answered regretfully:
+
+"This country is zigzagged and criss-crossed with watercourses--and
+water throws the dogs off. The fugitives probably made their way by
+wading wherever they could. The longest run we made was up toward Wolf
+Pen Branch."
+
+That was the direction, Spurrier silently reflected, of Sim Colby's
+house, but he made no comment.
+
+Brother Hawkins, who was leaving that afternoon, laid a kindly hand on
+Spurrier's shoulder.
+
+"Thet's bad news," he said. "But I kin give ye better. I kin almost
+give ye my gorrantee thet ther gal's goin' ter come through. Hit's
+_wantin'_ ter live thet does hit."
+
+Spurrier's eyes brightened out of the misery that had dulled them, and
+as to the failure of the chase he reassured himself with the thought
+that the dogs had started toward Sim Colby's house, and that he
+himself could finish what they had begun.
+
+Those tawny beasts had coursed at the behest of a master who was bound
+by the limitations of the law, but he, John Spurrier, was his own
+master and could deal less formally and more condignly with an enemy
+to whom suspicion pointed--and there was time enough.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+And yet on that day when the bobwhites had sounded and the blow had
+fallen, Sim Colby was nowhere near the opportunity hound's house. He
+sat tippling in a mining town two days' journey away, and he had no
+knowledge of what went on at home. His companion was ex-Private
+Severance--once his comrade in arms.
+
+The town was one of those places which discredit the march of industry
+by the mongrelized character of its outposts. The wild aloofness of
+the hills and valleys was marred there by the shacks of the camp and
+its sky soiled by a black reek of coke furnaces.
+
+Filth physical and moral brooded along the unkempt streets where the
+foul buzz of swarming flies sounded over refuse piles, and that spirit
+of degradation lay no less upon the unclean tavern, where the two men
+who had once worn the uniform sat with a bottle of cheap whisky
+between them.
+
+Colby, who had need to maintain his reputation for probity at home,
+made an occasional pilgrimage hither to foregather with his former
+comrade and loosen the galling rein of restraint. Just about the time
+when the attack on Spurrier's house had begun, he had leaned forward
+with his elbows on the table, his face heavy and his eyes inflamed,
+pursuing some topic of conversation which had already gained headway.
+
+"These hyar fellers that seeks ter git rid of Spurrier," he confided,
+"kinderly hinted 'round thet they'd like ter git me ter do ther job
+for 'em, but I pretended like I didn't onderstand what they war
+drivin' at, no fashion at all."
+
+"Why didn't ye hearken ter 'em?" questioned Severance practically.
+"Hit hain't every day a man kin git paid fer doin' what he seeks ter
+do on his own hook."
+
+But Colby grinned with a crafty gleam in his eye and poured another
+drink.
+
+"What fer would I risk ther penitenshery ter do a killin' fer them
+fellers when, ef I jest sets still on my hunkers they'll do _mine_ fer
+me," he countered.
+
+For a time after that whatever enemies Spurrier had seemed to have
+lost their spirit of eagerness. One might have presumed that to the
+rule of amity which apparently surrounded him, there was no
+exception--and so the mystery remained unsolved. Even blind Joe Givins
+made a detour in a journey to stop at Spurrier's house and sing a
+ballad of his own composition anent the mysterious siege and to
+express his indignation at the "pizen meanness" of men who would
+father and carry forward such infamies.
+
+And Glory, who had penetrated so deeply into the shadow that life had
+seemed ended for her, was recovering. Into her pale cheeks came a new
+blossoming and into the smile of her lips and eyes a new light that
+was serene and triumphant. She had been too happy to die.
+
+While the summer waned and the beauties of autumn began to kindle, the
+young wife grew strong, and her husband, seemingly, had nothing to do
+except to wander about the hills with her and discover in her new
+charms. Neighborly saws and hammers were ringing now as his place was
+transformed from its simple condition to the "hugest log house on
+seven creeks."
+
+In some respects he wished that his factitious indolence were real,
+for he felt no pride in the occult fashion in which he was directing
+the activities of his henchmen. And yet a few months ago this progress
+would have been food for satisfaction--almost triumph.
+
+His plans, as outlined to Martin Harrison were by no means at a
+standstill. They were going forward with an adroit drawing in and
+knitting together of scattered strands, and the warp and woof of this
+weaving were coming into definite order and pattern.
+
+The dual necessity was: first to slip through a legislature which was
+supposedly under the domination of American Oil and Gas, a charter
+which should wrest from that concern the sweet fruits of monopoly, and
+secondly, to secure at paltry prices the land options that would give
+the prospective pipe line its right of way.
+
+As this campaign had been originally mapped and devised it had not
+been simple, but now it was complicated by a new and difficult
+element. In those first dreams of conquest the native had been no more
+considered than the red Indian was considered in the minds of the new
+world settlers. Spurrier himself had brushed lightly aside this aspect
+of the affair. Every game has and must have its "suckers." And their
+sorry destiny it is to be despoiled. Now the very term that he had
+used in his thoughts, brought with it an amendment. It is not every
+game that must have its suckers but every bunco game.
+
+Martin Harrison did not know it, but his lieutenant had redrawn his
+plans, and redrawn them in a fashion which the chief would have
+regarded as insubordinate, impractical and sentimental.
+
+Spurrier intended that when the smoke cleared from the field upon
+which the forces of Harrison and those of Trabue had been embattled,
+the Harrison banners should be victoriously afloat and the Trabue
+standards dust trailed. But also he intended that the native
+land-holders, upon whom both combatants had looked as mere unfortunate
+onlookers raked by the cross fire of opposing artillery, should emerge
+as real and substantial gainers.
+
+Of late the man had not escaped the penalty of one who faces
+responsibility and wields power. He had abandoned as puerile his first
+impulse, after his marriage, to throw up his whole stewardship to the
+Wall Street masters. That would have amounted only to an ostentation
+of virtue which would have surrendered the situation into the
+merciless hands of A. O. and G., and would have left the mountain folk
+unprotected.
+
+Yet he could not escape the realization that he would stand with all
+the seeming of a traitor and a plunderer to any of his simple friends
+who learned of his activities--for as yet he could confide to no one
+the plans he was maturing.
+
+It was when the refurnished and enlarged place had been completed that
+the neighbors came from valley, slope, and cove to give their blessing
+at the housewarming which was also, belatedly, the "infaring."
+
+That homely, pioneer observance with which the groom brings home his
+bride, had not been possible after the wedding, but now Aunt Erie
+Toppitt had come over and prepared entertainment on a lavish if homely
+scale since Glory was not yet well.
+
+To the husband as he stood greeting the guests who arrived in jeans
+and hodden-gray, in bright shawls and calicoes, came the feeling of
+contrast and unreality, as though this were all part of some play
+quaintly and exaggeratedly staged to reflect a medieval period. In the
+drawing rooms of Martin Harrison and his confreres he had moved
+through a social atmosphere, quiet, contained, and reflecting such a
+life as the dramatist uses for background in a comedy of manners.
+Closing his eyes now he could see himself as he had been when,
+starting out for such an entertainment, he had paused before the
+cheval glass in his club bedroom, adding a straightening touch to his
+white tie, adjusting the set of his waistcoat and casting a critical
+eye over the impeccable black and white of his evening dress. Here,
+flannel shirted and booted, corduroy breeched and tanned brown, he
+stood by the door watching the arrival of guests who seemed to have
+stepped out of pioneer America or Elizabethan England. There were
+women riding mules or tramping long roads on foot and trailing
+processions of children who could not be left at home; men feeling
+overdressed and uncomfortable because they had donned coats and
+brushed their hats; even wagons plodding slowly behind yokes of oxen
+and one man riding a steer in lieu of a horse!
+
+So they came to give Godspeed to his marriage--and they were the only
+people on God's green earth who thought of him in any terms of regard
+save that regard which sprung from self-interest in his ability to
+serve beyond others!
+
+Men who were blood enemies met here as friends, because his roof
+covered a zone of common friendship and under its protection their
+hatreds could no more intrude on such a day than could pursuit in the
+Middle Ages follow beyond the sanctuary gates of a cathedral. Inside
+sounded the minors of the native fiddlers and the scrape of feet
+"running the sets" of quaint square dances.
+
+The labors of preparation had been onerous. Aunt Erie stood at the
+open door constituting, with Spurrier and his wife, a "receiving line"
+of three, and her wrinkled old face bore an affectation of morose
+exhaustion as to each guest she made the same declaration:
+
+"I hopes an' prays ye all enjoys this hyar party--Gawd knows _my_
+back's broke."
+
+But Spurrier had not in his letters to Harrison mentioned his
+marriage, and to Vivien he had not written at all. He thought they
+would hardly understand, and he preferred to make his announcement
+when he stood face to face with them, relying on the force of his own
+personality to challenge any criticism and proclaim his own
+independence of action. Just now there was no virtue in needlessly
+antagonizing his chief.
+
+Among the guests who came to that housewarming was one chance visitor
+who was not expected. He came because the people under whose roof he
+was being sheltered, had "fetched him along," and he was Wharton, the
+man whose purpose hereabouts had set gossip winging aforetime.
+
+It seemed to some of the local visitors that despite his entire
+courtesy, Spurrier did not evince any profound liking for this other
+"furriner," and since they had come to accept their host as a
+trustworthy oracle, they took the tip and were prepared to dislike
+Wharton, too.
+
+That evening, while blind Joe Givins fiddled, and dancers "ran their
+sets" on the smooth, new floor, a group of men gathered on the porch
+outside and smoked. Among them for a time were both Spurrier and
+Wharton.
+
+The latter raised something of a laugh when he confidently predicted
+that the oil prosperity, for all its former collapse and present
+paralysis, was not permanently dead.
+
+"The world needs oil and there's oil here," he declared with unctuous
+conviction. "Men who are willing to gamble on that proposition will
+win out in the end."
+
+"Stranger," responded Uncle Jimmy Litchfield, taking his pipestem from
+between his teeth and spitting contemptuously at the earth, "ye sees,
+settin' right hyar before ye a man that 'lowed he was a millionaire
+one time, 'count of this hyar same oil ye're discoursin' so hopeful
+about. Thet man's me. I'd been dirt-pore all my days, oftentimes
+hurtin' fer ther plum' needcessities of life. I'm mighty nigh thet
+pore still."
+
+"Did you strike oil in the boom days?" demanded Wharton as he bent
+eagerly forward.
+
+"I owned me a farm, them days, on t'other side ther mounting," went on
+the narrator, "an' them oil men came along an' wanted ter buy ther
+rights offen me."
+
+"Did you sell?"
+
+Uncle Billy chuckled. "They up an' offered me a royalty of one-eighth
+of ther whole production. They proved hit up ter me by 'rithmetic an'
+algebry how hit would make me rich over an' above all avarice--but I
+said no, I wouldn't take no eighth. I stud out fer a _sixteenth_ by
+crickety!"
+
+Both Spurrier and Wharton smothered their laughter as the latter
+inquired gravely: "Did they play one of them royalty games."
+
+"They done better'n thet. They said, 'We'll give ye two sixteenths,'
+an' thet's when I 'lowed I was es good es a Pierpont Morgan. I
+wouldn't nuver hurt fer no needcessity no more."
+
+"And what was the outcome of it all?" asked Wharton.
+
+Uncle Jimmy's face darkened. "The come-uppance of ther whole blame
+business war thet a lot of pore devils what hed done been content with
+poverty found hit twice as hard ter go on bein' pore because they'd
+got to entertainin' crazy dreams ther same as me. Any man thet talks
+oil ter me now's got ter buy outright an' pay me spot cash. I ain't
+playin' no more of them royalty games."
+
+"That's fair enough," said Wharton. "But it seems to me that you
+people are taking the wrong tack. Because the boom collapsed once, you
+are shutting the door against the possibility of its coming again--and
+it's going to come again."
+
+"A man kin git stung once," volunteered another native, "an' hit's
+jest tough luck or bewitchment. Ef he gits stung twicet on ther same
+trumpery, he ain't no more then a plum', daft fool."
+
+Wharton lighted a fresh cigar and turned toward Spurrier.
+
+"Mr. Spurrier here, is a man you all know and trust----" he hazarded.
+"I understand that he's seen oil fields in the West and Mexico. I
+wonder what he thinks about it all."
+
+On the dark porch Spurrier looked at his visitor for a few minutes in
+silence and his first reply was a quiet question.
+
+"Did I tell you I'd seen oil fields in operation?" he inquired, and
+Wharton stammered a little.
+
+"I was under that impression," he said. "Possibly I am wrong."
+
+"No--you are right enough," answered the other evenly. "I just didn't
+remember mentioning it. What is your question exactly?"
+
+"If I have a hunch that oil holds a future here and am willing to back
+that hunch, don't you think I am acting wisely to do it?"
+
+The host sat silent while he seemed to weigh the question with
+judicial deliberation, and during the pause he realized that the
+little group of men were waiting intently for his utterance as for the
+voice of the Delphic oracle.
+
+"I have seen oil operation and oil development," he said at last. "I
+have lived here for some time and know the history of the former boom,
+but I have not bought a foot of ground. That ought to make my opinion
+clear."
+
+"Then you don't believe in the future?"
+
+"Don't you think, Mr. Wharton," inquired Spurrier coolly and, his
+listeners thought, with a shaded note of contempt, "that what I've
+already said, answers your question? If I _did_ believe in it,
+wouldn't I be likely to seek investment at the present stage of land
+prices?"
+
+John Spurrier was glad that it was dark out there. He knew that the
+mountain men awaited his judgment as something carrying the sanction
+of finality and he felt like a Judas. He himself knew that back of his
+seeming betrayal was a determination to safeguard their rights, but
+the whole game of maneuvering and dissembling was as impossible to
+play proudly as it would have been to undertake the duties of a spy.
+
+"I'll admit," observed Wharton modestly, "that if I lost some money,
+it wouldn't break me--and I'm a stubborn man when I get a hunch. Well,
+I'm going in to watch them dance."
+
+He rose and went indoors and Uncle Jimmy, when he put a question
+acted, in effect, as spokesman for them all.
+
+"What does ye think of thet feller, Mr. Spurrier?"
+
+"I think," said the opportunity hound crisply, "that he's a fool, and
+Scripture says, 'a fool and his money are soon parted.'"
+
+"An' ef he seeks ter buy?"
+
+"Sell--by all means--if the price is right!"
+
+The next day when they were alone Glory said:
+
+"I don't like that man Wharton. He's got sneaky eyes."
+
+Her husband laughed. "I can't say that he struck me pleasantly," he
+admitted. "We talked oil out on the porch. He was the optimist and I
+the pessimist."
+
+And it was to happen that the first rift in Glory's lute of happiness
+was to come out of Wharton's agency, though she did not recognize it
+as his.
+
+For in these times, despite a happiness that made her sing through the
+days, something like the panic of stage fright was settling over her:
+a thing yet of the future, but some day to be faced.
+
+So long as life ran quietly, like the shaded streams that went down
+until they made the rivers of the greater and outer world, she was
+confident mistress of her life and had no forebodings. Spurrier
+loved her and she worshiped him--but out there beyond the ridges,
+the activities of his larger life were calling--or would call. Then
+they must leave here and she began to dread the thousand little
+mistakes and the humiliations that might come to him because of her
+unfamiliarity with that life. Since the bearings of achievement are
+delicate, she even feared that she might throw out of gear and
+poise the whole machinery of his success, and in secret Glory was
+poring over absurd books on etiquette and deportment. That these
+stereotyped instructions would only hamper her own naturally plastic
+spirit, she did not know when she read and reread chapters headed,
+"How to Enter a Drawing-room" and "Hints upon Refined Conversation."
+
+That Spurrier would suggest going without her to any field into which
+his work called him, she did not dream. That he would leave her to
+wait for him here, as the companion only of his backwoods hours, her
+pride never contemplated.
+
+Yet in the fall Spurrier did just that thing, and to the letter which
+induced its doing was signed the name of George Wharton. The latter
+wrote:
+
+ "We must begin to lay out lines for work with the next legislature.
+ There are people in Louisville and Lexington whom you should meet
+ and talk with. I think you had better make your headquarters at
+ one of the Louisville clubs, and when you get here I will put you
+ in touch with the proper bearings."
+
+That much might have puzzled any of the mountaineers who had taken
+their own cues from Spurrier's thinly concealed manner of hostility to
+Wharton, but the last part of the letter would have explained that,
+too:
+
+ "The little game down at your house was nothing short of masterly.
+ Your acting was superb, and though you were the star, I think I
+ may claim to have played up to you well. The device of gaining
+ their confidence so that, of their own accord, they turned to you
+ for counsel--and then seeming to gloom on me when I talked oil,
+ was pretty subtle. I could openly preach buying and instead of
+ turning away from me in suspicion, they fell on me for a sucker.
+ I--and others acting for me--have, as the result, secured a good
+ part of the options we need--and you appear to be of all men, the
+ least interested."
+
+Spurrier read the thing twice, then crushed it savagely in his
+clenched hand and cursed under his breath. "The damned jackals," he
+muttered. "That's the pack I'm running with--or rather I'm running
+with them and against them at once."
+
+But when Spurrier had kissed Glory good-by and she had waved a smiling
+farewell, she turned back into her house and covered her face with her
+hands.
+
+"I don't want to believe it," she declared. "I won't believe it--but
+it looks like he's ashamed to take me with him. Not that I blame
+him--only--only I've got to make myself over. He's _got_ to be proud
+of me!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+When he came back for a short stay in the hills between periods of
+quiet but strenuous affairs in Louisville, he brought gifts that
+delighted Glory and a devotion that made her forget her misgivings.
+She had him back, and he found the house expressing in many small ways
+a taste and discrimination which brought to him a flush of pleasurable
+surprise. Glory knew the menace that hung over Spurrier. She knew of
+the malevolent and elusive enmities to which her own life had so
+nearly become forfeit, and the old terror of the mountain woman for
+her man became the cross that she must carry with her. Because of her
+militant father's antagonisms she had been inured from childhood to
+the taut moment of suspense that came with every voice raised at the
+gate and every knock sounding on the door.
+
+There was an element of possible threat in each arrival. She had
+become, as one has need to be, under such circumstances, somewhat
+fatalistic as to the old dangers. Now that the fear embraced her
+husband as well as her father, the philosophy which she had cultivated
+failed her. Yet their happiness was so strong that it threw off these
+things and drew upon the treasury of the present.
+
+Spurrier, who talked little of his own dangers, was far from
+forgetting. His suspicion of Colby strengthened, and he looked forward
+to the day as inevitable when there must be a reckoning between them,
+which would not be a final reckoning unless one of them died, and for
+that encounter he went grimly prepared.
+
+One thing puzzled him. Of Sim Colby he had thought as a somewhat
+solitary character, whose relations with his neighbors, though
+amicable, were yet rather detached. He had seemed to have few
+intimates, yet if he had led this attack, he was palpably able to
+muster at his back a considerable force of men for a desperate
+project. That meant that the infection of hatred against himself had
+spread from a single enmity to the number, at least, of the men who
+had joined in the battle, and it had been a battle in which more than
+one had fallen. Before, he had recognized a single enemy. Henceforth
+he must acknowledge plural enmities.
+
+And along that line of reasoning the next step followed logically.
+
+Who would suggest himself as so natural a leader for a murder
+enterprise as Sam Mosebury, whose record was established in such
+matters? Certainly if this suspicion were well-founded it would be
+safest to know.
+
+Spurrier, despite all he had heard of Sam Mosebury, was reluctant to
+entertain the thought. The man might be, as Cappeze painted him, the
+head and front of an infamously vicious system, yet there was
+something engaging and likable about him, which made it hard to
+believe that for hire or any motive not nearly personal he would have
+conspired to do murder.
+
+So among the many claims upon Spurrier's attention was the effort to
+find out where Sam Mosebury stood, and it was while he was thinking
+of that problem that he encountered the object of his thoughts in
+person. The spot was one distant from his own house. Indeed it was
+near Colby's cabin--still apparently empty--that the meeting took
+place.
+
+The opportunity hound had made several trips over there of late,
+because he required to know something of Colby's activities, and, of
+course, when he came he observed a surreptitious caution which sought
+to guard against any hint leaking through to Colby of his own
+surveillance. He firmly believed that Sim was "hiding out," and that
+despite the seeming emptiness of his habitation he was not far away.
+
+So it was Spurrier, the law-abiding man, who was skulking in the
+laurel while the notorious Mosebury walked the highway "upstanding"
+and openly--and the man in the thicket stooped low to escape
+discovery. But his foot slipped in the tangle and a rotting branch
+cracked under it, giving out a sound which brought Mosebury to an
+abrupt halt with his head warily raised and his rifle poised. He, too,
+had enemies and must walk in caution.
+
+There had been times when Sam's life had hinged on just such trivial
+things as the snapping of a twig, and now, peering through the
+thickets Spurrier saw a flinty hardness come into his eyes.
+
+Sam stepped quietly but swiftly to the roadside and sheltered himself
+behind a rock. He said no word, but he waited, and Spurrier could feel
+that his eyes were boring into his own place of concealment with a
+scrutiny that went over it studiously and keenly, foot by foot.
+
+He hurriedly considered what plan to pursue. If Mosebury was in
+league with Colby, to show himself would be almost as undesirable a
+thing as to show himself to Colby direct. Yet if he stayed there with
+the guilty seeming of one in hiding, Mosebury would end by locating
+him--and might assume that the hiding was itself a proof of enmity. He
+decided to declare himself so he shouted boldly: "It's John Spurrier,"
+and rose a moment later into view.
+
+Then he came forward, thinking fast, and when the two met in the road,
+mendaciously said:
+
+"I guess it looks queer for a man with a clear conscience to take to
+the timber that way, Mr. Mosebury--but you may remember that I was
+recently attacked, and I don't know who did it."
+
+Mosebury nodded. "I'd be ther last man ter fault ye fer thet," he
+concurred. "I was doin' nigh erbout ther same thing myself, but I
+didn't know ye often fared over this way, Mr. Spurrier."
+
+"No, it's off my beat." Spurrier was now lying fluently in what he
+fancied was to be a game of wits with a man who might have led the
+siege upon his house. "I was just going over to Stamp Carter's place.
+He wanted me to advise him about a property deal."
+
+For a space Sam stood gravely thoughtful, and when he spoke his words
+astonished the other.
+
+"Seein' we _hev_ met up, accidental-like, I've got hit in head ter
+tell ye somethin' deespite hit ain't rightly none of my business."
+Again he paused, and it was plain that he was laboring under
+embarrassment, so Spurrier inquired:
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Of course, I've done heered ther talk erbout yore bein' attacked.
+Don't ye really suspicion no special man?"
+
+"Suspicion is one thing, Mr. Mosebury, and knowledge is another."
+
+"Yes, thet's Bible truth, an' yit I wouldn't marvel none yore
+suspicions went over thet-away--an' came up not fur off from hyar." He
+nodded his head toward Sim Colby's house, and Spurrier, who was
+steeled to fence, gave no indication of astonishment. He only
+inquired:
+
+"Why should Mr. Colby hold a grudge against me?"
+
+"I ain't got no power of knowin' thet." Mosebury spoke dryly. "An' es
+I said afore, hit ain't none of my business nohow--still I does know
+thet ye've been over hyar some sev'ral times, an' every time ye came,
+ye came quietlike es ef ye sought ter see Sim afore Sim seed _you_."
+
+"You think I've been here before?"
+
+"No, sir, I don't think hit. I knows hit. I seed ye."
+
+"Saw me!"
+
+"Yes, sir, seed ye. Hit's my business to keep a peeled eye in my
+face."
+
+So Spurrier's careful secrecy had been transparent after all, and if
+this man was an ally of Colby's, Colby already shared his knowledge.
+More than ever Spurrier felt sure that his suspicions of the man whose
+eyes had changed color, were grounded in truth.
+
+"Howsomever," went on Mosebury quietly, "I ain't nuver drapped no hint
+ter Sim erbout hit. I ain't, gin'rally speakin', no meddler, but ef so
+be I kin forewarn ye ergainst harm, hit would pleasure me ter do
+hit."
+
+There was a cordial ring of sincerity in the manner and voice, which
+it was hard to doubt, so the other said gravely:
+
+"Thank you. I did suspect Colby, but I have no proof."
+
+"I don't know whether Sim grudges ye or not," continued Mosebury. "He
+ain't nuver named ther matter ter me nowise, guise, ner fashion--but
+Sim _wasn't with ther crowd thet went atter ye_. He didn't even know
+nothin' erbout hit. Sometimes a man comes to grief by barkin' up ther
+wrong tree."
+
+Again suspicion came to the front. This savored strongly of an attempt
+to alibi a confederate, and Spurrier inquired bluntly:
+
+"Since you broached this subject, I think it's fair to ask you another
+question. You tell me who _didn't_ come. Do you know who _did_?"
+
+For a moment Mosebury's face remained blank, then he spoke stiffly.
+
+"I said I'd be glad ter warn ye--but I didn't say I war willin' ter
+name no names. Thet would be mighty nigh ther same thing es takin'
+yore quarrel onto myself."
+
+"Then that's all you can tell me--that it wasn't Colby?"
+
+"Mr. Spurrier," rejoined the mountaineer seriously, "ye _knows_
+jedgmatically an' p'intedly thet ye've got enemies that means
+business. I ain't nuver seed a man yet in these hills what belittled a
+peril sich as yourn thet didn't pay fer hit--with his life."
+
+"I don't belittle it, but what can I do?"
+
+Sam Mosebury stood with a gaze that wandered off over the broken sky
+line. So grave was his demeanor that when his words came they carried
+the shock of inconsistent absurdity.
+
+"Thar's a witch woman, thet dwells nigh hyar. Ef I war in youre stid,
+I'd git her ter read ther signs fer me an' tell me what I had need
+guard ergainst most."
+
+"I'm afraid," answered Spurrier, repressing his contempt with
+difficulty, "I'm too skeptical to pin my faith to signs and omens."
+
+Again the mountain man was looking gravely across the hills, but for a
+moment the eyes had flashed humorously.
+
+"I reckon we don't need ter cavil over thet, Mr. Spurrier. I don't sot
+no master store by witchcraft foolery my ownself. Mebby ye recalls
+thet oncet I told ye a leetle story erbout my cat an' my mockin'
+bird."
+
+"Yes," Spurrier began to understand now. "You sometimes speak in
+allegory. But this time I don't get the meaning."
+
+"Waal, hit's this fashion. I _don't_ know who ther men war thet tried
+ter kill ye. Thet's God's truth, but I've got my own notions an' mebby
+they ain't fur wrong. I ain't goin' ter name no names--but ef so be ye
+wants ter talk ter ther witch woman, _I'll_ hev speech with her fust.
+What comes outen magic kain't hardly make me no enemies--but mebby hit
+_mout_ enable ye ter discern somethin' thet would profit ye to a
+master degree."
+
+Spurrier stood looking into the face of the other and then impulsively
+he thrust out his hand.
+
+"Mr. Mosebury," he said, "I'll be honest with you. I half suspected
+you--because I'd met you at Colby's and I knew you hated Cappeze. I
+owe you an apology, and I'm glad to know I was wrong."
+
+"Mr. Spurrier," replied the other, "ef I _hed_ attempted yore life I
+wouldn't hev failed, an', moreover, I don't hate old Cappeze. Ther man
+thet wins out don't hev no need ter harbor hatreds. He hates me
+because he sought ter penitentiary me--an' failed."
+
+"When shall we go to consult the oracle?" asked Spurrier, and Mosebury
+shook his head.
+
+"I reckon mebby I mout seem over cautious--even timorouslike ter ye,
+in bein' so heedful erbout keepin' outen sight in this matter," he
+said. "But them thet knows my record, knows I _ain't_, jest ter say
+easy skeered. You go home an' wait an' afore long I'll write ye a
+letter, tellin' ye when ter go an' how ter go. Then ye kin make ther
+journey by yoreself."
+
+"That looks like common sense to me," declared the other, and he went
+home, forgetting the witch woman on the way, because of the other and
+lovelier witchcraft that he knew awaited him in his own house.
+
+Spurrier, despite his dangers, responsibilities, and conflict of
+purposes, was happy. He was happy in a simpler and less complicated
+way than he had ever been before, because his heart was in the
+ascendancy, and Glory, he thought, was "livin' up to her name."
+
+If he could have thrust some other things into the same dark cupboard
+of half-contemptuous philosophy to which he relegated his own dangers,
+he might have been even happier. But a mentor who had rarely troubled
+him in past years became insistent and audible through the
+silences--speaking with the voice of conscience.
+
+He remembered telling Vivian Harrison, over the consomme, that pearls
+did not make oysters happy and that these illiterates of the hills
+might have hidden wealth in the shells of their isolation and gain
+nothing more than the oyster. Indeed, he had thought of them no more
+than the pearl fisherman thinks of the low form of life whose diseased
+state gives birth to treasure. They inhabited a terrain over which he
+and the forces of American Oil and Gas were to do battle, and like
+birds nesting on a battlefield, they must take their chances.
+
+It was no longer possible to maintain that callous indifference. These
+men, to whom he could not, without disclosing his strategy and
+defeating his purpose, tell the truth, had befriended him.
+
+They were human and in many ways lovable. If he succeeded, they would,
+upon his own advice, have sold their birthrights.
+
+However, he gave an anodyne to his conscience with the thought that if
+victory came to him there would be wealth enough for all to share.
+Having won his conquest, he could be generous, rendering back as a
+gift a part of what should have been theirs by right. The means of
+doing this he had worked out but he could confide to no one. He had
+embarked as cold bloodedly as Martin Harrison had ever started on any
+of the enterprises that had made him a money baron. Indeed it had been
+Spurrier who had fired the chief with interest in the scheme, and if
+the thing were culpable the culpability had been his own. Then he had
+come to realize that in the human equation was a factor that he had
+ignored: the rights of the ignorant native. He had fought down that
+recognition as the voice of sentimentality until at last he had no
+longer been able to fight it down. Between those two states of mind
+had been a war of mental agony and conflict, of doubt, of vacillation.
+The conclusion had not been easily reached. Now he meant to carry on
+the war he had undertaken unaltered as to its objective of winning a
+victory for Harrison over Trabue and the myrmidons of A. O. and G.,
+but he meant to bring in that victory in such a guise that the native
+would share in the division of the spoils. He knew that Harrison, if
+he had an intimation of such an amendment of plan, would sharply veto
+it, but when the thing was done it would be too late to object--and
+meanwhile Spurrier regarded himself no less the trustee of the
+mountain-land holder than the servant of Martin Harrison. He was
+willing to shoulder, out of his own stipulated profits, the chief
+burden of this division, and in the end he would have driven a better
+bargain for his simple friends than they could have hoped to attain
+for themselves.
+
+Yet in him was being reborn an element of character, which had long
+been repressed.
+
+And there in the other section of the State where political
+connections had to be established and the skids of intrigue greased,
+much stood waiting to be done. Already most of what could be
+accomplished here on the ground had progressed to a point from which
+the end could be seen.
+
+John Spurrier, the seeming idler, could control almost all the
+territory needful for his right of way--all except a tract belonging
+to Brother Bud Hawkins, cautiously left for the last because he
+wished to handle that himself and did not yet wish to appear in the
+negotiations.
+
+In the intricate workings of such a project by a campaign of secrecy,
+the matter was not only one of acquiring a certain expanse of a
+definite sort of property in a given region, but of acquiring holdings
+that commanded the only practicable route through passable gaps. This
+special lie and trend of ground he thought of and spoke of, in his
+business correspondence, as "the neck of the bottle." When he held it,
+it mattered little who else had liquid in the bottle. It could come
+out only through his neck and, therefore, under his terms. Yet even
+when that was achieved, there remained the need of the corkscrew
+without which he himself could make no use of his range-wide jug of
+crude petroleum. That corkscrew was the charter to be had from a
+legislature where American Oil and Gas was supposed to have sentinels
+at the door.
+
+He could not take Glory with him on these trips, because Glory was of
+the hills, and loyal to the hills--and he could not yet take the
+natives into his confidence. For the same reason he could give her
+only business reasons of the most general and evasive character for
+leaving her behind.
+
+But the work that Spurrier had done so far was only the primary
+section of a broader design. What he had accomplished affected the oil
+field on the remote side of Hemlock Mountain, the part of the field
+that the earlier boom had never touched, and his entire project looked
+to a totality embracing also the "nigh" side, where his operations
+still existed only in projection.
+
+It was while this situation stood that there came to him one day two
+letters calling upon him for two irreconcilable courses of action. One
+was from Louisville, urging him to return there at once to busy
+himself with political plannings; the other was a rude scrawl from Sam
+Mosebury setting an appointment with the "witch woman."
+
+Spurrier was reluctant to go to Louisville. It meant laying aside the
+little paradise of the present for the putting on of heavy harness. It
+necessitated another excuse to Glory, and more than that, being away
+from Glory. Yet that was the bugle call of his mission, and he fancied
+that whatever threatened him here in the hills was a menace of local
+effect. If that were true he would not need the warning which the
+unaccountable desperado, Sam Mosebury, meant to relay to him through
+channels of alleged magic, until he came back.
+
+Therefore, the witch could wait. But in that detail Spurrier erred,
+and when he answered the summons that called him to town without his
+occult consultation, he unwittingly discarded a warning which he
+needed there no less than in the hills.
+
+He was called upon to choose a turning without pause, and he followed
+his business instincts. It happened that instinct misled him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+One afternoon Trabue, the unadvertised dictator of American Oil and
+Gas, sat with several of his close subordinates in a conference that
+had to do with Martin Harrison, the man he assumed to ignore.
+
+"Unless some unforeseen thing sends oil soaring," ventured Oliver
+Morris, "this fellow Spurrier is having his trouble for his pains. My
+idea is that he's seeking to tease us into counter activity--and trail
+after us in the profits."
+
+"And if something _should_ send oil soaring," crisply countered
+Cosgrove, "he'd have us distanced with a runaway start."
+
+"Who is this man Spurrier?" demanded Trabue himself. "What does our
+research department report?"
+
+"He's a protege of Martin Harrison's."
+
+Trabue appeared to find the words illuminating, and a shrewd irony
+glinted in his brief smile.
+
+"If he's Harrison's man, he's out to knife me--and he has resources at
+his back. Tell me more about him."
+
+Cosgrove took from his portfolio a neatly typed memorandum, and read
+from it aloud:
+
+ Former army officer who gained the sobriquet of "Plunger"
+ Spurrier: Court-martialed and convicted upon charge of murder,
+ and pardoned through efforts of Senator Beverly. Associated with
+ various enterprises as a general investigator and initiative
+ expert. Rumor has it that Harrison is grooming him as his own
+ successor.
+
+"If his reputation is that of a plunger," argued Morris, "my guess is
+that he's playing a long-shot bet for a killing."
+
+"And you guess wrong. If Harrison has picked this fellow to wear his
+own mantle, the man is more than a gambling tout. It is only lunacy to
+underestimate him or dismiss him with contempt."
+
+Cosgrove nodded his concurrence and amplified it. "In my judgment he's
+something of a genius with a chrome-nickeled nerve, but he's adroit as
+well as bold. He has operated only through others and has kept himself
+inconspicuous. Except for an accident, we should have had no warning
+of his activities."
+
+"If he were to get bitten by a rattlesnake," growled Morris savagely,
+"it would be a lucky thing for us. Of course, we might beguile him
+into our own camp."
+
+Trabue shook his head in a decisive negation.
+
+"That would only notify him that we recognize his effort and fear it.
+If the game's big enough, we don't want him." He paused, then added
+with a grim facetiousness: "As for your other suggestion, we have no
+rattlesnakes in our equipment."
+
+The dynamic-minded master of strategy sat balancing a pen-holder on
+his extended forefinger for a few moments, then he inquired as if in
+afterthought: "By the way, I feel curious as to how the tip came to us
+that this conspiracy was on foot. You say that except for an accident
+we should not have known it."
+
+Cosgrove smiled. "It came to this office through the regular channels
+of our local agencies--and I didn't inquire searchingly into the
+details. I gathered, though, that the trail was picked up by a sort of
+information tout--a fellow who was hurt and compromised a damage suit
+against us. It seems that he is supposed to be blind--but he could
+nonetheless see well enough to read some memoranda that chanced to
+come his way." The gentleman cleared his throat almost apologetically
+as he added: "As I remarked I didn't learn the particulars. I merely
+took the information for what it might be worth, and set our men to
+watching."
+
+"I see," Trabue made dry acknowledgment. "And what is being done
+toward watching him?"
+
+"I understand we have a man there who is assuming an enmity toward us
+and who is ostensibly helping Spurrier to build up political
+influence."
+
+"I see," said Trabue once more, with even a shade more dryness in his
+voice.
+
+That conversation had taken place quite a long while before the
+present, but it set into quiet motion the wheels of a large and
+powerful organization.
+
+The knowledge that John Spurrier was objectionable to A. O. and G. had
+filtered through to more local, yet confidential, officials, and
+through them to "men in the field," and it is characteristic of such
+delegations of authority, that each department suits the case referred
+to it to the practical workings of its own environment.
+
+Gentlemen of high business standing in lower Broadway could permit
+themselves no violence of language, beyond the intimation that this
+upstart was a nuisance. Translated into the more candid brutality of
+camp-following parasites in the wildness of the hills, that mild
+declaration became: "The man needs killin'. Let's git him!"
+
+Now, Spurrier found that the visit to Louisville and Lexington, which
+had promised to be the matter of weeks, must stretch itself into
+months, and that until the convening and adjournment of the assembly
+itself, his presence would be as requisite as that of a ship's officer
+on the bridge. In one respect he was gratified. American Oil and Gas
+seemed serenely unsuspicious of any danger. Vigilance seemed lapsed.
+Those men whose duty it was to watch the corporation's interest and to
+hold in line the needed lawmakers, appeared to regard legislative
+protection as a thing bought and paid for and safe from trespass.
+
+And Spurrier, knowing better, was secretly triumphant, but without
+Glory he was far from happy.
+
+Had he known what influences were at work with cancerlike corrosions
+upon her loyalty, what food was nourishing her anxiety, he would have
+stolen the time to go to her. Hers was an anxiety which she did not
+acknowledge. Even to herself she denied its existence and against any
+outside suggestion of inner hurt pride would have risen in valiant
+resentment.
+
+But in her heart it talked on in whispers that she could not hush. At
+night she would waken suddenly, wide-eyed with apprehension and seek
+to reassure herself by the emphasis of her avowals: "He's _not_
+ashamed of me. He's not leaving me because of that! He's a big man
+with big business, and some day he'll take me with him, everywhere!"
+
+When old Cappeze, a man not given to unreflecting or careless speech,
+flatly questioned: "Glory--why doesn't John ever take you with him?"
+she flinched and fell into exculpations that limped.
+
+The old man was quick to note the pained rawness of the nerve he had
+touched, and he began talking of something else, but when he was alone
+once more his old eyes took on that fanatic absorption that came of
+his deep love for his daughter, and he shook his head dubiously over
+her future.
+
+One day a neighborhood woman came by Glory's house and found her
+standing at the door. Tassie Plumford neither claimed nor was credited
+with powers of magic, but she, too, might have been called a "witch
+woman." In curdled disposition and shrewishness of tongue, she merited
+the title.
+
+"Waal, waal, Glory Cappeze," she drawled in her rasping, nasal voice.
+"Yore man hes done built ye a right monstrous fine house, hyar, ain't
+he?"
+
+"Come in and see it, Mrs. Plumford," invited the young wife. "But my
+name's Glory Spurrier now--not Cappeze."
+
+In the gesture with which the woman drew her shawl tighter about her
+lean shoulders, she contrived to convey the affront of suspicion and
+disbelief.
+
+"No, I reckon I ain't got ther power ter tarry now," she declined. "I
+don't git much time fer gaddin', an' be yore name whatsoever hit may,
+there's them hyar-abouts es 'lows yore man lavishes everything on ye
+but his own self. He's away from ye most of his time, albeit I reckon
+he's got car fare aplenty fer two."
+
+Glory stiffened, and without a word turned her back on her ungracious
+visitor. She went into the house with the tilted chin of one who
+disdains to answer insolent slanders, but in the tenderness of her
+heart the barb had nonetheless sunk deep. So people were saying that!
+
+Over at Aunt Erie Toppitt's the shrew again halted--and there it
+seemed that she did have time to "tarry," and roll the morsel of
+gossip under tongue.
+
+"Mebby she's ther furriner's lawful wife an' then ergin mebby she
+ain't nuthin' but his woman," opined Tassie Plumford. "Hit ain't none
+of my business nohow, but a godly woman hes call ter be heedful whar
+she visits at."
+
+"A godly woman!" Aunt Erie's tone stung like a hornet attack. "What
+has godliness got ter do with _you_, anyhow, Tassie Plumford? The
+records of ther high cote over at Carnettsville hes got _yore_ record
+fer a witness thet swears ter perjury."
+
+Mrs. Plumford trembled with rage but, prudently, she elected to ignore
+the reference to her legal status.
+
+"Ef they was rightfully married," she retorted, "hit didn't come ter
+pass twell old man Cappeze diskivered her alone with him--in his
+house--jest ther two of 'em--an' they wouldn't nuver hev _been_
+diskivered savin' an' exceptin' fer ther attack on ther furriner." In
+the self-satisfaction of one who has scored, she added: "I'll be
+farin' on now, I reckon."
+
+"An' don't nuver come back," stormed Aunt Erie, whose occasional
+tantrums were as famous as her usual good humor. "Unless ye seeks ter
+hev ther dawgs sot on ye."
+
+While the spiteful and forked little tongues of gossip were doing
+their serpent best to poison what had promised to be an Eden for Glory
+at home in the hills, the husband who was charged with neglecting her
+was miserable in town.
+
+His work had been the breath of life to him until now, bringing the
+zestful delight of prevailing over stubborn difficulties, and building
+bridges that should carry him across to his goal of financial power.
+Now he found it a necessity that exiled him from a place to which he
+had come half-contemptuously and to which his converted thoughts
+turned as the prayers of the true believer turn toward Mecca.
+
+He who had been urban in habit and taste found nothing in the city to
+satisfy him. The smoke-filled air seemed to stifle him and fill him
+with a yearning for the clean, spirited sweep of the winds across the
+slopes. He knew that these physical aspects were trivial things he
+would have swept aside had they not stood as emblems for a longing of
+the heart itself--a nostalgia born of his new life and love.
+
+But all the plans that had built one on the other toward a definite
+end of making an oil field of the barren hills were drawing to a focus
+that could not be neglected. He could no more leave these things
+undone than could his idol Napoleon have abandoned his headquarters
+before Austerlitz, and the sitting of the legislature could not be
+changed to suit his wishes. Neither could the lining up of forces that
+were to guide his legislation to its passage be left unwatched.
+
+So the absence that he had thought would be brief, or at worst a
+series of short trips away from home, was prolonging itself into a
+winter in Louisville and Frankfort. He found himself as warily busy as
+a collie herding a panicky flock, and as soon as one danger was met
+and averted, a new one called upon him from a new and unsuspected
+quarter.
+
+Much of the deviousness of playing underground politics disgusted him,
+and yet he knew he would have regarded it only as an amusing game for
+high stakes before his change of heart. But now that it was to be a
+battle for the mountain men as well as for Martin Harrison and for
+himself, it could be better stomached.
+
+The effort to pick out men who could be trusted in an enterprise where
+they had to be bought, was one which taxed both his insight into human
+nature and his self-esteem.
+
+Senator Chew, himself a mountaineer, who had come from a ragged
+district to the state assembly and who seemed to harbor a hatred
+against A. O. and G. of utter malevolence, was almost as his other
+self, furnishing him with eyes with which to see and ears with which
+to hear, and familiarity with all the devious, unlovely tricks of
+lobby processes.
+
+But Senator Chew, a countryman, who had capitalized his shifty wits
+and hard-won education, bent his knee to the brazen gods of cupidity
+and ambition.
+
+"I don't just see," he demurred petulantly to Spurrier, "why you go
+about this thing the way you do. You've got unlimited capital behind
+you and yet in going after these options you ain't hardly got hold of
+any more land than just enough to let your pipe line through. You
+could get all a man's property just as cheap per acre as part of
+it--and when I've sweated blood to give you your charter and you've
+sweated blood to grab your right-of-way, that God-forsaken land will
+be a Klondike."
+
+"I hope so," smiled Spurrier, and his ally went on.
+
+"All right, but why have nothing out of it except a pipe-line? Why not
+have the whole damn business to split three ways, among Harrison's
+crowd, yourself--and the crowd I've got to handle?"
+
+"You're a mountain man, Senator," the opportunity hound reminded him.
+"You know that in every other section of the hills to which
+development has come, the native has reaped only a heart-ache and an
+empty belly. I am purposely taking only a part of each man's holding,
+so that when the oil flows there what he has left will be worth more
+to him than all of it was before."
+
+"Hell," growled the politician. "The men you ought to think about
+making money for, are the men you need--like me, and the men who back
+you, like Harrison. These local fellows won't thank you, and in my
+opinion you're a fool, if you'll permit me to talk plain."
+
+"Talk as plain as you like, Senator," smiled the other. "But I think
+I'm acting with right sound sense. Our field can be more profitably
+developed among friends than among enemies--even if no consideration
+other than the practical enters into the problem."
+
+It was not until Christmas time that Spurrier broke away from his
+activities in Louisville, and then he came bearing gifts and with a
+heart full of eagerness. He came elated, too, at the fair promise of
+his prospects, and confident of victory.
+
+So Glory hid the fears that had been growing in her heart and, because
+of the tidal power of personal fascination and contact, she found it
+an easy task. While Spurrier was with her, those fears seemed to lose
+their substance and to stand out as absurdities. They were delirious
+miasmas dissipated by the sun and daylight of companionship.
+
+Spurrier kept most of his valuable papers in a safety vault in
+Louisville, but for purposes of reference here, he maintained a
+complete system of carbon copies, and these must be stored in some
+place where he could feel sure they were immune from any prying eye.
+The entire record of his proceedings would be clear to any reader of
+those memoranda.
+
+While Glory was away one day, he removed a section of the living-room
+wall and fashioned something in the nature of a secret cabinet, upon
+which he could rely for these purposes. Before he went away again he
+shared that secret with her, since in certain exigencies it might be
+needful that some one should be able to act on wired instructions. He
+showed her the bit of molding that was removable and which gave
+entrance to the hidden recess.
+
+"In that strong box," he told her, "are papers of vital importance. If
+I haven't taken you entirely into my confidence about them all, dear,
+it's because they concern other people more closely than myself. All
+my own affairs are yours--but in the service of others, I must obey
+instructions and those instructions are rigid."
+
+He took out one envelope, though, plainly marked.
+
+"This," he said, "is a paper to be used only in case of extreme
+emergency. It is an order on the safety-deposit people in Louisville
+to open my vault to the bearer. In the event of my death, or if I
+should wire you from a distance, I would want you to use it."
+
+Even that admittance into the veiled sanctum of his business life
+pleased Glory, and she nodded her head gravely.
+
+She did not tell him, and he did not guess, that tongues were wagging
+in his absence, and that people said she was good enough only for that
+part of his life in which he shed his white collar and his "fine
+manners" and donned the rougher habiliments of the backwoods.
+
+Even when she learned that his coming back had been only to spend the
+holidays with her and that he must leave again to be gone for weeks,
+at least, she let none of the disquiet that smouldered in her find an
+utterance in words.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On a fine old Blue Grass estate, which exhaled the elegance and ease
+of the Old South, lived Colonel Merriwell, a life-long friend of Dyke
+Cappeze. In years long gone he had more than once sought to have
+Cappeze transfer his activities to a wider field. Now, timber
+interests called him to the mountains, and though the cold weather had
+set in, his daughter chose to come with him. She had heard much of the
+strange and retarded life of the mountains, and because it was so
+different from the refinements with which she had always been
+surrounded, she wanted to see it.
+
+When they arrived after traveling conditions that warranted every
+conception of quaintness, but violated every demand of comfort, the
+girl from the Bluegrass found Glory a discovery.
+
+At once she recognized that into any drawing-room this wilderness-bred
+girl could be safely dropped, and that even though she stood in a
+corner, she would soon become its center.
+
+Helen Merriwell was fascinated by the anomaly of an inherent
+aristocracy in an encompassing life which was almost squalid, and a
+bond of sympathy sprang into instant being. The Bluegrass woman knew
+by instinct, though through no utterance from the loyal lips, that the
+other was lonely, and when Colonel Merriwell announced his intention
+of returning home, the daughter decided to continue her visit and its
+companionship.
+
+To Spurrier's house, too, during the crisp, clear weather of late
+winter came, without announcement or expectation another visitor. They
+were two other visitors to be exact, but one so overshadowed his
+companion in importance that the second became negligible.
+
+At the Carnettsville station the daily train drew up one morning and
+uncoupled, on a siding, the first private car that had ever run over
+that piece of roadbed. Its chef and valet gazed superciliously down
+upon the assembled loungers, but the two gentlemen who alighted and
+gave their names as Martin Harrison and his secretary, Mr. Spooner,
+were to all appearances "jest ordinary folks."
+
+Glory was housecleaning on the day of Harrison's coming, and, in
+neatly patched gingham and dust-protected crown, she came nearer
+seeming the typical mountain woman than she had for many days before.
+Her fresh beauty was hard to eclipse, but she was less presentable
+than she wished to be when her husband's great patron saw her for the
+first time and contrasted her with such women as his own daughter.
+
+When she heard the name, without previous warning, a sort of panic
+possessed her and for once she became tongue-tied and awkward, so that
+after the first, Helen Merriwell stepped into the breach and did the
+talking.
+
+"My name is Martin Harrison," said the great man with simple
+cordiality. "I thought John Spurrier lived here--but I seem to be
+mistaken."
+
+"He--he does live here," stammered Glory, catching the swiftly stifled
+amazement of the magnate's disapproving eyes.
+
+"Here?" He put the question blankly as if only politeness prevented a
+greater vehemence of surprise. "But I expected to find a bachelor
+establishment. There are ladies here."
+
+Glory fell back a step as if in retreat under attack. If this
+statement were true, Spurrier had never acknowledged her to the
+employer with whom his relations were intimately close. In her own
+eyes, she stood as one who had lost caste and been repudiated--and all
+self-confidence abandoned her, giving way to trepidation.
+
+Harrison stood bewilderedly looking at this country girl who had
+turned tremulous and pale, and Helen Merriwell stepped forward.
+
+"Then you didn't know that Mr. Spurrier was married?" she smilingly
+inquired.
+
+The money baron transferred his glance to her as his shadowed face
+lightened into relief. This young woman had the poise and ease of his
+own world, which made communication facile. If Spurrier had not been
+candid with him, at all events he had, perhaps, not unclassed himself.
+The other was presumably a local servant of whom he need think no
+more.
+
+"Mr. Spurrier," he answered easily, "had not mentioned his marriage,
+probably because our recent correspondence has all related to
+business. However, I hold it unhandsome of him not to have done so."
+He paused, then added deferentially: "Of course, I am better prepared
+now to felicitate him--since I have seen you."
+
+But Helen Merriwell laughed and laid a hand on Glory's shoulder.
+
+"You do me too much honor, Mr. Harrison," she assured him. "_This_ is
+Mrs. Spurrier."
+
+The financier's ingrained politeness for once failed him. It was not
+for long, but in the breached instant he stiffened arrogantly as his
+eyes went back to Glory, and betrayed themselves in half-contemptuous
+hostility. The lieutenant whom he had chosen as his own successor in
+the world of lofty affairs had not only deceived him but had thrown
+himself wantonly away upon a stammering daughter of illiterates!
+
+Martin Harrison bowed again, but this time with a precise formality.
+
+"I didn't notify Mr. Spurrier of my coming, since I felt sure I would
+find him here," he explained briefly, directing himself pointedly to
+Helen Merriwell. "I am on my way south, so now I'll defer seeing him
+until another time--unless you expect him back shortly?"
+
+Helen turned inquiringly to Glory and Glory shook her head. The
+episode, confirming her own anxieties, had unnerved her steadfast
+courage into collapse.
+
+Had any warning come to her in advance of the event her bearing toward
+this stranger would have been a different one. The pride that bowed
+submissively to no one except in love, would have sustained her. The
+natural dignity which was the gift of her blood would have been the
+thing that any observer must have first and last recognized. With a
+chance to have shaped her attitude, Glory would have received Harrison
+as a Barbarian princess might have met an ambassador from Rome, but no
+such chance had been afforded her and she stood as distraught and as
+panicky as a stage-struck child whose speech fails.
+
+She even slid back into the rough-hewn vernacular that had been so
+completely banished from her lips and custom.
+
+"I ain't got ther power ter say," she faltered, "when he'll git back.
+He's goin' ter Frankfort first."
+
+"I'll write to him there," said the capitalist.
+
+Harrison departed with the stiff dignity of an affronted sachem, and
+Helen Merriwell, looking after him, smiled with amusement for the
+incident which she so well understood, until she turned and saw
+Glory.
+
+The girl had wilted back against the wall and stood there as if she
+had been stricken. Her great, violet eyes were brimming with the
+spirit of tragedy and held the despair of one who has blithely
+returned home--to find his house in ruin and ashes.
+
+Glory stole away to her own room, escaping the embrace of sympathetic
+arms, as soon as she could. "He's done denied me ter his friends," she
+told herself wildly. "He dast'n't acknowledge me ter fine folks!"
+
+Then through the first, torpid misery of hurt pride, crept a more
+terrifying thought. Spurrier had been practically engaged to this
+man's daughter. He had been diverted from his purpose by motives of
+pity, and now that Harrison knew, he might be ruined--probably would
+be ruined. If so disaster would come to him because of her--and at
+last she rose from the chair where she had dropped down, collapsed,
+with a light of new resolution in her eyes.
+
+"If that's all I'm good for," she declared tempestuously, "he's got to
+be rid of me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+During the sitting of the legislature John Spurrier was a sporadic
+onlooker, and his agents were as vigilant as sentinels in a danger
+zone. The last day of the term drew to a wintry sunset, and when the
+clock registered midnight the body would stand automatically adjourned
+until gavel fall two years hence.
+
+Spurrier, outwardly a picture of serenity, but inwardly tensed for the
+final issue, sat in the visitors' gallery of the Senate chamber. The
+charter upon which all his hopes hung as upon a fulcrum was all but in
+his grasp. Seemingly the enemy slept on. Presumably in those last
+tired hours the authorizing bill would slip through to passage with
+the frictionless ease of well-oiled bearings.
+
+The needed men had been won over. Carping critics might prate, here
+and there, of ugly means that savored of bribery, but that was
+academic. The promise of forth-coming victory remained. Methods may be
+questionable. Results are not, and Spurrier was interested in
+results.
+
+A. O. and G. had corrupted and suborned certain public servants. He
+had discovered their practice and played their own cards to their
+undoing. His ostensible clients were perhaps little cleaner-handed
+than their adversaries, but certainly, those other clients who did
+not even know themselves to be represented stood with no stain on
+their claims.
+
+Those native men and women had not asked him to safeguard them, and
+had they been able to see what he was doing they would have guessed
+only that, after winning their faith, he was bent on swindling them.
+But Spurrier knew not only the seeming facts but those which lay
+beneath and he fought with a definite sense of stewardship.
+
+First the _coup_ must succeed, since that success was the foundation
+of all the rest, and the moment was at hand.
+
+For this he had slaved, faced dangers and deprived himself of the
+contentment of home and the society of his wife. Now it was about to
+end in victory.
+
+The enemy had been caught napping, and the victory would be his.
+Certainly he had been as fair as the foe. What now remained was a
+perfunctory confirmation by the Senate, and in these final wearied
+hours it would slip through easily in the general wind-up of
+uncontested affairs.
+
+Spurrier had not slept for two days--or had slept little. When
+this ended he would go to his bed and lie there in sunken hours of
+restoration the clock around--and after that back to Glory. Already
+he carried in his pocket the brief message which he meant to put
+upon the wires to Harrison, at the moment of midnight and success.
+Characteristically it read: "Complete victory. Spurrier."
+
+Now as the clerk droned through the mass of unfinished matters that
+burdened the schedule, the clock stood at ten in the evening, and a
+spirit of disordered peevishness proclaimed itself in the chamber.
+Seats were vacated. Voices rose in unparliamentary clamor.
+
+From the desk where a mountain senator sat in touseled disarray, a
+flask was drawn and tipped with scant regard to senatorial dignity.
+Then the chairman of the committee which had the steering of
+Spurrier's affairs arose and handed a paper to the clerk.
+
+Spurrier himself maintained the same unemotional cast of countenance
+with which, years before, he had watched a horse in the stretch
+battling for more than he could afford to lose, but Wharton, who sat
+at his side, chewed nervously on an unlighted cigar. Sleepy reporters
+yawned at the press tables as the clerk droned out his sing-song, "An
+act entitled an act conferring charter rights upon the Hemlock Pipe
+Line Company of Kentucky."
+
+The reading of the measure seemed devoid of interest or attention. It
+went forward in confusion, yet when it was ended the mountain man who
+had taken the swig out of his flask, came slowly to his feet.
+
+"Mr. President of the Senate," he drawled, "I want to address a few
+incongruvial remarks to the senators in regards to this here proposed
+measure."
+
+With a sudden sense of premonition Spurrier found himself sitting
+electrically upright.
+
+That man was Senator Chew who had sat in council with him and advised
+him; his right hand in action and his fox-brain in planning, yet now,
+with every moment invaluable he was burning up time!
+
+He was a pygmy among small men, and as he drooled on he seemed to urge
+no pertinent objection. Yet before he had been five minutes on his
+feet his intent was clear and his success assured.
+
+Out of the hands of their recognized lieutenants A. O. and G. had
+taken the matter of serving them. Into the hands of this obscure and
+loutish Solon who was ostensibly pledged to their enemies, they had
+thrust their commission, and now with the clock creeping forward
+toward adjournment, he meant to talk the charter measure to death by
+holding the floor until the opportunity for a vote had elapsed.
+
+Tediously and inanely he meandered along, and no one knew what he was
+talking about. In extravagant metaphor and florid simile he indulged
+himself--and the clock worked industriously, an ally not to be unduly
+hurried.
+
+"Gentlemen of the Senate--" he drooled, "most of us have been raised
+in a land that knows little of the primitive features that make up
+life with us, and though it may not at first seem germane or
+pertinent, I want you to go with me as your guide, while I try to make
+you see the life of those steep counties that are affected by the
+measure before you; counties that lie behind the barriers and sleep
+the ancient sleep of the forgotten."
+
+Men yawned while his tediousness spun itself into a tawdry flow of
+slow words, but the Honorable Mr. Chew talked on.
+
+"Many the day, as a lad, have I lain by a rushing brook," he
+declaimed, "where the water gushes with the sparkle of sunlit crystal
+and watched the deer come down on gingerly lifted feet to drink his
+fill. Now I reckon mighty few of you gentlemen have seen a deer come
+down to drink----"
+
+The minute hand of the clock, in comparison with this windy
+deliberation seemed to be racing between the dial characters.
+
+"In God's name," exclaimed Spurrier, "isn't there any way to shut that
+fool up? He's ruining us. Get some of our leaders up here, Wharton.
+We've got to stop him."
+
+"How?" demanded Wharton with a fallen jaw.
+
+"I don't give a damn how! Kill him--buy him. Anything!"
+
+"It's too late," responded Wharton grimly. "He's already bought. We've
+walked into their trap. We might as well go home."
+
+Spurrier sent for his whip, but he had come to the end of his
+resourcefulness and shook a dejected head.
+
+"If you want to shoot him down as he stands there," said the gentleman
+testily, "I dare say it would stop him short. I know no other way. He
+is having resort to the senatorial privilege of filibuster. We have
+let them slip up on us. A. O. and G. has outbid you, that's all."
+
+"But how in God's name did they get wise?"
+
+The other laughed grimly. "Wise?" he snorted. "My guess is that
+they've been wise all the time and that hayseed Iscariot has been
+playing us along for suckers."
+
+Held by a deadly fascination, Spurrier sank back into his seat. The
+clock over the speaker's desk traveled once, almost twice around
+the dial, and yet that nasal voice wandered on in an endless
+stream of grotesque bombast--talking the charter to a slow death by
+strangulation.
+
+Now, reflected Spurrier bitterly, his connection with the enterprise
+must seem to any eye that viewed it that only of Harrison's jackal and
+lobbyist, who had signally failed in his attempt to raid A. O. and G.
+
+To the mountain folk themselves, if the facts ever percolated into the
+hills, his seeming would be far from heroic and with nothing tangible
+accomplished, it would do no good to tell them that he had made his
+fight with their interests at heart. Such a claim would only stamp him
+in the face of contrary evidence as taking a coward's refuge in lies.
+
+Then when it seemed to him that he could no longer restrain himself,
+Spurrier heard the gavel fall. It was a light sound, but it crashed on
+his brain with thunders of destruction.
+
+"Gentlemen," declared the presiding officer, "The Senate stands
+adjourned, _sine die_."
+
+Had John Spurrier gone to see the "witch woman" when Mosebury advised
+it, his course from that point on would have brought him to a
+different ending.
+
+In looking back on that night, he could never quite remember it with
+consecutive distinctness. Gaps of forgetfulness were fitfully shot
+through with disconnected scraps of recollection. When events began to
+marshal themselves into orderly sequence, the windowpanes of his hotel
+room were turning a dirty gray with the coming of dawn, and he was
+sitting in a straight-backed chair. His bed had not been touched. Back
+of that lay a chaotic sense of irremediable disaster and despair.
+
+At last he caught a glimpse of himself in the mirror, and that picture
+of disheveled wildness startled him and brought him back to
+realization.
+
+Then self-contempt swept in on him. He had been called a man of iron
+nerve; a plunger who never turned a hair under reversals of
+fortune--and now he stood looking through the glass at a broken
+gambler with frenzied eyes. It was such a face as one might see in the
+circle before the Casino at Monte Carlo--the place of suicides.
+
+The man who had seemed to come from nowhere and who had talked last
+night with such destructive volubility, had been a pure shyster. To be
+outwitted by such a clown carried the sting of chagrin, quite apart
+from the material disaster. Yet into his disordered thoughts came the
+realization that the senator had been only a puppet. His actuating
+wires had been pulled by the fingers of A. O. and G. and the men who
+sat as overlords of A. O. and G. were only shysters of a greater
+caliber. The men whom he, himself, served were no better. Compared to
+this backwoods statesman he, John Spurrier, was as a smooth and
+sophisticated confidence man paralleled with a pickpocket. Ethically,
+they were cut from the same cloth, though to differing patterns--one
+rustic and the other urban.
+
+He had been engaged in a tawdry game, for all its gilding of rich
+prospects, but in the face of defeat a man cannot change his colors.
+
+Had he been able to undertake this fight as his own man and choose his
+own methods--changing them as he grew in stature--there might have
+been a man's zest in the game.
+
+Now, less than ever, could he speak open truth to these simple friends
+who had trusted him. Now he must fight out a damaged campaign to the
+end along the lines to which he stood committed, and until the end
+there was nothing to say.
+
+Perhaps if he could avert total ruin, he might yet have opportunity to
+reclaim the confidence of these Esaus who had traded for a mess of
+pottage. Certainly they had nothing to hope for from the myrmidons of
+Trabue.
+
+John Spurrier forced his shoulders back into military erectness. He
+compelled his lips into the stiff and counterfeited curvature of a
+smile.
+
+Not only had every resource he could muster gone into the scrapped
+enterprise, leaving him worse than bankrupt, but through him Martin
+Harrison had been led into the sinking of a fortune.
+
+Harrison would, in all likelihood, be less bitter about the money
+loss, than the thought of the triumphant smile on Trabue's thin lips,
+but it was quite in the cards that, with his contempt for failure, he
+would wash his hands of Spurrier.
+
+That, of course, spelled ruin. The exhibition skater had gone through
+the thin ice.
+
+Harrison could, if he chose, do more than dismiss John Spurrier. He
+had seen to it that his lieutenant was bound to his standards by debts
+he could not pay, save out of some future enrichment contingent on
+success. If he chose to call those loans he would leave his employee
+shattered beyond hope of recovery.
+
+But when Spurrier went down to the hotel dining room at breakfast
+time, a cold bath and a superhuman exertion of will power had
+transformed him. His bearing was a nice blending of the debonair and
+the dignified.
+
+To no eye of observation was there any trace of collapse or reversal.
+He seemed the man who demanded the best from life and who got it.
+
+At a table not far from his own sat Senator Chew with a companion whom
+Spurrier did not know. The traitor glanced up and his eye met that of
+the man he had betrayed, then fell flinching.
+
+Perhaps the mountaineer expected the dining room to stage such a scene
+of recrimination and violence as it had in the past on more than one
+occasion, for his crafty face went brick red, then darkened into
+truculence as he half pushed back his chair and his hand swept
+tentatively toward his hip.
+
+But the plunger had still his pride left, or its remnant, and it was
+no part of his plan to stand the self-confessed and vanquished victim,
+by any patent demonstration of wrath. He met the eyes of the
+politician who had played on both sides of the same game, and smiled,
+and if there was contempt in the expression, it was recognized only by
+the man who knew its cause.
+
+Later he wrote a telegram to Harrison. It was not the thing he had
+expected to say, yet in it went no whine of despair:
+
+ Have suffered a temporary reversal.
+
+Those were the words that the capitalist read when the message, after
+being decoded from its cipher, was laid on his desk.
+
+Harrison, recently returned from his Southern trip, thought
+truculently of that nearby office in which Trabue was also receiving
+telegraphic information, and he writhed in the wormwood of chagrin.
+
+The curtness of his response scorched the wires:
+
+ Explain in person if you can. Otherwise we separate.
+
+So John Spurrier packed his bag and caught the first train for the
+mountains. He must say good-by to Glory, before facing this final
+ordeal, and he believed that in that clarifying air he could brace
+himself for the encounter that awaited him in New York.
+
+As he turned into the yard of his own house he paused, and something
+about his heart tightened until it unsteadied him. Here alone, in all
+the world, he had known what home meant, and in his heart and veins
+rose an intoxicating tumult like that of wine.
+
+Back of that emotional wave though lurked a misery of self-reproach.
+Glory had made the magic of his brief happiness, but there was a
+background, too, of kindly souls and a ruggedly genuine welcome. He
+had learned to know these people and to revise his first, false views
+of them. In them dwelt the stout honesty and real strength of oak and
+hickory.
+
+First he had striven to plunder them, then sought to lift the yoke of
+poverty from their long-bowed shoulders. In both efforts he had
+failed.
+
+But had he failed, after all? Certainly he stood under the black
+shadow of a major disaster, but had not others retrieved disasters and
+made final victory only the brighter for its contrast with lurid
+misfortune?
+
+He had been the plunger who seemed strongest when he was weakest, and
+these enduring hills spoke their message of steadfastness to him as he
+stood surrounded by their lofty crests of spruce and pine.
+
+Then he had reached the door and flung it open and Glory was in his
+arms, but unaccountably she had burst into a tempest of tears.
+
+Before he had had time to speak of the necessity that called him East
+she was telling of the visit of Martin Harrison and his indignant
+departure.
+
+Despite his all-consuming absorption of a moment before, Spurrier drew
+away, chilled by that announcement, and Glory read in his eyes a
+momentary agony of apprehension.
+
+"In God's name," he demanded in a numbed voice, "why didn't you write
+me about that?"
+
+"He said," responded the wife simply, "that _he_ would write to you at
+Frankfort. I thought you knew."
+
+"But I should have thought you'd have spoken of his coming and
+going--like that."
+
+Her head came up with a brief little flash of hurt pride.
+
+"You hadn't ever told him--about me," she said, though without
+accusation. "I didn't want to talk to you about it until you were
+ready to suggest it. It might have seemed--disloyal."
+
+Spurrier again braced his shoulders. After a moment he took her in his
+arms.
+
+"Glory, my sweetheart, I've been playing a game for big stakes. I've
+had to do some things I didn't relish. I've got to do another now. I'm
+summoned to Harrison's office in New York, at once--and I have no
+choice."
+
+Glory drew away and looked with challenging directness into his eyes.
+
+"I suppose--you'll go alone?"
+
+"I must. Business affairs are at a crisis, and I need a free hand.
+But, God granting me a safe return, it's to be our last separation. I
+swear that. I am always wretched without you."
+
+Always before when disappointment or disquiet had riffled the deeps of
+her eyes, it had taken only a word and a smile from this man to dispel
+them and bring back the serenity of content. Her moments of panic when
+she had seemed to drop down, down into pits of foreboding until she
+had plumbed the depth of despair, had been moments to which she had
+surrendered in his absence and of which he had been given no hint.
+
+Now with a gravity that was bafflingly unreadable she stood silent and
+looked about the room, and the man's eyes followed hers.
+
+Why was it, he almost fiercely demanded of himself, that this cottage
+set in remote hills shed about him a feeling of soul-satisfaction that
+he had never encountered in more luxurious places?
+
+Now as he looked at it the thought of leaving it cramped his heart
+with a sort of breathless agony.
+
+Yet, of course, there was no question after all. It was because in
+everything it was reflection of Glory's own spirit and to him Glory
+stood for the only love that had ever been bigger to him than
+himself.
+
+The simplicity and good taste of the small house, standing in a land
+of squalid cabins like a disciple of quiet elegance among beggars, had
+been the result of their collaboration. Glory had had the instinct of
+artistic perception and true values and he had been able to guide her
+from his sybarite experience.
+
+The stone fireplace with its ingle-nook, built by their own hands from
+rocks they had selected and gathered together, seemed to him a
+beautiful thing. The natural wood of the paneling, picked out at the
+saw-mill with a critical eye for graining and figuration, satisfied
+the eye, and the few pictures that he had brought from the East were
+all landscapes that meant something to each of them--lyric bits of
+canvas with singing skies. To every object a memory had attached
+itself; a memory that had also a tendril in their hearts.
+
+But now Glory, too, was looking at all these things as though she as
+well as himself were leaving them. There was something of farewell in
+the glance that lingered on them and caressed them, as if of
+leave-taking and into Spurrier's heart crept the intuition that
+despite his declaration just made that this should be their last
+separation, she was seeing in it a threat of permanence.
+
+And that was the thought that was chilling Glory's heart and muting
+the song of happiness which his coming had awakened. This place which
+had been founded with all the promise of home and companionship was
+beginning to hold for her the foreboding of loneliness and something
+like abandonment. He knew it only when they were together here, but
+she had been in it alone and frightened more than in times of shared
+happiness.
+
+And why was this true? Why could it be either true or necessary
+unless, as she had told herself in panic moments and denied so
+persistently, she was a misfit in his broader life and a woman whom he
+could enjoy in solitude but dared not trust to comparison with
+others?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+At last she turned abruptly away, in order that the misery which would
+no longer submit to concealment might not show itself in her eyes, and
+stood looking out of the window.
+
+Spurrier crossed with anxious swiftness and took her again into his
+arms.
+
+"When I have finished this business trip," he declared fervently, "our
+separations shall end. They have been too many and too long--but I've
+paid for them in loneliness, dear. This call, that I'm answering now,
+is unexpected but it's imperative and I can't disobey it."
+
+She turned then, slowly and gravely, but with no lightening of the
+burdened anxiety in her eyes.
+
+"It's not just that you have to go away, Jack," she told him. "It's a
+great deal more than that."
+
+"What else is there, dearest?" His question was intoned with surprise.
+"When we are together, I have nothing else to ask of life. Have you?"
+
+"The place has been changed--mightily changed," she went on musingly
+as though talking to herself rather than to him. "And yet the walls
+are the same as they were that day--when we both thought we had to die
+here together."
+
+"They are the dearer for that," he exclaimed fervently. "That was what
+made us see things truly."
+
+"I wonder," she questioned, then meeting his eyes steadily she went on
+as though determined to say what must be said.
+
+"When you called Brother Hawkins in to marry us, I was afraid. I was
+afraid because I thought you were only doing it out of kindness, and
+that afterward you'd be ashamed of me."
+
+"Ashamed of you," he echoed with indignant incredulity. "In God's name
+how could I be?"
+
+"Or if not ashamed of me that you couldn't help knowing that I
+was--what I am--all right here in the hills but that outside--I
+wouldn't do."
+
+"If you were ever afraid of that, it was only because you were
+undervaluing yourself. You surely haven't any ghost of such a fear
+left now."
+
+For a little she stood silent again torn between the loyalty that
+hesitated to question him and the pride that was hurt.
+
+Finally she said simply: "It's a bigger fear now. Unless I'm
+unpresentable, why do you--never take me anywhere with you?"
+
+John Spurrier laughed, vastly relieved that the mountain of her
+anxiety had resolved itself, as he thought, into a mole-hill. He could
+laugh because he had no suspicion of the chronic soreness of her heart
+and his answer was lightly made.
+
+"These trips have all been in connection with the sort of business,
+Glory, that would have meant keeping me away from you whether you had
+gone to town or not. When we travel together--and I want that we shall
+travel a great deal--I must be free to devote myself to you. I want to
+show the world to you and I want to show you to the world."
+
+That declaration he fancied ought to resolve her fears of his being
+ashamed of her.
+
+"If you were afraid I'd seem out of place," she assured him, "I might
+be right sorry--and yet I think I'd understand. I'm not a fool and I
+know I'd make mistakes, but I was raised a lawyer's daughter and I've
+got a pretty good business head--yet you've never told me anything of
+what this business is that calls you away. You always treat me as if
+there were no use in even trying to make me understand it."
+
+The man no longer laughed. He could not explain that it was rather
+because she might understand too well than not well enough. Even to
+her, until he was ready to prove his intent by his actual deeds, it
+seemed impossible to give that story without the seeming of the
+plunderer of her people.
+
+"When the time comes that releases me from my pledge of absolute
+secrecy, dear," he told her earnestly, "I mean to tell you all about
+my business--and I think you'll approve, then. Now I don't talk
+because I have no right to."
+
+Again there was silence, after which Glory said in a voice of still
+resolution which he had never heard from her before:
+
+"I'm ignorant and uncultivated, Jack, but to me marriage is a full
+partnership--or it isn't anything. When Mr. Harrison came, I saw for
+the first time just how I looked to men like him. I was just 'pore
+white trash.'"
+
+"Did he----" Spurrier broke off and his face went abruptly white with
+passion. Had Harrison been there at that moment he would have stood
+in danger at the hands of his employee, but Glory shook her head and
+hastened to quiet him.
+
+"He wasn't impolite, Jack. It wasn't that--only I read in his eyes
+what he tried to hide. I only told you that because I wanted you to
+understand me. People here say that you give me everything but
+yourself; that I'm not good enough for you except right here where
+there's nothing better."
+
+"That is a damned lie," he expostulated. "Who says it?"
+
+"Only women-folks and gossipy grannies that you can't fight with,
+Jack," she answered steadily. "But I've thought about it lots. I've
+come to think, dear, that maybe you ought to be free--and if you
+ought," she paused, then the final assertion broke from her with an
+agonized voice, "then, I love you enough to set you free."
+
+Spurrier seized her in his arms and his words came choked with
+vehement feeling.
+
+"I want you, Glory. I want you always and I couldn't live without you.
+When I have to go away I endure it only by thinking of coming back to
+you. If you ever set me free as you call it, it will be only because
+_you_ don't want _me_. I suppose in that case I'd try to take my
+medicine--but I think it would about kill me."
+
+"There's no danger of that, dear," she declared.
+
+The man drew away for a moment and fumbled for words. His aptness of
+speech had deserted him and at last he spoke clumsily:
+
+"It's hard to explain just now, when you've accused me of not taking
+you into my confidence, but I stand at a point, Glory, where I've got
+the hardest fight ahead of me I ever made. I stand to be ruined or to
+make good. I've got to use every minute and every thought in
+competition with quick brains and enormous power. Until its over I
+must be a machine with one idea ... and I'll fail, dear, unless I can
+take with me the knowledge that you trust me."
+
+She looked up into his face and the misery in her eyes gave place to
+confidence.
+
+"Go ahead, Jack," she said. "I believe in you and I'm not even afraid
+of your failing." After a moment she clasped her arms tightly about
+him and added vehemently: "But whether you succeed or fail, come back
+to me, dear, because, except for your sake, it won't make any
+difference to me."
+
+That same afternoon Spurrier found time to visit the "witch woman." It
+had dawned upon him since that night in the Senate chamber that, after
+all, Sim Colby might have been the least dangerous of his enemies, and
+the thought made him inquisitive.
+
+The old crone made her magic with abundant grotesquerie, but at its
+end she peered shrewdly into his eyes, and said:
+
+"I reads hyar in the omends thet mebby ye comes too late."
+
+Spurrier smiled grimly. He thought that himself.
+
+"I dis'arns," went on the hag portentously, "thet a blind man
+impereled ye mightily--a blind man thet plays a fiddle--but thars
+others beside him thet dwells fur away an' holds a mighty power of
+wealth."
+
+A blind man! Spurrier's remembrance flashed back to the visit of blind
+Joe Givins and the papers incautiously left on his table. Yet if he
+was genuinely blind they could have meant nothing to him--and if he
+was not genuinely blind it was hard to conceive of human nerves
+enduring without wincing that test of the gun thrust against the
+temple.
+
+Spurrier rose and paid his fee. Had he seen her in time, this warning
+would have averted disaster. Now it was something of a post-mortem.
+
+At the door of Martin Harrison's office several days later Spurrier
+drew back his shoulders and braced himself. It was impossible to
+ignore the fact that he stood on the brink of total ruin; that his
+sole hope lay in persuading his principal that with more time and more
+money he would yet be able to succeed--and Harrison was as plastic to
+persuasion as a brass Buddha.
+
+But he had steeled himself for the interview--and now he turned the
+knob and swung back the mahogany door.
+
+Spurrier was familiar enough with the atmosphere of that office to
+read the signs correctly. The hushed air of nervousness that hung over
+it now betokened a chief in a mood which no one sought to stir to
+further irritation.
+
+Always in the past Spurrier had been deferentially ushered into a
+private office and treated as the future chief. Now, as though he were
+already a disinherited heir, he was left in the general waiting room,
+and he was left there for an hour. That cooling of the heel, he
+recognized as a warning of the cold reception to come--and an augury
+of ruin.
+
+At last he was called in, but he went with an unruffled demeanor which
+hid from the principal's eye how near to breaking his inward
+confidence was strained.
+
+"I wired you to come at once," began Harrison curtly, and Spurrier
+smiled as he nodded.
+
+"I came at once, sir, except that I hadn't been home for some time,
+and it was necessary to make a stop there."
+
+"Home," Martin's brows lifted a trifle. "You mean the mountains."
+
+"Certainly--for the time being, I'm located there."
+
+"We may as well be honest with each other," asserted the magnate. "I
+consider that under the circumstances you behaved with serious
+discourtesy and without candor." For a casual moment his glance dwelt
+on the portrait of Vivien which stood on his table.
+
+"I disagree with you, sir. I preferred relating the full circumstances,
+which were unusual, when there was an opportunity to do so in person.
+I was kept there by your interests as well as my own."
+
+"That recital," said the older man dryly, "is your concern. Now that I
+know the facts I find myself uninterested in the details. You have
+chosen your way. The question is whether we can travel it together."
+
+"And I presume that the first point of that question demands a full
+report upon the business operations."
+
+"So far as I can see, they have collapsed."
+
+"They have by no means collapsed."
+
+Suddenly the wrath that had been smoldering in Harrison's eyes burst
+into tempest. He brought his clenched fist down upon his desk until
+inkwells and accessories rattled.
+
+This man's moments of equinox were terrifying to those who must bow
+to his will--and his will held sway over broad horizons. If John
+Spurrier had not been intrepid he must have collapsed under the
+withering violence of the passion that rained on him.
+
+"Before God," cried Harrison, pacing his floor like a lion that lashes
+itself to frenzy, "you undertook to avenge me on Trabue. You have
+drawn on me with carte-blanche liberties and spent fortunes like a
+prodigal! You have assured me that you had, at all times, the
+situation well in hand. Then, through some damned blunder, you failed.
+Let the money loss slide. Damn the money! I'm the laughingstock of the
+business world. I'm delivered over to Trabue's enjoyment as a boob who
+failed. I'm an absurdity, and you're responsible!"
+
+"When you've finished, sir," said Spurrier quietly, "I shall endeavor
+to show you that none of those things have happened--that our failure
+is temporary and that when you undertook this enterprise you were in
+no impetuous haste as to the time of its accomplishment."
+
+"The legislature doesn't meet for two years," Harrison barked back at
+him. "That will be two years of preparation for Trabue. Now he's fully
+warned, where do we get off?"
+
+"At our original point of destination, sir."
+
+The opportunity hound began his argument. His demeanor of unruffled
+calm and entire confidence began to exercise its persuasive force.
+Harrison cooled somewhat, but Spurrier was fighting, beneath his pose,
+as a man who has cramps in deep water fights for his life. These few
+minutes would determine his fate, and he was totally at the mercy of
+this single arbiter.
+
+"I have now all the options we need on the far side of Hemlock
+Mountain," Spurrier summarized at last. "All except one tract which
+belongs to Bud Hawkins, who is a preacher and a friend of mine. He
+must have more generous terms, but I will be able to do business with
+him."
+
+"You talk of the options on the far side of the ridge," Harrison broke
+in belligerently. "That is the minor field."
+
+"I'll be able to repeat that performance on the near side."
+
+"You will not! A repetition of your performance is the last thing we
+crave. Any movement now would be only a piling up of warnings. For the
+present you will give every indication of having abandoned the
+project."
+
+"That is my idea, sir. I was not speaking of immediate but future
+activities. Also----" In spite of his desperation of plight the
+younger man's bearing flashed into a challenging undernote of its old
+audacity, "when I used the word 'repeat' I referred to the successful
+portion of my effort. There was no failure on the land end. It was the
+charter that went wrong--through the deceit of a man we had to
+trust."
+
+"A man whom you selected," Harrison caught him up. "You understood, in
+advance, the chances of your game. It was agreed upon your own
+insistence that your hand should be absolutely free--and freedom of
+method carries exclusiveness of responsibility. Traitors exist. They
+don't furnish excuses."
+
+"Nor am I making them. I am merely stating facts which you seem
+inclined to confuse. I grant the failure but I also claim the partial
+success."
+
+Harrison seated himself, and as the interview stretched Spurrier's
+nerves stretched with it under the placid surface of his plunger's
+camouflage. He had, as yet, no way of guessing how the verdict would
+go, and now the capitalist's face was hardened in discouragement. It
+was a face of merciless inflexibility. The sentence had been prepared
+in the judge's mind. There remained only its enunciation.
+
+"Nothing is to be gained by mincing my words, Spurrier," declared
+Spurrier's chief. "We know precisely where you stand."
+
+Harrison extended his hand with its fingers spread and closed it
+slowly into a clenched fist. "I hold you--there! I can crush you to a
+pulp of absolute ruin. You know that. The only question is whether I
+want, or not, to do it."
+
+"And whether, or not, you can afford to do it," amended the other with
+an audacity that he by no means felt. "You must decide whether you can
+afford to accept tamely and as a final defeat, a mere reversal, which
+I--and no one else--can turn into eventual victory."
+
+"I have duly considered that. I had implicit confidence in your
+abilities. You have struck at my personal feeling for you by a silence
+that was not frank. You have allied yourself with the mountain people
+by marriage, and we stand on opposite sides of the line of interest.
+You have all the while been watched by our enemies, and I regard you
+as a defeated man. If I choose to cast you aside, you go to the scrap
+heap. You will never recover."
+
+That was an assertion which there was neither health nor wisdom in
+contradicting and Spurrier waited. His last card was played.
+
+"And I am going to cast you aside--bankrupt you--ruin you!" blazed out
+Harrison, "unless you absolutely meet my requirements during a period
+of probation. That period will engage you in a very different matter.
+For the present you are through with the Kentucky mountains. The new
+task will be a difficult one, and it should put you on your mettle. It
+is one that can't be accomplished at all unless you can do it. You
+have that one chance to retrieve yourself. Take it or leave it."
+
+"What are your terms?"
+
+"You will sail to-morrow for Liverpool. I will give you explicit
+instructions to-night. Go prepared for an extended stay abroad."
+
+For the first time Spurrier's face paled and insurrection flared in
+his pupils.
+
+"Sail for Europe to-morrow!" he exclaimed vehemently. "I'll see you
+damned first! Doesn't it occur to you that a man has his human side? I
+have a wife and a home and when I am ordered to leave them for an
+indefinite time I'm entitled to a breathing space in which to set my
+own affairs in shape. I am willing enough to undertake your
+bidding--but not to-morrow."
+
+Spurrier paused at the end of his outbreak and stood looking down at
+the seated figure, which to all intents and purposes might have been
+the god that held, for him, life and death in his hand.
+
+And as he looked Spurrier thought he had never seen such glacial
+coldness and merciless indifference in any human face. He had known
+this man in the thundering of passion before which the walls about him
+seemed to tremble, but this manifestation of adamant implacability was
+new, and he realized that he had invited destruction in defying it.
+
+"As you please," replied Harrison crisply, "but it's to-morrow or not
+at all. I've already outlined the alternative and since you refuse,
+our business seems concluded. Next time you feel disposed to talk or
+think of what you're entitled to, remember that my view is different.
+All your claims stand forfeit in my judgment. You are entitled to just
+what I choose to offer--and no more."
+
+The chief glanced toward the door with a glance of dismissal, and the
+door became to Spurrier the emblem of finality. Yet he did not at once
+move toward it.
+
+"I appreciate the need of prompt obedience, where there is an urge of
+haste," he persisted, "but if a few days wouldn't imperil results, I
+want those days to make a flying trip to Kentucky and to my wife."
+
+The face of the seated man remained obdurately set but his eyes blazed
+again with a note of personal anger.
+
+"At a time when I was reasonably interested, you chose to leave me
+unenlightened about your domestic arrangements. Now I can claim no
+concern in them. Most wives, however, permit their husbands such
+latitude of movement as business requires. If yours does not it is
+your own misfortune. I think that's all."
+
+Spurrier knew that the jaws of the trap were closing on him. He had
+been too hasty in his outburst and he turned toward the door, but as
+his hand fell on the bronze knob Harrison spoke again.
+
+"Think it over, Spurrier. I can--and will ruin you--unless you yield.
+It is no time for maudlin sentiment, but until five-thirty this
+afternoon, I shall not consider your answer final. Up to that hour you
+may reconsider it, if you wish."
+
+"I will notify you at five," responded the lieutenant as he let
+himself out and closed the door behind him.
+
+That day the opportunity hound spent in an agony of conflicting
+emotions. That the other held a bolt of destruction and was in the
+mood to launch it he did not pretend to doubt. If it were launched
+even the land upon which his cottage stood would no longer be his own.
+He must either return to Glory empty-handed and bankrupt, or strain
+with a new tax, the confidence he had asked of her, with the pledge
+that he would return soon and for good.
+
+But if, even at the cost of humbled pride and Glory's hurt, he
+maintained his business relations, the path to eventual success
+remained open.
+
+As long as the cards were being shuffled chance beckoned and at five
+o'clock Spurrier went into a cigar-store booth and called a downtown
+telephone number.
+
+"You hold the whip hand, sir," he announced curtly when a secretary had
+put Harrison on the wire. "When do I report for final instructions?"
+
+"Come to my house this evening," ordered the master.
+
+Most of the hours of that evening, except the two in Harrison's study,
+Spurrier spent in writing to Glory, tearing up letter after letter
+while the nervous moisture bedewed his brow. It was so impossible to
+give her any true or comprehensive explanation of the pressing weight
+of compulsion. His messages must have the limp of unreason. He was
+crossing the ocean without her and she would read into it a sort of
+abandonment that would hurt and wound her. He had taxed everything
+else in life, and now he was overtaxing her loyalty.
+
+Yet he believed that if in his depleted treasury of life there was one
+thing left upon which he could draw prodigally and with faith, it was
+that love; a love that would stand staunch though he were forced to
+hurt it once again.
+
+So Spurrier sailed and, having arrived on European soil, took up the
+work that threw him into relations with men of large caliber in Capel
+Court and Threadneedle Street. His mission carried him to the
+continent as well; from Paris to Brussels and from Brussels to Hamburg
+and Berlin, where the quaint customs of the Kentucky Cumberlands
+seemed as remote as the life of Mars--remote but, to Spurrier, as
+alluring as the thought of salvation to a recluse who has foresworn
+the things of earth.
+
+In terms of dead reckoning, Berlin is as far from Hemlock Mountain as
+Hemlock Mountain is from Berlin, but in terms of human relations Glory
+felt the distance as infinitely greater than did her husband. To him
+the Atlantic was only an ocean three thousand miles wide; often
+crossed and discounted by familiarity. To her it was a measureless
+waste separating all she knew from another world. To him continental
+dimensions were reckoned in hours of commonplace railway journeying,
+but to her the "measured mile" was both lengthwise and perpendicular,
+and when she passed old friends she fancied that she detected in their
+glances either pity for her desertion or the smirk of "I-told-you-so"
+malevolence.
+
+It even crept to her ears that "some folks" spoke of her as "the
+widder Spurrier" and that Tassie Plumford had chuckled, "I reckon he's
+done gone off an' left her fer good an' all this time. Folks says he's
+fled away cl'ar acrost ther ocean-sea."
+
+Glory told herself that she had promised faith and that she was in no
+danger of faltering, but as the weeks lengthened into months and the
+months followed each other, her waiting became bitter.
+
+In Berlin John Spurrier passed as a British subject, bearing British
+passports. That had been part of the careful plan to prevent discovery
+of what American interests he represented and it had proven effective.
+He had almost accomplished the difficult task of self-redemption, set
+him by the man whose confidence he had strained.
+
+Then came the bolt out of heaven. The inconceivable suddenness of the
+war cloud belched and broke, but he remained confident that he would
+have a chance to finish up before the paralysis cramped bourse and
+exchange.
+
+England would not come in, and he, the seeming British subject, would
+have safe conduct out of Germany.
+
+Now he must get back. This would mean the soaring of oil prices, and
+along new lines the battle must be pitched back there at home, before
+it was too late.
+
+So Spurrier finished his packing. He was going out onto the
+streets to watch the upflame of the war spirit and to make railway
+reservations.
+
+There was a knock at the door and the man opened it. Stiffly erect,
+stood a squad of military police and stiffly their lieutenant
+saluted.
+
+"You are Herr John Spurrier?" he inquired.
+
+The man nodded.
+
+"It is, perhaps, in the nature of a formality, which you will be able
+to arrange," said the officer. "But I am directed to place you under
+arrest. England is in the war. You are said to be a former soldier."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Over the ragged lands that lay on the "nigh side" of Hemlock Mountain
+breathed a spirit of excitement and mighty hope. It had been two years
+since John Spurrier had left the field he had planned to develop, and
+in those years had come the transition of rebirth.
+
+Along muddy streets the hogs still wallowed, but now they were deeply
+rutted by the teaming of ponderous oil gear, and one saw young men in
+pith helmets and pig-skin puttees; keen-faced engineers and oil
+prospectors drawn in by the challenge of wealth from the far trails of
+Mexico and the West. One heard the jargon of that single business and
+the new vocabulary of its devotees. "Wild-catters" following surface
+indications or hunches were testing and well-driving. Gushers rewarded
+some and "dry holes" and "dusters" disappointed others. Into the
+mediaeval life of hills that had stood age-long unaltered and aloof
+came the infusion of hot-blooded enterprise, the eager questing after
+quick and miraculous wealth.
+
+In Lexington and Winchester oil exchanges carried the activity of
+small bourses. In newspapers a new form of advertisement proclaimed
+itself.
+
+Oil was king. Oil and its by-product, gasoline, that the armies needed
+and that the thousands of engines on the earth and in the air so
+greedily devoured.
+
+But over on the far side of the ridge men only fretted and chafed as
+yet. They had the oil under their feet, but for it there was no
+outlet. Like a land without a seaport, they looked over at neighbors
+growing rich while they themselves still "hurted fer needcessities."
+
+American Oil and Gas had locked them in while it milked the other cow.
+It had its needed charters for piping both fields, but a man who was
+either dead or somewhere across the world held the way barred in a
+stalemate of controlled rights of way.
+
+Glory thought less about the wonderful things that were going forward
+than did others about her, because she had a broken heart. No letters
+came from Spurrier, and the faith that she struggled to hold high like
+a banner nailed to the masthead of her life, hung drooping. In the end
+her colors had been struck.
+
+If John Spurrier returned in search of her now she would go into
+hiding from him, but it was most unlikely that he would return. He had
+married her on impulse and under a pressure of excitement. He had
+loved her passionately--but not with a strong enough fidelity to hold
+him true--and now she believed he had turned back again to his old
+idols. She was repudiated, and she ought to hate him with the
+bitterness of her mountain blood, yet in her heart's core, though she
+would never forgive him and never return to him, she knew that she
+still loved him and would always love him.
+
+She no longer feared that she would have hampered him in the society
+of his more finished world. She had visited Helen Merriwell and had
+come to know that other world for herself. She found that the gentle
+blood in her veins could claim its own rights and respond graciously.
+Hers had been a submerged aristocracy, but it had come out of its
+chrysalis, bright-winged.
+
+Then one day something happened that turned Glory's little personal
+world upside down and brought a readjustment of all its ideas.
+
+Sim Colby owned a little patch of land beside his homestead place,
+over cross the mountain, and he was among those who became rich. He
+was not so rich as local repute declared him, but rich enough to set
+stirring the avarice of an erstwhile friend, who owned no land at
+all.
+
+So ex-Private Severance came over to the deserter's house with a
+scheme conceived in envy and born of greed. He was bent on blackmail.
+
+When he first arrived, the talk ran along general lines, because
+"Blind Joe," the fiddler, was at the house, and the real object of the
+visit was confidential. Blind Joe had also been an oil beneficiary,
+and he and Sim Colby had become partners in a fashion. During that
+relationship Blind Joe had told Sim some things that he told few
+others.
+
+But when Joe left and the pipes were lighted Severance settled himself
+in a back-tilted chair and gazed reflectively at the crest of the
+timber line.
+
+"You an' me's been partners for a right long spell, Bud Grant, ain't
+we?"
+
+Colby started. The use of that discarded name brought back the past
+with its ghosts of fear. He had almost forgotten that once he had been
+Bud Grant, and a deserter from the army. It was all part of a bygone
+and walled-in long ago. Though they were quite alone he looked
+furtively about him and spoke in a lowered voice:
+
+"Don't call me by thet name. Thar ain't no man but you knows
+erbout--what I used to be."
+
+"Thet's what I've been studyin' erbout. Nobody else but me."
+
+Severance sat silent for a while after that announcement, but there
+was a meaning smile on his lips, and Colby paled a shade whiter.
+
+"_I_ reckon I kin trust ye; I always hev," he declared with a specious
+confidence.
+
+Severance nodded. "I was on guard duty an' I suffered ye ter escape,"
+he went reminiscently on. "I knows thet ye kilt Captain Comyn, an'
+I've done kept a close mouth all these years. Now ye're a rich man an'
+I'm a pore one. Hit looks like ter me ye owes me a debt an' ye'd ought
+ter do a leetle something for me."
+
+So that was it! Colby knew that if he yielded at all, this man's
+avarice and his importunities would feed on themselves increasingly
+and endlessly. Yet he dared not refuse, so he sought to temporize.
+
+"I reckon thar's right smart jestice in what ye says," he conceded,
+"but I don't know jest yit how I stands or how much money I'm wuth.
+Ye'll have ter give me a leetle time ter find out."
+
+But when Severance mounted his mule and rode away, Sim Colby gave him
+only a short start and then hurried on foot through the hill tangles
+by a short cut that would intercept his visitor's course.
+
+He knew that Severance would have to ride through the same gorge in
+which Sim had waylaid Spurrier, and he meant to get there first,
+rifle-armed.
+
+It was sunset when, quite unsuspecting of danger, at least for the
+moment, Severance turned his mule into the gorge. He was felicitating
+himself, since without an acre of land or a drop of oil he had
+"declared himself in" on another's wealth. His mule was a laggard in
+pace, and the rider did not urge him. He was content to amble.
+
+Back of the rock walls of the great cleft, the woods lay hushed and
+dense in the closing shadows. An owl quavered softly, and the water
+among the ferns whispered. All else was quiet.
+
+But from just a little way back, a figure hitched forward as it lay
+belly-down in the "laurel hell." It sighted a rifle and pressed a
+finger.
+
+The mule snorted and stopped dead with a flirt of ears and tail and
+with no word, without even a groan, the rider toppled sidewise and
+slid from the saddle.
+
+The man back in the brush peered out. He noted how still the crumpled
+figure lay between the feet of the patient, mouse-colored beast, that
+switched at flies with its tail. It lay twisted almost double with one
+arm bent beneath its chest.
+
+So Colby crept closer. It would be as well to haul the body back into
+the tangle where it would not be so soon discovered, and to start the
+beast along its way with a slap on the flank.
+
+But just as the assassin stooped, Severance's right hand darted out
+and, as it did so, there was a quick glint of blue steel, and three
+instantly successive reports.
+
+Colby staggered backward with a sense of betrayal and a horrible
+realization of physical pain. His rifle dropped from a shattered hand
+and jets of blood broke out through his rent clothing. Each of those
+three pistol balls had taken effect at a range so close that he had
+been powder-burned. He knew he was mortally hurt, and that the other
+would soon be dead if he was not so already.
+
+Colby began crawling. He was mangled as if by an explosion, but
+instinct drove him. Twice he fainted and recovered dim consciousness
+and still dragged himself tediously along.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Glory was alone in her house. Her father, who had been living with her
+of late, had gone to the county seat overnight.
+
+The young woman sat in silence, and the sewing upon which she had been
+busied lay in her lap forgotten. In her eyes was the far-away look of
+one who eats out one's heart in thoughts that can neither be solved
+nor banished.
+
+Then she heard a faint call. It was hardly more than a gasped whisper,
+and as she rose, startled, and went to the door she saw striving to
+reach it a shape of terrible human wreckage.
+
+Sim Colby's clothes were almost torn from him and blood, dried brown,
+and blood freshly flowing, mingled their ugly smears upon him. His
+lips were livid and his face gray.
+
+Glory ran to him with a horrified scream. She did not yet recognize
+him, and he gasped out a plea for whisky.
+
+With the utmost effort of her young strength she got him in, and
+managed to straighten out the mutilated body with pillows under its
+head.
+
+But after a little the stimulant brought a slight reviving, and he
+talked in broken and disjointed phrases.
+
+"Hit war Severance," he mumbled. "I fought back--I reckon I kilt him,
+too."
+
+Glory gazed in bewildered alarm about the house. Brother Bud Hawkins
+was at Uncle Jimmy Litchfield's place, and she must get medical help,
+though she feared that the wounded man would be dead before her
+return.
+
+When she came back with the preacher, who also "healed human bodies
+some," Colby was still alive but near his passing.
+
+"Ef thar's aught on your conscience, Sim," said the old preacher
+gently, "hit's time ter make yore peace with Almighty God, fer ye're
+goin' ter stand afore him in an hour more. Air ye ready ter face
+Him?"
+
+The dying man looked up, and above the weakness and the suffering that
+filled his eyes, showed a dominating expression of terror. If ever a
+human being needed to be shriven he thought it was himself.
+
+They had to bend close to catch his feeble syllables, as he said: "Git
+paper--write this down."
+
+The preacher obeyed, kneeling on the floor, and though the words were
+few, their utterance required dragging minutes, punctuated with breaks
+of silence and gasping.
+
+"Hit warn't John Spurrier--thet kilt Captain Comyn back tha'r in the
+Philippines.... I knows who done hit----" He broke off there, and the
+girl closed her hands over her face. "I sought ter kill Spurrier--but
+I warn't with them--thet attackted him hyar--an' wounded ther woman."
+
+Once more a long hiatus interrupted the recital and then the mangled
+creature went on: "Hit was ther oil folks thet deevised thet murder
+scheme."
+
+The preacher was busily writing the record of this death-bed statement
+and Glory stood pale and distraught.
+
+The words "oil people" were ringing in her ears. What connection could
+Spurrier have had with them: what enmity could they have had for him?
+
+But out of the confusion of her thoughts another thing stood forth
+with the sudden glare of revelation. This man might die before he
+finished and if he could not tell all he knew, he must first tell that
+which would clear her husband's name. Though that husband had turned
+his back on her, her duty to him in this matter must take precedence
+over the rest.
+
+"Joe Givins--" began Colby once more in laborious syllables, but
+peremptorily the girl halted him.
+
+"Never mind Joe Givins just now," she commanded with as sharp a
+finality as though to her had been delegated the responsibility of his
+judgment. "You said you knew who killed Captain Comyn. Who was it?"
+
+The eyes in the wounded and stricken face gazed up at her in mute
+appeal as a sinner might look at a father confessor, pleading that he
+be spared the bitterest dregs of his admission.
+
+Glory read that glance and her own delicate features hardened. She
+leaned forward.
+
+"I brought you in here and succored you," she asserted with a
+sternness which she could not have commanded in her own behalf.
+"You're going before Almighty God--and unless you answer that
+question honestly--no prayers shall go with you for forgiveness."
+
+"Glory!" The name broke in shocked horror from the bearded lips of the
+preacher. "Glory, the mercy of God hain't ter be interfered with by
+mortals. Ther man's dying!"
+
+Upon him the young woman wheeled with blazing eyes.
+
+"God calls on his servants for justice to the living as well as mercy
+to the dying," she declared. "Sim Colby, who killed Captain Comyn?"
+
+"I done hit," came the unwillingly wrung confession. "My real name's
+Grant.... Severance aided me.... Thet's why I sought to kill Spurrier.
+I deemed he war a huntin' me down."
+
+"Now," ordered the young woman, "what about Joe Givins?"
+
+Again a long pause, then: "Blind Joe Givins--only he ain't no blinder
+than me--read papers hyar--he diskivered thet Spurrier was atter oil
+rights--he tipped off ther oil folks--he war their spy all ther
+time--shammin' ter be blind----" There the speaker struggled to
+breathe and let his head fall back with the utterance incomplete. Five
+minutes later he was dead.
+
+"Hit don't seem ter me," said Brother Hawkins a short time later,
+while Glory still stood in dazed and trance-like wonderment, "es ef
+what he said kin be true. Why ef hit be, John Spurrier was aimin' ter
+plunder us hyar all ther time! He was counselin' us ter sell out--an'
+he was buyin'. I kain't believe that."
+
+But Glory had drawn back to the wall of the room and into her eyes had
+come a new expression. The expression of one who must tear aside a
+veil and know the truth, and who dreads what that truth may be.
+
+She had said that justice, no less than mercy, was God's command laid
+upon mortals. She had, almost by the extremity of withholding from
+Colby his hope of salvation until he spoke, won from him the
+declaration which would give back to John Spurrier an unsmirched name.
+Once Spurrier had said that was his strongest wish in life. But now
+justice called again: this time justice to her own people and perhaps
+it meant the unveiling of duplicity in the man she had married.
+
+"Brother Hawkins," she declared in a low but fervent voice, "if it's
+not true, it's a slander that I can't let stand. If it _is_ true, I
+must undo the wrong he's sought to do--if I can. Please wait."
+
+Then she was tearing at the bit of paneling that gave access to the
+secret cabinet, and poring over papers from a broken and rifled strong
+box.
+
+There was the uncontrovertible record, clear writ, and at length her
+pale face came up resolutely.
+
+"I don't understand it all yet," she told the preacher. "But he was
+buying. He bought everything that's been sold this side the ridge. He
+was seeking to influence the legislature, too. I've got to talk to my
+father."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the next night, when old Dyke Cappeze had ridden back from the
+county seat, that he sat under the lamp in the room where Sim Colby
+had died, and on the table before him were spread the papers that had
+lain unread so long in John Spurrier's secret cabinet.
+
+Across from him sat Glory with her fingers spasmodically clutched and
+her eyes riveted on his face as he read and studied the documents,
+which at first he had been loath to inspect without the permission of
+their owner. He had been convinced, however, when Glory had told the
+story of the dying confession and had appealed to him for counsel.
+
+"By what you tell me," the old lawyer had summarized at the end of her
+recital, "you forced from this man his admission which cleared John
+Spurrier of the charge that's been hanging over him. You set out to
+serve him and refused to be turned aside when Colby balked.... But
+that confession didn't end there. It went on and besides clearing Jack
+in that respect it seems to have involved him in another way. You
+can't use a part of a confession and discard the balance. Perhaps we
+can serve him as well as others best by going into the whole of the
+affair."
+
+So now Glory interrupted by no word or question, despite her anxiety
+to understand and her hoping against hope for a verdict which should
+leave John Spurrier clean of record.
+
+But if she refrained from breaking in on the study that engrossed her
+father and wrinkled his parchment-like forehead, she could not help
+reading the expression of his eyes, the growing sternness and
+indignation of his stiffening lips--and of drawing the moral that when
+he spoke his words must be those of condemnation.
+
+The strident song of the katydids came in through the windows and the
+moon dropped behind the hill crests before Dyke Cappeze spoke, and
+Brother Hawkins, who was spending the night at that house, smoked
+alone on the porch, unwilling to intrude on the confidences that these
+two might wish to exchange.
+
+Finally the lawyer folded the last paper and looked up.
+
+"Do you want the whole truth, little gal?" he inquired bluntly. "How
+much do you still love this man?"
+
+Glory flushed then paled.
+
+"I guess," she said and her words were very low and soft, "I'll love
+him so long as I live--though I hate myself for doing it. He wearied
+of me and forgot me--but I can't do likewise."
+
+Then her chin came up and her voice rang with a quiet finality.
+
+"But I want the truth ... the whole truth without any softening."
+
+"Then as I see it, it's simply this. A war was on between two groups
+of financiers. American Oil and Gas had held a monopoly and maintained
+a corrupt control in the legislature that stifled competition. That's
+why the other oil boom failed. The second group was trying to slip up
+on these corruptionists and gain the control by a campaign of
+surprise. Jack Spurrier appears to have been the ambassador of that
+second group--and he seems to have failed."
+
+The wife nodded. Even yet she unconsciously held a brief for his
+defense.
+
+"So far as you've gone," she reminded her father, "you show him to
+have been what is commonly called a 'practical business man'--but no
+worse than the men he fought."
+
+Cappeze bowed his head gravely and his next words came reluctantly.
+"So far, yes. Of course he could have done none of the things he did
+had he not first won the confidence of those poor ignorant folk that
+are our neighbors and our friends. Of course it was because they
+believed in him and followed his counsel that they sold their
+birthrights to men with whom he pretended to have no connection--and
+yet who took their orders from him."
+
+"Then," Glory started, halted and leaned forward with her hands
+against her breast and her utterance was the monotone of a voice
+forced to a hard question: "Then what I feared was true? He lived
+among us and made friends of us--only to rob us?"
+
+"If by 'us' you mean the mountain people, I fear me that's precisely
+what he did. I can see no other explanation. Which ever of these two
+groups won meant to exploit and plunder us."
+
+For a little she made no answer, but the delicate color of her cheeks
+was gone to an ivory whiteness and the violet eyes were hardening.
+
+"Perhaps we oughtn't to judge him too harshly for these things,"
+said the father comfortingly. "The scroll of my bitterness against
+him is already heavy enough and to spare. He has broken your heart
+and that's enough for me. As to the rest there are many so-called
+honorable gentlemen who are no more scrupulous. We demand clean
+conduct here in these hills," a fierce bitterness came into his
+words, "but then we are ignorant, backwoods folk! There are many
+intricate ins and outs to this business and I don't presume to speak
+with absolute conclusiveness yet."
+
+Outside the katydids sang their prophecies of frost to come and an
+owl hooted. Glory Spurrier sat staring ahead of her and at last she
+said aloud, in that tone which one uses when a thought finds
+expression, unconscious that it has been vocal: "So he won our
+faith--with his clear eyes and his honest smile--only to swindle and
+rob us!"
+
+"My God, if I were a younger man," broke out the father passionately,
+rising from his chair and clenching the damaging papers in his
+talon-like fingers, "I'd learn the oil game. I'd take this information
+and use it against both their gangs--and I believe I could force them
+both to their knees."
+
+He paused and the momentary fire died out of his eyes.
+
+"I'm too old a dog for new tricks though," he added dejectedly, "and
+there's no one else to do it."
+
+"How could it be done?" demanded Glory rousing herself from her
+trance. "Between them they hold all the power, don't they?"
+
+"As far as I can make out," Cappeze explained with the interest of the
+legalistic mind for tackling an abstruse problem, "Spurrier had
+completed his arch as to one of his two purposes--all except its
+keystone. He had yet to gain a passage way through Brother Hawkins'
+land. With that he would have held the completed right-of-way--and
+it's the only one. The other gang of pirates hold the ability to get a
+charter but no right of way over which to use it. Now the man who
+could deliver Brother Hawkins' concession would have a key. He could
+force Spurrier's crowd to agree to almost anything, and with
+Spurrier's crowd he could wring a compromise from the others. Bud
+Hawkins is like the delegate at a convention who can break a
+deadlock. God knows I'd love to tackle it--but it's too late for me."
+
+Glory had come to her feet, and stood an incarnation of combat.
+
+"It's not too late for me," she said quietly. "Perhaps I'm too crude
+to go into John Spurrier's world of cultivated people but I'm shrewd
+enough to go into his world of business!"
+
+"You!" exclaimed the father in astonishment, then after a moment an
+eager light slowly dawned in his eyes and he broke out vehemently: "By
+God in Heaven, girl, I believe you're the man for the job!"
+
+"Call Brother Hawkins in," commanded Glory. "We need his help."
+
+Before he reached the door old Cappeze turned on his heel.
+
+"Glory," he said, "we've need to move out of this house and go back to
+my place. Here we're dwelling under a dishonest roof."
+
+"I'm going to leave it," she responded quickly, "but I'm going farther
+away than that. I'm going to study oil and I'm going to do it in the
+Bluegrass lowlands."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+John Spurrier stepped from the train at Carnettsville into a life that
+had been revolutionized. At last he had succeeded in leaving his
+German exile. His own country was in the war but he, with the
+equipment of a soldier, bore a dishonored name, which would bar him
+from a commission. Here he found the development of his dreams
+realized, but by other hands than his own.
+
+Above all, he must see Glory. He had cabled her and written her, so
+she would be expecting him. Now he gazed about streets through which
+teemed the new activity.
+
+Here was the thing he had seen in his dreams when he stood on wooded
+hills and thought in the terms of the future. Here it stood vivid and
+actual before the eyes that had visioned it.
+
+With a groan he turned into the road homeward on a hired horse. He
+still meant to fight, and unless the Bud Hawkins property had escaped
+him, he would still have to be accounted with--but great prizes had
+slipped away.
+
+At the gate of his house, his heart rose into his throat. The power of
+his emotion almost stifled him. Never had his love for Glory
+flickered. Never had he thought or dreamed of anything else or any one
+else so dearly and so constantly as of her.
+
+He stood at the fence with half-closed eyes for a moment, steadying
+himself against the surges of up-welling emotion, then, raising his
+eyes, he saw that the windows and the door were nailed up. The chimney
+stood dead and smokeless.
+
+Panic clutched at his throat as with a physical grasp. Before him
+trooped a hundred associations unaccountably dear. They were all
+memories of little things, mostly foolish little things that went into
+the sacred intimacy of his life with Glory.
+
+Now there was no Glory there.
+
+He rode at the best speed left in his tired horse over to old
+Cappeze's house, and, as he dismounted, saw the lawyer, greatly aged
+and broken, standing in the door.
+
+One glance at that face confirmed all the fears with which he had been
+battling. It was a face as stern as those on the frieze of the
+prophets. In it there was no ghost of the old welcome, no hope of any
+relenting. This old man saw in him an enemy.
+
+"Where is Glory?" demanded Spurrier as he hurried up to the doorstep,
+and the other looked accusingly back into his eyes and answered in
+cold and bitterly clipped syllables.
+
+"Wherever she is, sir, it's her wish to be there alone." Suddenly the
+old eyes flamed and the old voice rose thin and passionate. "If I
+burned in hell for it to the end of eternity, I would give you no
+other word of her."
+
+"She--she is not dead, then?"
+
+"No--but dead to you."
+
+"Mr. Cappeze," said Spurrier steadily, "are you sure that I may not
+have explanations that may change her view of me?"
+
+"We know," said the lawyer in a voice out of which the passion had
+passed, but which had the dead quality of an opinion inflexibly
+solidified, "that since your marriage, you never made her the
+companion of any hour that was not a backwoods hour. We know that you
+never told us the truth about yourself or your enterprises--that you
+came to us as a friend, won our confidence, and sought to exploit us.
+Your record is one of lies and unfaithfulness, and we have cast you
+out. That is her decision and with me her wish is sacred."
+
+The returned exile stood meeting the relentless eyes of the old man
+who had been his first friend in these hills and for a few moments he
+did not trust himself to speak.
+
+The shock of those shuttered windows and that blankly staring front at
+the house where he had looked for welcome; the collapse of all the
+dreams that had sustained him while a prisoner in an internment camp
+and a refugee hounded across the German border were visiting upon him
+a prostration that left him trembling and shaken.
+
+Finally he commanded his voice.
+
+"To me, too, her wish is sacred--but not until I hear it from her own
+lips. She alone has the right to condemn me and not even she until I
+have made my plea to her. Great God, man, my silence hasn't been
+voluntary. I've been cut off in a Hun prison-camp. I've kept life in
+me only because I could dream of her and because though it was easier
+to die, I couldn't die without seeing her and explaining."
+
+"It was from her own lips that I took my orders," came the unmoved
+response. "Those orders were that through me you should learn
+nothing. You had the friendship of every man here until you abused
+it--now I think you'll encounter no sympathy. I told you once how the
+wolf-bitch would feel toward the man who robbed her of her young. You
+chose to disregard my warning--and I'll ask you to leave my house."
+
+John Spurrier bowed his head. He had lost her! If that were her final
+conclusion, he could hardly seek to dissuade her. At least he could
+lose the final happiness out of his life--from which so much else had
+already been lost--as a gentleman should lose.
+
+And he knew that however old Cappeze might feel, he would not lie. If
+he said that was Glory's deliberately formed decision, that statement
+must be accepted as true.
+
+"I have never loved any one else," said Spurrier slowly. "I shall
+never love any one else. I have been faithful despite appearances. The
+rest of your charges are true, and I make no denial. I gambled about
+as fairly as most men gamble. That is all."
+
+A stiffening pride, made flinty by the old man's hostility, shut
+into silence some things that Spurrier might have said. He scorned
+the seeming of whine that might have lain in explanations, even
+though the explanations should lighten the shadow of his old friend's
+disapproval. He offered no extenuation and breathed nothing of the
+changes that had been wrought in himself by the tedious alchemy of
+time and reflection.
+
+He had begun under the spur of greedy ambition, but changes had been
+wrought in him by Glory's love.
+
+He was still ambitious, but in a different way. He wanted to salvage
+something for the equitable beneficiaries. He wanted to stand, not
+among the predatory millionaires, but to be his own man, with a clean
+name and solvent.
+
+Before he could attain that condition he must render unto Harrison the
+things that were Harrison's and wipe out his own tremendous
+liabilities--but his heart was in the hills.
+
+John Spurrier went slowly and heavy heartedly back to the house which
+he had refashioned for his bride; the house that had become to him a
+shrine to all the dear, lost things of life.
+
+The sun fell in mottled luminousness across its face of tempered gray
+and from the orchard where the lush grass grew knee-high came the
+cheery whistle of a Bob-white.
+
+At the sound the man groaned with a wrench of his heart and throat,
+and his thoughts raced back to that day when the same note had come
+from the voices of hidden assassins and when Glory had exposed her
+breast to rifle-fire to send out the pigeon with its call for help.
+
+The splendid oak that had shaded their stile had grown broader of
+girth and more majestic in the spread of its head-growth since he had
+stood here before, and in the flower beds, in which Glory had
+delighted, a few forlorn survivors, sprung up as volunteers from
+neglected roots, struggled through a choke of dusty weeds.
+
+The man looked about the empty yard and his breath came like that of a
+torture victim on the rack. The desolation and ache of a life deprived
+of all that made it sweet struck in upon him with a blight beside
+which his prison loneliness had been nothing.
+
+"If she knew the whole truth--instead of only half the truth," he
+groaned, "she might forgive me."
+
+He ripped the padlock from the door and let himself in. He flung wide
+a shutter and let the afternoon sun flood the room, and once inside a
+score of little things worked the magic of memory upon him and tore
+afresh every wound that was festering.
+
+There hung the landscapes that he and she had loved and as he looked
+at them her voice seemed to sound again in his ears like forgotten
+music. From somewhere came the heavy fragrance of honeysuckle and old
+nights with her in the moonlight rushed back upon him.
+
+Then he saw an apron on a peg--hanging limp and empty, and again he
+saw her in it. He went and opened a drawer in which his own clothes
+had been kept--and there neatly folded by her hand were things of
+his.
+
+John Spurrier, whose iron nerve had once been cafe talk in the Orient,
+sat down on a quilted bed and tearless sobs racked him.
+
+"No," he said to himself at last. "No, if she wants her freedom I
+can't pursue her. I've hurt her enough--and God knows I'm punished
+enough."
+
+Unless he were tamely to surrender to the despair that beset him, John
+Spurrier had one other thing to do before he left the hills. He must
+come to such an agreement with Bud Hawkins as would give him a right
+of way over that single tract and complete his chain of holdings. Thus
+fortified the field beyond the ridge would be safe against invasion by
+his enemies and even the other field would have readier outlet to
+market by that route. In the Hawkins property lay the keystone of the
+arch. With it the position was impregnable. Without it all the rest
+fell apart like an inarticulated skeleton.
+
+It happened that Spurrier met Hawkins as he went away from his lonely
+house, and forcing his own miseries into the background, he sought to
+become the business man once more. He began with a frank statement of
+the facts and offered fair and substantial terms of trade.
+
+Both because his affection for the old preacher would have tolerated
+nothing less and because it would have been folly now to play the
+cheaper game, he spoke in the terms of generosity.
+
+But to his surprise and discomfiture, Brother Hawkins shook a stubborn
+head.
+
+"Thar ain't skeercely no power on 'arth, Mr. Spurrier," he declared,
+"thet could fo'ce me inter doin' no business with ye."
+
+"But, Brother Hawkins," argued the opportunity hound, "you are cutting
+your own throat. You and I standing together are invincible. Separate,
+we are lost. I'm almost willing to let you name the terms of
+agreement--to write the contract for yourself."
+
+"I've done been pore a right long while already," the preacher
+reminded him as his eyes kindled with the zealot's fire. "Long afore
+my day Jesus Christ was pore an' ther Apostle Paul, an' other
+righteous men. I ain't skeered ter go on in likewise ter what I've
+always done." He paused and laid a kindly hand on the shoulder of the
+man who offered him wealth.
+
+"I ain't seekin' ter fault ye unduly, John Spurrier. Mebby ye've done
+follered yore lights--but we don't see with no common eye, ner no
+mutual disc'arnment. Ye've done misled folk thet swore by ye, ef I
+sees hit a'right. Now ye offers me wealth, much ther same as Satan
+offered hit ter Jesus on a high place, an' we kain't trade--no more
+then what they could trade."
+
+The old preacher's attitude held the trace of kindliness that sought
+to drape reproof in gentleness and to him, as had been impossible with
+Cappeze, Spurrier poured out his confidence. At the outset, he
+confessed, he had deliberately dedicated himself to the development of
+wealth for himself and his employers, with no thought of others.
+Later, in a fight between wary capitalists where vigilance had to be
+met with vigilance, the seal of secrecy had been imperative. Frankness
+with the mountain men would have been a warning to his enemies. Now,
+however, his sense of responsibility was awake. Now he wanted to win
+back his status of confidence in this land where he had known his only
+home. Now what weight he had left to throw into the scales would be
+righteously thrown. Even yet he must move with strict, guarded
+secrecy.
+
+But the old circuit rider shook his head.
+
+"Hit's too late, now, ter rouse faith in me, John," he reiterated.
+"Albeit I'd love ter credit ye, ef so-be I could. What's come ter pass
+kain't be washed out with words." He paused before he added the simple
+edict against which there was no arguing.
+
+"Mebby I mout stand convinced even yit ef I didn't know thet ther
+devil was urgin' me on with prospects of riches."
+
+One thing remained to him; the pride that should stiffen him in the
+presence of his accusers and judges. When he went into the eclipse of
+ruin, at least he would go with unflinching gallantry.
+
+And it was in that mood that Spurrier reached his club in New York and
+prepared himself for the ordeal of the next day's interview.
+
+He had wired Harrison of his coming, but not of his hopelessness, and
+when his telephone jangled and he heard the voice of the financier, he
+recognized in it an undercurrent of exasperation, which carried omen
+of a difficult interview.
+
+"That you, Spurrier? This is Harrison. Be at my office at eleven
+to-morrow morning. Perhaps you can construe certain riddles."
+
+"Of what nature, sir?"
+
+"Of a nature that won't bear full discussion over the wire. We have
+had an anonymous letter from some mysterious person who claims to come
+with the situation in a sling. It may be a crank whom we'll have to
+throw out--or some one we dare not ignore. At all events, it's up to
+you to dispose of him. He's in your province. If you fail, we lose out
+and, as I said once before, you go to the scrap heap."
+
+Spurrier hung up the phone and sat in a nerveless trepidation which
+was new and foreign to his nature. This interview of to-morrow morning
+would call for the tallest bluffing he had ever attempted, and the
+chances would, perhaps, turn on hair-trigger elements of personal
+force.
+
+He must depend on his coolness, audacity, and adroitness to win a
+decision, and, except by guesswork, he could not hope to formulate in
+advance the terrain of battle or the nature of counter-attack with
+which he must meet his adversary.
+
+That evening he strolled along Broadway and found himself yielding to
+a dangerous and whimsical mood. He wondered how many other men
+outwardly as self-assured and prosperous as himself were covertly
+confessing suicide as one of to-morrow's probabilities.
+
+Over Longacre Square the incandescent billboards flamed and flared.
+The darning-wool kitten disported itself with mechanical abandon. The
+woman who advertised a well-known corset and the man who exploited a
+brand of underwear brilliantly made and unmade their toilets far above
+the sidewalk level. Motors shrieked and droned and crowds drifted.
+
+Before a moving-picture theater, his introspective eye was momentarily
+challenged by a gaudy three-sheet. The poster proclaimed a popular
+screen star in a "fight fuller of punch than that of 'The Wreckers.'"
+
+What caused Spurrier to pause was the composition of the picture--and
+the mental comparison which it evoked. A man crouched behind a heavy
+table, overthrown for a barricade--as he had once done.
+
+Fallen enemies lay on the floor of a crude Western cabin. Others still
+stood, and fought with flashing guns and faces "registering"
+desperation, frenzy, and maniac fury. The hero only, though alone and
+outnumbered, was grimly calm. The stress of that inferno had not
+interfered with the theatric pose of head and shoulders--the grace and
+effect of gesture that was conveyed in the two hands wielding two
+smoking pistols.
+
+Spurrier smiled. It occurred to him that had a director stood by
+while he himself had knelt behind a table he would have bawled out
+many amendments which fact had overlooked. Apparently he and his
+attackers had, by these exacting standards of art, missed the drama of
+the situation.
+
+Over him swept a fresh flood of memory, and it brought a cold and
+nervous dampness to his temples. Again he saw Glory rising at the
+broken window with a pigeon to release--and a life to sacrifice, if
+need be. On her face had been no theatric expression which would have
+warranted a close-up.
+
+Spurrier hastened on, turning into a side street where he could put
+the glare at his back and find a more mercifully dark way.
+
+He was seeing, instead of dark house fronts, the tops of pine trees
+etched against an afterglow, and Glory standing silhouetted against a
+hilltop. Above the grind of the elevated and the traffic, he was
+hearing her voice in thrushlike song, happy because he loved her.
+
+The agony of loss overwhelmed him, and he actually longed, as for a
+better thing, for that moment to come back when behind an overturned
+table he had endured the suspense which death had promised to end in
+an instant filled and paid for with revenge.
+
+Then through his disturbed brain once more flashed lines of verse:
+
+ "I was ever a fighter, so--one fight more,
+ The best and the last!
+ I should hate that Death bandaged my eyes and forebore,
+ And bade me creep past."
+
+At all events he would, in the figurative sense, die fighting
+to-morrow. He knew his mistakes now. If he lived on he hoped to atone
+for them, but if he died he would go out without a whine.
+
+And if he must die, there was one way that seemed preferable to
+others. The army would have none of him, as an officer, because he
+stood besmirched of honor. But he knew the stern temper of the
+mountaineers. They would rise in unanimous response to the call of
+arms. He could go with them, not with any insignia on his collar, but
+marching shoulder against shoulder into that red hell of Flanders and
+France, where a man might baptize himself, shrive himself, and die.
+And in dying they would leave a record behind them!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+Down along the creekbeds back of Hemlock Mountain young Jimmy
+Litchfield, a son of old Uncle Jimmy, had been teaming with a
+well-boring outfit and his wagon had bogged down in deep mud. He had
+failed to extricate himself so he tramped three hard, steep miles and
+telephoned for an extra team. While he awaited deliverance he found
+himself irked and, to while away the time, set his drill down
+haphazard and began to bore.
+
+It would be some hours before help arrived, and when he had worked a
+while he had forgotten all about help.
+
+His drill had struck through soft gravel to an oil pool lying close to
+the surface, and the black tide gushed crazily.
+
+Young Jimmy sat back watching the dark jet that he had no means of
+stemming or containing, and through his simple soul flowed all the
+intoxication of triumph.
+
+He was the discoverer of a new--and palpably a rich field!
+
+Hereafter oil men would speak of the Snake Creek field as copper men
+spoke of Anaconda or gold men of the Yukon.
+
+And that night word went by wire to the opportunity hound who had
+just gone east, that the "fur" side was to the "nigh" side as gold is
+to silver.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"What do you make of it?" demanded Harrison, when Spurrier, secure in
+his seeming of undaunted assurance, arrived at his office and the
+response came smilingly: "I think it means a bluff."
+
+"Read that," snapped the financier as he flung a letter across his
+desk.
+
+Spurrier took the sheet of paper and read in a hand, evidently
+disguised!
+
+ You find yourself in a cul-de-sac. I hold the key to a way out. My
+ terms are definite and determined in advance. I shall be at your
+ office at noon, Tuesday. We will do business at that time, or not
+ at all.
+
+"I repeat," said Spurrier, "that this seems to me a brass-bound bluff.
+I make only the request that I be permitted to talk with this brigand
+alone; to sound him out with no interference and to shape my policy by
+the circumstances. I'm not at all frightened."
+
+Harrison answered snappily:
+
+"I agree to that--but if you fail you fail finally."
+
+So on Tuesday forenoon Spurrier sat cross-legged in Harrison's office
+and their discussion had come to its end. Now, he had only to await
+the unknown person who was to arrive at noon bearing alleged terms, a
+person who claimed to be armed for battle if battle were needed.
+
+At Harrison's left and right sat his favored lieutenants, but Spurrier
+himself occupied a chair a little bit apart, relegated to a zone of
+probation.
+
+Then a rap sounded on the door, and Spurrier smiled with a ghost of
+triumph as he noted that he alone of the small group did not start at
+the signal. For all their great caliber and standing, these men were
+keyed to expectancy and exasperated nervousness.
+
+The clerk who appeared made his announcement with the calculated
+evenness of routine: "A lady is waiting. She says her name doesn't
+matter. She has an appointment for twelve."
+
+"A lady!" exclaimed Harrison in amazement. "My God, do we have to
+fight this thing out with a woman?"
+
+The tableau of astonishment held, until Spurrier broke it:
+
+"What matter personalities to us?" he blandly inquired. "We are
+interested in facts."
+
+The chief lifted his hand and gave curt direction. "Show her in."
+
+Then through the door came a woman whose beauty would have arrested
+attention in any gathering. Just now what these men, rising grudgingly
+from their chairs, noted first, was the self-possession, the poise,
+and the convincing evidence of good breeding and competency which
+characterized her.
+
+She was elegantly but plainly dressed, and her manner conveyed a
+self-assurance in nowise flustered by the prospect of impending
+storm.
+
+No one there, save Spurrier, recognized her, for to Martin Harrison
+carrying the one disapproving impression of a mountain girl in patched
+gingham, the transformation was complete.
+
+And as for Spurrier himself, after coming to his feet, he stood as a
+man might be expected to stand if a specter of death had suddenly
+materialized before him.
+
+For the one time in his life all the assumption of boldness, worn for
+other eyes, broke and fell away from him, leaving him nakedly and
+starkly dumbfounded. He presented the pale and distressed aspect of a
+whipped prize fighter, reeling groggily against the ropes, and
+defenseless against attack.
+
+It was a swift transformation from audacious boldness to something
+which seemed abject, or that at least was the aspect which presented
+itself to Martin Harrison and his aides, but back of it all lay
+reasons into which they could not see.
+
+It was no crumbling and softening of battle metal that had wrought
+this astonishing metamorphosis but a thing much nearer to the man's
+heart. At that moment there departed from his mind the whole urgent
+call of the duel between business enemies--and he saw only the woman
+for whom he had sought and whom he had not found.
+
+In the cumulative force and impact of their heart-breaking sequence
+there rushed back on him all the memories that had been haunting him,
+intensified to unspeakable degree at the sight of her face--and if he
+thought of the business awaiting them at all, it was only with a
+stabbing pain of realization that he had met Glory again only in the
+guise of an enemy.
+
+Harrison gave him one contemptuous glance and remarked brutally:
+
+"Madam, this gentleman was to talk with you, but he seems scarcely
+able to conduct any affair of moment."
+
+Glory was looking at the broken man, too, and into her splendid eyes
+stole a pity that had tenderness back of it.
+
+Old memories came in potent waves, and she closed her lids for a
+moment as though against a painful glare, but with quick recovery she
+spoke.
+
+"It is imperative, gentlemen, that I have a few words first--and
+alone--with Mr. Spurrier."
+
+"If you insist, but----" Harrison's shoulders stiffened. "But we do
+not guarantee that we shall abide by his declarations."
+
+"I do insist--and I think you will find that it is I who am in the
+position to dictate terms."
+
+Harrison gave a sharply imperative gesture toward the door through
+which the others filed out, followed by the chief himself, leaving the
+two alone.
+
+Then John Spurrier rose, and supported himself by hands pressed upon
+the table top. He stood unsteadily at first and failed in his effort
+to speak. Then, with difficulty, he straightened and swept his two
+hands out in a gesture of surrender.
+
+"I'm through," he said. "I thought there was still one fight left in
+me--but I can't fight you."
+
+She did not answer and, after a little, with a slight regaining of his
+self-command, he went on again:
+
+"Glory! What a name and what a fulfillment! You have always been Glory
+to me."
+
+Out of his eyes slowly went the apathy of despair and another look of
+even stronger feeling preempted its place: a look of worship and
+adoration.
+
+"I didn't know," admitted Glory softly, "that I was to meet you here.
+I didn't know that the fight was to be between us."
+
+"You have ruined me," he answered. "I'm a sinking ship now, and those
+rats out there will leave me--but it's worth ruin to see you again. I
+want you to take this message with you and remember it. All my life
+I've gambled hard and fought hard. Now I fail hard. I lost you and
+deserved to lose you, but I've always loved you and always shall."
+
+Her eyes grew stern, repressing the tenderness and pity that sought to
+hold them soft.
+
+"You abandoned me," she said. "You sought to plunder my people. I took
+up their fight, and I shall win it."
+
+Spurrier came a step toward her and spread his hands in a gesture of
+surrender, but he had recovered from the shock that had so unnerved
+him a few minutes ago and there was now a certain dignity in his
+acceptance of defeat.
+
+"I break my sword across my knee," he declared, "and since I must do
+it, I'm glad you are the victor. I won't ask for mercy even from
+you--but when you say I abandoned you, you are grievously wrong.
+
+"When you say I sought to plunder your people, you speak the truth
+about me--as I was before I came to love you. From that time on I
+sought to serve your people."
+
+"Sought to serve them?" she repeated in perplexity, "The record shows
+nothing of that."
+
+"And since the record doesn't," he answered steadily, "any assertions
+and protestations would be without proof. I've told you, because my
+heart compelled me. I won't try to convince you. At all events, since
+I failed, my motives don't matter."
+
+"Your motives are everything. I took up the fight," she said, "because
+I thought a Spurrier had wronged them. I wanted a Spurrier to make
+restitution."
+
+"At first I saw only the game, dear heart," he confessed, "never the
+unfairness. I'm ready to pay the price. Ruin me--but in God's name,
+believe that I love you."
+
+Her hand came out waveringly at that, and for a moment rested on his
+shoulder with a little gesture of tenderness.
+
+"I thought I hated you," she said. "I tried to hate you. I've
+dedicated myself to my people and their rights--but if you trust me
+enough, call them in and let me talk with them."
+
+"Trust you enough!" he exclaimed passionately, then he caught her to
+him, and, when he let her go, he stood again transformed and
+revivified into the man he had seemed before she appeared in the
+doorway. It was as though the touch of her lips had given him the fire
+from which he rose phoenixlike.
+
+With an unhesitant step he went to the door and opened it, and the men
+who had gone out trooped back and ranged themselves again about the
+table.
+
+"Mr. Spurrier did all in your interests that a man could do," said
+Glory. "He failed to secure your charter and he failed to secure the
+one tract that serves as the key. I am a mountain woman seeking only
+to protect my people. I hold that tract as trustee for Bud Hawkins. I
+mean to do business, but only at a fair price. It's for you to
+determine whether I deal with you or your competitors."
+
+A look of consternation spread over the faces of the lesser men, but
+Harrison inquired with a grim smile:
+
+"Madam, haven't I seen you somewhere before to-day?"
+
+"Once before--down in the hills."
+
+"Then you are this man's wife! Was this dramatic incident prearranged
+between you?"
+
+She raised an imperative hand, and her voice admitted no question of
+sincerity.
+
+"Make no such mistake. Mr. Spurrier knew nothing of this. He was loyal
+enough--to you. From him I never even learned the nature of his
+business. Without his knowledge _I_ was loyal to my people."
+
+Then for ten minutes she talked clearly, forcefully, and with the ring
+of indubitable sincerity giving fire to voice and manner. She told of
+the fight she and her father had made to keep heart in mountain folk,
+enraged by what they believed to be the betrayal by a man they had
+trusted and attacked by every means of coercion at the disposal of
+American Oil and Gas.
+
+She told of small local reservoirs, mysteriously burned by unknown
+incendiaries; of neighborhood pipe lines cut until they spilled out
+their wealth again into the earth; of how she herself had walked these
+lines at night, watching against sabotage.
+
+As she talked with simple directness and without self-vaunting, they
+saw her growing in the trust of these men whose wrath had been, in the
+words of old Cappeze, "Like that of the wolf-bitch robbed a second
+time of her whelps." They recognized the faith that had commissioned
+her to speak as trustee, and to act with carte-blanche powers.
+
+Harrison and his subordinates were not susceptible men, easily swayed
+by a dramatic circumstance, so they cross-examined and heckled her
+with shrewd and tripping inquiries, until she reminded them that she
+had not come as a supplicant, but to lay before them terms, which they
+would, at their peril, decline to accept.
+
+The realization was strong in them that she had spoken only the truth
+when she declared that she held the key. When they were convinced that
+she realized, in full, the strength of her position, they had no wish
+to antagonize longer.
+
+The group of financiers drew apart, but after a brief consultation
+Harrison came forward and offered his hand.
+
+"Mrs. Spurrier," he announced crisply, "we have gone too far to draw
+back. After all, I think you come rather as a rescue party than an
+attacker. Spurrier, you have married a damned brilliant woman."
+
+Glory accepted the extended hand of peace, and Harrison, with a jerk
+of his head to the door, led his followers out, leaving them alone
+again.
+
+Then Glory held out her arms, and into the bright depths of her eyes
+flashed the old bewitching merriment.
+
+"Thar's a lavish of things I needs ter know, Jack," she said. "You've
+got to l'arn 'em all ter me."
+
+"I come now, not as teacher but as pupil, dear heart," he declared,
+"and I come humbly."
+
+Then her face grew serious and her voice vibrant with tenderness.
+
+"I have another gift for you, Jack, besides myself, I can give you
+back an untarnished name."
+
+
+THE END
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcribers Note
+
+Typographical inconsistencies have been changed and are listed below.
+
+Hyphenation standardized.
+
+Other archaic and variable spelling and hyphenation is preserved,
+including the author's use of eying and eyeing, Quizote, Otello, and
+langour.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+
+Transcriber Changes
+
+The following changes were made to the original text:
+
+ Page 86: Was sterterously (he sat there breathing =stertorously=
+ while the untended fire died away)
+
+ Page 90: Was plausiblity (One explanation only presented itself with
+ any color of =plausibility=)
+
+ Page 96: Was mistly (there was a dreamy violet where it merged
+ =mistily= with the skyline ridges)
+
+ Page 118: Was there ("It is well established by the evidence befo'
+ =ther= co'te")
+
+ Page 120: Was impusively (the girl broke out =impulsively=)
+
+ Page 124: Removed extra quote (Still Spurrier cursed himself for a
+ careless =fool=)
+
+ Page 162: Was it's (you'll recall that =its= longer name is _Datura
+ stramonium_)
+
+ Page 180: Was inperceptible (pair of shoulders that hunched slowly
+ forward with almost =imperceptible= movement)
+
+ Page 208: Guessed at missing text (the latter inquired gravely:
+ ="Did they play one= of them royalty games")
+
+ Page 208: Was single quote (I ain't playin' no more of them royalty
+ =games"=)
+
+ Page 263: Was pacink ("Before God," cried Harrison, =pacing= his
+ floor like a lion)
+
+ Page 301: Was personalties ("What matter =personalities= to us?")
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Law of Hemlock Mountain, by Hugh Lundsford
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