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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Impostor, by Harold Bindloss, Illustrated
+by Victor Prout
+
+
+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 Impostor
+
+
+Author: Harold Bindloss
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2012 [eBook #39698]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IMPOSTOR***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the online Distributed Proofreaders
+Canada team (http://www.pgdpcanada.net) from images of public domain
+material generously made available by the University of Toronto Libraries
+(http://onesearch.library.utoronto.ca)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 39698-h.htm or 39698-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39698/39698-h/39698-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39698/39698-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPOSTOR.
+
+
+[Illustration: "In the meanwhile, Maud Barrington sat by the open window
+in her room." (Chapter XVI.)]
+
+
+THE IMPOSTOR
+
+by
+
+HAROLD BINDLOSS
+
+Author of "Hawtrey's Deputy," "The Liberationist,"
+"A Sower of Wheat," "The Pioneer," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Ward, Lock & Co., Limited
+London, Melbourne and Toronto
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I Rancher Witham
+ II Lance Courthorne
+ III Trooper Shannon's Quarrel
+ IV In the Bluff
+ V Miss Barrington Comes Home
+ VI Anticipations
+ VII Witham's Decision
+ VIII Witham Comes to Silverdale
+ IX An Armistice
+ X Maud Barrington's Promise
+ XI Speed the Plough
+ XII Mastery Recognized
+ XIII A Fair Advocate
+ XIV The Unexpected
+ XV Facing the Flame
+ XVI Maud Barrington is Merciless
+ XVII With the Stream
+ XVIII Under Test
+ XIX Courthorne Blunders
+ XX The Face at the Window
+ XXI Colonel Barrington is Convinced
+ XXII Sergeant Stimson Confirms his Suspicions
+ XXIII The Revelation
+ XXIV Courthorne makes Reparation
+ XXV Witham Rides Away
+ XXVI Reinstation
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPOSTOR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+RANCHER WITHAM
+
+
+It was a bitter night, for although there was no snow as yet, the
+frost had bound the prairie in its iron grip, when Rancher Witham
+stood shivering in a little Canadian settlement in the great, lonely
+land which runs north from the American frontier to Athabasca. There
+was no blink of starlight in the murky sky, and a stinging wind that
+came up out of the great waste of grass moaned about the frame houses
+clustering beside the trail that led south over the limited levels to
+the railroad and civilization. It chilled Witham through his somewhat
+tattered furs, and he strode up and down, glancing expectantly into
+the darkness, and then across the unpaved street, where the ruts were
+ploughed a foot deep in the prairie sod, towards the warm, red glow
+from the windows of the wooden hotel. He knew that the rest of the
+outlying farmers and ranchers who had ridden in for their letters were
+sitting snug about the stove, but it was customary for all who sought
+shelter there to pay for their share of the six o'clock supper, and
+the half-dollar Witham had then in his pocket was required for other
+purposes.
+
+He had also retained through all his struggles a measure of his pride,
+and because of it strode up and down buffeted by the blasts until a
+beat of horse-hoofs came out of the darkness and was followed by a
+rattle of wheels. It grew steadily louder, a blinking ray of
+brightness flickered across the frame houses, and presently dark
+figures were silhouetted against the light on the hotel veranda as a
+lurching wagon drew up beneath it. Two dusky objects, shapeless in
+their furs, sprang down, and one stumbled into the post office close
+by with a bag while the other man answered the questions hurled at him
+as he fumbled with stiffened fingers at the harness.
+
+"Late? Well, you might be thankful you've got your mail at all," he
+said. "We had to go round by Willow Bluff, and didn't think we'd get
+through the ford. Ice an inch thick, anyway, and Charley talked that
+much he's not said anything since, even when the near horse put his
+foot into a badger hole."
+
+Rude banter followed this, but Witham took no part in it. Hastening
+into the post office, he stood betraying his impatience by his very
+impassiveness while a sallow-faced woman tossed the letters out upon
+the counter. At last she took up two of them, and the man's fingers
+trembled a little as he stretched out his hand, when she said--
+
+"That's all there are for you."
+
+Witham recognized the writing on the envelopes, and it was with
+difficulty he held his eagerness in check, but other men were waiting
+for his place, and he went out and crossed the street to the hotel
+where there was light to read by. As he entered it a girl, bustling
+about a long table in the big stove-warmed room, turned with a little
+smile.
+
+"It's only you!" she said. "Now I was figuring it was Lance
+Courthorne."
+
+Witham, impatient as he was, stopped and laughed, for the
+hotel-keeper's daughter was tolerably well-favoured and a friend of
+his.
+
+"And you're disappointed?" he said. "I haven't Lance's good looks, or
+his ready tongue."
+
+The room was empty, for the guests were thronging about the post
+office then, and the girl's eyes twinkled as she drew back a pace and
+surveyed the man. There was nothing in his appearance that would have
+aroused a stranger's interest, or attracted more than a passing
+glance, and he stood before her in a very old fur coat, with a fur cap
+that was in keeping with it in his hand. His face had been bronzed
+almost to the colour of a Blackfoot Indian's by frost and wind and
+sun, and it was of English type from the crisp fair hair above the
+broad forehead to the somewhat solid chin. The mouth was hidden by the
+bronze-tinted moustache, and the eyes alone, were noticeable. They
+were grey, and there was a steadiness in them which was almost unusual
+even in that country, where men look into long distances. For the
+rest, he was of average stature, and stood impassively straight,
+looking down upon the girl without either grace or awkwardness, while
+his hard brown hands, suggested, as his attire did, strenuous labour
+for a very small reward.
+
+"Well," said the girl with Western frankness, "there's a kind of stamp
+on Lance that you haven't got. I figure he brought it with him from
+the old country. Still, one might take you for him if you stood with
+the light behind you, and you're not quite a bad-looking man. It's a
+kind of pity you're so solemn."
+
+Witham smiled. "I don't fancy that's astonishing after losing two
+harvests in succession," he said. "You see, there's nobody back there
+in the old country to send remittances to me."
+
+The girl nodded with quick sympathy. "Oh, yes. The times are bad," she
+said. "Well, you read your letters; I'm not going to worry you."
+
+Witham sat down and opened the first envelope under the big lamp. It
+was from a land agent and mortgage-broker, and his face grew a trifle
+grimmer as he read, "In the present condition of the money market your
+request that we should carry you over is unreasonable, and we regret
+that unless you can extinguish at least half the loan we will be
+compelled to foreclose upon your holding."
+
+There was a little more of it, but that was sufficient for Witham, who
+knew it meant disaster, and it was with the feeling of one clinging
+desperately to the last shred of hope he tore open the second
+envelope. The letter it held was from a friend he had made in a
+Western city, and once entertained for a month at his ranch, but the
+man had evidently sufficient difficulties of his own to contend with.
+
+"Very sorry, but it can't be done," he wrote. "I'm loaded up with
+wheat nobody will buy, and couldn't raise five hundred dollars to lend
+any one just now,"
+
+Witham sighed a little, but when he rose and slowly straightened
+himself nobody would have suspected he was looking ruin in the face.
+He had fought a slow, losing battle for six weary years, holding on
+doggedly though defeat appeared inevitable, and now when it had come
+he bore it impassively, for the struggle which, though he was scarcely
+twenty-six, had crushed all mirth and brightness out of his life, had
+given him endurance in place of them. Just then a man came bustling
+towards him, with the girl who bore a tray close behind.
+
+"What are you doing with that coat on?" he said. "Get it off and sit
+down right there. The boys are about through with the mail and
+supper's ready,"
+
+Witham glanced at the steaming dishes hungrily, for he had passed most
+of the day in the bitter frost, eating very little, and there was
+still a drive of twenty miles before him.
+
+"It is time I was taking the trail," he said.
+
+He was sensible of a pain in his left side, which, as other men have
+discovered, not infrequently follows enforced abstinence from food,
+but he remembered what he wanted the half-dollar in his pocket for.
+The hotel-keeper had possibly some notion of the state of affairs, for
+he laughed a little.
+
+"You've got to sit down," he said. "Now, after the way you fixed me up
+when I stopped at your ranch, you don't figure I'd let you go before
+you had some supper with me."
+
+Witham may have been unduly sensitive, but he shook his head. "You're
+very good, but it's a long ride, and I'm going now," he said.
+"Good-night, Nettie."
+
+He turned as he spoke, with the swift decision that was habitual with
+him, and when he went out the girl glanced at her father
+reproachfully.
+
+"You always get spoiling things when you put your hand in," she said.
+"Now that man's hungry, and I'd have fixed it so he'd have got his
+supper if you had left it to me."
+
+The hotel-keeper laughed a little. "I'm kind of sorry for Witham
+because there's grit in him, and he's never had a show," he said.
+"Still, I figure he's not worth your going out gunning after, Nettie."
+
+The girl said nothing, but there was a little flush in her face which
+had not been there before, when she busied herself with the dishes.
+
+In the meanwhile Witham was harnessing two bronco horses to a very
+dilapidated wagon. They were vicious beasts, but he had bought them
+cheap from a man who had some difficulty in driving them, while the
+wagon had been given him, when it was apparently useless, by a
+neighbour. The team had, however, already covered thirty miles that
+day, and started homewards at a steady trot without the playful
+kicking they usually indulged in. Here and there a man sprang clear of
+the rutted road, but Witham did not notice him or return his greeting.
+He was abstractedly watching the rude frame houses flit by, and
+wondering, while the pain in his side grew keener, when he would get
+his supper, for it happens not infrequently that the susceptibilities
+are dulled by a heavy blow, and the victim finds a distraction that is
+almost welcome in the endurance of a petty trouble.
+
+Witham was very hungry, and weary alike in body and mind. The sun had
+not risen when he left his homestead, and he had passed the day under
+a nervous strain, hoping, although it seemed improbable, that the mail
+would bring him relief from his anxieties. Now he knew the worst he
+could bear it as he had borne the loss of two harvests, and the
+disaster which followed in the wake of the blizzard that killed off
+his stock; but it seemed unfair that he should endure cold and hunger
+too, and when one wheel sank in a rut and the jolt shook him in every
+stiffened limb, he broke out with a hoarse expletive. It was his first
+protest against the fate that was too strong for him, and almost as he
+made it he laughed.
+
+"Pshaw! There's no use kicking against what has to be, and I've got to
+keep my head just now," he said.
+
+There was no great comfort in the reflection, but it had sustained him
+before, and Witham's head was a somewhat exceptional one, though there
+was as a rule nothing in any way remarkable about his conversation,
+and he was apparently merely one of the many quietly-spoken,
+bronze-faced men who are even by their blunders building up a great
+future for the Canadian dominion. He accordingly drew his old rug
+tighter round him, and instinctively pulled his fur cap lower down
+when the lights of the settlement faded behind him and the creaking
+wagon swung out into the blackness of the prairie. It ran back league
+beyond league across three broad provinces, and the wind that came up
+out of the great emptiness emphasized its solitude. A man from the
+cities would have heard nothing but the creaking of the wagon and the
+drumming fall of hoofs, but Witham heard the grasses patter as they
+swayed beneath the bitter blasts stiff with frost, and the moan of
+swinging boughs in a far-off willow bluff. It was these things that
+guided him, for he had left the rutted trail, and here and there the
+swishen beneath the wheels told of taller grass, while the bluff ran
+black athwart the horizon when that had gone. Then twigs crackled
+beneath them as the horses picked their way amidst the shadowy trees
+stunted by a ceaseless struggle with the wind, and Witham shook the
+creeping drowsiness from him when they came out into the open again,
+for he knew it is not advisable for any man with work still to do to
+fall asleep under the frost of that country.
+
+Still, he grew a trifle dazed as the miles went by, and because of it
+indulged in memories he had shaken off at other times. They were
+blurred recollections of the land he had left eight years ago,
+pictures of sheltered England, half-forgotten music, the voices of
+friends who no longer remembered him, and the smiles in a girl's
+bright eyes. Then he settled himself more firmly in the driving-seat,
+and with numbed fingers sought a tighter grip of the reins as the
+memory of the girl's soft answer to a question he had asked brought
+his callow ambitions back.
+
+He was to hew his way to fortune in the West, and then come back for
+her, but the girl who had clung to him with wet cheeks when he left
+her had apparently grown tired of waiting, and Witham sent back her
+letters in return for a silver-printed card. That was six years ago,
+and now none of the dollars he had brought into the country remained
+to him. He realized, dispassionately and without egotism, that this
+was through no fault of his, for he knew that better men had been
+crushed and beaten.
+
+It was, however, time he had done with these reflections, for while he
+sat half-dazed and more than half-frozen the miles had been flitting
+by, and now the team knew they were not very far from home. Little by
+little their pace increased, and Witham was almost astonished to see
+another bluff black against the night ahead of him. As usual in that
+country, the willows and birches crawled up the sides and just showed
+their heads above the sinuous crest of a river hollow. It was very
+dark when the wagon lurched in among them, and it cost the man an
+effort to discern the winding trail which led down into the blackness
+of the hollow. In places the slope was almost precipitous, and it
+behoved him to be careful of the horses, which could not be replaced.
+Without them he could not plough in spring, and his life did not
+appear of any especial value in comparison with theirs just then.
+
+The team, however, were evidently bent on getting home as soon as
+possible, and Witham's fingers were too stiff to effectively grasp the
+reins. A swinging bough also struck one of the horses, and when it
+plunged and flung up its head the man reeled a little in his seat.
+Before he recovered the team were going down-hill at a gallop. Witham
+flung himself bodily backwards with tense muscles, and the reins
+slipping a trifle in his hands, knowing that though he bore against
+them with all his strength the team were leaving the trail. Then the
+wagon jolted against a tree, one horse stumbled, picked up its stride,
+and went on at a headlong gallop. The man felt the wind rush past him
+and saw the dim trees whirl by, but he could only hold on and wonder
+what would take place when they came to the bottom. The bridge the
+trail went round by was some distance to the right and because the
+frost had just set in he knew the ice on the river would not bear the
+load, even if the horses could keep their footing.
+
+He had not, however, long to wonder. Once more a horse stumbled, there
+was a crash, and a branch hurled Witham backwards into the wagon,
+which came to a standstill suddenly. When he rose something warm was
+running down his face, and there was a red smear on the hand he
+lighted the lantern with. When that was done he flung himself down
+from the wagon, dreading what he would find. The flickering radiance
+showed him that the pole had snapped, and while one bronco still stood
+trembling on its feet the other lay inert amidst a tangle of harness.
+The man's face grew a trifle grimmer as he threw the light upon it,
+and then, stooping, glanced at one doubled leg. It was evident that
+fate, which did nothing by halves, had dealt him a crushing blow. The
+last faint hope he clung to had vanished now.
+
+He was, however, a humane man, and considerate of the beasts that
+worked for him, and accordingly thrust his hand inside the old fur
+coat, when he had loosed the uninjured horse, and drew out a
+long-bladed knife. Then he knelt and, setting down the lantern, felt
+for the place to strike. When he found it his courage almost deserted
+him, and meeting the eyes that seemed to look up at him with dumb
+appeal, turned his head away. Still, he was a man who would not shirk
+a painful duty, and shaking off the sense of revulsion turned again
+and stroked the beast's head.
+
+"It's all I can do for you," he said.
+
+Then his arm came down, and a tremor ran through the quivering frame,
+while Witham set his lips tightly as his hand grew warm. The thing was
+horrible to him, but the life he led had taught him the folly of
+weakness, and he was too pitiful to let his squeamishness overcome
+him.
+
+Still, he shivered when it was done, and rubbing the knife in the
+withered leaves, rose and made shift to gird a rug about the uninjured
+horse. Then he cut the reins and tied them, and mounting without
+stirrups rode towards the bridge. The horse went quietly enough now,
+and the man allowed it to choose its way. He was going home to find
+shelter from the cold, because his animal instincts prompted him, but
+otherwise, almost without volition, in a state of dispassionate
+indifference. Nothing more he fancied, could well befall him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+LANCE COURTHORNE
+
+
+It was late when Witham reached his log-built house, but he set out
+once more with his remaining horse before the lingering daylight crept
+out of the east, to haul the wagon home. He also spent most of the day
+in repairing it, because occupation of any kind that would keep him
+from unpleasant reflections appeared advisable, and to allow anything
+to fall out of use was distasteful to him, although as the wagon had
+been built for two horses he had little hope of driving it again. It
+was a bitter, grey day, with a low, smoky sky, and seemed very long to
+Witham; but evening came at last, and he was left with nothing between
+him and his thoughts.
+
+He lay in a dilapidated chair beside the stove, and the little bare
+room through which its pipe ran was permeated with the smell of fresh
+shavings, hot iron, and the fumes of indifferent tobacco. A
+carpenter's bench ran along one end of it, and was now occupied by a
+new wagon pole the man had fashioned out of a slender birch. A Marlin
+rifle, an axe, and a big saw hung beneath the head of an antelope on
+the wall above the bench, and all of them showed signs of use and
+glistened with oil. Opposite to them a few shelves were filled with
+simple crockery and cooking utensils, and these also shone spotlessly.
+There was a pair of knee boots in one corner with a patch partly sewn
+on to one of them, and the harness in another showed traces of careful
+repair. A bookcase hung above them, and its somewhat tattered contents
+indicated that the man who had chosen and evidently handled them
+frequently possessed tastes any one who did not know that country
+would scarcely have expected to find in a prairie farmer. A table and
+one or two rude chairs made by their owner's hands completed the
+furniture; but while all hinted at poverty, it also suggested
+neatness, industry, and care, for the room bore the impress of its
+occupier's individuality, as rooms not infrequently do.
+
+It was not difficult to see that he was frugal, though possibly from
+necessity rather than taste, not sparing of effort, and had a keen eye
+for utility, and if that suggested the question why, with such
+capacities, he had not attained to greater comfort, the answer was
+simple. Witham had no money, and the seasons had fought against him.
+He had done his uttermost with the means at his disposal, and now he
+knew he was beaten.
+
+A doleful wind moaned about the lonely building and set the roof
+shingles rattling overhead. Now and then the stove crackled, or the
+lamp flickered, and any one unused to the prairie would have felt the
+little loghouse very desolate and lonely. There was no other human
+habitation within a league, only a great waste of whitened grass
+relieved about the homestead by the raw clods of the fall ploughing;
+for, while his scattered neighbours, for the most part, put their
+trust in horses and cattle, Witham had been among the first to realize
+the capacities of that land as a wheat-growing country.
+
+Now, clad in well-worn jean trousers and an old deerskin jacket, he
+looked down at the bundle of documents on his knee, accounts unpaid, a
+banker's intimation that no more cheques would be honoured and a
+mortgage deed. They were not pleasant reading, and the man's face
+clouded as he pencilled notes on some of them, but there was no
+weakness or futile protest in it. Defeat was plain between the lines
+of all he read, but he was going on stubbornly until the struggle was
+ended, as others of his kind had done, there at the western limit of
+the furrows of the plough and in the great province further east which
+is one of the world's granaries. They went under and were forgotten,
+but they showed the way, and while their guerdon was usually six feet
+of prairie soil, the wheat-fields, mills, and railroads came, for it
+is written plainly on the new North-West that no man may live and
+labour for himself alone, and there are many who, realizing it,
+instinctively ask very little, and freely give their best for the land
+that but indifferently shelters them.
+
+Presently, however, there was a knocking at the door, and though this
+was most unusual, Witham only quietly moved his head when a bitter
+blast came in, and a man wrapped in furs stood in the opening.
+
+"I'll put my horse in the stable while I've got my furs on. It's a
+bitter night," he said.
+
+Witham nodded. "You know where the lantern is," he said. "There's some
+chop in the manger, and you needn't spare the oats in the bin. At
+present prices it doesn't pay to haul them in."
+
+The man closed the door silently, and it was ten minutes before he
+returned, and sloughing off his furs dropped into a chair beside the
+stove. "I got supper at Broughton's, and don't want anything but
+shelter to-night," he said. "Shake that pipe out and try one of these
+instead."
+
+He laid a cigar case on the table, and though well worn it was of
+costly make, with a good deal of silver about it, while Witham, who
+lighted one, knew that the cigars were good. He had no esteem for his
+visitor, but men are not censorious upon the prairie, and Western
+hospitality is always free.
+
+"Where have you come from, Courthorne?" he said quietly.
+
+The other man laughed a little. "The long trail," he said. "The
+Dakotas, Colorado, Montana. Cleaned up one thousand dollars at Regent,
+and might have got more, but some folks down there seemed tired of me.
+The play was quite regular, but they have apparently been getting
+virtuous lately."
+
+"And now?" said Witham, with polite indifference.
+
+Courthorne made a little gesture of deprecation.
+
+"I'm back again with the rustlers."
+
+Witham's nod signified comprehension, for the struggle between the
+great range-holders across the frontier and the smaller settlers who
+with legal right invaded their cattle runs was just over. It had been
+fought out bitterly with dynamite and rifles, and when at last, with
+the aid of the United States cavalry, peace was made, sundry broken
+men and mercenaries who had taken the pay of both parties, seeing
+their occupation gone, had found a fresh scope for their energies in
+smuggling liquor, and on opportunity transferring cattle, without
+their owners' sanction, across the frontier. That was then a
+prohibition country, and the profits and risks attached to supplying
+it and the Blackfeet on the reserves with liquor were heavy.
+
+"Business this way?" said Witham.
+
+Courthorne appeared to consider a moment, and there was a curious
+little glint which did not escape his companion's attention in his
+eyes, but he laughed.
+
+"Yes, we're making a big run," he said, then stopped and looked
+straight at the rancher. "Did it ever strike you, Witham, that you
+were not unlike me?"
+
+Witham smiled, but made a little gesture of dissent as he returned the
+other's gaze. They were about the same height and had the same English
+type of face, while Witham's eyes were grey and his companion's an
+indefinite blue that approached the former colour, but there the
+resemblance, which was not more than discernible, ended. Witham was
+quietly-spoken and somewhat grim, a plain prairie farmer in
+appearance, while a vague but recognizable stamp of breeding and
+distinction still clung to Courthorne. He would have appeared more in
+place in the States upon the southern Atlantic seaboard, where the
+characteristics the Cavalier settlers brought with them are not
+extinct, than he did upon the Canadian prairie. His voice had even in
+his merriment a little imperious ring, his face was refined as well as
+sensual, and there was a languid gracefulness in his movements and a
+hint of pride in his eyes. They, however, lacked the steadiness of
+Witham's, and there were men who had seen the wild devil that was born
+in Courthorne look out of them. Witham knew him as a pleasant
+companion, but surmised from stories he had heard that there were men,
+and more women, who bitterly rued the trust they had placed in him.
+
+"No," he said dryly. "I scarcely think I am like you, although only
+last night Nettie at the settlement took me for you. You see, the kind
+of life I've led out here has set its mark on me, and my folks in the
+old country were distinctly middle-class people. There is something in
+heredity."
+
+Courthorne did not parry the unexpressed question. "Oh, yes," he said,
+with a little sardonic smile. "I know. The backbone of the
+nation--solemn, virtuous, and slow. You're like them, but my folks
+were different, as you surmise. I don't think they had many estimable
+qualities from your point of view, but if they all didn't go quite
+straight they never went slow, and they had a few prejudices, which is
+why I found it advisable to leave the old country. Still, I've had my
+fill of all that life can offer most folks out here, while you
+scarcely seem to have found virtue pay you. They told me at the
+settlement things were bad with you."
+
+Witham, who was usually correct in his deductions, surmised that his
+companion had an object, and expected something in return for this
+confidence. There was also no need for reticence when every farmer in
+the district knew all about his affairs, while something urged him to
+follow Courthorne's lead.
+
+"Yes," he said quietly. "They are. You see, when I lost my cattle in
+the blizzard, I had to sell out or mortgage the place to the hilt, and
+during the last two years I haven't made the interest. The loan falls
+due in August, and they're going to foreclose on me."
+
+"Then," said Courthorne, "what is keeping you here when the result of
+every hour's work you put in will go straight into another's man's
+pocket?"
+
+Witham smiled a little. "In the first place, I've nowhere else to go,
+and there's something in the feeling that one has held on to the end.
+Besides, until a few days ago I had a vague hope that by working
+double tides, I might get another crop in. Somebody might have
+advanced me a little on it because the mortgage only claims the house
+and land."
+
+Courthorne looked at him curiously. "No. We are not alike," he said.
+"There's a slow stubborn devil in you, Witham, and I think I'd be
+afraid of you if I ever did you an injury. But go on."
+
+"There's very little more. My team ran away down the ravine, and I had
+to put one beast out of its misery. I can't do my ploughing with one
+horse, and that leaves me stranded for the want of the dollars to buy
+another with. It's usually a very little thing that turns the scale,
+but now the end has come, I don't know that I'm sorry. I've never had
+a good time, you see, and the struggle was slowly crushing the life
+out of me."
+
+Witham spoke quietly, without bitterness, but Courthorne, who had
+never striven at all but stretched out his hand and taken what was
+offered, the more willingly when it was banned alike by judicial and
+moral law, dimly understood him. He was a fearless man, but he knew
+his courage would not have been equal to the strain of that six years'
+struggle against loneliness, physical fatigue, and adverse seasons,
+during which disaster followed disaster. He looked at the bronzed
+farmer as he said, "Still, you would do a little in return for a
+hundred dollars that would help you to go on with the fight?"
+
+A faint sparkle crept into Witham's eyes. It was not hope, but rather
+the grim anticipation of the man offered a better weapon when standing
+with his back to the wall.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly. "I would do almost anything."
+
+"Even if it was against the law?"
+
+Witham sat silent for almost a minute, but there was no indecision in
+his face, which slightly perplexed Courthorne. "Yes," he said. "Though
+I kept it while I could, the law was made for the safe-guarding of
+prosperous men, but with such as I am it is every man for his own hand
+and the devil to care for the vanquished. Still, there is a
+reservation."
+
+Courthorne nodded. "It's unlawful, but not against the unwritten
+code."
+
+"Well," said Witham quietly, "when you tell me what you want I should
+have a better opinion."
+
+Courthorne laughed a little, though there was something unpleasant in
+his eyes. "When I first came out to this country I should have
+resented that," he said. "Now, it seems to me that I'm putting too
+much in your hands if I make the whole thing clear before you commit
+yourself in any way."
+
+Witham nodded. "In fact, you have got to trust me. You can do so
+safely."
+
+"The assurance of the guileless is astonishing and occasionally hard
+to bear," said Courthorne. "Why not reverse the position?"
+
+Witham's gaze was steady, and free from embarrassment. "I am," he
+said, "waiting for your offer."
+
+"Then," said Courthorne dryly, "here it is. We are running a big load
+through to the northern settlements and the reserves to-morrow, and
+while there's a good deal of profit attached to the venture, I have a
+notion that Sergeant Stimson has had word of it. Now, the Sergeant
+knows just how I stand with the rustlers, though he can fasten no
+charge on me, and he will have several of his troopers looking out for
+me. Well, I want one of them to see and follow me south along the
+Montana trail. There's no horse in the Government service can keep
+pace with that black of mine, but it would not be difficult to pull
+him and just keep the trooper out of carbine shot behind. When he
+finds he can't overtake the black he'll go off for his comrades, and
+the boys will run our goods across the river while they're picking up
+the trail."
+
+"You mentioned the horse, but not yourself," said Witham quietly.
+
+Courthorne laughed. "Yes," he said; "I will not be there. I'm offering
+you one hundred dollars to ride the black for me. You can put my furs
+on, and anybody who saw you and knew the horse would certify it was
+me."
+
+"And where will you be?"
+
+"Here," said Courthorne dryly. "The boys will have no use for me until
+they want a guide, but they'll leave an unloaded packhorse handy, and,
+as it wouldn't suit any of us to make my connexion with them too
+plain, it will be a night or two later when I join them. In the
+meanwhile your part's quite easy. No trooper could ride you down
+unless you wanted him to, and you'll ride straight on to Montana--I've
+a route marked out for you. You'll stop at the places I tell you, and
+the testimony of anybody who saw you on the black would be quite
+enough to clear me if Stimson's men are too clever for the boys."
+
+Witham sat still a moment, and it was not avarice which prompted him
+when he said, "Considering the risk, one hundred dollars is very
+little."
+
+"Of course," said Courthorne. "Still, it isn't worth any more to me,
+and there will be your expenses. If it doesn't suit you, I will do the
+thing myself and find the boys another guide."
+
+He spoke indifferently, but Witham was not a fool, and knew that he
+was lying.
+
+"Turn your face to the light," he said sharply.
+
+A little ominous glint became visible in Courthorne's eyes, and there
+was just a trace of darker colour in his forehead, but Witham saw it
+and was not astonished. Still Courthorne did not move.
+
+"What made you ask me that?" he said.
+
+Witham watched him closely, but his voice betrayed no special interest
+as he said, "I fancied I saw a mark across your cheek. It seemed to me
+that it had been made by a whip."
+
+The deeper tint was more visible on Courthorne's forehead, where the
+swollen veins showed a trifle, and he appeared to swallow something
+before he spoke. "Aren't you asking too many questions? What has a
+mark on my face to do with you?"
+
+"Nothing," said Witham quietly. "Will you go through the conditions
+again?"
+
+Courthorne nodded. "I pay you one hundred dollars--now," he said. "You
+ride south to-morrow along the Montana trail and take the risk of the
+troopers overtaking you. You will remain away a fortnight at my
+expense, and pass in the meanwhile for me. Then you will return at
+night as rancher Witham, and keep the whole thing a secret from
+everybody."
+
+Witham sat silent and very still again for more than a minute. He
+surmised that the man who made the offer had not told him all and
+there was more behind, but that was, after all, of no great
+importance. He was prepared to do a good deal for one hundred dollars,
+and his bare life of effort and self-denial had grown almost
+unendurable. He had now nothing to lose, and while some impulse urged
+him to the venture, he felt that it was possible fate had in store for
+him something better than he had known in the past. In the meanwhile
+the cigar he held went out, and the striking of a match as Courthorne
+lighted another roused him suddenly from the retrospect he was sinking
+into. The bitter wind still moaned about the ranch, emphasizing its
+loneliness, and the cedar shingles rattled dolefully overhead, while
+it chanced that as Witham glanced towards the roof his eyes rested on
+the suspended piece of rancid pork which with a little flour and a few
+potatoes had during the last few months provided him with a
+sustenance. It was of course a trifle, but it tipped the beam, as
+trifles often do, and the man who was tired of all it symbolized
+straightened himself with a little mirthless laugh.
+
+"On your word of honour there is nothing beyond the risk of a few
+days' detention which can affect me?" he said.
+
+"No," said Courthorne solemnly, knowing that he lied. "On my honour.
+The troopers could only question you. Is it a deal?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham simply, stretching out his hand for the roll of
+bills the other flung down on the table, and, while one of the
+contracting parties knew that the other would regret it bitterly, the
+bargain was made.
+
+Then Courthorne laughed in his usual indolent fashion as he said,
+"Well, it's all decided, and I don't even ask your word. To-morrow
+will see the husk sloughed off and for a fortnight you'll be Lance
+Courthorne. I hope you feel equal to playing the rôle with credit,
+because I wouldn't entrust my good fame to everybody."
+
+Witham smiled dryly. "I fancy I shall," he said, and long afterwards
+recalled the words. "You see, I had ambitions in my callow days, and
+it's not my fault that hitherto I've never had a part to play."
+
+Rancher Witham was, however, wrong in this. He had played the part of
+an honest man with a courage which had brought him to ruin, but there
+was now to be a difference.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+TROOPER SHANNON'S QUARREL
+
+
+There was bitter frost in the darkness outside when two young men
+stood talking in the stables of a little outpost lying a long ride
+back from the settlement in the lonely prairie. One leaned against a
+manger with a pipe in his hand, while the spotless, softly-gleaming
+harness hung up behind him showed what his occupation had been. The
+other stood bolt upright with lips set, and a faint greyness which
+betokened strong emotion showing through his tan. The lantern above
+them flickered in the icy draughts, and from out of the shadows beyond
+its light came the stamping of restless horses and the smell of
+prairie hay, which is pungent with the odours of wild peppermint.
+
+The two lads, and they were very little more, were friends, in spite
+of the difference in their upbringing, for there are few distinctions
+between caste and caste in that country where manhood is still
+esteemed the greatest thing, and the primitive virtues count for more
+than wealth or intellect. Courage and endurance still command respect
+in the new North-West, and that both the lads possessed them was made
+evident by the fact that they were troopers of the North-West police,
+a force of splendid cavalry whose duty it is to patrol the wilderness
+at all seasons and in all weathers, under scorching sun and in
+blinding snow.
+
+The men who keep the peace of the prairie are taught what heat and
+thirst are, when they ride in couples through a desolate waste wherein
+there is only bitter water, parched by pitiless sunrays and whitened
+by the intolerable dust of alkali. They also discover just how much
+cold the human frame can endure, when they lie down with only the
+stars above them, long leagues from the nearest outpost, in a trench,
+scooped in the snow, and they know how near one may come to
+suffocation and yet live through the grassfire's blinding smoke. It
+happens now and then that two who have answered to the last roster in
+the icy darkness do not awaken when the lingering dawn breaks across
+the great white waste, and only the coyote knows their resting-place,
+but the watch and ward is kept, and the lonely settler dwells as safe
+in the wilderness as he would in an English town.
+
+Trooper Shannon was an Irishman from the bush of Ontario, Trooper
+Payne, English, and a scion of a somewhat distinguished family in the
+old country, but while he told nobody why he left it suddenly, nobody
+thought of asking him. He was known to be a bold rider and careful of
+his beast, and that was sufficient for his comrades and the keen-eyed
+Sergeant Stimson. He glanced at his companion thoughtfully as he said,
+"She was a pretty girl. You knew her in Ontario?"
+
+Shannon's hands trembled a little. "Sure," he said, "Larry's place was
+just a mile beyont our clearing, an' there was never a bonnier thing
+than Ailly Blake came out from the old country--but is it need there
+is for talking when ye've seen her? There was once I watched her smile
+at ye with the black eyes that would have melted the heart out of any
+man. Waking and sleeping they're with me still."
+
+Three generations of the Shannons had hewn the lonely clearing further
+into the bush of Ontario and married the daughters of the soil, but
+the Celtic strain, it was evident, had not run out yet. Payne,
+however, came of English stock, and expressed himself differently.
+
+"It was a--shame," he said. "Of course he flung her over. I think you
+saw him, Pat?"
+
+Shannon's face grew greyer, and he quivered visibly as his passion
+shook him, while Payne felt his own blood pulse faster as he
+remembered the graceful dark-eyed girl who had given him and his
+comrade many a welcome meal when their duty took them near her
+brother's homestead. That was, however, before one black day for Ailly
+and Larry Blake when Lance Courthorne also rode that way.
+
+"Yes," said the lad from Ontario, "I was driving in for the stores
+when I met him in the willow bluff, an' Courthorne pulls his divil of
+a black horse up with a little ugly smile on the lips of him when I
+swung the wagon right across the trail.
+
+"'That's not civil, trooper,' says he.
+
+"'I'm wanting a word,' says I, with the black hate choking me at the
+sight of him. 'What have ye done with Ailly?'
+
+"'Is it anything to you?' says he.
+
+"'It's everything,' says I. 'And if ye will not tell me I'll tear it
+out of ye.'
+
+"Courthorne laughs a little, but I saw the divil in his eyes. 'I don't
+think you're quite man enough,' says he, sitting very quiet on the big
+black horse. 'Anyway, I can't tell you where she is just now, because
+she left the dancing saloon she was in down in Montana when I last saw
+her.'
+
+"I had the big whip that day, and I forgot everything as I heard the
+hiss of it round my shoulder. It came home across the ugly face of
+him, and then I flung it down and grabbed the carbine as he swung the
+black round with one hand fumbling in his jacket. It came out empty,
+an' we sat there a moment, the two of us, Courthorne white as death,
+his eyes like burning coals, and the fingers of me trembling on the
+carbine. Sorrow on the man that he hadn't a pistol, or I'd have sent
+the black soul of him to the divil it came from."
+
+The lad panted, and Payne, who had guessed at his hopeless devotion to
+the girl who had listened to Courthorne, made a gesture of disapproval
+that was tempered by sympathy. It was for her sake, he fancied,
+Shannon had left the Ontario clearing and followed Larry Blake to the
+West.
+
+"I'm glad he hadn't, Pat," said Payne. "What was the end of it?"
+
+"I remembered," said the other with a groan, "remembered I was Trooper
+Shannon, an' dropped the carbine into the wagon. Courthorne wheels the
+black horse round, an' I saw the red line across the face of him.
+
+"'You'll be sorry for this, my lad,' says he."
+
+"He's a dangerous man," Payne said thoughtfully. "Pat, you came near
+being a----ass that day. Anyway, it's time we went in, and as Larry's
+here I shouldn't wonder if we saw Courthorne again before the
+morning."
+
+The icy cold went through them to the bone as they left the stables,
+and it was a relief to enter the loghouse, which was heated to
+fustiness by the glowing stove. A lamp hung from a rough birch beam,
+and its uncertain radiance showed motionless figures wrapped in
+blankets in the bunks round the walls. Two men were, however,
+dressing, and one already in uniform sat at a table talking to another
+swathed in furs, who was from his appearance a prairie farmer. The man
+at the table was lean and weather-bronzed, with grizzled hair and
+observant eyes. They were fixed steadily upon the farmer, who knew
+that very little which happened upon the prairie escaped the vigilance
+of Sergeant Stimson.
+
+"It's straight talk you're giving me, Larry? What do you figure on
+making by it?" he said.
+
+The farmer laughed mirthlessly. "Not much, anyway, beyond the chance
+of getting a bullet in me back or me best steer lifted one dark night.
+'Tis not forgiving the rustlers are, and Courthorne's the divil," he
+said. "But listen now, Sergeant; I've told ye where he is, and if
+ye're not fit to corral him I'll ride him down meself."
+
+Sergeant Stimson wrinkled his forehead. "If anybody knows what they're
+after, it should be you," he said, watching the man out of the corner
+of his eyes. "Still, I'm a little worried as to why, when you'll get
+nothing for it, you're anxious to serve the State."
+
+The farmer clenched a big hand. "Sergeant, you that knows everything,
+will ye drive me mad, an' to ---- with the State!" he said. "Sure,
+it's gospel I'm telling ye, an' as you're knowing well, it's me could
+tell where the boys who ride at midnight drop many a keg. Well, if ye
+will have your reason, it was Courthorne who put the black shame on me
+an' mine."
+
+Sergeant Stimson nodded, for he had already suspected this.
+
+"Then," he said dryly, "we'll give you a chance of helping us to put
+the handcuffs on him. Now, because they wouldn't risk the bridge, and
+the ice is not thick yet everywhere, there are just two ways they
+could bring the stuff across, and I figure we'd be near the thing if
+we fixed on Graham's Pool. Still, Courthorne's no kind of fool, and
+just because that crossing seems the likeliest he might try the other
+one. You're ready for duty, Trooper Payne?"
+
+The lad stood straight. "I can turn out in ten minutes, sir," he said.
+
+"Then," and Sergeant Stimson raised his voice a trifle, "you will ride
+at once to the rise a league outside the settlement, and watch the
+Montana trail. Courthorne will probably be coming over from Witham's
+soon after you get there, riding the big black, and you'll keep out of
+sight and follow him. If he heads for Carson's Crossing ride for
+Graham's at a gallop, where you'll find me with the rest. If he makes
+for the bridge, you will overtake him if you can and find out what
+he's after. It's quite likely he'll tell you nothing, and you will not
+arrest him, but bearing in mind that every minute he spends there will
+be a loss to the rustlers you'll keep him so long as you can. Trooper
+Shannon, you'll ride at once to the bluff above Graham's Pool, and
+watch the trail. Stop any man who rides that way, and if it's
+Courthorne keep him until the rest of the boys come up with me. You've
+got your duty quite straight, both of you?"
+
+The lads saluted, and went out, while the Sergeant smiled a little as
+he glanced at the farmer, and the men who were dressing.
+
+"It's steep chances we'll have Mr. Courthorne's company to-morrow,
+boys," he said. "Fill up the kettle, Tom, and serve out a pint of
+coffee. There are reasons why we shouldn't turn out too soon. We'll
+saddle in an hour or so."
+
+Two of the men went out, and the stinging blast that swept in through
+the open door smote a smoky smear across the blinking lamp and roused
+a sharper crackling from the stove. Then one returned with the kettle
+and there was silence, when the fusty heat resumed its sway. Now and
+then a tired trooper murmured in his sleep, or there was a snapping in
+the stove, while the icy wind moaned about the building and the kettle
+commenced a soft sibilation, but nobody moved or spoke. Three shadowy
+figures in uniform sat just outside the light soaking in the grateful
+warmth while they could, for they knew that they might spend the next
+night unsheltered from the Arctic cold of the wilderness. The Sergeant
+sat with thoughtful eyes and wrinkled forehead where the flickering
+radiance forced up his lean face and silhouetted his spare outline on
+the rough boarding behind him, and close by the farmer sucked silently
+at his pipe, waiting, with a stony calm that sprang from fierce
+impatience, the reckoning with the man who had brought back shame upon
+him.
+
+It was about this time when Witham stood shivering a little with the
+bridle of a big black horse in his hand just outside the door of his
+homestead. A valise and two thick blankets were strapped to the
+saddle, and he had donned the fur cap and coat Courthorne usually
+wore. Courthorne himself stood close by, smiling at him sardonically.
+
+"If you keep the cap down and ride with your stirrups long, as I've
+fixed them, anybody would take you for me," said he. "Go straight
+through the settlement, and let any man you come across see you. His
+testimony would come in useful if Stimson tries to fix a charge on me.
+You know your part of the bargain. You're to be Lance Courthorne for a
+fortnight from to-day."
+
+"Yes," said Witham dryly. "I wish I was equally sure of yours."
+
+Courthorne laughed. "I'm to be Rancher Witham until to-morrow night,
+anyway. Don't worry about me. I'll borrow those books of yours and
+improve my mind. Possible starvation is the only thing that threatens
+me, and it's unfortunate you've left nothing fit to eat behind you."
+
+Witham swung himself into the saddle, a trifle awkwardly, for
+Courthorne rode with longer stirrup leathers than he was accustomed
+to, then he raised one hand, and the other man laughed a little as he
+watched him sink into the darkness of the shadowy prairie. When the
+drumming of hoofs was lost in the moaning of the wind he strode
+towards the stable, and taking up the lantern surveyed Witham's horse
+thoughtfully.
+
+"The thing cuts with both edges, and the farmer only sees one of
+them," he said. "That beast's about as difficult to mistake as my
+black is."
+
+Then he returned to the loghouse, and presently put on Witham's old
+fur coat and tattered fur cap. Had Witham seen his unpleasant smile as
+he did it, he would probably have wheeled the black horse and returned
+at a gallop, but the farmer was sweeping across the waste of whitened
+grass at least a league away by this time. Now and then a half-moon
+blinked down between wisps of smoky cloud, but for the most part grey
+dimness hung over the prairie, and the drumming of hoofs rang
+stridently through the silence. Witham knew a good horse, and had bred
+several of them--before a blizzard which swept the prairie killed off
+his finest yearlings as well as their pedigree sire--and his spirits
+rose as the splendid beast swung into faster stride beneath him.
+
+For two weeks at least he would be free from anxiety, and the monotony
+of his life at the lonely homestead had grown horribly irksome. Witham
+was young, and, now when for a brief space he had left his cares
+behind, the old love of adventure which had driven him out from
+England once more awakened and set his blood stirring. For the first
+time in six years of struggle he did not know what lay before him, and
+he had a curious, half-instinctive feeling that the trail he was
+travelling would lead him farther than Montana. It was borne in upon
+him that he had left the old hopeless life behind, and, stirred by
+some impulse, he broke into a little song he had sung in England, long
+and forgotten. He had a clear voice, and the words, which were filled
+with the hope of youth, rang bravely through the stillness of the
+frozen wilderness until the horse blundered, and Witham stopped with a
+little smile.
+
+"It's four long years since I felt as I do to-night," he said.
+
+Then he drew bridle and checked the horse as the lights of the
+settlement commenced to blink ahead, for the trail was rutted deep and
+frozen into the likeness of adamant, but when the first frame houses
+flung tracks of yellow radiance across the whitened grass he dropped
+his left arm a trifle and rode in at a canter as he had seen
+Courthorne do. Witham did not like Courthorne, but he meant to keep
+his bargain.
+
+As he passed the hotel more slowly a man who came out called to him.
+"Hello, Lance! Taking the trail?" he said. "Well, it kind of strikes
+me it's time you did. One of Stimson's boys was down here, and he
+seemed quite anxious about you."
+
+Witham knew the man, and was about to urge the horse forward, but in
+place of it drew bridle, and laughed with a feeling that was wholly
+new to him as he remembered that his neighbours now and then bantered
+him about his English and that Courthorne only used the Western
+colloquialism when it suited him.
+
+"Sergeant Stimson is an enterprising officer, but there are as keen
+men as he is," he said. "You will, in case he questions you, remember
+when you met me."
+
+"Oh, yes," said the other. "Still, I wouldn't fool too much with
+him--and where did you get those mittens from? That's the kind of
+outfit that would suit Witham."
+
+Witham nodded, for though he had turned his face from the light the
+hand he held the bridle with was visible, and his big fur gloves were
+very old.
+
+"They are his. The fact is, I've just come from his place," he said.
+"Well, you can tell Stimson you saw me starting out on the Montana
+trail."
+
+He shook the bridle, laughed softly as the frame houses flitted by,
+and then grew intent when the darkness of the prairie once more closed
+down. It was, he knew probable that some of Stimson's, men would be
+looking out for him, and he had not sufficient faith in Courthorne's
+assurances to court an encounter with them.
+
+The lights had faded, and the harsh grass was, crackling under the
+drumming hoofs when the blurred outline of a mounted man showed up on
+the crest of a rise, and a shout came down.
+
+"Hallo! Pull up there a moment, stranger."
+
+There was nothing alarming in the greeting, but Witham recognized the
+ring of command, as well as the faint jingle of steel which had
+preceded it, and pressed his heels home. The black swung forward
+faster, and Witham glancing over his shoulder, saw, the dusky shape
+was now moving down the incline, Then the voice rose again more
+commandingly.
+
+"Pull up; I want a talk with you."
+
+Witham turned his head a moment, and remembering Courthorne's English,
+flung back the answer, "Sorry, I haven't time."
+
+The faint musical jingle grew plainer, there was a thud of hoofs
+behind, and the curious, exhilaration returned to Witham as the big
+black horse stretched out at a gallop. The soil was hard as granite,
+but the matted grasses formed a covering that rendered fast riding
+possible to a man who took the risks and Witham knew there were few
+horses in the Government service to match the one he rode. Still, it
+was evident that the trooper meant to overtake him, and recollecting
+his compact he tightened his grip on the bridle. It was a long way to
+the ranch where he was to spend the night, and he knew that the
+further he drew the trooper on the better it would suit Courthorne.
+
+So they swept on through the darkness over the empty waste, the
+trooper who was riding hard slowly creeping up behind. Still, Witham
+held the horse in until a glance over his shoulder showed him that
+there was less than a hundred yards between them, and he fancied he
+heard a portentous rattle as well as the thud of hoofs. It was not
+unlike that made by a carbine flung across the saddle. This suggested
+unpleasant possibilities, and he slackened his grip on the bridle.
+Then a breathless shout rang out, "Pull up or I'll fire."
+
+Witham wondered if the threat was genuine or what is termed "bluff" in
+that country, but as he had decided objections to being shot in the
+back to please Courthorne, sent his heels home. The horse shot forward
+beneath him, and though no carbine flashed, the next backward glance
+showed him that the distance between him and the pursuer was drawing
+out, while when he stared ahead again the dark shape of willows or
+birches cut the skyline. As they came back to him the drumming of
+hoofs swelled into a staccato roar, while presently the trail grew
+steep, and dark boughs swayed above him. In another few minutes
+something smooth and level flung back a blink of light, and the
+timbers of a wooden bridge rattled under his passage. Then he was
+racing upwards through the gloom of wind-dwarfed birches on the
+opposite side, listening for the rattle behind him on the bridge, and
+after a struggle with the horse pulled him up smoking when he did not
+hear it.
+
+There was a beat of hoofs across the river, but it was slower than
+when he had last heard it and grew momentarily less audible, and
+Witham laughed as he watched the steam of the horse and his own breath
+rise in a thin white cloud.
+
+"The trooper has given it up, and now for Montana," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IN THE BLUFF
+
+
+It was very dark amidst the birches where Trooper Shannon sat
+motionless in his saddle, gazing down into the denser blackness of the
+river hollow. The stream ran deep below the level of the prairie, as
+the rivers of that country usually do, and the trees, which there
+alone found shelter from the winds, straggled, gnarled and stunted, up
+either side of the steep declivity. Close behind the trooper a sinuous
+trail seamed by ruts and the print of hoofs stretched away across the
+empty prairie. It forked on the outskirts of the bluff, and one arm
+dipped steeply to the river where, because the stream ran slow just
+there and the bottom was firm, a horseman might cross when the water
+was low, and heavy sledges make the passage on the ice in winter time.
+The other arm twisted in and out among the birches towards the bridge,
+but that detour increased the distance to any one travelling north or
+south by two leagues or so.
+
+The ice, however was not very thick as yet, and Shannon, who had heard
+it ring hollowly under him, surmised that while it might be possible
+to lead a laden horse across, there would be some risk attached to the
+operation. For that very reason, and although his opinion had not been
+asked, he agreed with Sergeant Stimson that the whisky-runners would
+attempt the passage. They were men who took the risks as they came,
+and that route would considerably shorten the journey it was
+especially desirable for them to make at night, while it would,
+Shannon fancied, appear probable to them that if the police had word
+of their intentions they would watch the bridge. Between it and the
+frozen ford the stream ran faster, and the trooper decided that no
+mounted man could cross the thinner ice.
+
+It was very cold as well as dark, for although the snow, which usually
+precedes the frost in that country, had not come as yet, it was
+evidently not far away, and the trooper shivered in the blasts from
+the pole which cut through fur and leather with the keenness of steel.
+The temperature had fallen steadily since morning, and now there was a
+presage of a blizzard in the moaning wind and murky sky. If it broke
+and scattered its blinking whiteness upon the roaring blast there
+would be but little hope for any man or beast caught shelterless in
+the empty wilderness, for it is beyond the power of anything made of
+flesh and blood to withstand that cold.
+
+Already a fine haze of snow swirled between the birch twigs every now
+and then, and stung the few patches of the trooper's unprotected skin
+as though they had been pricked with red-hot needles. It, however,
+seldom lasted more than a minute, and when it whirled away, a
+half-moon shone down for a moment between smoky clouds. The uncertain
+radiance showed the thrashing birches rising from the hollow, row on
+row, struck a faint sparkle from the ice beneath them, and then went
+out, leaving the gloom intensified. It was evident to Shannon that his
+eyes would not be much use to him that night, for which reason he kept
+his ears uncovered at the risk of losing them, but though he had been
+born in the bush and all the sounds of the wilderness had for him a
+meaning, hearing did not promise to be of much assistance. The dim
+trees roared about him with a great thrashing of twigs, and when the
+wilder gusts had passed there was an eery moaning, through which came
+the murmur of leagues of tormented grasses. The wind was rising
+rapidly, and it would, he fancied, drown the beat of approaching hoofs
+as well as any cry from his comrades.
+
+Four of them were hidden amidst the birches where the trail wound
+steeply upwards through the bluff across the river, two on the nearer
+side not far below, and Trooper Shannon's watch would serve two
+purposes. He was to let the rustlers pass him it they rode for the
+ford, and then help to cut off the retreat of any who escaped the
+sergeant, while if they found the ice too thin for loaded beasts or
+rode towards the bridge, a flash from his carbine would bring his
+comrades across in time to join the others who were watching that
+trail. It had, as usual with Stimson's schemes, all been carefully
+thought out and the plan was eminently workable, but unfortunately for
+the grizzled sergeant a better brain than his had foreseen the
+combination.
+
+In the meanwhile the lad felt his limbs grow stiff and almost useless,
+and a lethargic numbness blunt the keenness of his faculties as the
+heat went out of him. He had more than usual endurance, and utter
+cold, thirst, and the hunger that most ably helps the frost, are not
+infrequently the portion of the wardens of the prairie; but there is a
+limit to what man can bear, and the troopers who watched by the frozen
+river that night had almost reached it. Shannon could not feel the
+stirrups with his feet. One of his ears was tingling horribly as the
+blood that had almost left it resumed its efforts to penetrate the
+congealing flesh, while the mittened hands he beat upon his breast
+fell solidly on his wrappings without separate motion of the fingers.
+Once or twice the horse stamped fretfully, but a touch of hand and
+heel quieted him, for though the frozen flesh may shrink, unwavering
+obedience is demanded equally from man and beast enrolled in the
+service of the North-West police.
+
+"Stiddy now," said the lad, partly to discover if he still retained
+the power of speech. "Sure ye know the order that was given me, and if
+it's a funeral that comes of it the Government will bury ye."
+
+He sighed as he beat his hands upon his breast again, and when a
+flicker of moonlight smote a passing track of brightness athwart the
+tossing birches his young face was very grim. Like many another
+trooper of the North-West police, Shannon had his story, and he
+remembered the one trace of romance that had brightened his hard, bare
+life that night as he waited for the man who had dissipated it.
+
+When Larry Blake moved West from Ontario, Shannon, drawn by his
+sister's dark eyes, followed him, and took up a Government grant of
+prairie sod. His dollars were few, but he had a stout heart and two
+working oxen, and nothing seemed impossible while Ailly Blake smiled
+on him, and she smiled tolerably frequently, for Shannon was a
+well-favoured lad. He had worked harder than most grown men could do,
+won one good harvest, and had a few dollars in the bank when
+Courthorne rode up to Blake's homestead on his big black horse. After
+that, all Shannon's hopes and ambitions came down with a crash; and
+the day he found Blake grey in face with shame and rage he offered
+Sergeant Stimson his services. Now he was filled with an unholy
+content that he had done so, for he came of a race that does not
+forget an injury, and had sufficient cause for a jealous pride in the
+virtue of its women. He and Larry might have forgiven a pistol shot,
+but they could not forget the shame.
+
+Suddenly he stiffened to attention, for though a man of the cities
+would probably have heard nothing but the wailing of the wind, he
+caught a faint rhythmic drumming which might have been made by a
+galloping horse. It ceased, and he surmised, probably correctly, that
+it was Trooper Payne returning. It was, however, his business to watch
+the forking of the trail, and when he could only hear the thrashing of
+the birches, he moved his mittened hand from the bridle, and patted
+the restive horse. Just then the bluff was filled with sound as a
+blast that drove a haze of snow before it roared down. It was followed
+by a sudden stillness that was almost bewildering, and when a blink of
+moonlight came streaming down, Trooper Shannon grabbed at his carbine,
+for a man stood close beside him in the trail. The lad, who had
+neither seen nor heard him come, looked down on the glinting barrel of
+a Marlin rifle and saw a set white face behind it.
+
+"Hands up!" said a hoarse voice. "Throw that thing down,"
+
+Trooper Shannon recognized it, and all the fierce hate he was capable
+of flamed up. It shook him with a gust of passion, and it was not fear
+that caused his stiffened fingers to slip upon the carbine. It fell
+with a rattle, and while he sat still, almost breathless and livid in
+face, the man laughed a little.
+
+"That's better; get down," he said.
+
+Trooper Shannon swung himself from the saddle, and alighted heavily as
+a flung-off sack would have done, for his limbs refused to bend. Still
+it was not from lack of courage that he obeyed, and during one moment
+he had clutched the bridle with the purpose of riding over his enemy.
+He had, however, been taught to think for himself swiftly and shrewdly
+from his boyhood up, and realized instinctively that if he escaped
+scathless the ringing of the rifle would warn the rustlers who, he
+surmised, were close behind. He was also a police trooper broken to
+the iron bond of discipline, and if a bullet from the Marlin was to
+end his career, he determined it should, if possible, also terminate
+his enemy's liberty. The gust of rage had gone, and left him with the
+cold vindictive cunning the Celt who has a grievous injury to remember
+is also capable of, and there was contempt in his voice as he turned
+to Courthorne quietly.
+
+"Sure it's your turn now," he said. "The last time I put my mark on
+the divil's face of ye."
+
+Courthorne laughed wickedly. "It was a bad day's work for you; I
+haven't forgotten yet," he said. "I'm only sorry you're not a trifle
+older, but it will teach Sergeant Stimson the folly of sending a lad
+to deal with me. Well, walk straight into the bush, and remember that
+the muzzle of the rifle is scarcely three feet behind you!"
+
+Trooper Shannon did so with black rage in his heart, and his empty
+hands at his sides. He was a police trooper and a bushman born, and
+knew that the rustlers' laden horses would find some difficulty in
+remounting the steep trail and could not escape to left or right once
+they were entangled amidst the trees. Then it would be time to give
+the alarm, and go down with a bullet in his body, or by some
+contrivance evade the deadly rifle and come to grips with his enemy.
+He also knew Lance Courthorne, and, remembering how the lash had
+seamed his face, expected no pity. One of them it was tolerably
+certain would have set out on the long trail before the morning, but
+they breed grim men in the bush of Ontario, and no other kind ride
+very long with the wardens of the prairie.
+
+"Stop where you are," said Courthorne presently. "Now then, turn
+round. Move a finger or open your lips, and I'll have great pleasure
+in shooting you. In the meanwhile you can endeavour to make favour
+with whatever saint is honoured by the charge of you."
+
+Shannon smiled in a fashion that resembled a snarl as once more a
+blink of moonlight shone down upon them, and in place of showing
+apprehension, his young white face, from which the bronze had faded,
+was venomous.
+
+"And my folks were Orange, but what does that matter now?" said he.
+"There'll be one of us in----to-morrow, but for the shame ye put on
+Larry ye'll carry my mark there with ye."
+
+Courthorne looked at him with a little glow in his eyes. "You haven't
+felt mine yet," he said. "You will probably talk differently when you
+do."
+
+It may have been youthful bravado, but Trooper Shannon laughed. "In
+the meanwhile," he said, "I'm wondering why you're wearing an honest
+man's coat and cap. Faith, if he saw them on ye, Witham would burn
+them."
+
+Courthorne returned no answer and the moonlight went out, but they
+stood scarcely three feet apart, and one of them knew that any move he
+made would be followed by the pressure of the other's finger on the
+trigger. He, however, did not move at all, and while the birches
+roared about them they stood silently face to face, the man of birth
+and pedigree with a past behind him and blood already upon his head,
+and the raw lad from the bush, his equal before the tribunal that
+would presently judge their quarrel.
+
+In the meanwhile Trooper Shannon heard a drumming of hoofs that grew
+steadily louder before Courthorne apparently noticed the sound, and
+his trained ears told him that the rustlers' horses were coming down
+the trail. Now they had passed the forking, and when the branches
+ceased roaring again he knew they had floundered down the first of the
+declivity, and it would be well to wait a little until they had
+straggled out where the trail was narrow and deeply rutted. No one
+could turn them hastily there, and the men who drove them could
+scarcely escape the troopers who waited them, if they blundered on
+through the darkness of the bush. So five breathless minutes passed,
+Trooper Shannon standing tense and straight with every nerve tingling
+as he braced himself for an effort, Courthorne stooping a little with
+forefinger on the trigger, and the Marlin rifle at his hip. Then
+through a lull there rose a clearer thud of hoofs. It was lost in the
+thrashing of the twigs as a gust roared down again, and Trooper
+Shannon launched himself like a panther upon his enemy.
+
+He might have succeeded, and the effort was gallantly made, but
+Courthorne had never moved his eyes from the shadowy object before
+him, and even as it sprang, his finger contracted further on the
+trigger. There was a red flash and because he fired from the hip the
+trigger guard gashed his mitten. He sprang sideways, scarcely feeling
+the bite of the steel, for the lad's hand brushed his shoulder. Then
+there was a crash as something went down heavily amidst the crackling
+twigs. Courthorne stooped a little, panting in the smoke that blew
+into his eyes, jerked the Marlin lever, and, as the moon came through
+again, had a blurred vision of a white, drawn face that stared up at
+him still with defiance in its eyes. He looked down into it as he drew
+the trigger once more.
+
+Shannon quivered a moment, and then lay very still, and it was high
+time for Courthorne to look to himself, for there was a shouting in
+the bluff, and something came crashing through the undergrowth. Even
+then his cunning did not desert him, and flinging the Marlin down
+beside the trooper, he slipped almost silently in and out among the
+birches and swung himself into the saddle of a tethered horse.
+Unlooping the bridle from a branch, he pressed his heels home,
+realizing as he did it that there was no time to lose, for it was
+evident that one of the troopers was somewhat close behind him, and
+others were coming across the river. He knew the bluff well, and
+having no desire to be entangled in it was heading for the prairie,
+when a blink of moonlight showed him a lad in uniform riding at a
+gallop between him and the crest of the slope. It was Trooper Payne,
+and Courthorne knew him for a very bold horseman.
+
+Now, it is possible that had one of the rustlers, who were simple men
+with primitive virtues as well as primitive passions, been similarly
+placed, he would have joined his comrades and taken his chance with
+them, but Courthorne kept faith with nobody unless it suited him, and
+was equally dangerous to his friends and enemies. Trooper Shannon had
+also been silenced for ever, and if he could cross the frontier
+unrecognized, nobody would believe the story of the man he would leave
+to bear the brunt in place of him. Accordingly he headed at a gallop
+down the winding trail, while sharp orders and a drumming of hoofs
+grew louder behind him, and hoarse cries rose in front. Trooper Payne
+was, it seemed, at least keeping pace with him, and he glanced over
+his shoulder as he saw something dark and shadowy across the trail. It
+was apparently a horse from which two men were struggling to loose its
+burden.
+
+Courthorne guessed that the trail was blocked in front of it by other
+loaded beasts, and he could not get past in time, for the half-seen
+trooper was closing with him fast, and another still rode between him
+and the edge of the bluff cutting off his road to the prairie. It was
+evident he could not go on, while the crackle of twigs, roar of hoofs,
+and jingle of steel behind him, made it plain that to turn was to ride
+back upon the carbines of men who would be quite willing to use them.
+There alone remained the river. It ran fast below him, and the ice was
+thin, and for just a moment he tightened his grip on the bridle.
+
+"We've got you!" a hoarse voice reached him. "You're taking steep
+chances if you go on."
+
+Courthorne swung off from the trail. There was a flash above him,
+something whirred through the twigs above his head, and the horse
+plunged as he drove his heels in.
+
+"One of them gone for the river," another shout rang out, and
+Courthorne was crashing through the undergrowth straight down the
+declivity, while thin snow whirled about him, and now and then he
+caught the faint glimmer flung back by the ice beneath.
+
+Swaying boughs lashed him, his fur cap was whipped away, and he felt
+that his face was bleeding, but there was another crackle close behind
+him, for Trooper Payne was riding as daringly, and he carried a
+carbine. Had he desired it Courthorne could not turn. The bronco he
+bestrode was madly excited and less than half broken, and it is
+probable no man could have pulled him up just then. It may also have
+been borne in upon Courthorne, that he owed a little to those he had
+left behind him in the old country, and he had not lost his pride.
+There was, it seemed, no escape, but he had at least a choice of
+endings, and with a little breathless laugh he rode straight for the
+river.
+
+It was with difficulty Trooper Payne pulled his horse up on the steep
+bank a minute later. A white haze was now sliding down the hollow
+between the two dark walls of trees, and something seemed to move in
+the midst of it while the ice rang about it. Then, as the trooper
+pitched up his carbine, there was a crash that was followed by a
+horrible floundering and silence again. Payne sat still, shivering a
+little in his saddle until the snow that whirled about him blotted out
+all the birches, and a roaring blast came down.
+
+He knew there was now nothing that he could do. The current had
+evidently sucked the fugitive under, and, dismounting, he groped his
+way up the slope, leading the horse by the bridle, and only swung
+himself into the saddle when he found the trail again. A carbine
+flashed in front of him, two dim figures went by at a gallop, and a
+third one flung an order over his shoulder as he passed.
+
+"Go back. The Sergeant's hurt and Shannon has got a bullet in him."
+
+Trooper Payne had surmised as much already, and went back as fast as
+he could ride, while the beat of hoofs grew fainter down the trail.
+Ten minutes later he drew bridle close by a man who held a lantern,
+and saw Sergeant Stimson sitting very grim in face on the ground. It
+transpired later that his horse had fallen and thrown him, and it was
+several weeks before he rode again.
+
+"You lost your man?" he said. "Get down."
+
+Payne dismounted. "Yes, sir, I fancy he is dead," he said. "He tried
+the river, and the ice wouldn't carry him. I saw him ride away from
+here just after the first shot, and fancied he fired at Shannon. Have
+you seen him, sir?"
+
+The other trooper moved his lantern, and Payne gasped as he saw a
+third man stooping, with the white face of his comrade close by his
+feet. Shannon appeared to recognize him, for his eyes moved a little
+and the grey lips fell apart. Then Payne turned his head aside while
+the other trooper nodded compassionately in answer to his questioning
+glance.
+
+"I've sent one of the boys to Graham's for a wagon," said the
+Sergeant. "You saw the man who fired at him?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said Trooper Payne.
+
+"You knew him?" and there was a ring in the Sergeant's voice.
+
+"Yes, sir," said the trooper. "At least he was riding Witham's horse,
+and had on the old, long coat of his."
+
+Sergeant Stimson nodded, and pointed to the weapon lying with
+blackened muzzle at his feet. "And I think you could recognize that
+rifle? There's F. Witham cut on the stock of it."
+
+Payne said nothing, for the trooper signed to him.
+
+"I fancy Shannon wants to talk to you," he said.
+
+The lad knelt down, slipped one arm about his comrade's neck, and took
+the mittened hand in his own. Shannon smiled up at him feebly.
+
+"Witham's horse and his cap," he said, and then stopped, gasping
+horribly.
+
+"You will remember that, boys," said the Sergeant.
+
+Payne could say nothing. Trooper Shannon and he had ridden through icy
+blizzard and scorching heat together, and he felt his manhood melting
+as he looked down into his dimming eyes. There was a curious look in
+them which suggested a strenuous endeavour and an appeal, and the lips
+moved again.
+
+"It was," said Shannon, and moved his head a little on Payne's arm,
+apparently in an agony of effort.
+
+Then the birches roared about them, and drowned the feeble utterance,
+while, when the gust passed, all three, who had not heard what
+preceded it, caught only one word--"Witham."
+
+Trooper Shannon's eyes closed, and his head fell back, while the snow
+beat softly in to his upturned face, and there was a very impressive
+silence, intensified by the moaning of the wind, until the rattle of
+wheels came faintly down the trail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MISS BARRINGTON COMES HOME
+
+
+The long train was slackening speed and two whistles rang shrilly
+through the roar of wheels when Miss Barrington laid down the book
+with which she had beguiled her journey of fifteen hundred miles, and
+rose from her seat in a corner of the big first-class car. The car was
+sumptuously upholstered, and its decorations tasteful as well as
+lavish, but just then it held no other passenger, and Miss Barrington
+smiled curiously as she stood, swaying a little, in front of the
+mirror at one end of it, wrapping her furs about her. There was,
+however, a faint suggestion of regret in the smile, and the girl's
+eyes grew grave again, for the soft cushions, dainty curtains,
+gleaming gold and nickel, and equable temperature formed a part of the
+sheltered life she was about to leave behind her, and there would, she
+knew, be a difference in the future. Still, she laughed again as,
+drawing a little fur cap well down upon her broad, white forehead, she
+nodded at her own reflection.
+
+"One cannot have everything, and you might have stayed there and
+revelled in civilization if you had liked," she said.
+
+Crossing to the door of the portico she stood a moment with fingers on
+its handle, and once more looked about her. The car was very cosy, and
+Maud Barrington had all the average young woman's appreciation of the
+smoother side of life, although she had also the capacity, which is by
+no means so common, for extracting the most it had to give from the
+opposite one. Still, it was with a faint regret she prepared to
+complete what had been a deed of renunciation. Montreal, with its
+gaieties and luxuries, had not seemed so very far away while she was
+carried West amid all the comforts artizans who were also artists
+could provide for the traveller, but once that door closed behind her
+she would be cut adrift from it all, and left face to face with the
+simple, strenuous life of the prairie.
+
+Maud Barrington had, however, made her mind up some weeks ago; and
+when the lock closed with a little clack that seemed to emphasize the
+fact that the door was shut, she had shaken the memories from her, and
+was quietly prepared to look forward instead of back. It also needed
+some little courage, for, as she stood with the furs fluttering about
+her on the lurching platform, the cold went through her like a knife,
+and the roofs of the little prairie town rose up above the willows the
+train was now crawling through. The odours that greeted her nostrils
+were the reverse of pleasant, and glancing down with the faintest
+shiver of disgust, her eyes rested on the litter of empty cans,
+discarded garments, and other even more unsightly things which are
+usually dumped in the handiest bluff by the citizens of a springing
+Western town. They have, for the most part, but little appreciation of
+the picturesque, and it would take a good deal to affect their health.
+
+Then the dwarfed trees opened out, and flanked by two huge wheat
+elevators and a great water tank, the prairie city stood revealed. It
+was crude and repellent, devoid of anything that could please the most
+lenient eye, for the bare frame houses rose with their rough boarding
+weathered and cracked by frost and sun, hideous almost in their
+simplicity, from the white prairie. Paint was apparently an unknown
+luxury, and pavement there was none, though a rude plank platform
+straggled some distance above the ground down either side of the
+street, so that the citizens might not sink knee-deep in the mire of
+the spring thawing. Here and there a dilapidated wagon was drawn up in
+front of a store, but with a clanging of the big bell the locomotive
+rolled into the little station, and Maud Barrington looked down upon a
+group of silent men who had sauntered there to enjoy the one
+relaxation the desolate place afforded them.
+
+There was very little in their appearance to attract the attention of
+a young woman of Miss Barrington's upbringing. They had grave, bronzed
+faces, and wore, for the most part, old fur coats stained here and
+there with soil. Nor were their mittens and moccasins in good repair,
+but there was a curious steadiness in their gaze which vaguely
+suggested the slow, stubborn courage that upheld them through the
+strenuous effort and grim self-denial of their toilsome lives. They
+were small wheat-growers who had driven in to purchase provisions or
+inquire the price of grain, and here and there a mittened hand was
+raised to a well-worn cap, for most of them recognized Miss Barrington
+of Silverdale Grange. She returned their greetings graciously, and
+then swung herself from the platform, with a smile in her eyes as a
+man came hastily and yet, as it were, with a certain deliberation in
+her direction.
+
+He was elderly, but held himself erect, while his furs, which were
+good, fitted him in a fashion which suggested a uniform. He also wore
+boots which reached half-way to the knee, and were presumably lined to
+resist the prairie cold, which few men at that season would do, and
+scarcely a speck of dust marred their lustrous exterior, while as much
+of his face as was visible beneath the great fur cap was lean and
+commanding. Its salient features were the keen and somewhat imperious
+grey eyes and long, straight nose, while something in the squareness
+of the man's shoulders and his pose set him apart from the prairie
+farmers and suggested the cavalry officer. He was, in fact, Colonel
+Barrington, founder and autocratic ruler of the English community of
+Silverdale, and had been awaiting his niece somewhat impatiently.
+Colonel Barrington was invariably punctual, and resented the fact that
+the train had come in an hour later than it should have done.
+
+"So you have come back to us. We have been longing for you, my dear,"
+he said. "I don't know what we should have done had they kept you in
+Montreal altogether."
+
+Maud Barrington smiled, though there was a brightness in her eyes and
+a faint warmth in her cheek, for the sincerity of her uncle's welcome
+was evident.
+
+"Yes," she said, "I have come back. It was very pleasant in the city,
+and they were all kind to me; but I think, henceforward, I would
+sooner stay with you on the prairie."
+
+Colonel Barrington patted the hand he drew through his arm, and there
+was a very kindly smile in his eyes as they left the station and
+crossed the tract towards a little, and by no means very comfortable,
+wooden hotel. He stopped outside it.
+
+"I want to see the horses put in and get our mail," he said. "Mrs.
+Jasper expects you, and will have tea ready."
+
+He disappeared behind the wooden building, and his niece standing a
+moment on the veranda watched the long train roll away down the faint
+blur of track that ran west to the farthest verge of the great white
+wilderness. Then with a little impatient gesture she went into the
+hotel.
+
+"That is another leaf turned down, and there is no use in looking
+back; but I wonder what is written on the rest," she said.
+
+Twenty minutes later she watched Colonel Barrington cross the street
+with a bundle of letters in his hand. She fancied that his step was
+slower than it had been, and that he seemed a trifle preoccupied and
+embarrassed; but he spoke with quiet kindliness when he handed her
+into the waiting sleigh, and the girl's spirits rose as they swung
+smoothly northwards behind two fast horses across the prairie. It
+stretched away before her, ridged here and there with a dusky birch
+bluff or willow grove under a vault of crystalline blue. The sun that
+had no heat in it struck a silvery glitter from the snow, and the
+trail swept back to the horizon a sinuous blue-grey smear, while the
+keen, dry cold and sense of swift motion set the girl's blood
+stirring. After all, it seemed to her, there were worse lives than
+those the Western farmers led on the great levels under the frost and
+sun.
+
+Colonel Barrington watched her with a little gleam of approval in his
+eyes. "You are not sorry to come back to this and Silverdale?" he
+said, sweeping his mittened hand vaguely round the horizon.
+
+"No," said the girl, with a little laugh. "At least, I shall not be
+sorry to return to Silverdale. It has a charm of its own, for while
+one is occasionally glad to get away from it, one is even more pleased
+to come home again. It is a somewhat purposeless life our friends are
+leading yonder in the cities. I, of course, mean the women."
+
+Barrington nodded. "And some of the men! Well, we have room here for
+the many who are going to the devil in the old country for the lack of
+something worth while to do; though I am afraid there is considerably
+less prospect than I once fancied there would be of their making
+money."
+
+His niece noticed the gravity in his face, and sat thoughtfully silent
+for several minutes, while, with the snow hissing beneath it, the
+sleigh nipped into and swung out of a hollow.
+
+Colonel Barrington had founded the Silverdale settlement ten years
+earlier, and gathered about him other men with a grievance who had
+once served their nation, and the younger sons of English gentlemen
+who had no inclination for commerce, and found that lack of brains and
+capital debarred them from either a political or military career. He
+had settled them on the land, and taught them to farm, while, for the
+community had prospered at first when Western wheat was dear, it had
+taken ten years to bring home to him the fact that men who dined
+ceremoniously each evening and spent at least a third of their time in
+games and sport, could not well compete with the grim bushmen from
+Ontario, or the lean Dakota ploughmen, who ate their meals in ten
+minutes and toiled at least twelve hours every day.
+
+Colonel Barrington was slow to believe that the race he sprang from
+could be equalled and much less beaten at anything, while his respect
+for and scrupulous observance of insular traditions had cost him a
+good deal, and left him a poorer man than he had been when he founded
+Silverdale. Maud Barrington had been his ward, and he still directed
+the farming of a good many acres of wheat land which she now held in
+her own right. The soil was excellent, and would in all probability
+have provided one of the Ontario men with a very desirable revenue,
+but Colonel Barrington had no taste for small economies.
+
+"I want to hear all the news," said the girl. "You can begin at the
+beginning--the price of wheat. I fancied, when I saw you, it had been
+declining."
+
+Barrington sighed a little. "Hard wheat is five cents down, and I am
+sorry I persuaded you to hold your crop. I am very much afraid we
+shall see the balance the wrong side again next half-year."
+
+Maud Barrington smiled curiously. There was no great cause for
+merriment in the information given her, but it emphasized the contrast
+between the present and the careless life she had lately led when her
+one thought had been how to extract the greatest pleasure from the
+day. One had frequently to grapple with the problems arising from
+scanty finances at Silverdale.
+
+"It will go up again," she said. "Is there anything else?"
+
+Barrington's face grew a trifle grim as he nodded. "There is; and
+while I have not much expectation of an advance in prices, I have been
+worrying over another affair lately."
+
+His niece regarded him steadily. "You mean, Lance Courthorne?"
+
+"Yes," said Barrington, who flicked the near horse somewhat viciously
+with the whip. "He is also sufficient to cause any man with my
+responsibilities anxiety."
+
+Maud Barrington looked thoughtful. "You fancy he will come to
+Silverdale?"
+
+Barrington appeared to be repressing an inclination towards vigorous
+speech with some difficulty, and a little glint crept into his eyes.
+"If I could by any means prevent it, the answer would be, No. As it
+is, you know that, while I founded it, Silverdale was one of Geoffrey
+Courthorne's imperialistic schemes, and a good deal of the land was
+recorded in his name. That being so, he had every right to leave the
+best farm on it to the man he had disinherited, especially as Lance
+will not get a penny of the English property. Still, I do not know why
+he did so, because he never spoke of him without bitterness."
+
+"Yes," said the girl, while a little flush crept into her face. "I was
+sorry for the old man. It was a painful story."
+
+Colonel Barrington nodded. "It is one that is best forgotten--and you
+do not know it all. Still, the fact that the man may settle among us
+is not the worst. As you know, there was every reason to believe that
+Geoffrey intended all his property at Silverdale for you."
+
+"I have much less right to it than his own son, and the colonial cure
+is not infrequently efficacious," said Miss Barrington. "Lance may,
+after all, quieten down, and he must have some good qualities."
+
+The Colonel's smile was very grim. "It is fifteen years since I saw
+him at Westham, and they were not much in evidence then. I can
+remember two little episodes, in which he figured, with painful
+distinctness, and one was the hanging of a terrier which had in some
+way displeased him. The beast was past assistance when I arrived on
+the scene, but the devilish pleasure in the lad's face sent a chill
+through me. In the other, the gardener's lad flung a stone at a
+blackbird on the wall above the vinery, and Master Lance, who, I
+fancy, did not like the gardener's lad, flung one through the glass.
+Geoffrey, who was angry, but had not seen what I did, haled the boy
+before him, and Lance looked him in the face and lied with the
+assurance of an ambassador. The end was that the gardener, who was
+admonished, cuffed the innocent lad. These, my dear, are somewhat
+instructive memories."
+
+"I wonder," said Maud Barrington, glancing out across the prairie
+which was growing dusky now, "why you took the trouble to call them up
+for me?"
+
+The Colonel smiled dryly. "I never saw a Courthorne who could not
+catch a woman's eye, or had any undue diffidence about making the most
+of the fact; and that is partly why they have brought so much trouble
+on everybody connected with them. Further, it is unfortunate that
+women are not infrequently more inclined to be gracious to the sinner
+who repents, when it is worth his while, than they are to the honest
+man who has done no wrong. Nor do I know that it is only pity which
+influences them. Some of you take an exasperating delight in
+picturesque rascality."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed, and fearlessly met her uncle's glance. "Then
+you don't believe in penitence?"
+
+"Well," said the Colonel dryly, "I am, I hope, a Christian man, but it
+would be difficult to convince me that the gambler, cattle-thief, and
+whisky-runner who ruined every man and woman who trusted him will be
+admitted to the same place as clean-lived English gentlemen. There
+are, my dear, plenty of them still."
+
+Barrington spoke almost fiercely, and then flushed through his tan,
+when the girl, looking into his eyes, smiled a little. "Yes," she
+said, "I can believe it, because I owe a good deal to one of them."
+
+The ring in the girl's voice belied the smile, and the speech was
+warranted; for, dogmatic, domineering, and vindictive as he was apt to
+be occasionally, the words he had used applied most fitly to Colonel
+Barrington. His word at least had never been broken, and had he not
+adhered steadfastly to his own rigid code, he would have been a good
+deal richer man than he was then. Nor did his little shortcomings,
+which were burlesqued virtues, and ludicrous now and then, greatly
+detract from the stamp of dignity which, for speech was his worst
+point, sat well upon him. He was innately conservative to the
+backbone, though since an ungrateful Government had slighted him, he
+had become an ardent Canadian, and in all political questions
+aggressively democratic.
+
+"My dear, I sometimes fancy I am a hypercritical old fogey!" he said,
+and sighed a little, while once more the anxious look crept into his
+face. "Just now I wish devoutly I was a better business man."
+
+Nothing more was said for a little, and Miss Barrington watched the
+crimson sunset burn out low down on the prairie's western rim. Then
+the pale stars blinked out through the creeping dusk, and a great
+silence and an utter cold settled down upon the waste. The muffled
+thud of hoofs, and the crunching beneath the sliding steel, seemed to
+intensify it, and there was a suggestion of frozen brilliancy in the
+sparkle flung back by the snow. Then a coyote howled dolefully in a
+distant bluff, and the girl shivered as she shrank down further amidst
+the furs.
+
+"Forty degrees of frost," said the Colonel. "Perhaps more. This is
+very different from the cold of Montreal. Still, you'll see the lights
+of Silverdale from the crest of the next rise."
+
+It was, however, an hour before they reached them, and Miss Barrington
+was almost frozen when the first square loghouse rose out of the
+prairie. It and others that followed it flitted by, and then, flanked
+by a great birch bluff, with outlying barns, granaries and stables,
+looming black about it against a crystalline sky, Silverdale Grange
+grew into shape across their way. Its rows of ruddy windows cast
+streaks of flickering orange down the trail, the baying of dogs
+changed into a joyous clamour when the Colonel reined in his team,
+half-seen men in furs waved a greeting, and one who risked frost-bite,
+with his cap at his knee, handed Miss Barrington from the sleigh and
+up the veranda stairway.
+
+She had need of the assistance, for her limbs were stiff and almost
+powerless, and she gasped a little when she passed into the drowsy
+warmth and brightness of the great log-walled hall. The chilled blood
+surged back tingling to her skin, and swaying with a creeping
+faintness she found refuge in the arms of a grey-haired lady who
+stooped and kissed her gently. Then the door swung to, and she was
+home again in the wooden grange of Silverdale, which stood far remote
+from any civilization but its own on the frozen levels of the great
+white plain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ANTICIPATIONS
+
+
+It was late at night, and outside the prairie lay white and utterly
+silent under the Arctic cold, when Maud Barrington, who glanced at it
+through the double windows, flung back the curtains with a little
+shiver, and turning towards the fire, sat down on a little velvet
+footstool beside her aunt's knee. She had shaken out the coils of
+lustrous brown hair which flowed about her shoulders glinting in the
+light of the shaded lamp, and it was with a little gesture of physical
+content she stretched her hands towards the hearth. A crumbling birch
+log still gleamed redly amidst the feathery ashes, but its effect was
+chiefly artistic, for no open fire could have dissipated the cold of
+the prairie, and a big tiled stove brought from Teutonic Minnesota
+furnished the needful warmth.
+
+The girl's face was partly in shadow, and her figure foreshortened by
+her pose, which accentuated its rounded outline and concealed its
+willowy slenderness; but the broad white forehead and straight nose
+became visible when she moved her head a trifle, and a faintly
+humorous sparkle crept into the clear brown eyes. Possibly Maud
+Barrington looked her best just then, for the lower part of the
+pale-tinted face was a trifle too firm in its modelling.
+
+"No, I am not tired, aunt, and I could not sleep just now," she said.
+"You see, after leaving all that behind one, one feels, as it were,
+adrift, and it is necessary to realize one's self again."
+
+The little silver-haired lady who sat in the big basket chair smiled
+down upon her and laid a thin white hand that was still beautiful upon
+the gleaming hair.
+
+"I can understand, my dear, and am glad you enjoyed your stay in the
+city, because sometimes when I count your birthdays, I can't help a
+fancy that you are not young enough," she said. "You have lived out
+here with two old people who belong to the past too much."
+
+The girl moved a little, and swept her glance slowly round the room.
+It was small and scantily furnished, though great curtains shrouded
+door and window, and here and there a picture relieved the bareness of
+the walls, which were panelled with roughly-dressed British-Columbian
+cedar. The floor was of redwood, diligently polished and adorned, not
+covered, by one or two skins brought by some of Colonel Barrington's
+younger neighbours from the Rockies. There were two basket-chairs and
+a plain, redwood table; but in contrast to them a cabinet of old
+French workmanship stood in one corner bearing books in dainty
+bindings, and two great silver candlesticks. The shaded lamp was also
+of the same metal, and the whole room with its faint resinous smell
+conveyed, in a fashion not uncommon on the prairie, a suggestion of
+taste and refinement held in check by the least comparative poverty.
+Colonel Barrington was a widower who had been esteemed a man of
+wealth, but the founding of Silverdale had made a serious inroad on
+his finances. Even yet, though he occasionally practised it, he did
+not take kindly to economy.
+
+"Yes," said the girl, "I enjoyed it all--and it was so different from
+the prairie."
+
+There was comprehension, and a trace of sympathy, in Miss Barrington's
+nod. "Tell me a little, my dear," she said. "There was not a great
+deal in your letters."
+
+Her niece glanced dreamily into the sinking fire as though she would
+call up the pictures there. "But you know it all--the life I have only
+had glimpses of. Well, for the first few months I almost lost my head,
+and was swung right off my feet by the whirl of it. It was then I was,
+perhaps, just a trifle thoughtless."
+
+The while-haired lady laughed softly. "It is difficult to believe it,
+Maud."
+
+The girl shook her head reproachfully. "I know what you mean, and
+perhaps you are right, for that was what Twoinette insinuated," she
+said. "She actually told me that I should be thankful I had a brain
+since I had no heart. Still, at first I let myself go, and it was
+delightful--the opera, the dances, and the covered skating rink with
+the music and the black ice flashing beneath the lights. The whirr of
+the toboggans down the great slide was finer still, and the torchlight
+meets of the snowshoe clubs on the mountain. Yes, I think I was really
+young while it lasted."
+
+"For a month," said the elder. "And after?"
+
+"Then," said the girl slowly, "it all seemed to grow a trifle
+purposeless, and there was something that spoiled it. Twoinette was
+quite angry, and I know her mother wrote you--but it was not my fault,
+aunt. How was I, a guileless girl from the prairie, to guess that such
+a man would fling the handkerchief to me?"
+
+The evenness of tone and entire absence of embarrassment was
+significant. It also pointed to the fact that there was a closer
+confidence between Maud Barrington and her aunt than often exists
+between mother and daughter, and the elder lady stroked the lustrous
+head that rested against her knee with a little affectionate pride.
+
+"My dear, you know you are beautiful, and you have the cachet that all
+the Courthornes wear. Still, you could not like him. Tell me about
+him."
+
+Maud Barrington curled herself up further. "I think I could have liked
+him, but that was all," she said. "He was nice to look at and did all
+the little things gracefully; but he had never done anything else,
+never would, and, I fancy, had never wanted to. Now, a man of that
+kind would very soon pall on me, and I should have lost my temper
+trying to waken him to his responsibilities."
+
+"And what kind of man would please you?"
+
+Maud Barrington's eyes twinkled, but the fact that she answered at all
+was a proof of the sympathy between herself and the questioner. "I do
+not know that I am anxious any of them should," she said. "But, since
+you ask, he would have to be a man first: a toiling, striving animal,
+who could hold his own amidst his fellows wherever he was placed.
+Secondly, one would naturally prefer a gentleman, though I do not like
+the word, and one would fancy the combination a trifle rare, because
+brains and birth do not necessarily tally, and the man educated by the
+struggle for existence is apt to be taught more than he ever would be
+at Oxford or in the army. Still, men of that stamp forget a good deal,
+and learn so much that is undesirable, you see. In fact, I only know
+one man who would have suited me, and he is debarred by age and
+affinity--but, because we are so much alike, I can't help fancying
+that you once knew another."
+
+The smile in Miss Barrington's face, which was still almost beautiful
+as well as patient, became a trifle wistful.
+
+"There are few better men than my brother, though he is not clever,"
+she said and dropped her voice a little. "As to the other, he died in
+India--beside his mountain gun--long ago."
+
+"And you have never forgotten? He must have been worth it--I wonder if
+loyalty and chivalric faith belong only to the past," said the girl,
+reaching up a rounded arm and patting her aunt's thin hand. "And now
+we will be practical. I fancied the head of the settlement looked
+worried when he met me, and he is not very proficient at hiding his
+feelings."
+
+Miss Barrington sighed. "I am afraid that is nothing very new, and
+with wheat steadily falling and our granaries full, he has cause for
+anxiety. Then the fact that Lance Courthorne has divided your
+inheritance and is going to settle here has been troubling him."
+
+"The first is the lesser evil," said the girl, with a little laugh. "I
+wore very short frocks when I last saw Lance in England, and so far as
+I can remember he had the face of an angel and the temper of a devil.
+But did not my uncle endeavour to buy him off, and--for I know you
+have been finding out things--I want you to tell me all about him."
+
+"He would not take the money," said Miss Barrington, and sat in
+thoughtful silence a space. Then, and perhaps she had a reason, she
+quietly recounted Courthorne's Canadian history so far as her
+brother's agents had been able to trace it, not omitting, dainty in
+thought and speech as she was, one or two incidents which a mother
+might have kept back from her daughter's ears. Still, it was very
+seldom that Miss Barrington made a blunder. There was a faint pinkness
+in her face when she concluded, but she was not surprised when, with a
+slow, sinuous movement, the girl rose to her feet. Her cheeks were
+very slightly flushed, but there was a significant sparkle in her
+eyes.
+
+"Oh," she said, with utter contempt. "How sickening! Are there men
+like that?"
+
+There was a little silence, emphasized by the snapping in the stove,
+and if Miss Barrington had spoken with an object she should have been
+contented. The girl was imperious in her anger, which was caused by
+something deeper than startled prudery.
+
+"It is," said the little white-haired lady, "all quite true. Still, I
+must confess that my brother and myself were a trifle astonished at
+the report of the lawyer he sent to confer with Lance in Montana, One
+would almost have imagined that he had of late been trying to make
+amends."
+
+The girl's face was very scornful. "Could a man with a past like that
+ever live it down."
+
+"We have a warrant for believing it," said Miss Barrington quietly, as
+she laid her hand on her companion's arm. "My dear, I have told you
+what Lance was, because I felt it was right that you should know; but
+none of us can tell what he may be, and if the man is honestly trying
+to lead a different life, all I ask is that you should not wound him
+by any manifest suspicion. Those who have never been tempted can
+afford to be merciful."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed somewhat curiously. "You are a very wise
+woman, aunt, but you are a little transparent now and then," she said.
+"At least, he shall have a fair trial without prejudice or favour--and
+if he fails, as fail he will, we shall find the means of punishing
+him."
+
+"We?" said the elder lady a trifle maliciously.
+
+The girl nodded as she moved towards the doorway, and then turned a
+moment with the folds of the big red curtain flung behind her. It
+forced up the sweeping lines of a figure so delicately moulded that
+its slenderness was scarcely apparent, for Maud Barrington still wore
+a long, sombre dress that had assisted in her triumphs in the city. It
+emphasized the clear pallor of her skin and the brightness of her
+eyes, as she held herself very erect in a pose which, while assumed in
+mockery, had yet in it something that was almost imperial.
+
+"Yes," she said. "We. You know who is the power behind the throne at
+Silverdale, and what the boys call me. And now, good night. Sleep
+well, dear."
+
+She went out, and Miss Barrington sat very still gazing, with eyes
+that were curiously thoughtful, into the fire. "Princess of the
+Prairie--and it fits her well," she said, and then sighed a little.
+"And if there is a trace of hardness in the girl it may be fortunate.
+We all have our troubles--and wheat is going down."
+
+In the meanwhile, late as it was, Colonel Barrington and his chief
+lieutenant, Gordon Dane, sat in his log-walled smoking-room talking
+with a man he sold his wheat through in Winnipeg. The room was big and
+bare. There were a few fine heads of antelope upon the walls, and
+beneath them an armoury of English-made shot guns and rifles, while a
+row of riding crops, silver-mounted, and some handled with ivory,
+stood in a corner. All these represented amusement, while two or three
+treatises on veterinary surgery and agriculture lying amidst English
+stud-books and racing records, presumably stood for industry. The
+comparison was significant, and Graham, the Winnipeg wheat-broker,
+noticed it as he listened patiently to the views of Colonel
+Barrington, who nevertheless worked hard enough in his own fashion.
+Unfortunately, it was rather the fashion of the English gentleman than
+that common on the prairie.
+
+"And now," he said, with a trace of the anxiety he had concealed in
+his eyes, "I am open to hear what you can do for me."
+
+Graham smiled a little. "It isn't very much, Colonel. I'll take all
+your wheat off you at three cents down."
+
+Now Barrington did not like the broker's smile. It savoured too much
+of equality; and, though he had already unbent as far as he was
+capable of doing, he had no great esteem for men of business. Nor did
+it please him to be addressed as "Colonel."
+
+"That," he said coldly, "is out of the question, I would not sell at
+the last market price. Besides, you have hitherto acted as my broker."
+
+Graham nodded. "The market price will be less than what I offered you
+in a week, and I could scarcely sell your wheat at it to-day. I was
+going to hold it myself, because I can occasionally get a little more
+from one or two millers who like that special grade. Usual sorts I'm
+selling for a fall. Quite sure the deal wouldn't suit you?"
+
+Barrington lighted a fresh cigar, though Graham, noticed that he had
+smoked very little of the one he flung away. This was, of course, a
+trifle, but it is the trifles that count in the aggregate upon the
+prairie, as they not infrequently do elsewhere.
+
+"I fancy I told you so," he said.
+
+The broker glanced at Dane, who was a big, bronzed man, and, since
+Barrington could not see him, shook his head deprecatingly.
+
+"You can consider that decided, Graham," he said. "Still, can you as a
+friendly deed give us any notion of what to do? As you know, farming,
+especially at Silverdale, costs money, and the banks are demanding an
+iniquitous interest just now, while we are carrying over a good deal
+of wheat."
+
+Graham nodded. He understood why farming was unusually expensive at
+Silverdale, and was, in recollection of past favours, inclined to be
+disinterestedly friendly.
+
+"If I were you I would sell right along for forward delivery at a few
+cents under the market."
+
+"It is a trifle difficult to see how that would help us," said
+Barrington, with a little gesture of irritation, for it almost seemed
+that the broker was deriding him.
+
+"No!" said the man from Winnipeg, "on the contrary, it's quite easy.
+Now I can predict that wheat will touch lower prices still before you
+have to make delivery, and it isn't very difficult to figure out the
+profit on selling a thing for a dollar and then buying it, when you
+have to produce it at ninety cents. Of course, there is a risk of the
+market going against you, but you could buy at the first rise, and
+you've your stock to dole out in case anybody cornered you."
+
+"That," said Dane thoughtfully, "appears quite sensible. Of course,
+it's a speculation, but presumably we couldn't be much worse off than
+we are. Have you any objections to the scheme, sir."
+
+Barrington laid down his cigar, and glanced with astonished severity
+at the speaker. "Unfortunately, I have. We are wheat growers, and not
+wheat stock jugglers. Our purpose is to farm, and not swindle and lie
+in the wheat pits for decimal differences. I have a distinct antipathy
+to anything of the kind."
+
+"But, sir," said Dane, and Barrington stopped with a gesture.
+
+"I would," he said, "as soon turn gambler. Still, while it has always
+been a tradition at Silverdale that the head of the settlement's lead
+is to be followed, that need not prevent you putting on the gloves
+with the wheat-ring blacklegs in Winnipeg."
+
+Dane blushed a little under his tan, and then smiled as he remembered
+the one speculative venture his leader had indulged in, for Colonel
+Barrington was a somewhat hot-tempered and vindictive man. He made a
+little gesture of deprecation as he glanced at Graham, who
+straightened himself suddenly in his chair.
+
+"I should not think of doing so in face of your opinion, sir," he
+said. "There is an end to the thing, Graham!"
+
+The broker's face was a trifle grim. "I gave you good advice out of
+friendship, Colonel, and there are men with dollars to spare who would
+value a hint from me," he said. "Still, as it doesn't seem to strike
+you the right way, I've no use for arguing. Keep your wheat--and pay
+bank interest if you want any help to carry over."
+
+"Thanks," said Dane quietly. "They charge tolerably high, but I've
+seen what happens to the man who meddles with the mortgage-broker."
+
+Graham nodded. "Well, as I'm starting out at six o'clock, it's time I
+was asleep," he said. "Good-night to you, Colonel."
+
+Barrington shook hands with Graham, and then sighed a little when he
+went out. "I believe the man is honest, and he is a guest of mine, or
+I should have dressed him down," he said. "I don't like the way things
+are going, Dane; and the fact is we must find accommodation somewhere,
+because now I have to pay out so much on my ward's account to that
+confounded Courthorne, it is necessary to raise more dollars than the
+banks will give me. Now, there was a broker fellow wrote me a very
+civil letter."
+
+Dane, who was a thoughtful man, ventured to lay his hand upon his
+leader's arm. "Keep yourself and Miss Barrington out of those fellows'
+clutches, at any cost," he said.
+
+Barrington shook off his hand and looked at him sternly. "Are you not
+a trifle young to adopt that tone?" he asked.
+
+Dane nodded. "No doubt I am, but I've seen a little of mortgage
+jobbing. You must try to overlook it. I did not mean to offend."
+
+He went out, and, while Colonel Barrington sat down before a sheaf of
+accounts, sprang into a waiting sleigh. "It's no use; we've got to go
+through," he said to the lad who shook the reins, "Graham made a very
+sensible suggestion, but our respected leader came down on him, as he
+did on me. You see, one simply can't talk to the Colonel; and it's
+unfortunate Miss Barrington didn't marry that man in Montreal."
+
+"I don't know," said the lad. "Of course, there are not many girls
+like Maud Barrington, but is it necessary she should go outside
+Silverdale?"
+
+Dane laughed. "None of us would be old enough for Miss Barrington when
+we were fifty. The trouble is, that we spend half our time in play,
+and I've a notion it's a man, and not a gentleman dilettante, she's
+looking for."
+
+"Isn't that a curious way of putting it?" asked his companion.
+
+Dane nodded. "It may be the right one. Woman is as she was made, and
+I've had more than a suspicion lately that a little less refinement
+would not come amiss at Silverdale. Anyway, I hope she'll find him,
+for it's a man with grit and energy, who could put a little desirable
+pressure on the Colonel occasionally, we're all wanting. Of course,
+I'm backing my leader, though it's going to cost me a good deal, but
+it's time he had somebody to help him."
+
+"He would never accept assistance," said the lad thoughtfully. "That
+is, unless the man who offered it was, or became by marriage, one of
+the dynasty."
+
+"Of course," said Dane. "That's why I'm inclined to take a fatherly
+interest in Miss Barrington's affairs. It's a misfortune we've heard
+nothing very reassuring about Courthorne."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+WITHAM'S DECISION
+
+
+Farmer Witham crossed the frontier without molestation and spent one
+night in a little wooden town, where several people he did not speak
+to apparently recognized him. Then he pushed on southwards, and passed
+a week in the especially desolate settlement he had been directed to.
+A few dilapidated frame houses rose out of the white wilderness beside
+the broad, beaten trail, and, for here the prairie rolled south in
+long rises like the wakes of a frozen sea, a low wooden building on
+the crest of one cut the skyline a league away. It served as outpost
+for a squadron of United States cavalry, and the troopers daily
+maligned the Government which had sent them into that desolation on
+police duty.
+
+There was nothing else visible but a few dusky groves of willows and
+dazzling snow. The ramshackle wooden hotel was rather more than
+usually badly kept and comfortless, and Witham, who had managed to
+conciliate his host, felt relieved one afternoon when the latter flung
+down the cards disgustedly.
+
+"I guess I've had enough," he said. "Playing for stakes of this kind
+isn't good enough for you!"
+
+Witham laughed a little to hide his resentment, as he said, "I don't
+quite understand."
+
+"Pshaw!" said the American with a contemptuous gesture. "Three times
+out of four I've spoiled your hand, and if I didn't know that black
+horse I'd take you for some blamed Canadian rancher. You didn't handle
+the pictures that way when you stripped the boys to the hide at
+Regent, Mr. Courthorne?"
+
+"Regent?" said Witham.
+
+The hotel-keeper laughed. "Oh yes," he said. "I wouldn't go back there
+too soon, anyway. The boys seem quite contented, and I don't figure
+they would be very nice to you. Well, now, I've no use for fooling
+with a man who's too proud to take my dollars, and I've a pair of
+horses just stuffed with wickedness in the stable. There's not much
+you don't know about a beast, anyway, and you can take them out a
+league or two if you feel like it."
+
+Witham, who had grown very tired of his host, was glad of any
+distraction, especially as he surmised that while the man had never
+seen Courthorne, he knew rather more than he did himself about his
+doings. Accordingly, he got into the sleigh that was brought out by
+and by, and enjoyed the struggle with the half-tamed team which stood
+with ears laid back, prepared for conflict. Oats had been very
+plentiful, and prices low that season. Witham, who knew at least as
+much about a horse as Lance Courthorne, however, bent them to his will
+and the team were trotting quietly through the shadow of a big birch
+bluff a league from town, when he heard a faint clip-clop coming down
+the trail behind him. It led straight beneath the leafless branches,
+and was beaten smooth and firm; while Witham, who had noticed already
+that whenever he strayed any distance from the hotel there was a
+mounted cavalryman somewhere, in the vicinity, shook the reins.
+
+The team swung into faster stride, the cold wind whistled past him,
+and the snow whirled up from beneath the runners; but while he
+listened the rhythmic drumming behind him also quickened a little.
+Then a faintly musical jingle of steel accompanied the beat of hoofs,
+and Witham glanced about him with a little laugh of annoyance. The
+dusk was creeping across the prairie, and a pale star or two growing
+into brilliancy in the cloudless sweep of indigo.
+
+"It's getting a trifle tiresome. I'll find out what the fellow wants,"
+he said.
+
+Wheeling the team, he drove back the way he came, and, when a dusky
+object materialized out of the shadows beneath the birches, swung the
+horses right across the trail. The snow lay deep on either side of it
+just there, with a sharp crust upon its surface, which rendered it
+inadvisable to take a horse round the sleigh. The mounted man
+accordingly drew bridle, and the jingle and rattle betokened his
+profession, though it was already too dark to see him clearly.
+
+"Hallo!" he said. "Been buying this trail up, stranger?"
+
+"No," said Witham quietly, though he still held his team across the
+way. "Still, I've got the same right as any other citizen to walk or
+drive along it without anybody prowling after me, and just now I want
+to know if there is a reason I should be favoured with your company."
+
+The trooper laughed a little. "I guess there is. It's down in the
+orders that whoever's on patrol near the settlement should keep his
+eye on you. You see, if you lit out of here we would want to know just
+where you were going to."
+
+"I am," said Witham, "a Canadian citizen, and I came out here for
+quietness."
+
+"Well," said the other, "you're an American too. Anyway, when you were
+in a tight place down in Regent there, you told the boys so. Now, no
+sensible man would boast of being a Britisher unless it was helping
+him to play out his hand."
+
+Witham kept his temper. "I want a straight answer. Can you tell me
+what you and the boys are trailing me for?"
+
+"No," said the trooper. "Still, I guess our commander could. If you
+don't know of any reason, you might ask him."
+
+Witham tightened his grip on the reins. "I'll ride back with you to
+the outpost now."
+
+The trooper shook his bridle, and trotted behind the sleigh, while, as
+it swung up and down over the billowy rises of the prairie, Witham
+became sensible of a curious expectancy. The bare, hopeless life he
+had led seemed to have slipped behind him, and though he suspected
+that there was no great difference between his escort and a prisoner's
+guard, the old love of excitement he once fancied he had outgrown for
+ever awoke again within him. Anything that was different from the past
+would be a relief, and the man who had for eight long years of
+strenuous toil practised the grimmest self-denial wondered with a
+quickening of all his faculties what the future, that could not be
+more colourless, might have in store for him.
+
+It was dark, and very cold, when they reached the wooden building, but
+Witham's step was lighter, and his spirits more buoyant than they had
+been for some months when, handing the sleigh over to an orderly, he
+walked into the guard-room, where bronzed men in uniform glanced at
+him curiously. Then he was shown into a bare, log-walled hall, where a
+young man in blue uniform with a weather-darkened face was writing at
+a table.
+
+"I've been partly expecting a visit," he said. "I'm glad to see you,
+Mr. Courthorne."
+
+Witham laughed with a very good imitation of the outlaw's
+recklessness, and wondered the while because it cost him no effort. He
+who had, throughout the last two adverse seasons, seldom smiled at
+all, and then but grimly, experienced the same delight in an adventure
+that he had done when he came out to Canada.
+
+"I don't know that I can return the compliment just yet," he said. "I
+have one or two things to ask you."
+
+The young soldier smiled good-humouredly, as he flung a cigar case on
+the table. "Oh, sit down and shake those furs off," he said. "I'm not
+a worrying policeman, and we're white men, anyway. If you'd been
+twelve months in this forsaken place you'd know what I'm feeling. Take
+a smoke, and start in with your questions when you feel like it."
+
+Witham lighted a cigar, flung himself down in a hide chair, and
+stretched out his feet towards the stove. "In the first place, I want
+to know why your boys are shadowing me. You see, you couldn't arrest
+me unless our folks in the Dominion had got their papers through."
+
+The officer nodded. "No. We couldn't lay hands on you, and we only had
+orders to see where you went to when you left this place, so the folks
+there could corral you if they got the papers. That's about the size
+of it at present, but, as I've sent a trooper over to Regent, I'll
+know more to-morrow."
+
+Witham laughed. "It may appear a little astonishing, but I haven't the
+faintest notion why the police in Canada should worry about me. Is
+there any reason you shouldn't tell me?"
+
+The officer looked at him thoughtfully. "Bluff? I'm quite smart at it
+myself," he said.
+
+"No," and Witham shook his head. "It's a straight question. I want to
+know."
+
+"Well," said the other, "it couldn't do much harm if I told you. You
+were running whisky a little while ago, and, though the folks didn't
+seem to suspect it, you had a farmer or a rancher for a partner--it
+appears he has mixed up things for you."
+
+"Witham?" and the farmer turned to roll the cigar which did not need
+it between his fingers.
+
+"That's the man," said his companion. "Well, though I guess it's
+no news to you, the police came down upon your friends at a
+river-crossing, and farmer Witham put a bullet into a young trooper,
+Shannon, I fancy."
+
+Witham sat upright, and the blood that surged to his forehead sank
+from it suddenly, and left his face grey with anger.
+
+"Good Lord!" he said hoarsely. "He killed him?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said the officer, "Killing's not quite the word, because
+one shot would have been enough to free him of the lad, and the
+rancher fired twice into him. They figured, from the way the trooper
+was lying and the footprints, that he meant to finish him."
+
+The farmer's face was very grim as he said, "They were sure it was
+Witham?"
+
+"Yes," and the soldier watched him curiously. "Anyway, they were sure
+of his horse, and it was Witham's rifle. Another trooper nearly got
+him, and he left it behind him. It wasn't killing, for the trooper
+don't seem to have had a show at all, and I'm glad to see it makes you
+kind of sick. Only that one of the troopers allows he was trailing you
+at a time which shows you had no hand in the thing, you wouldn't be
+sitting there smoking that cigar."
+
+It was almost a minute before Witham could trust his voice. Then he
+said slowly, "And what do they want me for?"
+
+"I guess they don't quite know whether they do or not," said the
+officer. "They crawl slow in Canada. In the meanwhile they wanted to
+know where you were, so they could take out papers if anything turned
+up against you."
+
+"And Witham?" said the farmer.
+
+"Got away with a trooper close behind him. The rest of them had headed
+him off from the prairie, and he took to the river. Went through the
+ice and drowned himself, though as there was a blizzard nobody quite
+saw the end of him, and in case there was any doubt they've got a
+warrant out. Farmer Witham's dead, and if he isn't he soon will be,
+for the troopers have got their net right across the prairie, and the
+Canadians don't fool time away as we do when it comes to hanging
+anybody. The tale seems to have worried you."
+
+Witham sat rigidly still and silent for almost a minute. Then he rose
+up with a curious little shake of his shoulders.
+
+"And farmer Witham's dead. Well he had a hard life. I knew him rather
+well," he said. "Thank you for the story. On my word this is the first
+time I've heard it, and now it's time I was going."
+
+The officer laughed a little. "Sit right down again. Now, there's
+something about you that makes me like you, and as I can't talk to the
+boys, I'll give you the best supper we can raise in the whole forsaken
+country, and you can camp here until to-morrow. It's an arrangement
+that will meet the views of everybody, because I'll know whether the
+Canadians want you or not in the morning."
+
+Witham did not know what prompted him to agree, but it all seemed part
+of a purpose that impelled him against his reasoning will, and he sat
+still beside the stove while his host went out to give orders
+respecting supper and the return of the sleigh. He was also glad to be
+alone for a while, for now and then a fit of anger shook him as he saw
+how he had been duped by Courthorne. He had heard Shannon's story,
+and, remembering it, could fancy that Courthorne had planned the
+trooper's destruction with a devilish cunning that recognized by what
+means the blame could be laid upon a guiltless man. Witham's face
+became mottled with grey again as he realized that if he revealed his
+identity he had nothing but his word to offer in proof of his
+innocence.
+
+Still, it was anger and not fear that stirred him, for nobody could
+arrest a man who was dead, and there was no reason that would render
+it undesirable for him to remain so. His farm would, when sold,
+realize the money borrowed upon it, and the holder of the mortgage had
+received a profitable interest already. Had the unforeseen not
+happened, Witham would have held out to the end of the struggle, but
+now he had no regret that this was out of the question. Fate had been
+too strong for him as farmer Witham, but it might deal more kindly
+with him as the outlaw Courthorne. He could also make a quick
+decision, and when the officer returned to say that supper was ready,
+he rose with a smile.
+
+They sat down to a meal that was barbaric in its simplicity and
+abundance, for men live and eat in Homeric fashion in the North-West,
+while when the green tea was finished and the officer pushed the
+whisky across, his guest laughed as he filled his glass.
+
+"Here's better fortune to farmer Witham!" he said.
+
+The officer stared at him. "No, sir," he said "If the old folks taught
+me aright, Witham's in----"
+
+A curious smile flickered in the farmer's eyes. "No," he said slowly.
+"He was tolerably near it once or twice when he was alive, and,
+because of what he went through then, there may be something better in
+store for him."
+
+His companion appeared astonished, but said nothing further until he
+brought out the cards. They played for an hour beside the snapping
+stove, and then, when Witham flung a trump away, the officer groaned.
+
+"I guess," he said disgustedly, "you're not well to-night, or
+something is worrying you."
+
+Witham looked up with a little twinkle in his eyes. "I don't know that
+there's very much wrong with me."
+
+"Then," said the officer decisively, "if the boys down at Regent know
+enough to remember what trumps are, you're not Lance Courthorne. Now
+after what I'd heard of you, I'd have put up fifty dollars for the
+pleasure of watching your game--and it's not worth ten cents when I've
+seen it."
+
+Witham laughed. "Sit down and talk," he said. "One isn't always in his
+usual form, and there are folks who get famous too easily."
+
+They talked until nearly midnight, sitting close to the stove, while a
+doleful wind that moaned without drove the dust of snow pattering
+against the windows, and the shadows grew darker in the corners of the
+great log-walled room each time the icy draughts set the lamp
+flickering. Then the officer, rising, expressed the feelings of his
+guest as he said, "It's a forsaken country, and I'm thankful one can
+sleep and forget it."
+
+He had, however, an honourable calling, and a welcome from friend and
+kinsman awaiting him when he went East again, to revel in the life of
+the cities, but the man who followed him silently to the sleeping-room
+had nothing but a half-instinctive assurance that the future could not
+well be harder or more lonely than the past had been. Still, farmer
+Witham was a man of courage with a quiet belief in himself, and in ten
+minutes he was fast asleep.
+
+When he came down to breakfast his host was already seated with a
+bundle of letters before him, and one addressed to Courthorne lay
+unopened by Witham's plate. The officer nodded when he saw him.
+
+"The trooper has come in with the mail, and your friends in Canada are
+not going to worry you," he said. "Now, if you feel like staying here
+a few days, it would be a favour to me."
+
+Witham had in the meanwhile opened the envelope. He knew that when
+once the decision was made there could only be peril in half-measures,
+and his eyes grew thoughtful as he read. The letter had been written
+by a Winnipeg lawyer from a little town not very far away, and
+requested Courthorne to meet and confer with him respecting certain
+suggestions made by a Colonel Barrington. Witham decided to take the
+risk.
+
+"I'm sorry, but I have got to go into Annerly at once," he said.
+
+"Then," said the officer, "I'll drive you. I've some stores to get
+down there."
+
+They started after breakfast, but it was dusk next day when they
+reached the little town, and Witham walked quietly into a private room
+of the wooden hotel, where a middle-aged man with a shrewd face sat
+waiting him. The big nickelled lamp flickered in the draughts that
+found their way in, and Witham was glad of it, though he was outwardly
+very collected. The stubborn patience and self-control with which he
+had faced the loss of his wheat crops and frozen stock stood him in
+good stead now. He fancied the lawyer seemed a trifle astonished at
+his appearance, and sat down wondering whether he had previously
+spoken to Courthorne, until the question was answered for him.
+
+"Although I have never had the pleasure of meeting you before, I have
+acted as Colonel Barrington's legal adviser ever since he settled at
+Silverdale, and am, therefore, well posted as to his affairs, which
+are, of course, connected with those of your own family," said the
+lawyer. "We can accordingly talk with greater freedom, and I hope
+without the acerbity which in your recent communications somewhat
+annoyed the Colonel!"
+
+"Well," said Courthorne, who had never heard of Colonel Barrington, "I
+am ready to listen."
+
+The lawyer drummed on the table. "It might be best to come to the
+point at once," he said. "Colonel Barrington does not deem it
+convenient that you should settle at Silverdale, and would be prepared
+to offer you a reasonable sum to relinquish your claim."
+
+"My claim?" said Witham, who remembered having heard of the Silverdale
+Colony, which lay several hundred miles away.
+
+"Of course," said the lawyer. "The legacy lately left you by Roger
+Courthorne. I have brought you a schedule of the wheat in store, and
+amounts due to you on various sales made. You will also find the
+acreage, stock, and implements detailed at a well-known appraiser's
+valuation, which you could, of course, confirm, and Colonel Barrington
+would hand you a cheque for half the total now. He however, asks four
+years to pay the balance, which would carry bank interest in the
+meanwhile, in."
+
+Witham, who was glad of the excuse, spent at least ten minutes
+studying the paper, and realized that it referred to a large and
+well-appointed farm, though it occurred to him that the crop was a
+good deal smaller than it should have been. He noticed this, as it
+were, instinctively, for his brain was otherwise very busy.
+
+"Colonel Barrington seems somewhat anxious to get rid of me," he said.
+"You see, this land is mine by right."
+
+"Yes," said the lawyer. "Colonel Barrington does not dispute it,
+though I am of opinion that he might have done so under one clause of
+the will. I do not think we need discuss his motives."
+
+Witham moistened his lips with his tongue, and his lips quivered a
+little. He had hitherto been an honest man, and now it was impossible
+for him to take the money. It, however, appeared equally impossible to
+reveal his identity and escape the halter, and he felt that the dead
+man had wronged him horribly. He was entitled at least to safety by
+way of compensation, for by passing as Courthorne he would avoid
+recognition as Witham.
+
+"Still, I do not know how I have offended Colonel Barrington," he
+said.
+
+"I would sooner," said the lawyer, "not go into that. It is, I fancy,
+fifteen years since Colonel Barrington saw you, but he desired me to
+find means of tracing your Canadian record, and did not seem pleased
+with it. Nor, at the risk of offending you, could I deem him unduly
+prejudiced."
+
+"In fact," said Witham dryly, "this man who has not seen me for
+fifteen years is desirous of withholding what is mine from me at
+almost any cost."
+
+The lawyer nodded. "There is nothing to be gained by endeavouring to
+controvert it. Colonel Barrington is also, as you know, a somewhat
+determined gentleman."
+
+Witham laughed, for he was essentially a stubborn man, and felt little
+kindliness towards any one connected with Courthorne, as the Colonel
+evidently was.
+
+"I fancy I am not entirely unlike him in that respect," he said. "What
+you have told me makes me the more determined to follow my own
+inclinations. Is there any one else at Silverdale prejudiced against
+me?"
+
+The lawyer fell into the trap. "Miss Barrington, of course, takes her
+brother's view, and her niece would scarcely go counter to them. She
+must have been a very young girl when she last saw you, but from what
+I know of her character I should expect her to support the Colonel."
+
+"Well," said Witham. "I want to think over the thing. We will talk
+again to-morrow. You would require me to establish my identity,
+anyway?"
+
+"The fact that a famous inquiry agent has traced your movements down
+to a week or two ago, and told me where to find you, will render that
+simple," said the lawyer dryly.
+
+Witham sat up late that night turning over the papers the lawyer left
+him, and thinking hard. It was evident that in the meanwhile he must
+pass as Courthorne, but as the thought of taking the money revolted
+him, the next step led to the occupation of the dead man's property.
+The assumption of it would apparently do nobody a wrong, while he felt
+that Courthorne had taken so much from him that the farm at Silverdale
+would be a very small reparation. It was not, he saw, a great
+inheritance, but one that in the right hands could be made profitable,
+and Witham, who had fought a plucky fight with obsolete and worthless
+implements and indifferent teams, felt that he could do a great deal
+with what was, as it were, thrust upon him at Silverdale. It was not
+avarice that tempted him, though he knew he was tempted now, but a
+longing to find a fair outlet for his energies, and show what, once
+given the chance that most men had, he could do. He had stinted
+himself and toiled almost as a beast of burden, but now he could use
+his brains in place of wringing the last effort out of overtaxed
+muscle. He had also during the long struggle lost, to some extent, his
+clearness of vision, and only saw himself as a lonely man fighting for
+his own hand with fate against him. Now, when prosperity was offered
+him, it seemed but folly to stand aside when he could stretch out a
+strong hand and take it.
+
+During the last hour he sat almost motionless, the issue hung in the
+balance, and he laid himself down still undecided. Still, he had lived
+long in primitive fashion in close touch with the soil, and sank, as
+most men would have done, into restful sleep. The sun hung red above
+the rim of the prairie when he awakened, and going down to breakfast
+found the lawyer waiting for him.
+
+"You can tell Colonel Barrington I'm coming to Silverdale," he said.
+
+The lawyer looked at him curiously. "Would there be any use in asking
+you to consider?"
+
+Witham laughed. "No," he said. "Now, I rather like the way you talked
+to me, and if it wouldn't be disloyalty to the Colonel, I should be
+pleased if you would undertake to put me in due possession of my
+property."
+
+He said nothing further, and the lawyer sat down to write Colonel
+Barrington.
+
+"Mr. Courthorne proves obdurate," he said. "He is, however, by no
+means the type of man I expected to find, and I venture to surmise
+that you will eventually discover him to be a less undesirable
+addition to Silverdale than you are at present inclined to fancy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WITHAM COMES TO SILVERDALE
+
+
+There were warmth and brightness in the cedar-boarded general room of
+Silverdale Grange, and most of the company gathered there basked in it
+contentedly after their drive through the bitter night. Those who came
+from the homesteads lying farthest out had risked frost-nipped hands
+and feet, for when Colonel Barrington held a levee at the Grange
+nobody felt equal to refusing his invitation. Neither scorching heat
+nor utter cold might excuse compliance with the wishes of the founder
+of Silverdale, and it was not until Dane, the big middle-aged
+bachelor, had spoken very plainly, that he consented to receive his
+guests in time of biting frost dressed otherwise than as they would
+have appeared in England.
+
+Dane was the one man in the settlement who dare remonstrate with its
+ruler, but it was a painful astonishment to the latter when he said,
+in answer to one invitation, "I have never been frost-bitten, sir, and
+I stand the cold well, but one or two of the lads are weak in the
+chest, and this climate was never intended for bare-shouldered women.
+Hence, if I come, I shall dress myself to suit it."
+
+Colonel Barrington stared at him for almost a minute, and then shook
+his head. "Have it your own way," he said, "Understand that in itself
+I care very little for dress, but it is only by holding fast to every
+traditional nicety we can prevent ourselves sinking into Western
+barbarism, and I am horribly afraid of the thin end of the wedge."
+
+Dane having gained his point, said nothing further, for he was one of
+the wise and silent men who know when to stop, and that evening he sat
+in a corner watching his leader thoughtfully, for there was anxiety in
+the Colonel's face. Barrington sat silent near the ample hearth whose
+heat would scarcely have kept water from freezing but for the big
+stove, and disdaining the dispensation made his guests, he was clad
+conventionally, though the smooth black fabric clung about him more
+tightly than it had once been intended to do. His sister stood, with
+the stamp of a not wholly vanished beauty still clinging to her gentle
+face, talking to one or two matrons from outlying farms, and his niece
+by a little table turning over Eastern photographs with a few young
+girls. She, too, wore black in deference to the Colonel's taste, which
+was sombre, and the garment she had laughed at as a compromise, left
+uncovered a narrow strip of ivory shoulder and enhanced the polished
+whiteness of her neck. A slender string of pearls gleamed softly on
+the satiny skin, but Maud Barrington wore no other adornment and did
+not need it. She had inherited the Courthorne comeliness, and the
+Barringtons she sprang from on her father's side had always borne the
+stamp of distinction.
+
+A young girl sat at the piano singing in a thin, reedy voice, while an
+English lad waited with ill-concealed jealousy of a too officious
+companion to turn over the music by her side. Other men, mostly young,
+with weather-bronzed faces, picturesque in embroidered deerskin or
+velvet lounge jackets, were scattered about the room, and all were
+waiting for the eight-o'clock dinner, which replaced the usual prairie
+supper at Silverdale. They were growers of wheat who combined a good
+deal of amusement with a little not very profitable farming, and most
+of them possessed a large share of insular English pride and a
+somewhat depleted exchequer.
+
+Presently Dane crossed over, and sat down by Colonel Barrington. "You
+are silent, sir, and not looking very well to-night," he said.
+
+Barrington nodded gravely, for he had a respect for the one man who
+occasionally spoke plain truth to him. "The fact is, I am growing
+old," he said, and then added, with what was only an apparent lack of
+connexion, "Wheat is down three cents, and money tighter than ever."
+
+Dane looked thoughtful, and noticed the older man's glance in his
+niece's direction, as he said, "I am afraid there are difficult times
+before us."
+
+"I have no doubt we shall weather them as we have done before," said
+the Colonel. "Still, I can't help admitting that just now I feel--a
+little tired--and am commencing to think we should have been better
+prepared for the struggle had we worked a trifle harder during the
+recent era of prosperity. I could wish there were older heads on the
+shoulders of those who will come after me."
+
+Just then Maud Barrington glanced at them, and Dane, who could not
+remember having heard his leader talk in that fashion before, and
+could guess his anxieties, was a little touched as he noticed his
+attempt at sprightliness. As it happened, one of the lads at the piano
+commenced a song of dogs and horses that had little to recommend it
+but the brave young voice.
+
+"They have the right spirit, sir," he said.
+
+"Of course!" said Barrington. "They are English lads, but I think a
+little more is required. Thank God we have not rated the dollar too
+high, but it is possible we have undervalued its utility, and I fear I
+have only taught them to be gentlemen."
+
+"That is a good deal, sir," Dane said quietly.
+
+"It is. Still, a gentleman, in the restricted sense, is somewhat of an
+anachronism on the prairie, and it is too late to begin again. In the
+usual course of nature I must lay down my charge presently, and that
+is why I feel the want of a more capable successor, whom they would
+follow because of his connexion with mine and me."
+
+Dane looked thoughtful. "If I am not taking a liberty--you still
+consider the one apparently born to fill the place quite unsuitable?"
+
+"Yes," said Barrington quietly. "I fear there is not a redeeming
+feature in Courthorne's character."
+
+Neither said anything further, until there was a tapping at the door,
+and, though this was a most unusual spectacle on the prairie, a trim
+English maid in white-banded dress stood in the opening.
+
+"Mr. Courthorne, Miss Barrington," she said.
+
+Now Silverdale had adopted one Western custom in that no chance guest
+was ever kept waiting, and the music ceased suddenly, while the
+stillness was very suggestive, when a man appeared in the doorway. He
+wore one of the Scandinavian leather jackets which are not uncommon in
+that country, and when his eyes had become accustomed to the light,
+moved forward with a quiet deliberation that was characterized neither
+by graceful ease nor the restraint of embarrassment. His face was
+almost the colour of a Blackfoot's, his eyes steady and grey, but
+those of the men who watched him were next moment turned upon the
+Colonel's sister, who rose to receive him, slight, silver-haired, and
+faded, but still stamped with a simple dignity that her ancient silks
+and lace curiously enhanced. Then there was a silence that could be
+felt, for all realized that a good deal depended on the stranger's
+first words and the fashion of his reception.
+
+Witham, as it happened, felt this too, and something more. It was
+eight years since he had stood before an English lady, and he surmised
+that there could not be many to compare with this one, while after his
+grim, lonely life an intangible something that seemed to emanate from
+her gracious serenity compelled his homage. Then as she smiled at him
+and held out her hand, he was for a moment sensible of an almost
+overwhelming confusion. It passed as suddenly, for this was a man of
+quick perceptions, and remembering that Courthorne had now and then
+displayed some of the grace of bygone days he yielded to a curious
+impulse, and, stooping, kissed the little withered fingers.
+
+"I have," he said, "to thank you for a welcome that does not match my
+poor deserts, madam."
+
+Then Dane, standing beside his leader, saw the grimness grow a trifle
+less marked in his eyes. "It is in the blood," he said half aloud, but
+Dane heard him and afterwards remembered it.
+
+In the meanwhile Miss Barrington had turned from the stranger to her
+niece. "It is a very long time since you have seen Lance, Maud, and,
+though I knew his mother well, I am less fortunate, because this is
+our first meeting," she said. "I wonder if you still remember my
+niece."
+
+Now, Witham had been gratified by his first success, and was about to
+venture on the answer that it was impossible to forget; but when he
+turned towards the very stately young woman in the long black dress,
+whose eyes had a sardonic gleam, and wondered whether he had ever seen
+anybody so comely or less inclined to be companionable, it was borne
+in upon him that any speech of the kind would be distinctly out of
+place. Accordingly, and because there was no hand held out in this
+case, he contented himself with a little bend of his head. Then he was
+presented to the Colonel, who was distantly cordial, and Witham was
+thankful when the maid appeared in the doorway again, to announce that
+dinner was ready. Miss Barrington laid her hand upon his arm.
+
+"You will put up with an old woman's company to-night?" she said.
+
+Witham glanced down deprecatingly at his attire. "I must explain that
+I had no intention of trespassing on your hospitality," he said. "I
+purposed going on to my own homestead, and only called to acquaint
+Colonel Barrington with my arrival."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed pleasantly. "That," she said, "was neither
+dutiful nor friendly. I should have fancied you would also have
+desired to pay your respects to my niece and me."
+
+Witham was not quite sure what he answered, but he drew in a deep
+breath, for he had made the plunge and felt that the worst was over.
+His companion, evidently noticed the gasp of relief.
+
+"It was somewhat of an ordeal?" she said.
+
+Witham looked down upon her gravely, and Miss Barrington noticed a
+steadiness in his eyes she had not expected to see. "It was, and I
+feel guilty because I was horribly afraid," he said. "Now I only
+wonder if you will always be equally kind to me."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled a little, but the man fancied there was just a
+perceptible tightening of the hand upon his arm. "I would like to be,
+for your mother's sake," she said.
+
+Witham understood that while Courthorne's iniquities were not to be
+brought up against him, the little gentle-voiced lady had but taken
+him on trial; but, perhaps because it was so long since any woman had
+spoken kindly words to him, his heart went out towards her, and he
+felt a curious desire to compel her good opinion. Then he found
+himself seated near the head of the long table, with Maud Barrington
+on his other hand, and had an uncomfortable feeling that most of the
+faces were turned somewhat frequently in his direction. It is also
+possible that he would have betrayed himself, had he been burdened
+with self-consciousness, but the long, bitter struggle he had fought
+alone had purged him of petty weaknesses and left him the closer grasp
+of essential things, with the strength of character which is one and
+the same in all men who possess it, whatever may be their upbringing.
+
+During a lull in the voices, Maud Barrington, who may have felt it
+incumbent on her to show him some scant civility, turned towards him
+as she said, "I am afraid our conversation will not appeal to you.
+Partly because there is so little else to interest us, we talk wheat
+throughout the year at Silverdale."
+
+"Well," said Witham with a curious little smile, "wheat as a topic is
+not quite new to me. In fact, I know almost more about cereals than
+some folks would care to do."
+
+"In the shape of elevator warrants or Winnipeg market margins,
+presumably?"
+
+Witham's eyes twinkled, though he understood the implication. "No," he
+said. "The wheat I handled was in 250-pound bags, and I occasionally
+grew somewhat tired of pitching them into a wagon, while my
+speculations usually consisted in committing it to the prairie soil,
+in the hope of reaping forty bushels to the acre, and then
+endeavouring to be content with ten. It is conceivable that operations
+on the Winnipeg market are less laborious as well as more profitable,
+but I have no opportunity of trying them."
+
+Miss Barrington looked at him steadily, and Witham felt the blood
+surge to his forehead as he remembered having heard of a certain
+venture made by Courthorne, which brought discredit on one or two men,
+connected with the affairs of a grain elevator. It was evident that
+Miss Barrington had also heard of it, and no man cares to stand
+convicted of falsification in the eyes of a very pretty girl. Still,
+he roused himself with an effort.
+
+"It is neither wise nor charitable to believe all one hears," he said.
+
+The girl smiled a little, but the man still winced inwardly under her
+clear brown eyes that would, he fancied, have been very scornful had
+they been less indifferent.
+
+"I do not remember mentioning having heard anything," she said. "Were
+you not a trifle premature in face of the proverb?"
+
+Witham's face was a trifle grim, though he laughed. "I'm afraid I was;
+but I am warned," he said. "Excuses are, after all, not worth much,
+and when I make my defence it will be before a more merciful judge."
+
+Maud Barrington's curiosity was piqued. Lance Courthorne, outcast and
+gambler, was at least a different stamp of man from the type she had
+been used to, and, being a woman, the romance that was interwoven with
+his somewhat iniquitous career was not without its attractions for
+her.
+
+"I did not know that you included farming among your talents, and
+should have fancied you would have found it--monotonous," she said.
+
+"I did," and the provoking smile still flickered in Witham's eyes.
+"Are not all strictly virtuous occupations usually so?"
+
+"It is probably a question of temperament. I have, of course, heard
+sardonic speeches of the kind before, and felt inclined to wonder
+whether those who made them were qualified to form an opinion."
+
+Witham nodded, but there was a little ring in his voice. "Perhaps I
+laid myself open to the thrust; but have you any right to assume I
+have never followed a commendable profession?"
+
+No answer was immediately forthcoming, but Witham did wisely when, in
+place of waiting, he turned to Miss Barrington. He had left her niece
+irritated, but the trace of anger she felt was likely to enhance her
+interest. The meal, however, was a trial to him, for he had during
+eight long years lived for the most part apart from all his kind, a
+lonely toiler, and now was constrained to personate a man known to be
+almost dangerously skilful with his tongue. At first sight the task
+appeared almost insuperably difficult, but Witham was a clever man,
+and felt all the thrill of one playing a risky game just then. Perhaps
+it was due to excitement that a readiness he had never fancied himself
+capable of came to him in his need, and, when at last the ladies rose,
+he felt that he had not slipped perilously. Still, he found how dry
+his lips had grown when somebody poured him a glass of wine. Then he
+became sensible that Colonel Barrington, who had apparently been
+delivering a lengthy monologue, was addressing him.
+
+"The outlook is sufficient to cause us some anxiety," he said. "We are
+holding large stocks, and I can see no prospect of anything but a
+steady fall in wheat. It is, however, presumably a little too soon to
+ask your opinion."
+
+"Well," said Witham, "while I am prepared to act upon it, I would
+recommend it to others with some diffidence. No money can be made at
+present by farming, but I see no reason why we should not endeavour to
+cut our losses by selling forward down. If caught by a sudden rally,
+we could fall back on the grain we hold."
+
+There was a sudden silence, until Dane said softly, "That is exactly
+what one of the cleverest brokers in Winnipeg recommended."
+
+"I think," said Colonel Barrington, "you heard my answer. I am
+inclined to fancy that such a measure would not be advisable or
+fitting, Mr. Courthorne. You, however, presumably know very little
+about the practical aspect of the wheat question?"
+
+Witham smiled. "On the contrary, I know a great deal."
+
+"You do?" said Barrington sharply, and while a blunderer would have
+endeavoured to qualify his statement, Witham stood by it.
+
+"You are evidently not aware, sir, that I have tried my hand at
+farming, though not very successfully."
+
+"That, at least," said Barrington dryly, as he rose, "is quite
+credible."
+
+When they went into the smaller room, Witham crossed over to where
+Maud Barrington sat alone, and looked down upon her gravely. "One
+discovers that frankness is usually best," he said. "Now, I would not
+like to feel that you had determined to be unfriendly with me."
+
+Maud Barrington fixed a pair of clear brown eyes upon his face, and
+the faintest trace of astonishment crept into them. She was a woman
+with high principles, but neither a fool nor a prude, and she saw no
+sign of dissolute living there. The man's gaze was curiously steady,
+his skin clear and brown, and his sinewy form suggested a capacity
+for, and she almost fancied an acquaintance with, physical toil. Yet
+he had already denied the truth to her. Witham, on his part, saw a
+very fair face with wholesome pride in it, and felt that the eyes
+which were coldly contemptuous now could, if there was a warrant for
+it, grow very gentle.
+
+"Would it be of any moment if I were?" she said.
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly. "There are two people here it is desirable
+for me to stand well with, and the first of them, your aunt, has, I
+fancy, already decided to give me a fair trial. She told me it was for
+my mother's sake. Now, I can deal with your uncle."
+
+The girl smiled a little. "Are you quite sure? Everybody does not find
+it easy to get on with Colonel Barrington. His code is somewhat
+draconic."
+
+Witham nodded. "He is a man, and I hope to convince him I have at
+least a right to toleration. That leaves only you. The rest don't
+count. They will come round by and by, you see."
+
+The little forceful gesture with which he concluded pleased Maud
+Barrington. It was free from vanity, but conveyed an assurance that he
+knew his own value.
+
+"No friendship that is lightly given is worth very much," she said. "I
+could decide better in another six months. Now it is perhaps fortunate
+that Colonel Barrington is waiting for us to make up his four at
+whist."
+
+Witham allowed a faint gesture of dismay to escape him. "Must I play?"
+
+"Yes," said the girl, smiling. "Whist is my uncle's hobby, and he is
+enthusiastic over a clever game."
+
+Witham groaned inwardly. "And I am a fool at whist."
+
+"Then it was poker you played?" and again a faint trace of anger crept
+into the girl's eyes.
+
+Witham shook his head. "No," he said. "I had few opportunities of
+indulging in expensive luxuries."
+
+"I think we had better take our places," said Maud Barrington, with
+unveiled contempt.
+
+Witham's forehead grew a trifle hot, and when he sat down Barrington
+glanced at him. "I should explain that we never allow stakes of any
+kind at Silverdale," he said. "Some of the lads sent out to me have
+been a trifle extravagant in the old country."
+
+He dealt out the cards, but a trace of bewildered irritation crept
+into his eyes as the game proceeded, and once or twice he appeared to
+check an exclamation of astonishment, while at last he glanced
+reproachfully at Witham.
+
+"My dear sir! Still, you have ridden a long way," he said, laying his
+finger on a king.
+
+Witham laughed to hide his dismay. "I am sorry, sir. It was scarcely
+fair to my partner. You would, however, have beaten us, anyway."
+
+Barrington gravely gathered up the cards. "We will," he said, "have
+some music. I do not play poker."
+
+Then, for the first time, Witham lost his head in his anger. "Nor do
+I, sir."
+
+Barrington only looked at him, but the farmer felt as though somebody
+had struck him in the face, and as soon as he conveniently could, bade
+Miss Barrington good night.
+
+"But we expected you would stay here a day or two. Your place is not
+ready," she said.
+
+Witham smiled at her. "I think I am wise. I must feel my way."
+
+Miss Barrington was won, and, making no further protest, signed to
+Dane. "You will take Mr. Courthorne home with you," she said. "I would
+have kept him here, but he is evidently anxious to talk over affairs
+with some one more of his age than my brother is."
+
+Dane appeared quite willing, and an hour later, Witham sat, cigar in
+hand, in a room of his outlying farm. It was furnished simply, but
+there were signs of taste, and the farmer who occupied it had already
+formed a good opinion of the man whose knowledge of his own profession
+astonished him.
+
+"So you are actually going to sell wheat in face of the Colonel's
+views?" he said.
+
+"Of course," said Witham simply. "I don't like unpleasantness, but I
+can allow no man to dictate my affairs to me."
+
+Dane grinned. "Well," he said, "the Colonel can be nasty, and he has
+no great reason for being fond of you already."
+
+"No?" said Witham. "Now, of course, my accession will make a
+difference at Silverdale, but I would consider it a friendly act if
+you will let me know the views of the colony."
+
+Dane looked thoughtful. "The trouble is that your taking up the land
+leaves less for Maud Barrington than there would have been.
+Barrington, who is fond of the girl, was trustee for the property, and
+after your--estrangement--from your father everybody expected she
+would get it all."
+
+"So I have deprived Miss Barrington of part of her income?"
+
+"Of course," said Dane. "Didn't you know?"
+
+Witham found it difficult to answer. "I never quite realized it
+before. Are there more accounts against me?"
+
+"That," said Dane slowly, "is rather a facer. We are all more or less
+friends of the dominant family, you see."
+
+Witham laid down his cigar and stood up, "Now," he said, "I generally
+talk straight, and you have held out a hand to me. Can you believe in
+the apparent improbability of such a man as I am in the opinion of the
+folks at Silverdale getting tired of a wasted life and trying to walk
+straight again? I want your answer, yes or no, before I head across
+the prairie for my own place."
+
+"Sit down," said Dane with a little smile. "Do you think I would have
+brought you here if I hadn't believed it? And, if I have my way, the
+first man who flings a stone will be sorry for it. Still, I don't
+think any of them will--or could afford it. If we had all been saints,
+some of us would never have come out from the old country."
+
+He stopped and poured out two glasses of wine. "It's a long while
+since I've talked so much," he said. "Here's to our better
+acquaintance, Courthorne."
+
+After that they talked wheat-growing and horses, and when his guest
+retired Dane still sat smoking thoughtfully beside the stove. "We want
+a man with nerve and brains," he said. "I fancy the one who has been
+sent us will make a difference at Silverdale."
+
+It was about the same time when Colonel Barrington stood talking with
+his niece and sister in Silverdale Grange. "And the man threw that
+trick away when it was absolutely clear who had the ace--and wished me
+to believe that he forgot!" he said.
+
+His face was flushed with indignation, but Miss Barrington smiled at
+her niece. "What is your opinion, Maud?"
+
+The girl moved one white shoulder with a gesture of disdain. "Can you
+ask--after that! Besides, he twice wilfully perverted facts while he
+talked to me, though it was not in the least necessary."
+
+Miss Barrington looked thoughtful. "And yet, because I was watching
+him, I do not think he plays cards well."
+
+"But he was a professional gambler," said the girl.
+
+The elder lady shook her head. "So we--heard," she said. "My dear,
+give him a little time. I have seen many men and women--and can't help
+a fancy that there is good in him."
+
+"Can the leopard change his spots?" asked Colonel Barrington, with a
+grim smile.
+
+The little white-haired lady glanced at him as she said quietly, "When
+the wicked man----"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+AN ARMISTICE
+
+
+The dismal afternoon was drawing in when Witham, driving home from the
+railroad, came into sight of a lonely farm. It lifted itself out of
+the prairie, a blur of huddled buildings on the crest of a long rise,
+but at first sight Witham scarcely noticed it. He was gazing
+abstractedly down the sinuous smear of trail which unrolled itself
+like an endless riband across the great white desolation, and his
+brain was busy. Four months had passed since he came to Silverdale,
+and they had left their mark on him.
+
+At first there had been the constant fear of detection, and when that
+had lessened and he was accepted as Lance Courthorne, the latter's
+unfortunate record had met him at every turn. It accounted for the
+suspicions of Colonel Barrington, the reserve of his niece, and the
+aloofness of some of his neighbours, while there had been times when
+Witham found Silverdale almost unendurable. He was, however, an
+obstinate man, and there was on the opposite side the gracious
+kindliness of the little grey-haired lady, who had from the beginning
+been his champion, and the friendship of Dane and one or two of the
+older men. Witham had also proved his right to be listened to, and
+treated, outwardly at least, with due civility, while something in his
+resolute quietness rendered an impertinence impossible. He knew by
+this time that he could hold his own at Silverdale, and based his
+conduct on the fact, but that was only one aspect of the question, and
+he speculated as to the consummation.
+
+It was, however, evident that in the meanwhile he must continue to
+pose as Courthorne, and he felt, rightly or wrongly, that the
+possession of his estate, was, after all, a small reparation for the
+injury the outlaw had done him, but the affair was complicated by the
+fact that, in taking Courthorne's inheritance, he had deprived Maud
+Barrington of part of hers. The girl's coldness stung him, but her
+unquestionable beauty and strength of character had not been without
+their effect, and the man winced as he remembered that she had no pity
+for anything false or mean. He had decided only upon two things, first
+that he would vindicate himself in her eyes, and, since nobody else
+could apparently do it, pull the property that should have been hers
+out of the ruin it had been drifting into under her uncle's
+guardianship. When this had been done, and the killing of Trooper
+Shannon forgotten, it would be time for him to slip back into the
+obscurity he came from.
+
+Then the fact that the homestead was growing nearer forced itself upon
+his perceptions, and he glanced doubtfully across the prairie as he
+approached the forking of the trail. A grey dimness was creeping
+across the wilderness and the smoky sky seemed to hang lower above the
+dully gleaming snow, while the moaning wind flung little clouds of icy
+dust about him. It was evident that the snow was not far away, and it
+was still two leagues to Silverdale, but Witham, who had been to
+Winnipeg, had business with the farmer, and had faced a prairie storm
+before. Accordingly he swung the team into the forking trail and shook
+the reins. There was, he knew, little time to lose, and in another
+five minutes he stood, still wearing his white-sprinkled furs, in a
+room of the birch-log building.
+
+"Here are your accounts, Macdonald, and while we've pulled up our
+losses, I can't help thinking we have just got out in time," he said.
+"The market is but little stiffer yet, but there is less selling, and
+before a few months are over we're going to see a sharp recovery."
+
+The farmer glanced at the documents, and smiled with contentment as he
+took the cheque. "I'm glad I listened to you," he said. "It's
+unfortunate for him and his niece that Barrington wouldn't--at least,
+not until he had lost the opportunity."
+
+"I don't understand," said Witham.
+
+"No," said the farmer, "you've been away. Well, you know it takes a
+long while to get an idea into the Colonel's head, but once it's in
+it's even harder to get it out again. Now Barrington looked down on
+wheat jobbing, but money's tight at Silverdale, and when he saw what
+you were making, he commenced to think. Accordingly he's going to
+sell, and, as he seems convinced that wheat will not go up again, let
+half the acreage lie fallow this season. The worst of it is, the
+others will follow him up, and he controls Maud Barrington's property
+as well as his own."
+
+Witham's face was grave. "I heard in Winnipeg that most of the smaller
+men who had lost courage were doing the same thing. That means a very
+small crop of western hard, and millers paying our own prices.
+Somebody must stop the Colonel."
+
+"Well," said Macdonald dryly, "I wouldn't like to be the man, and,
+after all, it's only your opinion. As you have seen, the small men
+here and in Minnesota are afraid to plough."
+
+Witham laughed softly. "The man who makes the dollars is the one who
+sees farther than the crowd. Anyway, I found the views of one or two
+men who make big deals were much the same as mine, and I'll speak to
+Miss Barrington."
+
+"Then if you will wait a little, you will have an opportunity. She is
+here, you see."
+
+Witham looked disconcerted. "She should not have been. Why didn't you
+send her home? There'll be snow before she reaches Silverdale."
+
+Macdonald laughed. "I hadn't noticed the weather, and, though my wife
+wished her to stay, there is no use in attempting to persuade Miss
+Barrington to do anything when she does not want to. In some respects
+she is very like the Colonel."
+
+The farmer led the way into another room, and Witham flushed a little
+when the girl returned his greeting in a fashion which he fancied the
+presence of Mrs. Macdonald alone rendered distantly cordial. Still, a
+glance through the windows showed him that delay was inadvisable.
+
+"I think you had better stay here all night, Miss Barrington," he
+said. "There is snow coming."
+
+"I am sorry our views do not coincide," said the girl. "I have several
+things to attend to at the Grange."
+
+"Then Macdonald will keep your team, and I will drive you home," said
+Witham. "Mine are the best horses at Silverdale, and I fancy we will
+need all their strength."
+
+Miss Barrington looked up sharply. There had been a little ring in
+Witham's voice, but there was also a solicitude in his face which
+almost astonished her, and when Macdonald urged her to comply she rose
+leisurely.
+
+"I will be ready in ten minutes," she said.
+
+Witham waited at least twenty, very impatiently, but when at last the
+girl appeared, handed her with quiet deference into the sleigh, and
+then took his place, as far as the dimensions of the vehicle
+permitted, apart from her. Once he fancied she noticed it with faint
+amusement, but the horses knew what was coming, and it was only when
+he pulled them up to a trot again on the slope of a rise that he found
+speech convenient.
+
+"I am glad we are alone, though I feel a little diffidence in asking a
+favour of you, because unfortunately when I venture to recommend
+anything you usually set yourself against it," he said. "This is, in
+the language of this country, tolerably straight."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed. "I could find no fault with it on the score
+of ambiguity."
+
+"Well," said Witham, "I believe your uncle is going to sell wheat for
+you, and let a good deal of your land go out of cultivation. Now, as
+you perhaps do not know, the laws which govern the markets are very
+simple and almost immutable, but the trouble is that a good many
+people do not understand their application."
+
+"You apparently consider yourself an exception," said the girl.
+
+Witham nodded. "I do just now. Still, I do not wish to talk about
+myself. You see, the people back there in Europe must be fed, and the
+latest news from wheat-growing countries does not promise more than an
+average crop, while half the faint-hearted farmers here are not going
+to sow much this year. Therefore when the demand comes for Western
+wheat there will be little to sell."
+
+"But how is it that you alone see this? Isn't it a trifle
+egotistical?"
+
+Witham laughed. "Can't we leave my virtues, or the reverse, out of the
+question? I feel that I am right, and want you to dissuade your uncle.
+It would be even better if, when I return to Winnipeg, you would
+empower me to buy wheat for you."
+
+Maud Barrington looked at him curiously. "I am a little perplexed as
+to why you should wish me to."
+
+"No doubt," said Witham. "Still, is there any reason why I should be
+debarred the usual privilege of taking an interest in my neighbour's
+affairs?"
+
+"No," said the girl slowly. "But can you not see that it is out of the
+question that I should entrust you with this commission?"
+
+Witham's hands closed on the reins, and his face grew a trifle grim as
+he said, "From the point of view you evidently take, I presume it is."
+
+A flush of crimson suffused the girl's cheeks. "I never meant that,
+and I can scarcely forgive you for fancying I did. Of course I could
+trust you with--you have made me use the word--the dollars, but you
+must realize that I could not do anything in public opposition to my
+uncle's opinion."
+
+Witham was sensible of a great relief, but it did not appear advisable
+to show it. "There are so many things you apparently find it difficult
+to forgive me--and we will let this one pass," he said. "Still, I
+cannot help thinking that Colonel Barrington will have a good deal to
+answer for."
+
+Maud Barrington made no answer, but she was sensible of a respect
+which appeared quite unwarranted for the dryly-spoken man who, though
+she guessed her words stung him now and then, bore them without
+wincing. While she sat silent, shivering under her furs, darkness
+crept down. The smoky cloud dropped lower, the horizon closed in as
+the grey obscurity rolled up to meet them across a rapidly-narrowing
+strip of snow. Then she could scarcely see the horses, and the muffled
+drumming of their hoofs was lost in a doleful wail of wind. It also
+seemed to her that the cold, which was already almost insupportable,
+suddenly increased, as it not infrequently does in that country before
+the snow. Then a white powder was whirled into her face, filling her
+eyes and searing the skin, while, when she could see anything again,
+the horses were plunging at a gallop through a filmy haze, and Witham,
+whitened all over, leaned forward with lowered head hurling hoarse
+encouragement at them. His voice reached her fitfully through the roar
+of wind, until sight and hearing were lost alike as the white haze
+closed about them, and it was not until the wild gust had passed she
+heard him again.
+
+He was apparently shouting, "Come nearer."
+
+Maud Barrington was not sure whether she obeyed him or he seized and
+drew her towards him. She, however, felt the furs piled high about her
+neck and that there was an arm round her shoulder, and for a moment
+was sensible of an almost overwhelming revulsion from the contact. She
+was proud and very dainty, and fancied she knew what this man had
+been, while now she was drawn in to his side, and felt her chilled
+blood respond to the warmth of his body. Indeed, she grew suddenly hot
+to the neck, and felt that henceforward she could never forgive him or
+herself, but the mood passed almost as swiftly, for again the awful
+blast shrieked about them and she only remembered her companion's
+humanity as the differences of sex and character vanished under that
+destroying cold. They were no longer man and woman, but only beings of
+flesh and blood, clinging desperately to the life that was in them,
+for the first rush of the Western snowstorm has more than a physical
+effect, and man exposed to its fury loses all but his animal instincts
+in the primitive struggle with the elements.
+
+Then, while the snow folded them closely in its white embrace during a
+lull, the girl recovered herself, and her strained voice was faintly
+audible.
+
+"This is my fault; why don't you tell me so?" she said.
+
+A hoarse laugh seemed to issue from the whitened object beside her,
+and she was drawn closer to it again. "We needn't go into that just
+now. You have one thing to do, and that is to keep warm."
+
+One of the horses stumbled, the grasp that was around her became
+relaxed and she heard the swish of the whip followed by hoarse
+expletives, and did not resent it. The man, it seemed, was fighting
+for her life as well as his own, and even brutal virility was
+necessary. After that there was a space of oblivion, while the storm
+raged about them, until, when the wind fell a trifle, it became
+evident that the horses had left the trail.
+
+"You are off the track, and will never make the Grange unless you find
+it!" she said.
+
+Witham seemed to nod. "We are not going there," he said, and if he
+added anything, it was lost in the scream of a returning gust.
+
+Again Maud Barrington's reason reasserted itself, and remembering the
+man's history she became sensible of a curious dismay, but it also
+passed, and left her with the vague realization that he and she were
+actuated alike only by the desire to escape extinction. Presently she
+became sensible that the sleigh had stopped beside a formless mound of
+white and the man was shaking her.
+
+"Hold those furs about you while I lift you down," he said.
+
+She did his bidding, and did not shrink when she felt his arms about
+her, while next moment she was standing knee-deep in the snow and the
+man shouting something she did not catch. Team and sleigh seemed to
+vanish, and she saw her companion dimly for a moment before he was
+lost in the sliding whiteness too. Then a horrible fear came upon her.
+
+It seemed a very long while before he reappeared, and thrust her in
+through what seemed to be a door. Then there was another waiting
+before the light of a lamp blinked out, and she saw that she was
+standing in a little log-walled room with bare floor and a few trusses
+of straw in a corner. There was also a rusty stove, and a very small
+pile of billets beside it. Witham, who had closed the door, stood
+looking at them with a curious expression.
+
+"Where is the team?" she gasped.
+
+"Heading for a birch bluff or Silverdale, though I scarcely think they
+will get there," said the man. "I have never stopped here, and it
+wasn't astonishing they fancied the place a pile of snow. While I was
+getting the furs out they slipped away from me."
+
+Miss Barrington now knew where they were. The shanty was used by the
+remoter settlers as a half-way house where they slept occasionally on
+their long journey to the railroad, and as there was a birch bluff not
+far away, it was the rule that whoever occupied it should replace the
+fuel he had consumed. The last man had, however, not been liberal.
+
+"But what are we to do?" she asked, with a little gasp of dismay.
+
+"Stay here until the morning," said Witham quietly. "Unfortunately I
+can't even spare you my company. The stable has fallen in, and it
+would be death to stand outside, you see. In the meanwhile, pull out
+some of the straw and put it in the stove."
+
+"Can you not do that?" asked Miss Barrington, feeling that she must
+commence at once, if she was to keep this man at a befitting distance.
+
+Witham laughed. "Oh, yes, but you will freeze if you stand still, and
+these billets require splitting. Still, if you have special objections
+to doing what I ask you, you can walk up and down rapidly."
+
+The girl glanced at him a moment, and then lowered her eyes. "Of
+course I was wrong! Do you wish to hear that I am sorry?"
+
+Witham, answering nothing, swung an axe round his head, and the girl,
+kneeling beside the stove, noticed the sinewy suppleness of his frame
+and the precision with which the heavy blade cleft the billets. The
+axe, she knew, is by no means an easy tool to handle. At last the red
+flame crackled, and though she had not intended the question to be
+malicious, there was a faint trace of irony in her voice as she asked,
+"Is there any other thing you wish me to do?"
+
+Witham flung two bundles of straw down beside the stove, and stood
+looking at her gravely. "Yes," he said. "I want you to sit down and
+let me wrap this sleigh robe about you."
+
+The girl submitted, and did not shrink from his touch visibly when he
+drew the fur robe about her shoulders and packed the end of it round
+her feet. Still, there was a faint warmth in her face, and she was
+grateful for his unconcernedness.
+
+"Fate or fortune has placed me in charge of you until to-morrow, and
+if the position is distasteful to you it is not my fault," he said.
+"Still, I feel the responsibility, and it would be a little less
+difficult if you could accept the fact tacitly."
+
+Maud Barrington would not have shivered if she could have avoided it,
+but the cold was too great for her, and she did not know whether she
+was vexed or pleased at the gleam of compassion in the man's grey
+eyes. It was more eloquent than anything of the kind she had ever
+seen, but it had gone and he was only quietly deferent when she
+glanced at him again.
+
+"I will endeavour to be good," she said, and then flushed with
+annoyance at the adjective. Half-dazed by the cold as she was, she
+could not think of a more suitable one. Witham, however, retained his
+gravity.
+
+"Now, Macdonald gave you no supper, and he has dinner at noon," he
+said. "I brought some eatables along, and you must make the best meal
+you can."
+
+He opened a packet, and laid it, with a little silver flask, upon her
+knee.
+
+"I cannot eat all this--and it is raw spirit," said Maud Barrington.
+
+Witham laughed. "Are you not forgetting your promise? Still, we will
+melt a little snow into the cup."
+
+An icy gust swept in when he opened the door, and it was only by a
+strenuous effort he closed it again, while, when he came back panting
+with the top of the flask a little colour crept into Maud Barrington's
+face. "I am sorry," she said. "That at least is your due."
+
+"I really don't want my due," said Witham with a deprecatory gesture
+as he laid the silver cup upon the stove. "Can't we forget we are not
+exactly friends, just for to-night? If so, you will drink this and
+commence at once on the provisions--to please me!"
+
+Maud Barrington was glad of the reviving draught, for she was very
+cold, but presently she held out the packet.
+
+"One really cannot eat many crackers at once; will you help me?"
+
+Witham laughed as he took one of the biscuits. "If I had expected any
+one would share my meal, I would have provided a better one. Still, I
+have been glad to feast upon more unappetizing things occasionally!"
+
+"When were you unfortunate?" said the girl.
+
+Witham smiled somewhat dryly. "I was unfortunate for six years on
+end."
+
+He was aware of the blunder when he had spoken, but Maud Barrington
+appeared to be looking at the flask thoughtfully.
+
+"The design is very pretty," she said. "You got it in England?"
+
+The man knew that it was the name F. Witham his companion's eyes
+rested on, but his face was expressionless. "Yes," he said. "It is one
+of the things they make for presentation in the old country."
+
+Maud Barrington noticed the absence of any attempt at explanation, and
+having considerable pride of her own, was sensible of a faint
+approval. "You are making slow progress," she said, with a slight but
+perceptible difference in her tone. "Now, you can have eaten nothing
+since breakfast."
+
+Witham said nothing, but by and by poured a little of the spirit into
+a rusty can, and the girl, who understood why he did so, felt that it
+covered several of his offences. "Now," she said graciously, "you may
+smoke if you wish to."
+
+Witham pointed to the few billets left and shook his head. "I'm afraid
+I must get more wood."
+
+The roar of the wind almost drowned his voice, and the birch logs
+seemed to tremble under the impact of the blast, while Maud Barrington
+shivered as she asked, "Is it safe?"
+
+"It is necessary," said Witham, with the little laugh she had already
+found reassuring.
+
+He had gone out in another minute, and the girl felt curiously lonely
+as she remembered stories of men who had left their homesteads during
+a blizzard to see to the safety of the horses in a neighbouring
+stable, and were found afterwards as still as the snow that covered
+them. Maud Barrington was not unduly timorous, but the roar of that
+awful icy gale would have stricken dismay into the hearts of most men,
+and she found herself glancing with feverish impatience at a
+diminutive gold watch and wondering whether the cold had retarded its
+progress. Ten minutes passed very slowly, lengthened to twenty more
+slowly still, and then it flashed upon her that there was at least
+something she could do; and, scraping up a little of the snow that
+sifted in, she melted it in the can. Then she set the flask-top upon
+the stove, and once more listened for the man's footsteps very
+eagerly.
+
+She did not hear them, but at last the door swung open, and carrying a
+load of birch branches Witham staggered in. He dropped them, strove to
+close the door, and failed, then leaned against it, gasping, with a
+livid face, for there are few men who can withstand the cold of a
+snow-laden gale at forty degrees below.
+
+How Maud Barrington closed the door she did not know; but it was with
+a little imperious gesture she turned to the man.
+
+"Shake those furs at once," she said; and drawing him towards the
+stove held up the steaming cup. "Now sit there and drink it."
+
+Witham stooped and reached out for the can, but the girl swept it off
+the stove. "Oh, I know the silver was for me," she said. "Still, is
+this a time for trifles such as that?"
+
+Worn out by a very grim struggle, Witham did as he was bidden, and
+looked up with a twinkle in his eyes, when with the faintest trace of
+colour in her cheeks the girl sat down close to him and drew part of
+the fur robe about him.
+
+"I really believe you were a little pleased to see me come back just
+now," he said.
+
+"Was that quite necessary?" asked Maud Barrington. "Still, I was."
+
+Witham made a little deprecatory gesture. "Of course," he said. "Now
+we can resume our former footing to-morrow, but in the meanwhile I
+would like to know why you are so hard upon me, Miss Barrington,
+because I really have not done much harm to any one at Silverdale.
+Your aunt"--and he made a little respectful inclination of his head
+which pleased the girl--"is at least giving me a fair trial."
+
+"It is difficult to tell you--but it was your own doing," said Maud
+Barrington. "At the beginning you prejudiced us when you told us you
+could only play cards indifferently. It was so unnecessary, and we
+knew a good deal about you!"
+
+"Well," said Witham quietly, "I have only my word to offer, and I
+wonder if you will believe me now, but I don't think I ever won five
+dollars at cards in my life."
+
+Maud Barrington watched him closely, but his tone carried conviction,
+and again she was glad that he attempted no explanation. "I am quite
+willing to take it," she said. "Still, you can understand----"
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "It puts a strain upon your faith, but some day I
+may be able to make a good deal that puzzles you quite clear."
+
+Maud Barrington glanced at the flask. "I wonder if that is connected
+with the explanation, but I will wait. Now, you have not lighted your
+cigar."
+
+Witham understood that the topic was dismissed, and sat thoughtfully
+still while the girl nestled against the birch logs close beside him
+under the same furs; for the wind went through the building and the
+cold was unbearable a few feet from the stove. The birch rafters shook
+above their heads, and every now and then it seemed that a roaring
+gust would lift the roof from them. Still the stove glowed and
+snapped, and close in about it there was a drowsy heat, while
+presently the girl's eyes grew heavy. Finally--for there are few who
+can resist the desire for sleep in the cold of the North-West--her
+head sank back, and Witham, rising very slowly, held his breath as he
+piled the furs about her. That done, he stooped and looked down upon
+her while the blood crept to his face. Maud Barrington lay very still,
+the long, dark lashes resting on her cold-tinted cheeks, and the
+patrician serenity of her face was even more marked in her sleep. Then
+he turned away, feeling like one who had committed a desecration,
+knowing that he had looked too long already upon the sleeping girl who
+believed he had been an outcast and yet had taken his word; for it was
+borne in upon him that a time would come when he would try her faith
+even more severely. Moving softly, he paced up and down the room.
+
+Witham afterwards wondered how many miles he walked that night, for
+though the loghouse was not longer than thirty feet, the cold bit
+deep; but at last he heard a sigh as he glanced towards the stove, and
+immediately swung round again. When he next turned, Miss Barrington
+stood upright, a little flushed in face, but otherwise very calm; and
+the man stood still, shivering in spite of his efforts, and blue with
+cold. The wind had fallen, but the sting of the frost that followed it
+made itself felt beside the stove.
+
+"You had only your deerskin jacket--and you let me sleep under all the
+furs," she said.
+
+Witham shook his head, and hoped he did not look as guilty as he felt,
+when he remembered that it must have been evident to his companion
+that the furs did not get into the position they had occupied
+themselves.
+
+"I only fancied you were a trifle drowsy and not inclined to talk," he
+said, with an absence of concern, for which Miss Barrington, who did
+not believe him, felt grateful. "You see"--and the inspiration was a
+trifle too evident--"I was too sleepy to notice anything myself.
+Still, I am glad you are awake now, because I must make my way to the
+Grange."
+
+"But the snow will be ever so deep, and I could not come," said Maud
+Barrington.
+
+Witham shook his head. "I'm afraid you must stay here; but I will be
+back with Colonel Barrington in a few hours at latest."
+
+The girl deemed it advisable to hide her consternation. "But you might
+not find the trail," she said. "The ravine would lead you to Graham's
+homestead."
+
+"Still," said Witham slowly, "I am going to the Grange."
+
+Then Maud Barrington remembered, and glanced aside from him. It was
+evident this man thought of everything; and she made no answer when
+Witham, who thrust more billets into the stove, turned to her with a
+little smile.
+
+"I think we need remember nothing when we meet again, beyond the fact
+that you will give me a chance of showing that the Lance Courthorne,
+whose fame you know, has ceased to exist."
+
+Then he went out, and the girl stood with flushed cheeks looking down
+at the furs he had left behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MAUD HARRINGTON'S PROMISE
+
+
+Daylight had not broken across the prairie, when, floundering through
+a foot of dusty snow, Witham reached the Grange. He was aching from
+fatigue and cold, and the deerskin jacket stood out from his numbed
+body, stiff with frost, when, leaning heavily on a table, he awaited
+Colonel Barrington. The latter, on entering, stared at him and then
+flung open a cupboard and poured out a glass of wine.
+
+"Drink that before you talk. You look half dead," he said.
+
+Witham shook his head. "Perhaps you had better hear me first."
+
+Barrington thrust the glass upon him. "I could make nothing of what
+you told me while you speak like that. Drink it, and then sit until
+you get used to the different temperature."
+
+Witham drained the glass and sank limply into a chair. As yet his face
+was colourless, though his chilled flesh tingled horribly as the blood
+once more crept into the surface tissues. Then he fixed his eyes upon
+his host as he told his story. Barrington stood very straight watching
+his visitor, but his face was drawn, for the resolution which
+supported him through the day was less noticeable in the early
+morning, and it was evident now at least that he was an old man
+carrying a heavy load of anxiety. Still, as the story proceeded, a
+little blood crept into his cheeks, while Witham guessed that he found
+it difficult to retain his grim immobility.
+
+"I am to understand that an attempt to reach the Grange through the
+snow would have been perilous?" he said.
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly.
+
+The older man stood very still regarding him intently, until he said,
+"I don't mind admitting that it was distinctly regrettable!"
+
+Witham stopped him with a gesture. "It was at least unavoidable, sir.
+The team would not face the snow, and no one could have reached the
+Grange alive."
+
+"No doubt you did your best--and, as a connexion of the family, I am
+glad it was you. Still--and there are cases in which it is desirable
+to speak plainly--the affair, which you will, of course, dismiss from
+your recollection, is to be considered as closed now."
+
+Witham smiled, and a trace of irony he could not quite repress was
+just discernible in his voice. "I scarcely think that was necessary,
+sir. It is, of course, sufficient for me to have rendered a small
+service to the distinguished family which has given me an opportunity
+of proving my right to recognition, and neither you, nor Miss
+Barrington, need have any apprehension that I will presume upon it!"
+
+Barrington wheeled round. "You have the Courthorne temper, at least,
+and perhaps I deserved this display of it. You acted with commendable
+discretion in coming straight to me--and the astonishment I got drove
+the other aspect of the question out of my head. If it hadn't been for
+you, my niece would have frozen."
+
+"I'm afraid I spoke unguardedly, sir; but I am very tired. Still, if
+you will wait a few minutes, I will get the horses out without
+troubling the hired man."
+
+Barrington made a little gesture of comprehension, and then shook his
+head. "You are fit for nothing further, and need rest and sleep."
+
+"You will want somebody, sir," said Witham. "The snow is very loose
+and deep."
+
+He went out, and Barrington, who looked after him with a curious
+expression in his face, nodded twice as if in approval. Twenty minutes
+later he took his place in the sleigh that slid away from the Grange,
+which lay a league behind it when the sunrise flamed across the
+prairie. The wind had gone, and there was only a pitiless brightness
+and a devastating cold, while the snow lay blown in wisps, dried dusty
+and fine as flour by the frost. It had no cohesion, the runners sank
+in it, and Witham was almost waist deep when he dragged the
+floundering team through the drifts. A day had passed since he had
+eaten anything worth mention, but he held on with an endurance which
+his companion, who was incapable of rendering him assistance, wondered
+at. There were belts of deep snow the almost buried sleigh must be
+dragged through, and tracts from which the wind had swept the dusty
+covering, leaving bare the grasses the runners would not slide over,
+where the team came to a standstill, and could scarcely be urged to
+continue the struggle.
+
+At last, however, the loghouse rose, a lonely mound of whiteness, out
+of the prairie, and Witham drew in a deep breath of contentment when a
+dusky figure appeared for a moment in the doorway. His weariness
+seemed to fall from him, and once more his companion wondered at the
+tirelessness of the man, as, floundering on foot beside them, he urged
+the team through the powdery drifts beneath the big birch bluff.
+Witham did not go in, however, when they reached the house; and when,
+five minutes later, Maud Barrington came out, she saw him leaning with
+a drawn face against the sleigh. He straightened himself suddenly at
+the sight of her, but she had seen sufficient, and her heart softened
+towards him. Whatever the man's history had been he had borne a good
+deal for her.
+
+The return journey was even more arduous, and now and then Maud
+Barrington felt a curious throb of pity for the worn-out man, who
+during most of it walked beside the team; but it was accomplished at
+last, and she contrived to find means of thanking him alone when they
+reached the Grange.
+
+Witham shook his head, and then smiled a little. "It isn't nice to
+make a bargain," he said. "Still, it is less pleasant now and then to
+feel under an obligation, though there is no reason why you should."
+
+Maud Barrington was not altogether pleased, but she could not blind
+herself to facts, and it was plain that there was an obligation. "I am
+afraid I cannot quite believe that, but I do not see what you are
+leading to."
+
+Witham's eyes twinkled. "Well," he said reflectively, "I don't want
+you to fancy that last night commits you to any line of conduct in
+regard to me. I only asked for a truce, you see."
+
+Maud Barrington was a trifle nettled. "Yes?" she said.
+
+"Then, I want to show you how you can discharge any trifling
+obligation you may fancy you may owe me, which of course would be more
+pleasant to you. Do not allow your uncle to sell any wheat forward for
+you, and persuade him to sow every acre that belongs to you this
+spring."
+
+"But however would this benefit you," asked the girl.
+
+Witham laughed. "I have a fancy that I can straighten up things at
+Silverdale, if I can get my way. It would please me, and I believe
+they want it. Of course, a desire to improve anything appears curious
+in me!"
+
+Maud Barrington was relieved of the necessity of answering, for the
+Colonel came up just then; but, moved by some sudden impulse, she
+nodded as if in agreement.
+
+It was afternoon when she awakened from a refreshing sleep, and
+descending to the room set apart for herself and her aunt, sat
+thoughtfully still awhile in a chair beside the stove. Then,
+stretching out her hand, she took up a little case of photographs and
+slipped out one of them. It was a portrait of a boy and pony, but
+there was a significance in the fact that she knew just where to find
+it. The picture was a good one, and once more Maud Barrington noticed
+the arrogance, which did not, however, seem out of place there, in the
+lad's face. It was also a comely face, but there was a hint of
+sensuality in it that marred its beauty. Then with a growing
+perplexity she compared it with that of the weary man who had plodded
+beside the team. Witham was not arrogant but resolute, and there was
+no stamp of indulgence in his face. Indeed, the girl had from the
+beginning recognized the virility in it that was tinged with
+asceticism and sprang from a simple, strenuous life of toil in the
+wind and sun.
+
+Just then there was a rustle of fabric, and she laid down the
+photograph a moment too late, as her aunt came in. As it happened, the
+elder lady's eyes rested on the picture, and a faint flush of
+annoyance crept into the face of the girl. It was scarcely
+perceptible, but Miss Barrington saw it, and though she felt tempted,
+did not smile.
+
+"I did not know you were down," she said. "Lance is still asleep. He
+seemed very tired."
+
+"Yes," said the girl. "That is very probable. He left the railroad
+before daylight, and had driven round to several farms before he came
+to Macdonald's, and he was very considerate. He had made me take all
+the furs, and, I fancy, walked up and down with nothing but his indoor
+clothing on all night long, though the wind went through the building,
+and one could scarcely keep alive a few feet from the stove."
+
+Again the flicker of colour crept into the girl's cheeks, and the eyes
+that were keen, as well as gentle, noticed it.
+
+"I think you owe him a good deal," said Miss Barrington.
+
+"Yes," said her niece, with a little laugh which appeared to imply a
+trace of resentment. "I believe I do, but he seemed unusually anxious
+to relieve me of that impression. He was also good enough to hint that
+nothing he might have done need prevent me being--the right word is a
+trifle difficult to find--but I fancy he meant unpleasant to him if I
+wished it."
+
+There was a little twinkle in Miss Barrington's eyes. "Are you not a
+trifle hard to please, my dear? Now, if he had attempted to insist on
+a claim to your gratitude, you would have resented it."
+
+"Of course," said the girl reflectively. "Still, it is annoying to be
+debarred from offering it. There are times, aunt, when I can't help
+wishing that Lance Courthorne had never come to Silverdale. There are
+men who leave nothing just as they found it, and whom one can't
+ignore."
+
+Miss Barrington shook her head. "I fancy you are wrong. He has
+offended after all?"
+
+She was pleased to see her niece's face relax into a smile that
+expressed unconcern. "We are all exacting now and then," said the
+girl. "Still, he made me promise to give him a fair trial, which was
+not flattering, because it suggested that I had been unnecessarily
+harsh, and then hinted this morning that he had no intention of
+holding me to it. It really was not gratifying to find he held the
+concession he asked for of so small account. You are, however, as
+easily swayed by trifles as I am, because Lance can do no wrong since
+he kissed your hand."
+
+"I really think I liked him the better for it," said the little
+silver-haired lady. "The respect was not assumed, but wholly genuine,
+you see; and whether I was entitled to it or not, it was a good deal
+in Lance's favour that he should offer it to me. There must be some
+good in the man who can be moved to reverence anything, even if he is
+mistaken."
+
+"No man with any sense could help adoring you," said Maud Barrington.
+"Still, I wonder why you believe I was wrong in wishing he had not
+come to Silverdale."
+
+Miss Barrington looked thoughtful. "I will tell you, my dear. There
+are few better men than my brother; but his thoughts, and the
+traditions he is bound by, are those of fifty years ago, while the
+restless life of the prairie is a thing of to-day. We have fallen too
+far behind it at Silverdale, and a crisis is coming that none of us
+are prepared for. Even Dane is scarcely fitted to help my brother to
+face it, and the rest are either over-fond of their pleasure or
+untrained boys. Brave lads they are, but none of them have been taught
+that it is only by mental strain, or the ceaseless toil of his body,
+the man without an inheritance can win himself a competence now. This
+is why they want a leader who has known hardship and hunger, instead
+of ease, and won what he holds with his own hand in place of having it
+given him."
+
+"You fancy we could find one in such a man as Lance has been?"
+
+Miss Barrington looked grave. "I believe the prodigal was afterwards a
+better, as well as a wiser, man than the one who stayed at home, and I
+am not quite sure that Lance's history is so nearly like that of the
+son in the parable as we have believed it to be. A residence in the
+sty is apt to leave a stain, which I have not, though I have looked
+for it, found on him."
+
+The eyes of the two women met, and, though nothing more was said, each
+realized that the other was perplexed by the same question, while the
+girl was astonished to find her vague suspicions shared. While they
+sat silent, Colonel Barrington came in.
+
+"I am glad to see you looking so much better, Maud," he said, with a
+trace of embarrassment. "Courthorne is resting still. Now, I can't
+help feeling that we have been a trifle more distant than was needful
+with him. The man has really behaved very discreetly. I mean in
+everything."
+
+This was a great admission, and Miss Barrington smiled. "Did it hurt
+you very much to tell us that?" she asked.
+
+The Colonel laughed. "I know what you mean, and if you put me on my
+mettle I'll retract. After all, it was no great credit to him, because
+blood will tell, and he is, of course, a Courthorne."
+
+Almost without her intention, Maud Barrington's eyes wandered towards
+the photograph, and then looking up she met those of her aunt, and
+once more saw the thought that troubled her in them.
+
+"The Courthorne blood is responsible for a good deal more than
+discretion," said Miss Barrington, who went out quietly.
+
+Her brother appeared a trifle perplexed. "Now, I fancied your aunt had
+taken him under her wing, and when I was about to suggest that,
+considering the connexion between the families, we might ask him over
+to dinner occasionally, she goes away," he said.
+
+The girl looked down a moment, for, realizing that her uncle
+recognized the obligation he was under to the man he did not like, she
+remembered that she herself owed him considerably more and he had
+asked for something in return. It was not altogether easy to grant,
+but she had tacitly pledged herself, and turning suddenly she laid a
+hand on Barrington's arm.
+
+"Of course; but I want to talk of something else just now," she said.
+"You know I have very seldom asked you questions about my affairs, but
+I wish to take a little practical interest in them this year."
+
+"Yes?" said Barrington, with a smile. "Well, I am at your service, my
+dear, and quite ready to account for my stewardship. You are no longer
+my ward, except by your own wishes."
+
+"I am still your niece," said the girl, patting his arm. "Now, there
+is, of course, nobody who could manage the farming better than you do,
+but I would like to raise a large crop of wheat this season."
+
+"It wouldn't pay," and the Colonel grew suddenly grave. "Very few men
+in the district are going to sow all their holding. Wheat is steadily
+going down."
+
+"Then if nobody sows there will be very little, and shouldn't that put
+up the prices?"
+
+Barrington's eyes twinkled. "Who has been teaching you commercial
+economy? You are too pretty to understand such things, and the
+argument is fallacious, because the wheat is consumed in Europe--and
+even if we have not much to offer, they can get plenty from
+California, Chile, India, and Australia."
+
+"Oh, yes--and Russia," said the girl. "Still, you see, the big mills
+in Winnipeg and Minneapolis depend upon the prairie. They couldn't
+very well bring wheat in from Australia."
+
+Barrington was still smiling with his eyes, but his lips were set. "A
+little knowledge is dangerous, my dear, and if you could understand me
+better, I could show you where you were wrong. As it is, I can only
+tell you that I have decided to sell wheat forward and plough very
+little."
+
+"But that was a policy you condemned with your usual vigour. You
+really know you did."
+
+"My dear," said the Colonel, with a little impatient gesture, "one can
+never argue with a lady. You see--circumstances alter cases
+considerably."
+
+He nodded with an air of wisdom as though that decided it; but the
+girl persisted. "Uncle," she said, drawing closer to him with lithe
+gracefulness, "I want you to let me have my own way just for once, and
+if I am wrong I will never do anything you do not approve of again.
+After all, it is a very little thing, and you would like to please
+me."
+
+"It is a trifle that is likely to cost you a good deal of money," said
+the Colonel dryly.
+
+"I think I could afford it, and you could not refuse me."
+
+"As I am only your uncle, and no longer a trustee, I could not," said
+Barrington. "Still, you would not act against my wishes?"
+
+His eyes were gentle, unusually so, for he was not as a rule very
+patient when any one questioned his will; but there was a reproach in
+them that hurt the girl. Still, because she had promised, she
+persisted.
+
+"No," she said. "That is why it would be ever so much nicer if you
+would just think as I did."
+
+Barrington looked at her steadily. "If you insist, I can at least hope
+for the best," he said, with a gravity that brought a faint colour to
+the listener's cheek.
+
+It was next day when Witham took his leave, and Maud Barrington stood
+beside him as he put on his driving furs.
+
+"You told me there was something you wished me to do, and, though it
+was difficult, it is done," she said. "My holding will be sown with
+wheat this spring."
+
+Witham turned his head aside a moment and apparently found it needful
+to fumble at the fastenings of the furs, while there was a curious
+expression in his eyes when he looked round again.
+
+"Then," he said with a little smile, "we are quits. That cancels any
+little obligation which may have existed."
+
+He had gone in another minute, and Maud Barrington turned back into
+the stove-warmed room very quietly. Her lips were, however, somewhat
+closely set.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+SPEED THE PLOUGH
+
+
+Winter had fled back beyond the barrens to the lonely North at last,
+and though here and there a little slushy snow still lay soaking the
+black loam in a hollow, a warm wind swept the vast levels when one
+morning Colonel Barrington rode with his niece and sister across the
+prairie. Spring comes suddenly in that region, and the frost-bleached
+sod was steaming under an effulgent sun, while in places a hardy
+flower peeped through. It was six hundred miles to the forests of the
+Rockies' eastern slope, and as far to the Athabascan pines, but it
+seemed to Maud Barrington that their resinous sweetness was in the
+glorious western wind, which awoke a musical sighing from the sea of
+rippling grass. It rolled away before her in billows of lustrous
+silver-grey, and had for sole boundary the first upward spring of the
+arch of cloudless blue, across which the vanguard of the feathered
+host pressed on, company by company towards the Pole.
+
+The freshness of it all stirred her blood like wine, and the
+brightness that flooded the prairie had crept into her eyes; for those
+who bear the iron winter of that lonely land realize the wonder of the
+reawakening, which in a little space of day, dresses the waste which
+has lain for long months white and silent as the dead, in living
+green. It also has its subtle significance that the grimmest toiler
+feels, and the essence of it is hope eternal and triumphant life. The
+girl felt the thrill of it, and gave thanks by an answering
+brightness, as the murmuring grasses and peeping flowerets did; but
+there was behind her instinctive gladness a vague wonder and
+expectancy. She had read widely, and seen the life of the cities with
+understanding eyes, and now she was to be provided with the edifying
+spectacle of the gambler and outcast turned farmer.
+
+Had she been asked a few months earlier whether the man who had, as
+Courthorne had done, cast away his honour and wallowed in the mire,
+could come forth again and purge himself from the stain, her answer
+would have been coldly sceptical; but now, with the old familiar
+miracle and what it symbolized before her eyes, the thing looked less
+improbable. Why this should give pleasure she did not know, or would
+not admit that she did, but the fact remained that it was so.
+
+Trotting down the slope of the next rise, they came upon him, and he
+stood with very little sign of dissolute living upon him by a great
+breaker plough. In front of him, the quarter-mile furrow led on beyond
+the tall sighting poles on the crest of the next rise, and four
+splendid horses, of a kind not very usual on the prairie, were
+stamping the steaming clods at his side. Bronzed by frost and sun,
+with his brick-red neck and arch of chest revealed by the coarse blue
+shirt that, belted at the waist, enhanced his slenderness of flank,
+the repentant prodigal was at least a passable specimen of the animal
+man, but it was the strength and patience in his face that struck the
+girl, as he turned towards her, bareheaded, with a little smile in his
+eyes. She also noticed the difference he presented with his ingrained
+hands and the stain of the soil upon him to her uncle, who sat his
+horse, immaculate as usual with gloved hand on the bridle, for the
+Englishmen at Silverdale usually hired other men to do their coarser
+work for them.
+
+"So you are commencing in earnest in face of my opinion?" said
+Barrington. "Of course, I wish you success, but that consummation
+appears distinctly doubtful."
+
+Witham laughed as he pointed to a great machine which, hauled by four
+horses, rolled towards them, scattering the black clods in its wake.
+"I'm doing what I can to achieve it, sir," he said. "In fact, I'm
+staking somewhat heavily. That team with the gang ploughs and
+cultivators cost me more dollars than I care to remember."
+
+"No doubt," said Barrington dryly. "Still, we have always considered
+oxen good enough for breaking prairie at Silverdale."
+
+Witham nodded. "I used to do so, sir, when I could get nothing better,
+but after driving oxen for eight years one finds out their
+disadvantages."
+
+Barrington's face grew a trifle stern. "There are times when you tax
+our patience, Lance," he said. "Still, there is nothing to be gained
+by questioning your assertion. What I fail to see is where your reward
+for all this will come from, because I am still convinced that the
+soil will, so to speak, give you back eighty cents for every dollar
+you put into it. I would, however, like to look at those implements. I
+have never seen better ones."
+
+He dismounted and helped his companion down, for Witham made no
+answer. The farmer was never sure what actuated him, but, save in an
+occasional fit of irony, he had not attempted by any reference to make
+his past fall into line with Courthorne's since he had first been
+accepted as the latter at Silverdale. He had taken the dead man's
+inheritance, for a while, but he would stoop no further, and to speak
+the truth, which he saw was not credited, brought him a grim amusement
+as well as flung a sop to his pride. Presently, however, Miss
+Barrington turned to him, and there was a kindly gleam in her eyes as
+she glanced at the splendid horses and widening strip of ploughing.
+
+"You have the hope of youth, Lance, to make this venture when all
+looks black--and it pleases me," she said. "Sometimes I fancy that men
+had braver hearts than they have now when I was young."
+
+Witham flushed a trifle, and stretching out an arm swept his hand
+round the horizon. "All that looked dead a very little while ago, and
+now you can see the creeping greenness in the sod," he said. "The lean
+years cannot last for ever, and, even if one is beaten again, there is
+a consolation in knowing that one has made a struggle. Now, I am quite
+aware that you are fancying a speech of this kind does not come well
+from me."
+
+Maud Barrington had seen his gesture, and something in the thought
+that impelled it, as well as the almost statuesque pose of his
+thinly-clad figure, appealed to her. Courthorne as farmer, with the
+damp of clean effort on his forehead and the stain of the good soil
+that would faithfully repay it on his garments, had very little in
+common with the profligate and gambler. Vaguely she wondered whether
+he was not working out his own redemption by every wheat furrow torn
+from the virgin prairie, and then again the doubt crept in. Could this
+man have ever found pleasure in the mire?
+
+"You will plough all your holding, Lance?" asked the elder lady, who
+had not answered his last speech yet, but meant to do.
+
+"Yes," said the man. "All I can. It's a big venture, and if it fails
+will cripple me; but I seem to feel, apart from any reason I can
+discern, that wheat is going up again, and I must go through with this
+ploughing. Of course, it does not sound very sensible."
+
+Miss Barrington looked at him gravely, for there was a curious and
+steadily-tightening bond between the two. "It depends upon what you
+mean by sense. Can we reason out all we feel, and is there nothing
+intangible but real behind the impulses which may be sent to us?"
+
+"Well," said Witham, with a little smile, "that is a trifle too deep
+for me, and it's difficult to think of anything but the work I have to
+do. But you were the first at Silverdale to hold out a hand to me--and
+I have a feeling that your good wishes would go a long way now. Is it
+altogether fantastic to believe that the good-will of my first friend
+would help to bring me prosperity?"
+
+The white-haired lady's eyes grew momentarily soft, and, with a
+gravity that did not seem out of place, she moved forward and laid her
+hand on a big horse's neck, and smiled when the dumb beast responded
+to her gentle touch.
+
+"It is a good work," she said. "Lance, there is more than dollars, or
+the bread that somebody is needing, behind what you are doing, and
+because I loved your mother I know how her approval would have
+followed you. And now sow in hope, and God speed your plough!"
+
+She turned away almost abruptly, and Witham stood still, with one hand
+closed tightly and a little deeper tint in the bronze of his face,
+sensible at once of an unchanged resolution and a horrible
+degradation. Then he saw that the Colonel had helped Miss Barrington
+into the saddle and her niece was speaking.
+
+"I have something to ask Mr. Courthorne, and will overtake you," she
+said.
+
+The others rode on, and the girl turned to Witham, "I made you a
+promise and did my best to keep it but I find it harder than I fancied
+it would be," she said. "I want you to release me."
+
+"I should like to hear your reasons," said Witham.
+
+The girl made a faint gesture of impatience. "Of course, if you
+insist!"
+
+"I do," said Witham quietly.
+
+"Then I promised you to have all my holding sown this year, and I am
+still willing to do so; but, though my uncle makes no protests I know
+he feels my opposition very keenly, and it hurts me horribly. Unspoken
+reproaches are the worst to bear, you know, and now Dane and some of
+the others are following your lead, it is painful to feel that I am
+taking part with them against the man who has always been kind to me."
+
+"And you would prefer to be loyal to Colonel Barrington even if it
+cost you a good deal?"
+
+"Of course!" said Maud Barrington. "Can you ask me?"
+
+Witham saw the sparkle in her eyes and the half-contemptuous pride in
+the poise of the shapely head. Loyalty, it was evident, was not a
+figure of speech with her, but he felt that he had seen enough and
+turned his face aside.
+
+"I knew it would be difficult when I asked," he said. "Still, I cannot
+give you back that promise. We are going to see a great change this
+year, and I have set my heart on making all I can for you."
+
+"But why should you?" asked Maud Barrington, somewhat astonished that
+she did not feel more angry.
+
+"Well," said Witham gravely, "I may tell you by and by, and in the
+meanwhile you can set it down to vanity. This may be my last venture
+at Silverdale, and I want to make it a big success."
+
+The girl glanced at him sharply, and it was because the news caused
+her an unreasonable concern that there was a trace of irony in her
+voice.
+
+"Your last venture! Have we been unkind to you or does it imply that,
+as you once insinuated, an exemplary life becomes monotonous?"
+
+Witham laughed. "No. I should like to stay here--a very long while,"
+he said; and the girl saw he spoke the truth as she watched him glance
+wistfully at the splendid teams, great ploughs, and rich, black soil.
+"In fact, strange as it may appear, it will be virtue, given the rein
+for once, that drives me out when I go away."
+
+"But where are you going to?"
+
+Witham glanced vaguely across the prairie, and the girl was puzzled by
+the look in his eyes. "Back to my own station," he said softly, as
+though to himself, and then turned with a little shrug of his
+shoulders. "In the meanwhile there is a good deal to do, and once more
+I am sorry I cannot release you."
+
+"Then, there is an end of it. You could not expect me to beg you to,
+so we will discuss the practical difficulty. I cannot under the
+circumstances borrow my uncle's teams, and I am told I have not
+sufficient men or horses to put a large crop in."
+
+"Of course!" said Witham quietly. "Well, I have now the best teams and
+machines on this part of the prairie, and am bringing Ontario men in.
+I will do the ploughing--and, if it will make it easier for you, you
+can pay me for the services."
+
+There was a little flush on the girl's face. "It is all distasteful,
+but as you will not give me back my word, I will keep it to the
+letter. Still, it almost makes me reluctant to ask you a further
+favour."
+
+"This one is promised before you ask it," said Witham quietly.
+
+It cost Maud Barrington some trouble to make her wishes clear, and
+Witham's smile was not wholly one of pleasure as he listened. One of
+the young English lads, who was, it appeared, a distant connexion of
+the girl's, had been losing large sums of money at a gaming table, and
+seeking other equally undesirable relaxations at the railroad
+settlement. For the sake of his mother in England, Miss Barrington
+desired him brought to his senses, but was afraid to appeal to the
+Colonel, whose measures were occasionally more draconic than wise.
+
+"I will do what I can," said Witham. "Still, I am not sure that a lad
+of the kind is worth your worrying over, and I am a trifle curious as
+to what induced you to entrust the mission to me?"
+
+The girl felt embarrassed, but she saw that an answer was expected.
+"Since you ask, it occurred to me that you could do it better than
+anybody else," she said. "Please don't misunderstand me; but I fancy
+it is the other man who is leading him away."
+
+Witham smiled somewhat grimly. "Your meaning is quite plain, and I am
+already looking forward to the encounter with my fellow-gambler. You
+believe that I will prove a match for him?"
+
+Maud Barrington, to her annoyance, felt the blood creep to her
+forehead, but she looked at the man steadily, noticing the quiet
+forcefulness beneath his somewhat caustic amusement.
+
+"Yes," she said simply; "and I shall be grateful."
+
+In another few minutes she was galloping across the prairie, and when
+she rejoined her aunt and Barrington, endeavoured to draw out the
+latter's opinion respecting Courthorne's venture by a few discreet
+questions.
+
+"Heaven knows where he was taught it, but there is no doubt that the
+man is an excellent farmer," he said. "It is a pity that he is also,
+to all intents and purposes, mad."
+
+Miss Barrington glanced at her niece, and both of them smiled, for the
+Colonel usually took for granted the insanity of any one who
+questioned his opinions.
+
+In the meanwhile, Witham sat swaying on the driving-seat, mechanically
+guiding the horses and noticing how the prairie sod rolled away in
+black waves beneath the great plough. He heard the crackle of fibres
+beneath the triple shares, and the swish of greasy loam along the
+mouldboard's side; but his thoughts were far away, and when he raised
+his head, he looked into the dim future beyond the long furrow that
+cut the skyline on the rise.
+
+It was shadowy and uncertain, but one thing was clear to him, and that
+was that he could not stay in Silverdale. At first he had almost hoped
+he might do this, for the good land, and the means of efficiently
+working it, had been a horrible temptation. That was before he
+reckoned on Maud Barrington's attractions; but of late he had seen
+what these were leading him to, and all that was good in him recoiled
+from an attempt to win her. Once he had dared to wonder whether it
+could be done, for his grim life had left him self-centred and bitter,
+but that mood had passed, and it was with disgust he looked back upon
+it. Now he knew that the sooner he left Silverdale, the less difficult
+it would be to forget her; but he was still determined to vindicate
+himself by the work he did, and make her affairs secure. Then, with or
+without a confession, he would slip back into the obscurity he came
+from.
+
+While he worked the soft wind rioted about him, and the harbingers of
+summer passed north in battalions overhead--crane, brent goose, and
+mallard--in crescents, skeins, and wedges, after the fashion of their
+kind. Little long-tailed gophers whisked across the whitened sod, and
+when the great plough rolled through the shadows of a bluff, jack
+rabbits, pied white and grey, scurried amidst the rustling leaves.
+Even the birches were fragrant in that vivifying air, and seemed to
+rejoice as all animate creatures did; but the man's face grew more
+sombre as the day of toil wore on. Still, he did his work with the
+grim, unwavering diligence that had already carried him, dismayed but
+unyielding, through years of drought and harvest hail, and the stars
+shone down on the prairie when at last he loosed his second team.
+
+Then, standing in the door of his lonely homestead, he glanced at the
+great shadowy granaries and barns, and clenched his hand as he saw
+what he could do if the things that had been forced upon him were
+rightfully his. He knew his own mettle, and that he could hold them if
+he would; but the pale, cold face of a woman rose up in judgment
+against him, and he also knew that because of the love of her, that
+was casting its toils about him, he must give them up.
+
+Far back on the prairie a lonely coyote howled, and a faint wind, that
+was now like snow-cooled wine, brought the sighing of limitless
+grasses out of the silence. There was no cloud in the crystalline
+ether, and something in the vastness and stillness that spoke of
+infinity brought a curious sense of peace to him. Impostor though he
+was, he would leave Silverdale better than he found it, and afterwards
+it would be of no great moment what became of him. Countless
+generations of toiling men had borne their petty sorrows before him,
+and gone back to the dust they sprang from; but still, in due
+succession, harvest followed seed-time, and the world whirled on.
+Then, remembering that, in the meanwhile, he had much to do which
+would commence with the sun on the morrow, he went back into the house
+and shook the fancies from him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+MASTERY RECOGNIZED
+
+
+There was, considering the latest price of wheat, a somewhat
+astonishing attendance in the long room of the hotel at the railroad
+settlement one Saturday evening. A big stove in the midst of it
+diffused a stuffy and almost unnecessary heat, gaudy nickelled lamps
+an uncertain brilliancy, and the place was filled with the drifting
+smoke of indifferent tobacco. Oleographs, barbaric in colour and
+drawing, hung about the roughly-boarded walls, and any critical
+stranger would have found the saloon comfortless and tawdry.
+
+It was, however, filled that night with bronzed-faced men who expected
+nothing better. Most of them wore jackets of soft black leather or
+embroidered deerskin, and the jean trousers and long boots of not a
+few apparently stood in need of repairing, though the sprinkling of
+more conventional apparel and paler faces showed that the storekeepers
+of the settlement had been drawn together, as well as the prairie
+farmers who had driven in to buy provisions or take up their mail.
+There was, however, but little laughter, and their voices were low,
+for boisterousness and assertion are not generally met with on the
+silent prairie. Indeed, the attitude of some of the men was mildly
+deprecatory, as though they felt that in assisting in what was going
+forward they were doing an unusual thing. Still, the eyes of all were
+turned toward the table where a man, who differed widely in appearance
+from most of them, dealt out the cards.
+
+He wore city clothes, and a white shirt with a fine diamond in the
+front of it, while there was a keen intentness behind the
+half-ironical smile in his somewhat colourless face. The whiteness of
+his long, nervous fingers and the quickness of his gestures would also
+have stamped him as a being of different order from the slowly-spoken
+prairie farmers, while the slenderness of the little pile of coins in
+front of him testified that his endeavours to tempt them to
+speculation on games of chance had met with no very marked success as
+yet. Gambling for stakes of moment is not a popular amusement in that
+country, where the soil demands his best from every man in return for
+the scanty dollars it yields him, but the gamester had chosen his time
+well, and the men who had borne the dreary solitude of winter in
+outlying farms, and now only saw another adverse season opening before
+them, were for once in the mood to clutch at any excitement that would
+relieve the monotony of their toilsome lives.
+
+A few were betting small sums with an apparent lack of interest which
+did not in the least deceive the dealer, and when he handed a few
+dollars out he laughed a little as he turned to the bar-keeper.
+
+"Set them up again. I want a drink to pass the time," he said. "I'll
+play you at anything you like to put a name to, boys, if this game
+don't suit you, but you'll have to give me the chance of making my
+hotel bill. In my country I've seen folks livelier at a funeral."
+
+The glasses were handed round, but when the gambler reached out
+towards the silver at his side, a big bronzed-skinned rancher stopped
+him.
+
+"No," he drawled. "We're not sticking you for a locomotive tank, and
+this comes out of my treasury. I'll call you three dollars and take my
+chances on the draw."
+
+"Well," said the dealer, "that's a little more encouraging. Anybody
+wanting to make it better?"
+
+A young lad in elaborately-embroidered deerskin with a flushed face
+leaned upon the table. "Show you how we play cards in the old
+country," he said. "I'll make it thirty--for a beginning."
+
+There was a momentary silence, for the lad had staked heavily and lost
+of late, but one or two more bets were made. Then the cards were
+turned up, and the lad smiled fatuously as he took up his winnings.
+
+"Now, I'll let you see," he said. "This time we'll make it fifty."
+
+He won twice more in succession, and the men closed in about the
+table, while, for the dealer knew when to strike, the glasses went
+round again, and in the growing interest nobody quite noticed who paid
+for the refreshment. Then, while the dollars began to trickle in, the
+lad flung a bill for a hundred down.
+
+"Go on," he said a trifle huskily. "To-night you can't beat me!"
+
+Once more he won, and just then two men came quietly into the room.
+One of them signed to the hotel-keeper.
+
+"What's going on? The boys seem kind of keen," he said.
+
+The other man laughed a little. "Ferris has struck a streak of luck,
+but I wouldn't be very sorry if you got him away, Mr. Courthorne. He
+has had as much as he can carry already, and I don't want anybody
+broke up in my house. The boys can look out for themselves, but the
+Silverdale kid has been losing a good deal lately, and he doesn't know
+when to stop."
+
+Witham glanced at his companion, who nodded. "The young fool," he
+said.
+
+They crossed towards the table in time to see the lad take up his
+winnings again, and Witham laid his hand quietly upon his shoulder.
+
+"Come along and have a drink while you give the rest a show," he said.
+"You seem to have done tolerably well, and it's usually wise to stop
+while the chances are going with you."
+
+The lad turned and stared at him with languid insolence in his
+half-closed eyes, and, though he came of a lineage that had been
+famous in the old country, there was nothing very prepossessing in his
+appearance. His mouth was loose, his face weak in spite of its
+inherited pride, and there was little need to tell either of the men,
+who noticed his nervous fingers and muddiness of skin, that he was one
+who in the strenuous early days would have worn the woolly crown.
+
+"Were you addressing me?" he asked.
+
+"I was," said Witham quietly. "I was, in fact, inviting you to share
+our refreshment. You see we have just come in."
+
+"Then," said the lad, "it was condemnable impertinence. Since you have
+taken this fellow up, couldn't you teach him that it's bad taste to
+thrust his company upon people who don't want it, Dane?"
+
+Witham said nothing, but drew Dane, who flushed a trifle, aside, and
+when they sat down the latter smiled dryly.
+
+"You have taken on a big contract, Courthorne. How are you going to
+get the young ass out?" he said.
+
+"Well," said Witham, "it would gratify me to take him by the neck, but
+as I don't know that it would please the Colonel if I made a public
+spectacle of one of his retainers, I fancy I'll have to tackle the
+gambler. I don't know him, but as he comes from across the frontier
+it's more than likely he has heard of me. There are advantages in
+having a record like mine, you see."
+
+"It would, of course, be a kindness to the lad's people--but the young
+fool is scarcely worth it, and it's not your affair," said Dane
+reflectively.
+
+Witham guessed the drift of the speech, but he could respect a
+confidence, and laughed a little. "It's not often I have done any one
+a good turn, and the novelty has its attractions."
+
+Dane did not appear contented with this explanation, but he asked
+nothing further, and the two sat watching the men about the table, who
+were evidently growing eager.
+
+"That's two hundred the kid has let go," said somebody.
+
+There was a murmur of excited voices, and one rose hoarse and a trifle
+shaky in the consonants above the rest.
+
+"Show you how a gentleman can stand up, boys. Throw them out again.
+Two hundred this time on the game!"
+
+There was silence and the rustle of shuffled cards; then once more the
+voices went up. "Against him! Better let up before he takes your farm.
+Oh, let him face it and show his grit--the man who slings round his
+hundreds can afford to lose!"
+
+The lad's face showed a trifle paler through the drifting smoke,
+though a good many of the cigars had gone out now, and once more there
+was the stillness of expectancy through which a strained voice rose.
+
+"Going to get it all back. I'll stake you four hundred."
+
+Witham rose and moved forward quietly, with Dane behind him, and then
+stood still where he could see the table. He had also very observant
+eyes, and was free from the excitement of those who had a risk on the
+game. Still, when the cards were dealt, it was the gambler's face he
+watched. For a brief space nobody moved, and then the lad flung down
+his cards and stood up with a greyness in his cheeks and his hands
+shaking.
+
+"You've got all my dollars now," he said. "Still, I'll play you for
+doubles if you'll take my paper."
+
+The gambler nodded, and flung down a big pile of bills. "I guess I'll
+trust you. Mine are here."
+
+The bystanders waited motionless, and none of them made a bet, for any
+stakes they could offer would be trifles now; but they glanced at the
+lad who stood tensely still, while Witham watched the face of the man
+at the table in front of him. For a moment he saw a flicker of triumph
+in his eyes, and that decided him. Again, one by one, the cards went
+down, and then, when everybody waited in strained expectancy, the lad
+seemed to grow limp suddenly and groaned.
+
+"You can let up," he said hoarsely. "I've gone down!"
+
+Then a hard brown hand was laid upon the table, and while the rest
+stared in astonishment, a voice which had a little stern ring in it
+said, "Turn the whole pack up, and hand over the other one."
+
+In an instant the gambler's hand swept beneath his jacket, but it was
+a mistaken move, for as swiftly the other hard, brown fingers closed
+upon the pile of bills, and the men, too astonished to murmur, saw
+Witham leaning very grim in face across the table. Then it tilted over
+beneath him, and the cards were on the gambler's knees, while, as the
+two men rose and faced each other, something glinted in the hands of
+one of them.
+
+It is more than probable that the man did not intend to use it, and
+trusted to its moral effect, for the display of pistols is not
+regarded with much toleration on the Canadian prairie. In any case, he
+had not the opportunity, for in another moment Witham's right hand
+closed upon his wrist, and the gambler was struggling fruitlessly to
+extricate it. He was a muscular man, with doubtless a sufficiency of
+nerve, but he had not toiled with his arms and led a Spartan life for
+eight long years. Before another few seconds had passed he was
+wondering whether he would ever use that wrist again, while Dane
+picked up the fallen pistol and put it in his pocket with the bundle
+of bills Witham handed him.
+
+"Now," said the latter, "I want to do the square thing. If you'll let
+us strip you and turn out your pockets, we'll see you get any winnings
+you're entitled to when we've straightened up the cards."
+
+The gambler was apparently not willing, for, though it is possible he
+would have found it advisable to play an honest game across the
+frontier, he had evidently surmised that there was less risk of
+detection among the Canadian farmers. He probably knew they would not
+wait long for his consent, but in the first stages of the altercation
+it is not as a rule insuperably difficult for a fearless man to hold
+his own against an indignant company who have no definite notion of
+what they mean to do, and it was to cover his retreat he turned to
+Witham.
+
+"And who the ---- are you?" he asked.
+
+Witham smiled grimly. "I guess you have heard of me. Anyway, there are
+a good many places in Montana where they know Lance Courthorne. Quite
+sure I know a straight game when I see it!"
+
+The man's resistance vanished, but he had evidently been taught the
+necessity of making the best of defeat in his profession, and he
+laughed as he swept his glance round at the angry faces turned upon
+him.
+
+"If you don't there's nobody does," he said. "Still, as you've got my
+pistol and 'most dislocated my wrist, the least you can do is to get a
+partner out of this."
+
+There was an ominous murmur, and the lad's face showed livid with fury
+and humiliation, but Witham turned quietly to the hotel-keeper.
+
+"You will take this man with you into your side room and stop with him
+there," he said. "Dane, give him the bills. The rest of you had better
+sit down here and make a list of your losses, and you'll get whatever
+the fellow has upon him divided amongst you. Then, because I ask you,
+and you'd have had nothing but for me, you'll put him in his wagon
+and turn him out quietly upon the prairie."
+
+"That's sense, and we don't want no circus here," said somebody.
+
+A few voices were raised in protest, but when it became evident that
+one or two of the company were inclined to adopt more draconic
+measures, Dane spoke quietly and forcibly, and was listened to. Then
+Witham reached out and grasped the shoulder of the English lad, who
+made the last attempt to rouse his companions.
+
+"Let them alone, Ferris, and come along. You'll get most of what you
+lost back to-morrow, and we're going to take you home," he said.
+
+Ferris turned upon him, hoarse with passion, flushed in face, and
+swaying a trifle on his feet, while Witham noticed that he drew one
+arm back.
+
+"Who are you to lay hands on a gentleman?" he asked. "Keep your
+distance. I'm going to stay here, and, if I'd have had my way, we'd
+have kicked you out of Silverdale."
+
+Witham dropped his hand, but next moment the ornament of a
+distinguished family was seized by the neck, and the farmer glanced at
+Dane.
+
+"We've had enough of this fooling, and he'll be grateful to me
+to-morrow," he said.
+
+Then his captive was thrust, resisting strenuously, out of the room,
+and with Dane's assistance conveyed to the waiting wagon, into which
+he was flung, almost speechless with indignation.
+
+"Now," said Dane quietly, "you've given us a good deal more trouble
+than you're worth, Ferris, and if you attempt to get out again, I'll
+break your head for you. Tell Courthorne how much that fellow got from
+you."
+
+In another ten minutes they had jolted across the railroad track, and
+were speeding through the silence of the lonely prairie. Above them
+the clear stars flung their cold radiance down through vast distances
+of liquid indigo, and the soft beat of hoofs was the only sound that
+disturbed the solemn stillness of the wilderness. Dane drew in a great
+breath of the cool night air and laughed quietly.
+
+"It's a good deal more wholesome here in several ways," said he. "If
+you're wise, you'll let up on card-playing and hanging round the
+settlement, Ferris, and stick to farming. Even if you lose almost as
+many dollars over it, it will pay you considerably better. Now that's
+all I'm going to tell you, but I know what I'm speaking of, because
+I've had my fling--and it's costing me more than I care to figure out
+still. You, however, can pull up, because by this time you have no
+doubt found out a good deal, if you're not all a fool. Curiosity's at
+the bottom of half our youthful follies, isn't it, Courthorne? We want
+to know what the things forbidden actually taste like."
+
+"Well," said Witham dryly, "I don't quite know. You see, I had very
+little money in the old country, and still less leisure here to spend
+either on that kind of experimenting. Where to get enough to eat was
+the one problem that worried me."
+
+Dane turned a trifle sharply. "We are, I fancy, tolerably good
+friends. Isn't it a little unnecessary for you to adopt that tone with
+me?"
+
+Witham laughed, but made no answer, and their companion said nothing
+at all. Either the night wind had a drowsy effect on him or he was
+moodily resentful, for it was not until Witham pulled up before the
+homestead whose lands he farmed indifferently under Barrington's
+supervision that he opened his mouth.
+
+"You have got off very cheaply to-night, and if you're wise you'll let
+that kind of thing alone in future," said Witham quietly.
+
+The lad stepped down from the wagon and then stood still. "I resent
+advice from you as much as I do your uncalled-for insolence an hour or
+two ago," he said. "To lie low until honest men got used to him would
+be considerably more becoming to a man like you."
+
+"Well," said Witham, stung into forgetfulness, "I'm not going to
+offend in that fashion again, and you can go to the devil in the way
+that most pleases you. In fact, I only pulled you out of the pit
+to-night because a lady, who apparently takes a quite unwarranted
+interest in you, asked me to."
+
+Ferris stared up at him, and his face showed almost livid through the
+luminous night.
+
+"She asked you to!" he said. "By the Lord, I'll make you sorry for
+this."
+
+Witham said nothing, but shook the reins, and when the wagon lurched
+forward Dane looked at him.
+
+"I didn't know that before," he said.
+
+"Well," said Witham dryly, "if I hadn't lost my temper with the lad
+you wouldn't have done now."
+
+Dane smiled. "You miss the point of it. Our engaging friend made
+himself the laughing-stock of the colony by favouring Maud Barrington
+with his attentions when he came out. In fact, I fancy the lady, in
+desperation, had to turn her uncle loose on him before he could be
+made to understand that they were not appreciated. I'd keep your eye
+on him, Courthorne, for the little beast has shown himself abominably
+vindictive occasionally, though I have a notion he's scarcely to be
+held accountable. It's a case of too pure a strain and consanguinity.
+Two branches of the family--marriage between land and money, you see."
+
+"It will be my heel if he gets in my way," said Witham grimly.
+
+It was late when they reached his homestead where Dane was to stay the
+night, and when they went in a youthful figure in uniform rose up in
+the big log-walled hall. For a moment Witham's heart almost stood
+still, and then, holding himself in hand by a strenuous effort, he
+moved forward and stood where the light of a lamp did not shine quite
+fully upon him. He knew that uniform, and he had also seen the lad who
+wore it once or twice before, at an outpost six hundred miles away
+across the prairie. He knew the risk he took was great, but it was
+evident to him that if his identity escaped detection at first sight,
+use would do the rest, and while he had worn a short pointed beard on
+the Western prairie, he was cleanly-shaven now.
+
+The lad stood quite still a moment staring at him, and Witham
+returning his gaze steadily felt his pulses throb.
+
+"Well, trooper, what has brought you here?" he said.
+
+"Homestead visitation, sir," said the lad, who had a pleasant English
+voice. "Mr. Courthorne, I presume--accept my regrets if I stared too
+hard at you--but for a moment you reminded me of a man I knew. They've
+changed us round lately, and I'm from the Alberta Squadron just sent
+in to this district. It was late when I rode in, and your people were
+kind enough to put me up."
+
+Witham laughed. "I have been taken for another man before. Would you
+like anything to drink, or a smoke before you turn in, trooper?"
+
+"No, sir," said the lad. "If you'll sign my docket to show I've been
+here, I'll get some sleep. I've sixty miles to ride to-morrow."
+
+Witham did as he was asked, and the trooper withdrew, while when they
+sat down to a last cigar it seemed to Dane that his companion's face
+was graver than usual.
+
+"Did you notice the lad's astonishment when you came in?" he asked.
+"He looked very much as if he had seen a ghost."
+
+Witham smiled. "I believe he fancied he had. There was a man in the
+district he came from whom some folks considered resembled me. In
+reality, I was by no means like him, and he's dead now."
+
+"Likenesses are curious things, and it's stranger still how folks
+alter," said Dane. "Now, they've a photograph at Barrington's of you
+as a boy, and while there is a resemblance in the face, nobody with
+any discernment would have fancied that lad would grow into a man like
+you. Still, that's of no great moment, and I want to know just how you
+spotted the gambler. I had a tolerably expensive tuition in most games
+of chance in my callow days, and haven't forgotten completely what I
+was taught then, but though I watched the game I saw nothing that led
+me to suspect crooked play."
+
+Witham laughed. "I watched his face, and what I saw there decided me
+to try a bluff, but it was not until he turned the table over I knew I
+was right."
+
+"Well," said Dane dryly, "you don't need your nerves toning up. With
+only a suspicion to go upon, it was a tolerably risky game. Still, of
+course, you had advantages."
+
+"I have played a more risky one, but I don't know that I have cause to
+be very grateful for anything I acquired in the past," said Witham
+with a curious smile.
+
+Dane stood up and flung his cigar away. "It's time I was asleep," he
+said. "Still, since our talk has turned in this direction, I want to
+tell you that, as you have doubtless seen, there is something about
+you that puzzles me occasionally. I don't ask your confidence until
+you are ready to give it me--but if ever you want anybody to stand
+behind you in a difficulty, you'll find me rather more than willing."
+
+He went out, and Witham sat still very grave in face for at least
+another hour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A FAIR ADVOCATE
+
+
+Thanks to the fashion in which the hotel-keeper managed the affair,
+the gambler left the settlement without personal injury, but very
+little richer than when he entered it. The rest of those who were
+present at his meeting with Witham were also not desirous that their
+friends should know they had been victimized, and because Dane was
+discreet, news of what had happened might never have reached
+Silverdale, had not one of the younger men ridden in to the railroad a
+few days later. Odd scraps of conversation overheard led him to
+suspect that something unusual had taken place, but as nobody seemed
+willing to supply details, he returned to Silverdale with his
+curiosity unsatisfied. As it happened, he was shortly afterwards
+present at a gathering of his neighbours at Macdonald's farm and came
+across Ferris there.
+
+"I heard fragments of a curious story at the settlement," he said.
+"There was trouble of some kind in which a professional gambler
+figured last Saturday night, and though nobody seemed to want to talk
+about it, I surmised that somebody from Silverdale was concerned in
+it."
+
+He had perhaps spoken a trifle more loudly than he had intended, and
+there were a good many of the Silverdale farmers with a few of their
+wives and daughters whose attention was not wholly confined to the
+efforts of Mrs. Macdonald at the piano in the long room just then. In
+any case a voice broke through the silence that followed the final
+chords.
+
+"Ferris could tell us if he liked. He was there that night."
+
+Ferris, who had cause for doing so, looked uncomfortable, and
+endeavoured to sign to the first speaker that it was not desirable to
+pursue the topic.
+
+"I have been in tolerably often of late. Had things to attend to," he
+said.
+
+The other man was, however, possessed by a mischievous spirit, or did
+not understand him. "You may just as well tell us now as later,
+because you never kept a secret in your life," he said.
+
+In the meantime, several of the others had gathered about them, and
+Mrs. Macdonald, who had joined the group, smiled as she said, "There
+is evidently something interesting going on. Mayn't I know, Gordon?"
+
+"Of course," said the man, who had visited the settlement. "You shall
+know as much as I do, though that is little, and if it excites your
+curiosity you can ask Ferris for the rest. He is only anxious to
+enhance the value of his story by being mysterious. Well, there was a
+more or less dramatic happening, of the kind our friends in the old
+country unwarrantably fancy is typical of the West, in the saloon at
+the settlement not long ago. Cards, pistols, a professional gambler,
+and the unmasking of foul play, don't you know. Somebody from
+Silverdale played the leading rôle."
+
+"How interesting!" said a young English girl. "Now, I used to fancy
+something of that kind happened here every day before I came out to
+the prairie. Please tell us, Mr. Ferris! One would like to find there
+was just a trace of reality in our picturesque fancies of debonair
+desperadoes and big-hatted cavaliers."
+
+There was a curious expression in Ferris' face, but as he glanced
+round at the rest, who were regarding him expectantly, he did not
+observe that Maud Barrington and her aunt had just come in and stood
+close behind him.
+
+"Can't you see there's no getting out of it, Ferris?" said somebody.
+
+"Well," said the lad in desperation, "I can only admit that Gordon is
+right. There was foul play and a pistol drawn, but I'm sorry that I
+can't add anything further. In fact, it wouldn't be quite fair of me."
+
+"But the man from Silverdale?" asked Mrs. Macdonald.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Ferris, with the air of one shielding a friend, "I
+can't tell you anything about him."
+
+"I know Mr. Courthorne drove in that night," said the young English
+girl, who was not endued with very much discretion.
+
+"Courthorne!" said one of the bystanders, and there was a momentary
+silence that was very expressive. "Was he concerned in what took
+place, Ferris?"
+
+"Yes," said the lad with apparent reluctance. "Mrs. Macdonald, you
+will remember that they dragged it out of me, but I will tell you
+nothing more whatever."
+
+"It seems to me you have told us quite sufficient and perhaps a trifle
+too much," said somebody.
+
+There was a curious silence. All of those present were more or less
+acquainted with Courthorne's past history, and the suggestion of foul
+play coupled with the mention of a professional gambler had been
+significant. Ferris, while committing himself in no way, had certainly
+said sufficient. Then there was a sudden turning of heads as a young
+woman moved quietly into the midst of the group. She was ominously
+calm, but she stood very straight, and there was a little hard glitter
+in her eyes, which reminded one or two of them who noticed it of those
+of Colonel Barrington. The fingers of one hand were also closed at her
+side.
+
+"I overheard you telling a story, Ferris, but you have a bad memory
+and left rather too much out," she said.
+
+"They compelled me to tell them what I did, Miss Barrington," said the
+lad, who winced beneath her gaze. "Now, there is really nothing to be
+gained by going any further into the affair. Shall I play something
+for you, Mrs. Macdonald?"
+
+He turned as he spoke, and would have edged away but that one of the
+men, at a glance from the girl, laid a hand on his shoulder.
+
+"Don't be in a hurry, Ferris. I fancy Miss Barrington has something
+more to tell you," he said dryly.
+
+The girl thanked him with a gesture. "I want you to supply the most
+important part," she said, and the lad, saying nothing, changed colour
+under the glance she cast upon him. "You do not seem willing. Then
+perhaps I had better do it for you. There were two men from Silverdale
+directly concerned in the affair, and one of them at no slight risk to
+himself did a very generous thing. That one was Mr. Courthorne. Did
+you see him lay a single stake upon a card, or do anything that led
+you to suppose he was there for the purpose of gambling that evening?"
+
+"No," said the lad, seeing she knew the truth, and his hoarse voice
+was scarcely audible.
+
+"Then," said Maud Barrington, "I want you to tell us what you did see
+him do."
+
+Ferris said nothing, and though the girl laughed a little as she
+glanced at the wondering group, her voice was icily disdainful.
+
+"Well," she said, "I will tell you. You saw him question a
+professional gambler's play to save a man who had no claim on him from
+ruin, and, with only one comrade to back him, drive the swindler, who
+had a pistol, from the field. He had, you admit, no interest of any
+kind in the game?"
+
+Ferris had grown crimson again, and the veins on his forehead showed
+swollen high. "No," he said, almost abjectly.
+
+Maud Barrington turned from him to her hostess as she answered, "That
+will suffice, in the meanwhile, until I can decide whether it is
+desirable to make known the rest of the tale. I brought the new song
+Evelyn wanted, Mrs. Macdonald, and I will play it for her if she would
+care to try it."
+
+She moved away with the elder lady, and left the rest astonished to
+wonder what had become of Ferris, who was seen no more that evening,
+while presently Witham came in.
+
+His face was a trifle weary, for he had toiled since the sun rose
+above the rim of the prairie, and when the arduous day was over, and
+those who worked for him were glad to rest their aching limbs, had
+driven two leagues to Macdonald's. Why he had done so he was not
+willing to admit, but he glanced round the long room anxiously as he
+came in, and his eyes brightened as they rested on Maud Barrington.
+They were, however, observant eyes, and he noticed that there was a
+trifle more colour than usual in the girl's pale-tinted face, and
+signs of suppressed curiosity about some of the rest. When he had
+greeted his hostess, he turned to one of the men.
+
+"It seems to me you are either trying not to see something, Gordon, or
+to forget it as soon as you can," he said.
+
+Gordon laughed a little. "You are not often mistaken, Courthorne? That
+is precisely what we are doing. I presume you haven't heard what
+occurred here an hour ago?"
+
+"No!" said Witham. "I'm not very curious if it does not concern me."
+
+Gordon looked at him steadily. "I fancy it does. You see, that young
+fool Ferris was suggesting that you had been mixed up in something not
+very creditable at the settlement lately. As it happened, Maud
+Barrington overheard him and made him retract before the company. She
+did it effectively, and if it had been any one else, the scene would
+have been almost theatrical. Still, you know nothing seems out of
+place when it comes from the Colonel's niece. Nor if you had heard her
+would you have wanted a better advocate."
+
+For a moment the bronze deepened in Witham's forehead, and there was a
+gleam in his eyes, but though it passed as rapidly as it came, Gordon
+had seen it, and smiled when the farmer moved away.
+
+"That's a probability I never counted on," he thought. "Still, I fancy
+if it came about, it would suit everybody but the Colonel."
+
+Then he turned as Mrs. Macdonald came up to him. "What are you doing
+here alone when I see there is nobody talking to the girl from
+Winnipeg?" she said.
+
+The man laughed a little. "I was wondering whether it is a good sign,
+or otherwise, when a young woman is, so far as she can decently be,
+uncivil to a man who desires her good-will."
+
+Mrs. Macdonald glanced at him sharply, and then shook her head. "The
+question is too deep for you--and it is not your affair. Besides,
+haven't you seen that indiscreet freedom of speech is not encouraged
+at Silverdale?"
+
+In the meanwhile Witham, crossing the room, took a vacant place at
+Maud Barrington's side. She turned her head a moment and looked at
+him.
+
+Witham nodded. "Yes, I heard," he said. "Why did you do it?"
+
+Maud Barrington made a little gesture of impatience. "That is quite
+unnecessary. You know I sent you."
+
+"Yes," said Witham a trifle dryly, "I see. You would have felt mean if
+you hadn't defended me."
+
+"No," said the girl, with a curious smile. "That was not exactly the
+reason, but we cannot talk too long here. Dane is anxious to take us
+home in his new buggy, but it would apparently be a very tight fit for
+three. Will you drive me over?"
+
+Witham only nodded, for Mrs. Macdonald approached in pursuit of him,
+but he spent the rest of the evening in a state of expectancy, and
+Maud Barrington fancied that his hard hands were suspiciously
+unresponsive as she took them when he helped her into the Silverdale
+wagon--a vehicle a strong man could have lifted, and in no way
+resembling its English prototype. The team was mettlesome, the lights
+of Macdonald's homestead soon faded behind them, and they were racing
+with many a lurch and jolt straight as the crow flies across the
+prairie.
+
+There was no moon, but the stars shone far up in the soft indigo, and
+the grasses whirled back in endless ripples to the humming wheels,
+dimmed to the dusky blue that suffused the whole intermerging sweep of
+earth and sky. The sweetness of wild peppermint rose through the
+coolness of the dew, and the voices of the wilderness were part of the
+silence that was but the perfect balance of the nocturnal harmonies.
+The two who knew and loved the prairie could pick out each one of
+them. Nor did it seem that there was any need of speech on such a
+night, but at last Witham turned with a little smile to his companion,
+as he checked the horses on the slope of a billowy rise.
+
+"One feels diffident about intruding on this great quietness," he
+said. "Still, I fancy you had a purpose in asking me to drive you
+home."
+
+"Yes," said the girl, with a curious gentleness. "In the first place,
+though I know it isn't necessary with you, I want to thank you. I made
+Dane tell me, and you have done all I wished--splendidly."
+
+Witham laughed. "Well, you see, it naturally came easy to me."
+
+Maud Barrington noticed the trace of grimness in his voice. "Please
+try to overlook our unkindness," she said. "Is it really needful to
+keep reminding me? And how was I to know what you were, when I had
+only heard that wicked story?"
+
+Witham felt a little thrill run through him, for which reason he
+looked straight in front of him and shifted his grasp on the reins.
+Disdainful and imperious as she was at times, he knew there was a
+wealth of softer qualities in his companion now. Her daintiness in
+thought and person, and honesty of purpose, appealed to him, while
+that night her mere physical presence had an effect that was almost
+bewildering. For a moment he wondered vaguely how far a man with what
+fate had thrust upon him might dare to go, and then with a little
+shiver saw once more the barrier of deceit and imposture.
+
+"You believe it was not a true one?" he asked.
+
+"Of course," said Maud Barrington. "How could it be? And you have been
+very patient under our suspicions. Now, if you still value the
+good-will you once asked for, it is yours absolutely."
+
+"But you may still hear unpleasant stories about me," said Witham,
+with a note the girl had not heard before in his voice.
+
+"I should not believe them," she said.
+
+"Still," persisted Witham, "if the tales were true?"
+
+Maud Barrington did nothing by halves. "Then I should remember that
+there is always so much we do not know which would put a different
+colour on any story, and I believe they could never be true again."
+
+Witham checked a little gasp of wonder and delight and Maud Barrington
+looked away across the prairie. She was not usually impulsive and
+seldom lightly bestowed gifts that were worth the having, and the man
+knew that the faith in him she had confessed to was the result of a
+conviction that would last until he himself shattered it. Then, in the
+midst of his elation, he shivered again and drew the lash across the
+near horse's back. The wonder and delight he felt had suddenly gone.
+
+"Few would venture to predict as much. Now and then I feel that our
+deeds are scarcely contrived by our own will, and one could fancy our
+parts had been thrust upon us in a grim joke," he said. "For instance,
+isn't it strange that I should have a share in the rousing of
+Silverdale to a sense of its responsibilities? Lord, what I could make
+of it if fate had but given me a fair opportunity!"
+
+He spoke almost fiercely, but the words did not displease the girl.
+The forceful ring in his voice set something thrilling within her, and
+she knew by this time that his assertions seldom went beyond the fact.
+
+"But you will have the opportunity, and we need you here," she said.
+
+"No," said Witham slowly. "I am afraid not. Still, I will finish the
+work I see in front of me. That at least--one cannot hope for the
+unattainable."
+
+Maud Barrington was sensible of a sudden chill. "Still, if one has
+strength and patience, is anything quite unattainable?"
+
+Witham looked out across the prairie, and for a moment the demons of
+pride and ambition rioted within him. He knew there were in him the
+qualities that compel success, and the temptation to stretch out a
+daring hand and take all he longed for grew almost overmastering.
+Still, he also knew how strong the innate prejudices of caste and
+tradition are in most women of his companion's station, and she had
+never hidden one aspect of her character from him. It was with a
+smothered groan he realized that if he flung the last shred of honour
+aside and grasped the forbidden fruit it would turn to bitterness in
+his mouth.
+
+"Yes," he said very slowly. "There is a limit, which only fools would
+pass."
+
+Then there was silence for a while, until, as they swept across the
+rise, Maud Barrington laughed as she pointed to the lights that
+blinked in the hollow, and Witham realized that the barrier between
+them stood firm again.
+
+"Our views seldom coincide for very long, but there is something else
+to mention before we reach the Grange," she said. "You must have paid
+out a good many dollars for the ploughing of your land and mine, and
+nobody's exchequer is inexhaustible at Silverdale. Now I want you to
+take a cheque from me."
+
+"Is it necessary, that I should?"
+
+"Of course," said the girl, with a trace of displeasure.
+
+Witham laughed. "Then I shall be prepared to hand you my account
+whenever you demand it."
+
+He did not look at his companion again, but with a tighter grip than
+there was any need for on the reins, sent the light wagon jolting down
+the slope to Silverdale Grange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+The sun beat down on the prairie, which was already losing its flush
+of green, but it was cool where Maud Barrington and her aunt stood in
+the shadow of the bluff by Silverdale Grange. The birches, tasselled
+now with whispering foliage, divided the homestead from the waste
+which would lie white and desolate under the parching heat, and that
+afternoon it seemed to the girl that the wall of green shut out more
+than the driving dust and sun-glare from the Grange, for where the
+trees were thinner she could see moving specks of men and horses
+athwart the skyline.
+
+They had toiled in the sun-baked furrow since the first flush of
+crimson streaked the prairie's rim, and the chill of dusk would fall
+upon the grasses before their work was done. Those men who bore the
+burden and heat of the day were, the girl knew, helots now, but there
+was in them the silent vigour and something of the sombreness of the
+land of rock and forest they came from, and a time would come when
+others would work for them. Winning slowly, holding grimly, they were
+moving on, while secure in its patrician tranquility Silverdale stood
+still, and Maud Barrington smiled curiously as she glanced down at the
+long white robe that clung very daintily about her and then towards
+her companions in the tennis field. Her apparel had cost many dollars
+in Montreal, and there was a joyous irresponsibility in the faces of
+those she watched.
+
+"It is a little unequal, isn't it, aunt?" she said. "One feels
+inclined to wonder what we have done that we should have exemption
+from the charge laid upon the first tiller of the soil we and the men
+who are plodding through the dust there are descended from."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed a little as she glanced with a nod of
+comprehension at the distant toilers, and more gravely towards the
+net. Merry voices came up to her through the shadows of the trees as
+English lad and English maiden, lissom and picturesque in many-hued
+jackets and light dresses, flitted across the little square of velvet
+green. The men had followed the harrow and seeder a while that
+morning. Some of them, indeed, had for a few hours driven a team, and
+then left the rest to the hired hands, for the stress and sweat of
+effort that was to turn the wilderness into a granary was not for such
+as them.
+
+"Don't you think it is all made up to those others?" she asked.
+
+"In one sense--yes," said the girl. "Of course, one can see that all
+effort must have its idealistic aspect, and there may be men who find
+their compensation in the thrill of the fight, and the knowledge of
+work well done when they rest at night. Still, I fancy most of them
+only toil to eat, and their views are not revealed to us. We are, you
+see, women--and we live at Silverdale."
+
+Her aunt smiled again. "How long is it since the plough crossed the
+Red River, and what is Manitoba now? How did those mile furrows come
+there, and who drove the road that takes the wheat out through the
+granite of the Superior shore? It is more than their appetites that
+impelled those men, my dear. Still, it is scarcely wise to expect too
+much when one meets them, for though one could feel it is presumptuous
+to forgive its deficiencies, the Berserk type of manhood is not
+conspicuous for its refinement."
+
+For no apparent reason Maud Barrington evaded her aunt's gaze. "You,"
+she said dryly, "have forgiven one of that type a good deal already,
+but, at least, we have never seen him when the fit was upon him."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed. "Still, I have no doubt that, sooner or
+later, you will enjoy the spectacle."
+
+Just then a light wagon came up behind them, and when one of the hired
+men helped them in they swept out of the cool shade into the dust and
+glare of the prairie, and when, some little time later, with the thud
+of hoofs and rattle of wheels softened by the bleaching sod, they
+rolled down a rise, there was spread out before them evidence of man's
+activity.
+
+Acre by acre, gleaming chocolate brown against the grey and green of
+the prairie, the wheat loam rolled away, back to the ridge, over it,
+and on again. It was such a breadth of sowing as had but once, when
+wheat was dear, been seen at Silverdale, but still across the
+foreground, advancing in echelon, came lines of dusty teams, and there
+was a meaning in the furrows they left behind them, for they were not
+ploughing where the wheat had been. Each wave of lustrous clods that
+rolled from the gleaming shares was so much rent from the virgin
+prairie, and a promise of what would come when man had fulfilled his
+mission and the wilderness would blossom. There was a wealth of food
+stored, little by little during ages past counting, in every yard of
+the crackling sod to await the time when the toiler with the sweat of
+the primeval curse upon his forehead should unseal it with the plough.
+It was also borne in upon Maud Barrington that the man who directed
+those energies was either altogether without discernment, or one who
+saw further than his fellows and had an excellent courage, when he
+flung his substance into the furrows while wheat was going down. Then,
+as the hired man pulled up the wagon, she saw him.
+
+A great plough with triple shares had stopped at the end of the
+furrow, and the leading horses were apparently at variance with the
+man who, while he gave of his own strength to the uttermost, was
+asking too much from them. Young and indifferently broken, tortured by
+swarming insects, and galled by the strain of the collar, they had
+laid back their ears, and the wickedness of the bronco strain shone in
+their eyes. One rose almost upright amidst a clatter of harness, its
+mate squealed savagely, and the man who loosed one hand from the
+headstall flung out an arm. Then he and the pair whirled round
+together amidst the trampled clods in a blurred medley of
+spume-flecked bodies, soil-stained jean, flung-up hoofs, and an arm
+that swung and smote again. Miss Barrington grew a trifle pale as she
+watched, but a little glow crept into her niece's eyes.
+
+The struggle, however, ended suddenly, and hailing a man who plodded
+behind another team, Witham picked up his broad hat, which was
+trampled into shapelessness, and turned towards the wagon. There was
+dust and spume upon him, a rent in the blue shirt, and the knuckles of
+one hand dripped red, but he laughed as he said, "I did not know we
+had an audience, but this, you see, is necessary."
+
+"Is it?" asked Miss Barrington, who glanced at the ploughing. "When
+wheat is going down?"
+
+Witham nodded. "Yes," he said. "I mean, to me; and the price of wheat
+is only part of the question."
+
+Miss Barrington stretched out her hand, though her niece said nothing
+at all. "Of course, but I want you to help us down. Maud has an
+account you have not sent in, to ask you for."
+
+Witham first turned to the two men who now stood by the idle machine.
+"You'll have to drive those beasts of mine as best you can, Tom, and
+Jake will take your team. Get them off again now. This piece of
+breaking has to be put through before we loose again."
+
+Then he handed his visitors down, and Maud Barrington fancied as he
+walked with them to the house that the fashion in which the damaged
+hat hung down over his eyes would have rendered most other men
+ludicrous. He left them a space in his bare sitting-room, which
+suggested only grim utility, and Miss Barrington smiled when her niece
+glanced at her.
+
+"And this is how Lance, the profligate, lives!" said she.
+
+Maud Barrington shook her head. "No," she said. "Can you believe that
+this man was ever a prodigal?"
+
+Her aunt was a trifle less astonished than she would once have been,
+but before she could answer Witham, who had made a trifling change in
+his clothing, came in.
+
+"I can give you some green tea, though I am afraid it might be a good
+deal better than it is, and our crockery is not all you have been used
+to," he said. "You see, we have only time to think of one thing until
+the sowing is through."
+
+Miss Barrington's eyes twinkled. "And then?"
+
+"Then," said Witham, with a little laugh, "there will be prairie hay
+to cut, and after that the harvest coming on."
+
+"In the meanwhile, it was business that brought me here, and I have a
+cheque with me," said Maud Barrington. "Please let us get it over
+first of all."
+
+Witham sat down at a table and scribbled on a strip of paper. "That,"
+he said gravely, "is what you owe me for the ploughing."
+
+There was a little flush in his face as he took the cheque the girl
+filled in, and both felt somewhat grateful for the entrance of a man
+in blue jean with the tea. It was of very indifferent quality, and he
+had sprinkled a good deal on the tray, but Witham felt a curious
+thrill as he watched the girl pour it out at the head of the bare
+table. Her white dress gleamed in the light of a dusty window, and the
+shadowy cedar boarding behind her forced up each line of the shapely
+figure. Again the maddening temptation took hold of him and he
+wondered whether he had betrayed too much, when he felt the elder
+lady's eyes upon him. There was a tremor in his brown fingers as he
+took the cup held out to him, but his voice was steady.
+
+"You can scarcely fancy how pleasant this is," he said. "For eight
+years, in fact, ever since I left England, no woman has ever done any
+of these graceful little offices for me."
+
+Miss Barrington glanced at her niece, and both of them knew that, if
+the lawyer had traced Courthorne's past correctly, this could not be
+true. Still, there was no disbelief in the elder lady's eyes, and the
+girl's faith remained unshaken.
+
+"Eight years," she said, with a little smile, "is a very long while."
+
+"Yes," said Witham, "horribly long, and one year at Silverdale is
+worth them all--that is, a year like this one, which is going to be
+remembered by all who have sown wheat on the prairie; and that leads
+up to something. When I have ploughed all my own holding I shall not
+be content, and I want to make another bargain. Give me the use of
+your unbroken land, and I will find horses, seed, and men, while we
+will share what it yields us when the harvest is in."
+
+The girl was astonished. This, she knew, was splendid audacity, for
+the man had already staken very heavily on the crop he had sown, and
+while the daring of it stirred her she sat silent a moment.
+
+"I could lose nothing, but you will have to bring out a host of men
+and have risked so much," she said. "Nobody but you, and I, and three
+or four others in all the province, are ploughing more than half their
+holdings."
+
+The suggestion of comradeship set Witham's blood tingling, but it was
+with a little laugh he turned over the pile of papers on the table,
+and then took them up in turn.
+
+"'Very little ploughing has been done in the tracts of Minnesota
+previously alluded to. Farmers find wheat cannot be grown at present
+prices, and there is apparently no prospect of a rise,'" he said.
+
+"'The Dakota wheat-growers are mostly following. They can't quite
+figure how they would get eighty cents for the dollar's worth of
+seeding this year.'
+
+"'Milling very quiet in Winnipeg. No inquiries from Europe coming in,
+and Manitoba dealers generally find little demand for harrows or
+seeders this year. Reports from Assiniboia seem to show that the one
+hope this season will be mixed farming and the neglect of cereals.'"
+
+"There is only one inference," he said. "When the demand comes there
+will be nothing to meet it with."
+
+"When it comes," said Maud Barrington quietly. "But you who believe it
+will stand alone."
+
+"Almost," said Witham. "Still there are a few much cleverer men who
+feel as I do. I can't give you all my reasons, or read you the sheaf
+of papers from the Pacific slope, London, New York, Australia; but,
+while men lose hope, and little by little the stocks run down, the
+world must be fed. Just as sure as the harvest follows the sowing, it
+will wake up suddenly to the fact that it is hungry. They are buying
+cotton and scattering their money in other nations' bonds in the old
+country now, for they and the rest of Europe forget their necessities
+at times, but it is impossible to picture them finding their granaries
+empty and clamouring for bread?"
+
+It was a crucial test of faith, and the man knew it, as the woman did.
+He stood alone, with the opinions of the multitude against him; but
+there was, Maud Barrington felt, a great if undefinable difference
+between his quiet resolution and the gambler's recklessness. Once more
+the boldness of his venture stirred her, and this time there was a
+little flash in her eyes as she bore witness to her perfect
+confidence.
+
+"You shall have the land, every acre of it, to do what you like with,
+and I will ask no questions whether you win or lose," she said.
+
+Then Miss Barrington glanced at him in turn. "Lance, I have a thousand
+dollars I want you to turn into wheat for me."
+
+Witham's fingers trembled, and a darker hue crept into his tan.
+"Madam," he said, "I can take no money from you."
+
+"You must," said the little white-haired lady. "For your mother's
+sake, Lance. It is a brave thing you are doing, and you are the son of
+one who was my dearest friend."
+
+Witham turned his head away, and both women wondered when he looked
+round again. His face seemed a trifle drawn, and his voice was
+strained.
+
+"I hope," he said slowly, "it will in some degree make amends for
+others I have done. In the meanwhile, there are reasons why your
+confidence humiliates me."
+
+Miss Barrington rose and her niece after her. "Still I believe it is
+warranted, and you will remember there are two women who have trusted
+you, hoping for your success. And now, I fancy, we have kept you too
+long."
+
+Witham stood holding the door open a moment, with his head bent, and
+then suddenly straightened himself.
+
+"I can at least be honest with you in this venture," he said, with a
+curious quietness.
+
+Nothing further was said, but when his guests drove away Witham sat
+still awhile, and then went back very grim in face to his ploughing.
+He had passed other unpleasant moments of that kind since he came to
+Silverdale, and long afterwards the memory of them brought a flush to
+his face. The excuses he had made seemed worthless when he strove to
+view what he had done, and was doing, through those women's eyes.
+
+It was dusk when he returned to the homestead worn out in body but
+more tranquil in mind, and stopped a moment in the doorway to look
+back on the darkening sweep of the ploughing. He felt with no
+misgivings that his time of triumph would come, and in the meanwhile
+the handling of this great farm with all the aids that money could buy
+him was a keen joy to him; but each time he met Maud Barrington's eyes
+he realized the more surely that the hour of his success must also see
+accomplished an act of abnegation, which he wondered with a growing
+fear whether he could find the strength for. Then as he went in a man
+who cooked for his hired assistants came to meet him.
+
+"There's a stranger inside waiting for you," he said. "Wouldn't tell
+me what he wanted, but sat right down as if the place was his and
+helped himself without asking to your cigars. Wanted something to
+drink, too, and smiled at me kind of wicked when I brought him the
+cider."
+
+The room was almost dark when Witham entered it and stood still a
+moment staring at a man who sat, cigar in hand, quietly watching him.
+His appearance was curiously familiar, but Witham could not see his
+face until he moved forward another step or two. Then he stopped once
+more, and the two, saying nothing, looked at one another. It was
+Witham who spoke first, and his voice was very even.
+
+"What do you want here?" he asked.
+
+The other man laughed. "Isn't that a curious question when the place
+is mine? You don't seem overjoyed to see me come to life again."
+
+Witham sat down and slowly lighted a cigar. "We need not go into that.
+I asked you what you want."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne dryly, "it is not a great deal. Only the means
+to live in a manner more befitting a gentleman than I have been able
+to do lately."
+
+"You have not been prospering?" and Witham favoured his companion with
+a slow scrutiny.
+
+"No," and Courthorne laughed again. "You see, I could pick up a
+tolerable living as Lance Courthorne, but there is very little to be
+made at my business when you commence in new fields as an unknown
+man."
+
+"Well," said Witham coldly, "I don't know that it wouldn't be better
+to face my trial than stay here at your mercy. So far as my
+inclinations go, I would sooner fight than have any further dealings
+with a man like you."
+
+Courthorne shook his head. "I fixed up the thing too well, and you
+would be convicted. Still, we'll not go into that, and you will not
+find me unreasonable. A life at Silverdale would not suit me, and you
+know by this time that it would be difficult to sell the place, while
+I don't know where I could find a tenant who would farm it better than
+you. That being so, it wouldn't be good policy to bleed you too
+severely. Still, I want a thousand dollars in the meanwhile. They're
+mine, you see."
+
+Witham sat still a minute. He was sensible of a fierce distrust and
+hatred of the man before him, but he felt he must at least see the
+consummation of his sowing.
+
+"Then you shall have them on condition that you go away, and stay
+away, until harvest is over. After that I will send for you and shall
+have more to tell you. If in the meantime you come back here, or hint
+that I am Witham, I will surrender to the police or decide our
+differences in another fashion."
+
+Courthorne nodded. "That is direct," he said. "One knows where he is
+when he deals with a man who talks as you do. Now, are you not curious
+as to the way I cheated both the river and the police?"
+
+"No," said Witham grimly, "not in the least. We will talk business
+together when it is necessary, but I can only decline to discuss
+anything else with you."
+
+Courthorne laughed. "There's nothing to be gained by pretending to
+misunderstand you, but it wouldn't pay me to be resentful when I'm
+graciously willing to let you work for me. Still, I have been inclined
+to wonder how you were getting on with my estimable relatives and
+connexions. One of them has, I hear, unbent a trifle towards you, but
+I would like to warn you not to presume on any small courtesy shown
+you by the younger Miss Barrington."
+
+Witham stood up and set his back to the door. "You heard my terms, but
+if you mention that lady again in connexion with me it would suit me
+equally well to make good all I owe you very differently."
+
+Courthorne did not appear in any way disconcerted, but before he could
+answer a man outside opened the door.
+
+"Here's Sergeant Stimson and one of his troopers wanting you," he
+said.
+
+Witham looked at Courthorne, but the latter smiled. "The visit has
+nothing to do with me. It is probably accidental; but I fancy Stimson
+knows me, and it wouldn't be advisable for him to see us both
+together. Now, I wonder whether you could make it fifteen hundred
+dollars."
+
+"No," said Witham. "Stay, if it pleases you."
+
+Courthorne shook his head. "I don't know that it would. You don't do
+it badly, Witham."
+
+He went out by another door almost as the grizzled sergeant came in
+and stood still, looking at the master of the homestead.
+
+"I haven't seen you since I came here, Mr. Courthorne, and now you
+remind me of another man I once had dealings with," he said.
+
+Witham laughed a little. "I scarcely fancy that is very civil,
+Sergeant."
+
+"Well," said the prairie-rider, "there is a difference, when I look at
+you more closely. Let me see, I met you once or twice back there in
+Alberta?"
+
+He appeared to be reflecting, but Witham was on his guard. "More
+frequently, I fancy, but you had nothing definite against me, and the
+times have changed. I would like to point that out to you civilly.
+Your chiefs are also on good terms with us at Silverdale, you see."
+
+The sergeant laughed. "Well, sir, I meant no offence, and called round
+to requisition a horse. One of the Whitesod boys has been deciding a
+quarrel with a neighbour with an axe, and while I fancy they want me
+at once, my beast got his foot in a badger hole."
+
+"Tell Tom in the stables to let you have your choice," said Witham.
+"If you like them, there's no reason you shouldn't take some of these
+cigars along."
+
+The sergeant went out, and when the beat of hoofs sank into the
+silence of the prairie, Witham called Courthorne in. "I have offered
+you no refreshment, but the best in the house is at your service," he
+said.
+
+Courthorne looked at him curiously, and for the first time Witham
+noticed that the life he had led was telling upon his companion.
+
+"As your guest?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "I am tenant here, and, that I may owe you
+nothing, purpose paying you a second thousand dollars when the crop is
+in, as well as bank-rate interest on the value of the stock and
+machines and the money I have used, as shown in the documents handed
+me by Colonel Barrington. With wheat at its present price, nobody
+would give you more for the land. In return, I demand the
+unconditional use of the farm until within three months from harvest I
+have the elevator warrants for whatever wheat I raise, which will
+belong to me. If you do not agree, or remain here after sunrise
+to-morrow, I shall ride over to the outpost and make a declaration."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne slowly, "you can consider it a deal."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+FACING THE FLAME
+
+
+Courthorne rode away next morning, and some weeks had passed when Maud
+Barrington came upon Witham sitting beside his mower in a sloo. He did
+not at first see her, for the rattle of the machines in a neighbouring
+hollow drowned the muffled beat of hoofs, and the girl, reining her
+horse in, looked down on him. The man was sitting very still, which
+was unusual with him, a hammer in his hand, gazing straight before
+him, as though he could see something beyond the shimmering heat that
+danced along the rim of the prairie.
+
+Summer had come, and the grass, which grew scarcely ankle-deep on the
+great levels, was once more white and dry; but in the hollows that had
+held the melting snow it stood waist-high, scented with peppermint,
+harsh and wiry, and Witham had set out with every man he had to
+harvest it. Already a line of loaded wagons crawled slowly across the
+prairie, and men and horses moved half-seen amid the dust that whirled
+about another sloo. Out of it came the trampling of hoofs and the
+musical tinkle of steel.
+
+Suddenly Witham looked up, and the care which was stamped upon it fled
+from his face when he saw the girl. The dust that lay thick upon his
+garments had spared her, and as she sat, patting the restless horse,
+with a little smile in her face which showed just touched by the sun
+beneath the big white hat, something in her dainty freshness reacted
+upon the tired man's fancy. He had long borne the stress and the
+burden, and as he watched her a longing to taste for at least a space
+the life of leisure and refinement came upon him, as it had done too
+often for his tranquility since he came to Silverdale. This woman who
+had been born to it could, it seemed to him, lift the man she trusted
+beyond the sordid cares of the turmoil to her own high level, and as
+he waited for her to speak, a fit of passion shook him. It betrayed
+itself only by the sudden hardening of his face.
+
+"It is the first time I have surprised you idle. You were dreaming,"
+she said.
+
+Witham smiled a trifle mirthlessly. "I was, but I am afraid the
+fulfillment of the dreams is not for me. One is apt to be pulled up
+suddenly when he ventures over far."
+
+"We are inquisitive, you know," said Maud Barrington; "can't you tell
+me what they were?"
+
+Witham did not know what impulse swayed him, and afterwards blamed
+himself for complying; but the girl's interest compelled him, and he
+showed her a little of what was in his heart.
+
+"I fancy I saw Silverdale gorging the elevators with the choicest
+wheat," he said. "A new bridge flung level across the ravine where the
+wagons go down half-loaded to the creek; a dam turning the hollow
+into a lake, and big turbines driving our own flouring mill. Then
+there were herds of cattle fattening on the strippings of the grain
+that wasteful people burn, our products clamoured for, east in the old
+country, and west in British Columbia--and for a background,
+prosperity and power, even if it was paid for with half the traditions
+of Silverdale. Still, you see it may all be due to the effect of the
+fierce sunshine on an idle man's fancy."
+
+Maud Barrington regarded him steadily, and the smile died out of her
+eyes. "But," she said, slowly "is all that quite beyond realization.
+Could you not bring it about?"
+
+Witham saw her quiet confidence and something of her pride. There was
+no avarice in this woman, but the slight dilation of the nostrils and
+the glow in her eyes told of ambition, and for a moment his soul was
+not his own.
+
+"I could," he said; and Maud Barrington, who watched the swift
+straightening of his shoulders and lifting of his head, felt that he
+spoke no more than the truth. Then with a sudden access of bitterness,
+"But I never will."
+
+"Why?" she asked. "Have you grown tired of Silverdale, or has what you
+pictured no charm for you?"
+
+Witham leaned, as it were wearily against the wheel of the mower. "I
+wonder if you could understand what my life has been. The crushing
+poverty that rendered every effort useless from the beginning, the
+wounds that come from using imperfect tools, and the numb hopelessness
+that follows repeated failure. They are tolerably hard to bear alone,
+but it is more difficult to make the best of them when the poorly-fed
+body is as worn out as the mind. To stay here would be--paradise--but
+a glimpse of it will probably have to suffice. Its gates are well
+guarded and without are the dogs, you know."
+
+Something in Maud Barrington thrilled in answer to the faint
+hoarseness in Witham's voice, and she did not resent it. She was a
+woman with all her sex's instinctive response to passion and emotion,
+though as yet the primitive impulses that stir the hearts of men had
+been covered, if not wholly hidden, from her by the thin veneer of
+civilization. Now, at least, she felt in touch with them, and for a
+moment she looked at the man with a daring that matched his own
+shining in her eyes.
+
+"And you fear the angel with the sword?" she said. "There is nothing
+so terrible at Silverdale."
+
+"No," said Witham, "I think it is the load I have to carry I fear the
+most."
+
+For the moment Maud Barrington had flung off the bonds of
+conventionality. "Lance," she said, "you have proved your right to
+stay at Silverdale, and would not what you are doing now cover a great
+deal in the past?"
+
+Witham smiled wryly. "It is the present that is difficult," he said.
+"Can a man be pardoned and retain the offence?"
+
+He saw the faint bewilderment in the girl's face give place to the
+resentment of frankness unreturned, and with a little shake of his
+shoulders shrank into himself. Maud Barrington, who understood it,
+once more put on the becoming reticence of Silverdale.
+
+"We are getting beyond our depth, and it is very hot," she said. "You
+have all this hay to cut!"
+
+Witham laughed as he bent over the mower's knife. "Yes," he said, "it
+is really more in my line, and I have kept you in the sun too long."
+
+In another few moments Maud Barrington was riding across the prairie,
+but when the rattle of the machine rose from the sloo behind her she
+laughed curiously.
+
+"The man knew his place, but you came perilously near making a fool of
+yourself this morning, my dear," she said.
+
+It was a week or two later, and very hot when, with others of his
+neighbours, Witham sat in the big hall at Silverdale Grange. The
+windows were open wide, and the smell of hot dust came in from the
+white waste which rolled away beneath the stars. There was also
+another odour in the little puffs of wind that flickered in, and far
+off where the arch of indigo dropped to the dusky earth wavy lines of
+crimson moved along the horizon. It was then the season when fires
+that are lighted by means which no man knows creep up and down the
+waste of grass, until they put on speed and roll in a surf of flame
+before a sudden breeze. Still, nobody was anxious about them, for the
+guarding furrows that would oppose a space of dusty soil to the march
+of the flame had been ploughed round every homestead at Silverdale.
+
+Maud Barrington was at the piano, and her voice was good; while
+Witham, who had known what it is to toil from red dawn to sunset
+without hope of more than daily food, found the simple song she had
+chosen chime with his mood: "All day long the reapers."
+
+A faint staccato drumming that rose from the silent prairie throbbed
+through the final chords of it, and when the music ceased, swelled
+into the gallop of a horse. It seemed in some curious fashion
+portentous, and when there was a rattle and jingle outside other eyes
+than Witham's were turned towards the door. It swung open presently,
+and Dane came in. There was quiet elation and some diffidence in his
+bronzed face as he turned to Colonel Barrington.
+
+"I could not get away earlier from the settlement, sir, but I have
+great news," he said. "They have awoke to the fact that stocks are
+getting low in the old country. Wheat moved up at Winnipeg, and there
+was almost a rush to buy yesterday."
+
+There was a sudden silence, for among those present were men who
+remembered the acres of good soil they had not ploughed, but a little
+grim smile crept into their leader's face.
+
+"It is," he said quietly, "too late for most of us. Still, we will not
+grudge you your good fortune, Dane. You and a few of the others owe it
+to Courthorne."
+
+Every eye was on the speaker, for it had become known among his
+neighbours that he had sold for a fall; but Barrington could lose
+gracefully. Then both his niece and Dane looked at Witham with a
+question in their eyes.
+
+"Yes," he said very quietly, "it is the turning of the tide."
+
+He crossed over to Barrington, who smiled at him dryly as he said, "It
+is a trifle soon to admit that I was wrong."
+
+Witham made a gesture of almost impatient deprecation. "I was
+wondering how far I might presume, sir. You have forward wheat to
+deliver?"
+
+"I have," said Barrington; "unfortunately, a good deal. You believe
+the advance will continue?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham simply. "Still it is but the beginning, and there
+will be a reflux before the stream sets in. Wait a little, sir, and
+then telegraph your broker to cover all your contracts when the price
+drops again."
+
+"I fancy it would be wiser to cut my losses now," said Barrington
+dryly.
+
+Then Witham did a somewhat daring thing, for he raised his voice a
+trifle, in a fashion that seemed to invite the attention of the rest
+of the company.
+
+"The more certain the advance seems to be, the fiercer will be the
+bears' last attack," he said. "They have to get from under, and will
+take heavy chances to force prices back. As yet, they may contrive to
+check or turn the stream, and then every wise man who has sold down
+will try to cover, but no one can tell how far it may carry us, once
+it sets strongly in."
+
+The men understood, as did Colonel Barrington, that they were being
+warned, above their leader's head; and his niece, while resenting the
+slight, admitted the courage of the man. Barrington's face was
+sardonic, and a less resolute man would have winced under the
+implication as he said:
+
+"This is, no doubt, intuition. I fancy you told us you had no dealings
+on the markets at Winnipeg."
+
+Witham looked steadily at the speaker, and the girl noticed with a
+curious approval that he smiled.
+
+"Perhaps it is, but I believe events will prove me right. In any case,
+what I had the honour of telling you and Miss Barrington was the
+fact," he said.
+
+Nobody spoke, and the girl was wondering by what means the strain,
+which, though few heard what Barrington said, all seemed to feel,
+could be relieved, when out of the darkness came a second beat of
+hoofs, and by and by a man swaying on the driving-seat of a jolting
+wagon swept into the light from the windows. Then there were voices
+outside, and a breathless lad came in.
+
+"A big grass fire coming right down on Courthorne's farm!" he said.
+"It was tolerably close when I got away."
+
+In an instant there was commotion, and every man in Silverdale Grange
+was on his feet. For the most part they took life lightly, and looked
+upon their farming as an attempt to combine the making of dollars with
+gentlemanly relaxation; but there were no laggards among them when
+there was perilous work to be done, and they went out to meet the fire
+joyously. Inside five minutes scarcely a horse remained in the
+stables, and the men were flying at a gallop across the dusky prairie,
+laughing at the risk of a stumble in a deadly badger hole. Yet in the
+haste of saddling, they found time to arrange a twenty-dollar
+sweepstake and the allowance for weight.
+
+Up the long rise and down the back of it they swept, stirrup as yet by
+stirrup and neck by neck, while the roar of the hoofs reft the silence
+of the prairie like the roll of musketry. Behind came the wagons,
+lurching up the slope, and the blood surged to the brave young faces
+as the night wind smote them and fanned into brightness the crimson
+smear on the horizon. They were English lads, and healthy Englishmen,
+of the stock that had furnished their nation's fighting line, and not
+infrequently counted no sacrifice too great that brought their colours
+home first on the racing turf. Still, careless to the verge of
+irresponsibility as they were in most affairs that did not touch their
+pride, the man who rode with red spurs and Dane next behind him, a
+clear length before the first of them, asked no better allies in what
+was to be done.
+
+Then the line drew out as the pace began to tell, though the rearmost
+rode grimly, knowing the risks the leaders ran, and that the chance of
+being first to meet the fire might yet fall to them. There was not one
+among them who would not have killed his best horse for that honour,
+and for further incentive the Colonel's niece, in streaming habit,
+flitted in front of them. She had come up from behind them, and passed
+them on a rise, for Barrington disdained to breed horses for dollars
+alone, and there was blood well known on the English turf in the beast
+she rode.
+
+By-and-by a straggling birch bluff rose blackly across their way, but
+nobody swung wide. Swaying low while the branches smote them, they
+went through, the twigs crackling under foot, and here and there the
+red drops trickling down a flushed, scarred face, for the slanting
+rent of a birch bough cuts like a knife. Dim trees whirled by them,
+undergrowth went down, and they were out on the dusty grass again,
+while hurled straight, like field guns wanted at the front, the
+bouncing wagons went through behind. Then the fire rose higher in
+front of them, and when they topped the last rise the pace grew faster
+still. The slope they thundered down was undermined by gophers and
+seamed by badger-holes, but they took their chances gleefully, sparing
+no effort of hand and heel, for the sum of twenty dollars and the
+credit of being first man in. Then the smoke rolled up to them, and
+when eager hands drew bridle at last a youthful voice rose
+breathlessly out of it:
+
+"Stapleton a good first, but he'll go back on weight. It used to be
+black and orange when he was at home."
+
+There was a ripple of hoarse laughter, a gasping cheer, and then
+silence, for now their play was over, and it was with the grim
+quietness, which is not unusual with their kind, the men of Silverdale
+turned towards the fire. It rolled towards the homestead, a waving
+crimson wall, not fast, but with remorseless persistency, out of the
+dusky prairie, and already the horses were plunging in the smoke of
+it. That, however, did not greatly concern the men, for the bare fire
+furrows stretched between themselves and it; but there was also
+another blaze inside the defences, and, unless it was checked, nothing
+could save house and barns and granaries, rows of costly binders, and
+stock of prairie hay. They looked for a leader, and found one ready,
+for Witham's voice came up through the crackle of the fire:
+
+"Some of you lead the saddle-horses back to the willows and picket
+them. The rest to the stables and bring out the working beasts. The
+ploughs are by the corral, and the first team that comes up is to be
+harnessed to each in turn. Then start in, and turn over a fall-depth
+furrow a furlong from the fire."
+
+There was no confusion, and already the hired men were busy with two
+great machines until Witham displaced two of them.
+
+"How that fire passed the guards I don't know, but there will be time
+to find out later," he said to Dane. "Follow with the big breaker--it
+wants a strong man to keep that share in--as close as you can."
+
+Then they were off, a man at the heads of the leading horses harnessed
+to the great machines, and Witham sitting very intent in the
+driving-seat of one, while the tough sod crackled under the rending
+shares. Both the man and the reins were needed when the smoke rolled
+down on them, but it was for a moment torn aside again, and there
+roared up towards the blurred arch of indigo a great rush of flame.
+The heat of it smote into prickliness the uncovered skin, and in spite
+of all that Witham could do, the beasts recoiled upon the machine
+behind them. Then they swung round wrenching the shares from the
+triplex furrow, and for a few wild minutes man and terrified beast
+fought for the mastery. Breathless, half-strangled objurgations, the
+clatter of trace and swivel, and the thud of hoofs, rose muffled
+through the roar of the fire, for while swaying, plunging, panting,
+they fought with fist and hoof, it was rolling on, and now the heat
+was almost insupportable. The victory, however, was to the men, and
+when the great machine went on again, Maud Barrington, who with the
+wife of one of her neighbours had watched the struggle, stood
+wide-eyed, half-afraid, and yet thrilled in every fibre.
+
+"It was splendid!" she said. "They can't be beaten."
+
+Her companion seemed to shiver a little. "Yes," she said, "perhaps it
+was, but I wish it was over. It would appeal to you differently, my
+dear, if you had a husband at one of those horse's heads."
+
+For a moment Maud Barrington wondered whether it would, and then, when
+a red flame flickered out towards the team, felt a little chill of
+dread. In another second the smoke whirled about them, and she moved
+backward choking with her companion. The teams, however, went on, and,
+though the men who led them afterwards wondered how they kept their
+grip on the horses' heads, came out frantic with fear on the farther
+side. Then it was that while the machines swung round and other men
+ran to help, Witham, springing from the driving-seat, found Dane
+amidst the swaying, plunging medley of beasts and men.
+
+"If you can't find hook or clevis, cut the trace," he said. "It can't
+burn the plough, and the devils are out of hand now. The fire will
+jump these furrows, and we've got to try again."
+
+In another minute four maddened beasts were careering across the
+prairie with portions of their trappings banging about them, while one
+man who was badly kicked sat down grey in face and gasping, and the
+fire rolled up to the ridge of loam, checked, and then sprang across
+it here and there.
+
+"I'll take one of those lad's places," said Dane: "That fellow can't
+hold the breaker straight, Courthorne."
+
+It was a minute or two later when he flung a breathless lad away from
+his plough, and the latter turned upon him hoarse with indignation.
+
+"I raced Stapleton for it. Loose your hold, confound you. It's mine,"
+he said.
+
+Dane turned and laughed at him as he signed to one of the Ontario
+hired men to take the near horse's head.
+
+"You're a plucky lad, and you've done what you could," he said.
+"Still, if you get in the way of a grown man now, I'll break your head
+for you."
+
+He was off in another moment, crossed Witham, who had found fresh
+beasts, in his furrow, and had turned and doubled it before the fire
+that had passed the other barrier came close upon them. Once more the
+smoke grew blinding, and one of Dane's beasts went down.
+
+"I'm out of action now," he said. "Try back. That team will never face
+it, Courthorne."
+
+Witham's face showed very grim under the tossing flame. "They've got
+to. I'm going through," he said. "If the others are to stop it behind
+there, they must have time."
+
+Then he and the husband of the woman who had spoken to Maud Barrington
+passed on with the frantic team into the smoke that was streaked with
+flame.
+
+"Good Lord!" said Dane, and added more as, sitting on the horse's
+head, he turned his tingling face from the fire.
+
+It was some minutes before he and the hired man who came up loosed the
+fallen horse, and led it and its fellow back towards the last defences
+the rest had been raising, while the first furrows checked but did not
+stay the conflagration. There he presently came upon the man who had
+been with Witham.
+
+"I don't know where Courthorne is," he said. "The beasts bolted with
+us just after we'd gone through the worst of it, and I fancy they took
+the plough along. Anyway, I didn't see what became of them, and don't
+fancy anybody would have worried much about them after being trampled
+on by a horse in the lumbar region."
+
+Dane saw that the man was limping and white in face, and asked no more
+questions. It was evident to him that Courthorne would be where he was
+most needed, and he did what he could with those who were adding
+furrow to furrow across the path of the fire. It rolled up to them
+roaring, stopped, flung a shower of burning filaments before it, sank
+and swept aloft again, while the sparks rained down upon the grass
+before the draught it made.
+
+Blackened men with smouldering clothes were, however, ready, and they
+fought each incipient blaze with soaked grain bags, and shovels, some
+of them also, careless of blistered arms, with their own wet jackets.
+As fast as each fire was trampled out another sprang into life, but
+the parent blaze that fed them sank and died, and at last there was a
+hoarse cheer. They had won, and the fire they had beaten passed on
+divided across the prairie, leaving the homestead unscathed between.
+
+Then they turned to look for their leader, and did not find him until
+a lad came up to Dane.
+
+"Courthorne's back by the second furrows, and I fancy he's badly
+hurt," he said. "He didn't appear to know me, and his head seems all
+kicked in."
+
+It was not apparent how the news went round, but in a few more minutes
+Dane was kneeling beside a limp, blackened object stretched amidst the
+grass, and while his comrades clustered behind her, Maud Barrington
+bent over him. Her voice was breathless as she asked, "You don't
+believe him dead?"
+
+Somebody had brought a lantern, and Dane felt inclined to gasp when he
+saw the girl's white face, but what she felt was not his business
+then.
+
+"He's of a kind that is very hard to kill. Hold that lantern so I can
+see him," he said.
+
+The rest waited silent, glad that there was somebody to take a lead,
+and in a few moments Dane looked round again.
+
+"Ride in to the settlement, Stapleton, and bring that doctor fellow
+out if you bring him by the neck. Stop just a moment. You don't know
+where you're to bring him to."
+
+"Here, of course," said the lad, breaking into a run.
+
+"Wait," and Dane's voice stopped him. "Now, I don't fancy that would
+do. It seems to me that this is a case in which a woman to look after
+him would be necessary."
+
+Then, before any of the married men or their wives who had followed
+them could make an offer, Maud Barrington touched his shoulder.
+
+"He is coming to the Grange," she said.
+
+Dane nodded, signed to Stapleton, then spoke quickly to the men about
+him and turned to Maud Barrington.
+
+"Ride on at a gallop and get everything ready. I'll see he comes to no
+harm," he said.
+
+The girl felt curiously grateful as she rode out with her companion,
+and Dane who laid Witham carefully in a wagon, drew two of the other
+men aside when it rolled away towards the Grange.
+
+"There is something to be looked into. Did you notice anything unusual
+about the affair?" he said. "Since you asked me, I did," said one of
+the men. "I, however, scarcely cared to mention it until I had time
+for reflection, but while I fancy the regulation guards would have
+checked the fire on the boundaries without our help, I don't see how
+one started in the hollow inside them."
+
+"Exactly," said Dane very dryly. "Well, we have got to discover it,
+and the more quickly we do it the better. I fancy, however, that the
+question who started it is what we have to consider."
+
+The men looked at one another, and the third of them nodded.
+
+"I fancy it comes to that--though it is horribly unpleasant to admit
+it," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MAUD BARRINGTON IS MERCILESS
+
+
+Dane overtook the wagon close by the birch bluff at Silverdale
+Grange. It was late then, but there were lights in the windows that
+blinked beyond the trees, and, when the wagon stopped, Barrington
+stood in the doorway with one or two of his hired men. Accidents are
+not infrequent on the prairie, where surgical assistance is not always
+available, and there was a shutter ready on the ground beside him, for
+the Colonel had seen the field hospital in operation.
+
+"Unhook the tailboard," he said sharply. "Two of you pick up the
+shutter. Four more here. Now, arms about his shoulders, hips, and
+knees. Lift and lower--step off with right foot leading bearer, with
+your left in the rear!"
+
+It was done in a few moments, and when the bearers passed into the big
+hall that rang with their shuffling steps, Maud Barrington shivered as
+she waited with her aunt in an inner room. That tramping was horribly
+suggestive, and she had seen but little of sickness and grievous
+wounds. Still, the fact scarcely accounted for the painful throbbing
+of her heart, and the dizziness that came upon her. Then the bearers
+came in, panting, with Barrington and Dane behind them, and the girl
+was grateful to her aunt, who laid a hand upon her arm when she saw
+the singed head, and blackened face that was smeared with a ruddier
+tint, upon the shutter.
+
+"Lower!" said Colonel Barrington. "Lift, as I told you," and the
+huddled object was laid upon the bed. Then there was silence until the
+impassive voice rose again.
+
+"We shall not want you, Maud. Dane, you and I will get these burnt
+things off him."
+
+The girl went out, and while she stood, feeling curiously chilly in an
+adjoining room, Barrington bent over his patient.
+
+"Well put together!" he said thoughtfully. "Most of his people were
+lighter in the frame. Well, we can only oil the burns, and get a cold
+compress about his head. All intact, so far as I can see, and I fancy
+he'd pull through a good deal more than has happened to him. I am
+obliged for your assistance, but I need not keep you."
+
+The men withdrew, and when a rattle of wheels rose from the prairie,
+Maud Barrington waylaid her uncle in the hall. Her fingers were
+trembling, and, though her voice was steady, the man glanced at her
+curiously as she asked, "How is he?"
+
+"One can scarcely form an opinion yet," he said slowly. "He is burned
+here and there, and his head is badly cut, but it is the concussion
+that troubles me. A frantic horse kicks tolerably hard, you know, but
+I shall be able to tell you more when the doctor comes to-morrow. In
+the meanwhile you had better rest, though you could look in and see if
+your aunt wants anything in an hour or two."
+
+Maud Barrington passed an hour in horrible impatience, and then stole
+quietly into the sick-room. The windows were open wide, and the shaded
+lamp burned unsteadily as the cool night breeze flowed in. Its dim
+light just touched the man who lay motionless with a bandage round his
+head, and the drawn pallor of his face once more sent a shiver through
+the girl. Then Miss Barrington rose and lifted a warning hand.
+
+"Quite unconscious still," she said softly. "I fancy he was knocked
+down by one of the horses and trampled on, but your uncle has hopes of
+him. He has evidently led a healthy life."
+
+The girl was a little less serene than usual then, and drew back into
+the shadow.
+
+"Yes," she said. "We did not think so once."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled curiously. "Are you very much astonished, Maud?
+Still, there is nothing you can do for me, and we shall want you
+to-morrow."
+
+Realizing that there was no need for her, the girl went out, and when
+the door closed behind her the little white-haired lady bent down and
+gazed at her patient long and steadily. Then she shook her head, and
+moved back to the seat she had risen from, with perplexity in her
+face.
+
+In the meantime Maud Barrington sat by the open window in her room,
+staring out into the night. There was a whispering in the birch bluff,
+and the murmuring of leagues of grasses rose from the prairie that
+stretched away beyond it. Still, though the wind fanned her throbbing
+forehead with a pleasant coolness, the nocturnal harmonies awoke no
+response in her. Sleep was out of the question, for her brain was in a
+whirl of vague sensation, through which fear came uppermost every now
+and then. Why anything which could befall this man who had come out of
+the obscurity and was he had told her, to go back into it again,
+should disturb her, Maud Barrington did not know; but there was no
+disguising the fact that she would feel his loss grievously, as others
+at Silverdale would do. Then with a little tremor she wondered whether
+they must lose him, and, rising, stood tensely still, listening for
+any sound from the room where the sick man lay.
+
+There was nothing but the sighing of the grasses outside and the
+murmur of the birches in the bluff, until the doleful howl of a coyote
+stole faintly out of the night. Again the beast sent its cry out upon
+the wind, and the girl trembled as she listened. The unearthly wail
+seemed charged with augury, and every nerve in her thrilled.
+
+Then she sank down into her chair again, and sat still, hoping,
+listening, fearing, and wondering when the day would come, until at
+last her eyes grew heavy, and it was with a start she roused herself
+when a rattle of wheels came up out of the prairie in the early
+morning. Then a spume-flecked team swept up to the house, a door swung
+open, there was a murmur of voices and a sound of feet that moved
+softly in the hall, after which for what seemed an interminable time,
+silence reigned again. At last, when the stealthy patter of feet
+recommenced, the girl slipped down the stairway and came upon
+Barrington. Still, she could not ask the question that was trembling
+on her lips.
+
+"Is there anything I can do?" she said.
+
+Barrington shook his head. "Not now! The doctor is here, and does not
+seem very anxious about him. The concussion is not apparently serious,
+and his other injuries will not trouble him much."
+
+Maud Barrington said nothing and turned away, sensible of a great
+relief, while her aunt entering her room an hour later found her lying
+fast asleep but still dressed as she had last seen her. Then, being a
+discerning woman, she went out softly with a curious smile, and did
+not at any time mention what she had seen.
+
+It was that evening, and Barrington had departed suddenly on business
+to Winnipeg, when Dane rode up to the Grange. He asked for Miss
+Barrington and her niece, and when he heard that his comrade was
+recovering sensibility, sat down looking very grave.
+
+"I have something to tell you, but Courthorne must not know until he
+is better, while I'm not sure that we need tell him then," he said.
+"In the meanwhile, I am also inclined to fancy it would be better kept
+from Colonel Barrington on his return. It is the first time anything
+of the kind has happened at Silverdale, and it would hurt him
+horribly, which decided us to come first to you."
+
+"You must be more concise," said Miss Barrington quietly, and Dane
+trifled with the hat in his hand.
+
+"It is," he said, "a most unpleasant thing, and is known to three men
+only, of whom I am one. We have also arranged that nobody else will
+chance upon what we have discovered. You see, Ferris is unfortunately
+connected with you, and his people have had trouble enough already."
+
+"Ferris?" said Maud Barrington, with a sudden hardening of her face.
+"You surely don't mean----"
+
+Dane nodded. "Yes," he said reluctantly. "I'm afraid I do. Now, if you
+will listen to me for a minute or two."
+
+He told his story with a grim, convincing quietness, and the blood
+crept into the girl's cheeks as she followed his discoveries step by
+step. Glancing at her aunt, she saw that there was horror as well as
+belief in the gentle lady's face.
+
+"Then," she said with cold incisiveness, "Ferris cannot stay here, and
+he shall be punished."
+
+"No," said Dane. "We have no room for a lad of his disposition at
+Silverdale--but I'm very uncertain in regard to the rest. You see,
+it couldn't be done without attracting attention--and I have the
+honour of knowing his mother. You will remember how she lost
+another son. That is why I did not tell Colonel Barrington. He is a
+trifle--precipitate--occasionally."
+
+Miss Barrington glanced at him gratefully. "You have done wisely," she
+said. "Ethel Ferris has borne enough, and she has never been the same
+since the horrible night they brought Frank home, for she knew how he
+came by his death, though the coroner brought it in misadventure. I
+also fancy my brother would be implacable in a case like this, though
+how far I am warranted in keeping the facts from him I do not know."
+
+Dane nodded gravely. "We leave that to you. You will, however,
+remember what happened once before. We cannot go through what we did
+then again."
+
+Miss Barrington recalled the formal court-martial that had once been
+held in the hall of the Grange, when every man in the settlement had
+been summoned to attend, for there were offences in regard to which
+her brother was inflexible. When it was over and the disgraced man
+went forth an outcast, a full account of the proceedings had been
+forwarded to those at home who had hoped for much from him.
+
+"No," she said. "For the sake of the woman who sent him here we must
+stop short of that."
+
+Then Maud Barrington looked at them both. "There is one person you do
+not seem to consider at all, and that is the man who lies here in
+peril through Ferris's fault," she said. "Is there nothing due to
+him?"
+
+Dane noticed the sternness in her eyes, and glanced as if for support
+towards Miss Barrington. "I fancy he would be the last to claim it if
+he knew what we do. Still, in the meanwhile, I leave the affair to
+your aunt and you. We would like to have your views before doing
+anything further."
+
+He rose as he spoke, and when he had gone out Maud Barrington sat down
+at a writing table. "Aunt," she said quietly, "I will ask Ferris to
+come here at once."
+
+It was next day when Ferris came, evidently ill at ease, though he
+greeted Miss Barrington with elaborate courtesy, and would have done
+the same with her niece but the girl turned from him with visible
+disdain.
+
+"Sit down," she said coldly. "Colonel Barrington is away, but his
+sister will take his place, and after him I have the largest stake in
+the welfare of Silverdale. Now, a story has come to our ears which, if
+it had not been substantiated, would have appeared incredible. Shall
+Miss Barrington tell it you?"
+
+Ferris, who was a very young man, flushed, but the colour faded and
+left his cheeks a trifle grey. He was not a very prepossessing lad,
+for it requires a better physique than he was endowed with to bear the
+stamp of viciousness that is usually most noticeable on the feeble,
+but he was distinguished by a trace of arrogance that not infrequently
+served him as well as resolution.
+
+"If it would not inconvenience Miss Barrington, it would help me to
+understand a good deal I can find no meaning for now," he said.
+
+The elder lady's face grew sterner, and very quietly but remorselessly
+she set forth his offence, until no one who heard the tale could have
+doubted the origin of the fire.
+
+"I should have been better pleased had you, if only when you saw we
+knew everything, appeared willing to confess your fault and make
+amends," she said.
+
+Ferris laughed as ironically as he dared under the eyes which had lost
+their gentleness. "You will pardon me for telling you that I have no
+intention of admitting it now. That you should be so readily
+prejudiced against me is not gratifying, but, you see, nobody could
+take any steps without positive proof of the story, and my word is at
+least as credible as that of the interloper who told it you."
+
+Maud Barrington raised her head suddenly, and looked at him with a
+curious light in her eyes, but the elder lady made a little gesture of
+deprecation.
+
+"Mr. Courthorne has told us nothing," she said. "Still, three
+gentlemen whose worth is known at Silverdale are willing to certify
+every point of it. If we lay the affair before Colonel Barrington, you
+will have an opportunity of standing face to face with them."
+
+The lad's assurance, which, so far and no further, did duty for
+courage, deserted him. He was evidently not prepared to be made the
+subject of another court-martial, and the hand he laid on the table in
+front of him trembled a little.
+
+"Madam," he said hoarsely, "if I admit everything what will you do?"
+
+"Nothing," said Maud Barrington coldly. "On conditions that within a
+month you leave Silverdale."
+
+Ferris stared at her. "You can't mean that. You see, I'm fond of
+farming, and nobody would give me what the place cost me. I couldn't
+live among the outside settler fellows."
+
+The girl smiled coldly. "I mean exactly what you heard, and, if you do
+not enlighten them, the settlers would probably not object to you.
+Your farm will be taken over at what you gave for it."
+
+Ferris stood up. "I am going to make a last appeal. Silverdale's the
+only place fit for a gentleman to live in in Canada, and I want to
+stay here. You don't know what it would cost me to go away, and I'd do
+anything for reparation--send a big cheque to a Winnipeg hospital and
+starve myself to make up for it if that would content you. Only, don't
+send me away."
+
+His tone grew almost abject as he proceeded, and while Miss
+Barrington's eyes softened, her niece's heart grew harder because of
+it, as she remembered that he had brought a strong man down.
+
+"No," she said dryly. "That would punish your mother and sisters from
+whom you would cajole the money. You can decide between leaving
+Silverdale and having the story, and the proof of it, put into the
+hands of Colonel Barrington."
+
+She sat near an open window regarding him with quiet scorn, and the
+light that shone upon her struck a sparkle from her hair and set the
+rounded cheek and neck gleaming like ivory. The severity of her pose
+became her, and the lad's callow desire that had driven him to his
+ruin stirred him to impotent rage in his desperation. There were grey
+patches in his cheeks, and his voice was strained and hoarse.
+
+"You have no mercy on me because I struck at him," he said. "The one
+thing I shall always be sorry for is that I failed, and I would go
+away with pleasure if the horse had trampled the life out of him.
+Well, there was a time when you could have made what you wished of me,
+and now, at least, I shall not see the blackleg you have showered your
+favours on drag you down to the mire he came from."
+
+Maud Barrington's face had grown very colourless, but she said
+nothing, and her aunt rose and raised the hammer of a gong.
+
+"Ferris," she said, "do you wish to be led out by the hired men?"
+
+The lad laughed, and the hideous merriment set the white-haired lady's
+nerves on edge. "Oh, I am going now; but, for once, let us be honest.
+It was for her I did it, and if it had been any other man I had
+injured, she would have forgiven me."
+
+Then with an ironical farewell he swung out of the room, and the two
+women exchanged glances when the door closed noisily behind him. Miss
+Barrington was flushed with anger, but her niece's face was paler than
+usual.
+
+"Are there men like him?" she said.
+
+Miss Barrington shook off her anger and, rising, laid a gentle hand on
+her niece's shoulder. "Very few, I hope," she said. "Still, it would
+be better if we sent word to Dane. You would not care for that tale to
+spread?"
+
+For a moment the girl's cheek flamed, then she rose quietly and
+crossed the room.
+
+"No," she said; and her aunt stood still, apparently lost in
+contemplation, after the door swung softly to. Then she sat down at
+the writing table. There was very little in the note, but an hour
+after Dane received it that night, a wagon drew up outside Ferris's
+farm. Two men went quietly in and found the owner of the homestead
+sitting with a sheaf of papers scattered about the table in front of
+him.
+
+"Come back to-morrow. I can't be worried now," he said. "Well, why the
+devil don't you go?"
+
+Dane laid a hand on his shoulder. "We are waiting for you. You are
+coming with us!"
+
+Ferris turned and stared at them. "Where to?"
+
+"To the railroad," said Dane dryly. "After that you can go just where
+it pleases you. Now, there's no use whatever making a fuss, and every
+care will be taken of your property until you can arrange to dispose
+of it. Hadn't you better get ready?"
+
+The grim quietness of the voice was sufficient, and Ferris, who saw
+that force would be used if it was necessary, decided that it was
+scarcely likely his hired men would support him.
+
+"I might have expected it!" he said. "Of course, it was imprudent to
+speak the truth to our leader's niece. You know what I have done."
+
+"I know what you did the night Courthorne nearly lost his life," said
+Dane. "One would have fancied that would have contented you."
+
+"Well," said Ferris, "if you like to hear of a more serious offence,
+I'll oblige you."
+
+Dane's finger closed on his arm. "If you attempt to tell me, I'll
+break your head for you."
+
+Next moment Ferris was lifted from his chair, and in less than ten
+minutes Dane thrust him into the wagon, where another man, who passed
+a hand through his arm, sat beside him. It was a very long drive to
+the railroad, but few words were exchanged during it, and when they
+reached the settlement one of Ferris's companions mounted guard
+outside the hotel he found accommodation in, until the Montreal
+express crawled up above the rim of the prairie. Then both went with
+him to the station, and as the long cars rolled in Dane turned quietly
+to the lad.
+
+"Now, I am quite aware that we are incurring some responsibility, so
+you need not waste your breath," he said. "There are, however, lawyers
+in Winnipeg, if you fancy it is advisable to make use of them, and you
+know where I and Macdonald are, if you want us. In the meanwhile, your
+farm will be run better than ever it was in your hands, until you
+dispose of it. That is all I have to tell you, except that if any
+undesirable version of the affair gets about, Courthorne or I will
+assuredly find you."
+
+Then there was a scream of the whistle, and the train rolled away with
+Ferris standing white with fury on the platform of a car.
+
+In the meanwhile, Maud Barrington spent a sleepless night. Ferris's
+taunt had reached its mark, and she realized with confusion that it
+was the truth he spoke. The fact that brought the blood to her cheeks
+would no longer be hidden, and she knew it was a longing to punish the
+lad who had struck down the man she loved that had led to her
+insistence on the former leaving Silverdale. It was a difficult
+admission, but she made it that night. The outcast who had stepped out
+of the obscurity and into her peaceful life, had shown himself a man
+that any woman might be proud to mate with; and, though he had said
+very little, and now and then his words were bitter, she knew that he
+loved her. Whatever he had done--and she felt against all the
+teachings of her reason that it had not been evil--he had shown
+himself the equal of the best at Silverdale, and she laughed as she
+wondered which of the men there she could set in the balance against
+him. Then she shivered a little, remembering that there was a barrier
+whose extent he alone realized between them, and wondered vaguely what
+the future would bring.
+
+It was a week or two before Witham was on his feet again, and Maud
+Barrington was one of the first to greet him when he walked feebly
+into the hall. She had, however, decided on the line of conduct that
+would be most fitting, and there was no hint of more than neighbourly
+kindliness in her tone. They had spoken about various trifles when
+Witham turned to her.
+
+"You and Miss Barrington have taken such good care of me that, if I
+consulted my inclinations I would linger in convalescence a long
+while," he said. "Still, I must make an effort to get away to-morrow."
+
+"We cannot take the responsibility of letting you go under a week
+yet," said Maud Barrington. "Have you anything especially important to
+do?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham--and the girl understood the grimness of his
+face--"I have."
+
+"It concerns the fire?"
+
+Witham looked at her curiously. "I would sooner you did not ask me
+that question, Miss Barrington."
+
+"I scarcely fancy it is necessary," said the girl, with a little
+smile. "Still I have something to tell you, and a favour to ask.
+Ferris has left Silverdale, and you must never make any attempt to
+discover what caused the fire."
+
+"You know?"
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington. "Dane, Macdonald, and Hassal know, too;
+but you will not ask them, and if you did they would not tell you."
+
+"I can refuse you nothing," said Witham with a laugh, though his voice
+betrayed him. "Still, I want a _quid pro quo_. Wait until Ferris's
+farm is in the sale list, and then take it with the growing crop."
+
+"I could not. There are reasons," said the girl.
+
+Witham gazed at her steadily, and a little colour crept to his
+forehead, but he answered unconcernedly, "They can be over-ridden. It
+may be the last favour I shall ever ask you."
+
+"No," said Maud Barrington. "Anything else you wish, but not that. You
+must believe, without wondering why, that it is out of the question!"
+
+Witham yielded with a curious little smile. "Well," he said, "we will
+let it drop. I ask no questions. You have accepted so much already
+without understanding it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+WITH THE STREAM
+
+
+It was Witham's last afternoon at the Grange, and almost unpleasantly
+hot, while the man whose vigour had not as yet returned to him was
+content to lounge in the big window-seat listlessly watching his
+companion. He had borne the strain of effort long, and the time of his
+convalescence amidst the tranquility of Silverdale Grange had, with
+the gracious kindliness of Miss Barrington and her niece, been a
+revelation to him. There were moments when it brought him bitterness
+and self-reproach, but these were usually brief, and he made the most
+of what he knew might never be his again, telling himself that it
+would at least be something to look back upon.
+
+Maud Barrington sat close by, glancing through the letters a mounted
+man had brought in, and the fact that his presence put no restraint on
+her curiously pleased the man. At last, however, she opened a paper
+and passed it across to him.
+
+"You have been very patient, but no doubt you will find something that
+will atone for my silence there," she said.
+
+Witham turned over the journal, and then smiled at her. "Is there
+anything of moment in your letters?"
+
+"No," said the girl with a little laugh. "I scarcely think there is--a
+garden party, a big reception, the visit of a high official, and a
+description of the latest hat. Still, you know, that is supposed to be
+enough for us."
+
+"Then I wonder whether you will find this more interesting. 'The bears
+made a determined rally yesterday, and wheat moved back again. There
+was later in the day a rush to sell, and prices now stand at almost
+two cents below their lowest level.'"
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington, noticing the sudden intentness of his
+pallid face. "I do. It is serious news for you?"
+
+"And for you! You see where I have led you. Ill or well, I must start
+for Winnipeg to-morrow."
+
+Maud Barrington smiled curiously. "You and I and a handful of others
+stand alone, but I told you I would not blame you whether we won or
+lost. Do you know that I am grateful for the glimpses of the realities
+of life that you have given me?"
+
+Witham felt his pulses throb faster, for the girl's unabated
+confidence stirred him, but he looked at her gravely. "I wonder if you
+realize what you have given me in return? Life as I had seen it was
+very grim and bare--and now I know what, with a little help, it is
+possible to make of it."
+
+"With a little help?" said Maud Barrington.
+
+Witham nodded, and his face, which had grown almost wistful, hardened.
+"Those who strive in the pit are apt to grow blind to the best--the
+sweetness and order and all the little graces that mean so much. Even
+if their eyes are opened, it is usually too late. You see, they lose
+touch with all that lies beyond the struggle, and without some one to
+lead them they cannot get back to it. Still, if I talk in this fashion
+you will laugh at me; but every one has his weakness now and then--and
+no doubt I shall make up for it at Winnipeg to-morrow. One cannot
+afford to be fanciful when wheat is two cents down."
+
+Maud Barrington was not astonished. Tireless in his activities and,
+more curious still, almost ascetic in his mode of life, the man had
+already given her glimpses of his inner self and the vague longings
+that came upon him. He never asked her pity, but she found something
+pathetic in his attitude, for it seemed he knew that the stress and
+the turmoil alone could be his. Why this was so, she did not know, but
+it was with a confidence that could not be shaken now she felt it was
+through no fault of his. His last words, however, showed her that the
+mask was on again.
+
+"I scarcely fancy you are well enough, but if you must go, I wonder
+whether you would do a good turn to Alfreton?" she said. "The lad has
+been speculating and he seems anxious lately."
+
+"It is natural that they should all bring their troubles to you."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed. "I, however, generally pass them on to you."
+
+A trace of colour crept into the man's face, and his voice was a
+trifle hoarse as he said. "Do you know that I would ask nothing better
+than to take every care you had and bear it for you?"
+
+"Still," said the girl with a little smile, "that is very evidently
+out of the question."
+
+Witham rose, and she saw that one hand was closed as he looked down
+upon her. Then he turned and stared out at the prairie, but there was
+something very significant in the rigidity of his attitude, and his
+face seemed to have grown suddenly careworn when he glanced back at
+her.
+
+"Of course," he said quietly. "You see, I have been ill, and a little
+off my balance lately. That accounts for erratic speeches, though I
+meant it all. Colonel Barrington is still in Winnipeg?"
+
+"Yes," said the girl, who was not convinced by the explanation, very
+quietly. "I am a little anxious about him, too. He sold wheat forward,
+and I gather from his last letter has not bought it yet. Now, as
+Alfreton is driving in to-morrow, he could take you."
+
+Witham was grateful to her, and still more to Miss Barrington, who
+came in just then; while he did not see the girl again before he
+departed with Alfreton on the morrow. When they had left Silverdale a
+league behind, the trail dipped steeply amidst straggling birches to a
+bridge which spanned the creek in a hollow, and Witham glanced at the
+winding ascent thoughtfully.
+
+"It has struck me that going round by this place puts another six
+miles on to your journey to the railroad, and a double team could not
+pull a big load up," he said.
+
+The lad nodded. "The creek is a condemned nuisance. We have either to
+load light when we are hauling grain in and then pitch half the bags
+off at the bottom and come back for them--while, you know, one man
+can't put up many four bushel bags--or keep a man and horses at the
+ravine until we're through."
+
+Witham laughed. "Now, I wonder whether you ever figured how much those
+little things put up the price of your wheat."
+
+"This is the only practicable way down," said the lad. "You can
+scarcely climb up one side where the ravine's narrow abreast of
+Silverdale."
+
+"Drive round. I want to see it," said Witham. "Call at Rushforth for a
+spool of binder twine."
+
+Half-an-hour later Alfreton pulled the wagon up amidst the birches on
+the edge of the ravine, which just there sloped steep as a railway
+cutting, and not very much broader, to the creek. Witham gazed at it,
+and then handed the twine to the hired man.
+
+"Take that with you, Charley, and get down," he said. "If you strip
+your boots off you can wade through the creek."
+
+"I don't know that I want to," said the man.
+
+"Well," said Witham, "it would please me if you did, as well as cool
+your feet. Then you could climb up and hold that twine down on the
+other side."
+
+The man grinned; and, though Alfreton remembered that he was not
+usually so tractable with him, proceeded to do Witham's bidding. When
+he came back there was a twinkle of comprehension in his eyes; and
+Witham, who cut off the length of twine, smiled at Alfreton.
+
+"It is," he said dryly, "only a little idea of mine."
+
+They drove on, and, reaching Winnipeg next day, went straight to
+Graham the wheat-broker's offices. He kept them waiting some time, and
+in the meanwhile men with intent faces passed hastily in and out
+through the outer office. Some of them had telegrams or bundles of
+papers in their hands, and the eyes of all were eager. The corridor
+rang with footsteps, the murmur of voices seemed to vibrate through
+the great building; while it seemed to Alfreton there was a suggestion
+of strain and expectancy in all he heard and saw. Witham, however, sat
+gravely still, though the lad noticed that his eyes were keener than
+usual, for the muffled roar of the city, patter of messengers' feet,
+ceaseless tinkle of telephone call bells, and whirr of the elevators,
+each packed with human freight, all stirred him. Hitherto, he had
+grappled with nature, but now he was to test his judgment against the
+keenest wits of the cities, and stand or fall by it, in the struggle
+that was to be waged over the older nation's food.
+
+At last, however, a clerk signed to them from a doorway, and they
+found Graham sitting before a littered table. A man sat opposite him
+with the telephone receiver in his hand.
+
+"Sorry to keep you, but I've both hands full just now. Every man in
+this city is thinking wheat," he said. "Has he word from Chicago,
+Thomson?"
+
+"Yes," said the clerk. "Bears lost hold this morning. General buying!"
+
+Just then the door swung open, and a breathless man came in. "Guess I
+scared that clerk of yours who wanted to turn me off," he said. "Heard
+what Chicago's doing? Well, you've got to buy for me now. They're
+going to send her right up into the sky, and it's 'bout time I got out
+before the bulls trample the life out of me."
+
+"Quite sure you can't wait until to-morrow?" asked Graham.
+
+The man shook his head. "No, sir. When I've been selling all along the
+line! Send off right away, and tell your man on the market to cover
+every blame sale for me."
+
+Graham signed to the clerk, and as the telephone bell tinkled, a lad
+brought in a message. The broker opened it. "'New York lost advance
+and recovered it twice in the first hour,'" he read. "'At present a
+point or two better. Steady buying in Liverpool.'"
+
+"That," said the other man, "is quite enough for me. Let me have the
+contracts as soon as they're ready."
+
+He went out, and Graham turned to Witham. "There's half-a-dozen more
+of them outside," he said. "Do you buy or sell?"
+
+Witham laughed. "I want to know which a wise man would do."
+
+"Well," said Graham, "I can't tell you. The bulls rushed wheat up as I
+wired you, but the other folks got their claws in and worried it down
+again. Wheat's anywhere and nowhere all the time, and I'm advising
+nobody just now. No doubt you've formed your own opinion."
+
+Witham nodded. "It's the last of the grappled, and the bears aren't
+quite beaten yet, but any time the next week or two the decisive turn
+will come. Then, if they haven't got out, there'll be very little left
+of them."
+
+"You seem tolerably sure of the thing. Got plenty of confidence in the
+bulls?"
+
+Witham smiled. "I fancy I know how Western wheat was sown this year
+better than any statistician of the ring, and it's not the bulls I'm
+counting on but those millions of hungry folks in the old country.
+It's not New York or Chicago, but Liverpool the spark is coming from."
+
+"Well," said Graham, "that's my notion, too, but I've no time for
+anybody who hasn't grist for me just now. Still, I'd be glad to come
+round and take you home to supper if you haven't the prejudice, which
+is not unknown at Silverdale, against eating with a man who makes his
+dollars on the market and didn't get them given him."
+
+Witham laughed, and held up a lean brown hand. "All I ever had until
+less than a year ago I earned with that. I'll be ready for you."
+
+He went out with Alfreton, and noticed that the lad ate little at
+lunch. When the meal was over he glanced at him with a smile through
+the cigar smoke.
+
+"I think it would do you good to take me into your confidence," he
+said.
+
+"Well," said Alfreton, "it would be a relief to talk, and I feel I
+could trust you. Still, it's only fair to tell you I didn't at the
+beginning. I was an opinionated ass, you see."
+
+Witham laughed. "I don't mind in the least, and we have most of us
+felt that way."
+
+"Well," said the lad, "I was a little short of funds, and proud of
+myself, and when everybody seemed certain that wheat was going down
+for ever, I thought I saw my chance of making a little. Now I've more
+wheat than I care to think of to deliver, the market's against me. If
+it stiffens any further it will break me; and that's not all, you see.
+Things have gone tolerably badly with the folks at home, and I fancy
+it took a good deal of what should have been the girls' portion to
+start me at Silverdale."
+
+"Then," said Witham, "it's no use trying to show you how foolish
+you've been. That is the usual thing, and it's easy; but what the man
+in the hole wants to know is the means of getting out again."
+
+Alfreton smiled ruefully. "I'm tolerably far in. I could just cover at
+to-day's prices if I pledged my crop, but it would leave me nothing to
+go on with and the next advance would swamp the farm."
+
+"Well," said Witham quietly, "don't buy to-day. There's going to be an
+advance that will take folks' breath away, but the time's not quite
+ripe yet. You'll see prices knocked back a little the next day or two,
+and then you will cover your sales to the last bushel."
+
+"But are you sure?" asked the lad a trifle hoarsely. "You see, if
+you're mistaken, it will mean ruin to me."
+
+Witham laid his hand on his shoulder. "If I am wrong, I'll make your
+losses good."
+
+Nothing more was said on that subject, but Alfreton's face grew
+anxious once more as they went up and down the city. Everybody was
+talking wheat, which was not astonishing, for that city and the two
+great provinces to the west of it lived by the trade in grain; and
+before the afternoon had passed they learned that there had been a
+persistent advance. The lad's uneasiness showed itself, but when they
+went back to the hotel about the supper hour Witham smiled at him.
+
+"You're feeling sick?" he said. "Still, I don't fancy you need worry."
+
+Then Graham appeared and claimed him, and it was next morning when he
+saw Alfreton again. He was breakfasting with Colonel Barrington and
+Dane, and Witham noticed that the older man did not appear to have
+much appetite. When the meal was finished he drew him aside.
+
+"You have covered your sales, sir?" he asked.
+
+"No, sir," said Barrington. "I have not."
+
+"Then I wonder if it would be presumption if I asked you a question?"
+
+Barrington looked at him steadily. "To be frank, I fancy it would be
+better if you did not. I have, of course, only my own folly to blame
+for believing I could equal your natural aptitude for this risky
+amusement, which I had, and still have, objections to. I was, however,
+in need of money, and seeing your success, yielded to the temptation.
+I am not laying any of the responsibility on you, but am not inclined
+to listen to more of your suggestions."
+
+Witham met his gaze without embarrassment. "I am sorry you have been
+unfortunate, sir."
+
+Just then Dane joined them. "I sat up late last night in the hope of
+seeing you," he said. "Now, I don't know what to make of the market,
+but there were one or two fellows who would have bought my estimated
+crop from me at a figure which would have about covered working
+expenses. Some of the others who did not know you were coming in, put
+their affairs in my hands, too."
+
+"Sell nothing," said Witham quietly.
+
+It was an hour later when a messenger from Graham found them in the
+smoking-room, and Colonel Barrington smiled dryly as he tore up the
+envelope handed him.
+
+"'Market opened with sellers prevailing. Chicago flat!'" he read.
+
+Dane glanced at Witham somewhat ruefully, but the latter's eyes were
+fixed on Colonel Barrington.
+
+"If I had anything to cover I should still wait," he said.
+
+"That," said Dane, "is not exactly good news to me."
+
+"Our turn will come," said Witham gravely.
+
+That day, and during several which followed it, wheat moved down, and
+Dane said nothing to Witham about what he felt, though his face grew
+grimmer as the time went on. Barrington was quietly impassive when
+they met him, while Alfreton, who saw a way out of his difficulties,
+was hard to restrain. Witham long afterwards remembered that horrible
+suspense, but he showed no sign of what he was enduring then, and was
+only a trifle quieter than usual when he and Alfreton entered Graham's
+office one morning. It was busier than ever, while the men who
+hastened in and out seemed to reveal by attitude and voice that they
+felt something was going to happen.
+
+"In sellers' favour!" said the broker. "Everybody with a few dollars
+is hammering prices one way or the other. Nothing but wheat is heard
+of in this city. Well, we'll simmer down when the turn comes, and
+though I'm piling up dollars, I'll be thankful. Hallo, Thomson,
+anything going on now?"
+
+"Chicago buying," said the clerk. "Now it's Liverpool! Sellers holding
+off. Wanting a two-eights more the cental."
+
+The telephone bell tinkled again, and there was a trace of excitement
+in the face of the man who answered it.
+
+"Walthew has got news ahead of us," he said. "Chicago bears caved in.
+Buying orders from Liverpool broke them. Got it there strong."
+
+Witham tapped Alfreton's shoulder. "Now is the time. Tell him to buy,"
+he said. "We'll wait outside until you've put this deal through,
+Graham."
+
+It was twenty minutes before Graham came out to them. "I'll let you
+have your contracts, Mr. Alfreton, and my man on the market just fixed
+them in time," he said. "They're up a penny on the cental in Liverpool
+now, and nobody will sell, while here in Winnipeg they're falling over
+each other to buy. Never had such a circus since the trade began."
+
+Alfreton, who seemed to quiver, turned to his companion, and then
+forgot what he had to tell him. Witham had straightened himself and
+his eyes were shining, while the lad was puzzled by his face. Still,
+save for the little tremor in it, his voice was very quiet.
+
+"It has come at last," he said. "Two farms would not have covered your
+losses, Alfreton, if you had waited until to-morrrow. Have supper with
+us Graham--if you like it, lakes of champagne."
+
+"I want my head, but I'll come," said Graham, with a curious smile. "I
+don't know that it wouldn't pay me to hire yours just now."
+
+Then Witham turned suddenly, and running down the stairway shook the
+man awaiting him by the arm.
+
+"The flood's with us now," he said. "Find Colonel Barrington, and make
+him cover everything before he's ruined. Dane, you and I, and a few
+others, will see the dollars rolling into Silverdale."
+
+Dane found Barrington, who listened with a grim smile to what he had
+to tell him.
+
+"The words are yours, Dane, but that is all," he said. "Wheat will go
+down again, and I do not know that I am grateful to Courthorne."
+
+Dane dare urge nothing further, and spent the rest of that day
+wandering up and down the city, in a state of blissful content, with
+Alfreton and Witham. One of them had turned his losses into a small
+profit, and the other two, who had, hoping almost against hope, sown
+when others had feared to plough, saw that the harvest would repay
+them beyond their wildest expectations. They heard nothing but
+predictions of higher prices everywhere, and the busy city seemed to
+throb with exultation. The turn had come, and there was hope for the
+vast wheat lands it throve upon.
+
+Graham had much to tell them when they sat down to the somewhat
+elaborate meal Witham termed supper that night, and he nodded
+approvingly when Dane held out his glass of champagne and touched his
+comrade's.
+
+"I'm not fond of speeches, Courthorne, and I fancy our tastes are the
+same," he said. "Still, I can't let this great night pass without
+greeting you as the man who has saved not a few of us at Silverdale.
+We were in a very tight place before you came, and we are with you
+when you want us from this time, soul and body, and all our
+possessions." Alfreton's eyes glistened, and his hand shook a little
+as he touched the rim of Witham's goblet.
+
+"There are folks in the old country who will bless you when they
+know," he said. "You'll forget it, though I can't, that I was once
+against you."
+
+Witham nodded to them gravely, and when the glasses were empty shook
+hands with the three.
+
+"We have put up a good fight, and I think we shall win; but, while you
+will understand me better by-and-by what you have offered me almost
+hurts," he said.
+
+"What we have given is yours. We don't take it back," said Dane.
+
+Witham smiled, though there was a wistfulness in his eyes as he saw
+the faint bewilderment in his companions' faces.
+
+"Well," he said slowly, "you can do a little for me now. Colonel
+Barrington was right when he set his face against speculation, and it
+was only because I saw dollars were badly needed at Silverdale, and
+the one means of getting them, I made my deal. Still, if we are to
+succeed as farmers we must market our wheat as cheaply as our rivals,
+and we want a new bridge on the level. Now, I got a drawing of one and
+estimates for British Columbia stringers, yesterday, while the birches
+in the ravine will give us what else we want. I'll build a bridge
+myself, but it will cheapen the wheat-hauling to everybody, and you
+might like to help me."
+
+Dane glanced at the drawing laid before him, but Alfreton spoke first.
+"One hundred dollars. I'm only a small man, but I wish it was five,"
+he said.
+
+"I'll make it that much, and see the others do their share," said
+Dane, and then glanced at the broker with a curious smile.
+
+"How does he do it--this and other things? He was never a business
+man!"
+
+Graham nodded. "He can't help it. It was born in him. You and I can
+figure and plan, but Courthorne is different--the right thing comes to
+him. I knew, the first night I saw him, you had got the man you wanted
+at Silverdale."
+
+Then Witham stood up, wineglass in hand. "I am obliged to you, but I
+fancy this has gone far enough," he said. "There is one man who has
+done more for you than I could ever do. Prosperity is a good thing,
+but you at least know what he has aimed at stands high above that. May
+you have the head of the Silverdale community long with you!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+UNDER TEST
+
+
+The prairie lay dim and shadowy in the creeping dusk when Witham sat
+on a redwood stringer near the head of his partly-finished bridge.
+There was no sound from the hollow behind him but the faint gurgle of
+the creek and the almost imperceptible vibration of countless minute
+wings. The birches which climbed the slope to it wound away sinuously,
+a black wall on either hand, and the prairie lying grey and still
+stretched back into the silence in front of him. Here and there a
+smouldering fire showed dully red on the brink of the ravine, but the
+tired men who had lighted them were already wrapped in heavy slumber.
+
+The prairie hay was gathered, harvest had not come, and for the last
+few weeks Witham, with his hired men from the bush of Ontario, had
+toiled at the bridge with a tireless persistency which had somewhat
+astonished the gentlemen farmers of Silverdale. They, however, rode
+over every now and then, and most cheerfully rendered what assistance
+they could, until it was time to return for tennis or a shooting
+sweepstake, and Witham thanked them gravely, even when he and his
+Ontario axemen found it necessary to do the work again. He could have
+told nobody why he had undertaken to build the bridge, which could be
+of no use to him, but he was in a measure prompted by instincts born
+in him; for he was one of the Englishmen who, with a dim recognition
+of the primeval charge to subdue the earth and render it fruitful,
+gravitate to the newer lands, and usually leave their mark upon them.
+He had also a half-defined notion that it would be something he could
+leave behind in reparation, that the men of Silverdale might remember
+the stranger who had imposed on them more leniently, while in the
+strain of the mental struggle strenuous occupation was a necessity to
+him.
+
+A bundle of papers it was now too dim to see lay beside him, clammy
+with the dew, and he sat bareheaded, a pipe which had gone out in his
+hand, staring across the prairie with an ironical smile in his eyes.
+He had planned boldly and striven tirelessly, and now the fee he could
+not take would surely be tendered him. Wheat was growing dearer every
+day, and such crops as he had sown had not been seen at Silverdale.
+Still, the man, who had had few compunctions before he met Maud
+Barrington, knew now that in a little while he must leave all he had
+painfully achieved behind. What he would do then he did not know, for
+only one fact seemed certain--in another four months, or less, he
+would have turned his back on Silverdale.
+
+Presently, however, the sound of horse-hoofs caught his ears, and he
+stood up when a mounted figure rose out of the prairie. The moon had
+just swung up, round and coppery, from behind a rise, and when horse
+and rider cut black and sharp against it his pulses throbbed faster
+and a little flush crept into his face, for he knew every line of the
+figure in the saddle. Some minutes had passed when Maud Barrington
+rode slowly to the head of the bridge, and pulled up her horse at the
+sight of him.
+
+The moon, turning silver now, shone behind her head, and a tress of
+hair sparkled beneath her wide hat, while the man had a glimpse of the
+gleaming whiteness of rounded cheek and neck. Her face he could not
+see, but shapely shoulders, curve of waist, and sweeping line of the
+light habit were forced up as in a daguerreotype, and as the girl sat
+still looking down on him, slender, lissom, dainty, etherealized
+almost by the brightening radiance, she seemed to him a visionary
+complement of the harmonies of the night. It also appeared wiser to
+think of her as such than a being of flesh and blood whom he had
+wildly ventured to long for, and he almost regretted when her first
+words dispelled the illusion.
+
+"It is dreadfully late," she said. "Pluto went very lame soon after I
+left Macdonald's, and I knew if I went back for another horse he would
+have insisted on riding home with me. I had slipped away while he was
+in the granary. One can cross the bridge?"
+
+"Not mounted," said Witham. "There are only a few planks between the
+stringers here and there, but, if you don't mind waiting, I can lead
+your horse across."
+
+He smiled a little, for the words seemed trivial and out of place in
+face of the effect the girl's appearance had on him, but she glanced
+at him questioningly.
+
+"No!" she said. "Now, I would have gone round by the old bridge, only
+that Allardyce told me you let him ride across this afternoon."
+
+"Still," and the man stopped a moment, "it was daylight then, you
+see."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed a little, for his face was visible, and she
+understood the slowness of his answer. "Is that all? It is moonlight
+now."
+
+"No," said Witham dryly, "but one is apt to make an explanation too
+complete occasionally. Will you let me help you down?"
+
+Maud Barrington held out her hands, and when he swung her down watched
+him tramp away with the horse with a curious smile. A light compliment
+seldom afforded her much pleasure, but the man's grim reserve had now
+and then piqued more than her curiosity, though she was sensible that
+the efforts she occasionally made to uncover what lay behind it were
+not without their risk. Then he came back, and turned to her very
+gravely.
+
+"Let me have your hand," he said.
+
+Maud Barrington gave it him, and hoped the curious little thrill that
+ran through her when his hard fingers closed upon her palm did not
+communicate itself to him. She also noticed that he moved his head
+sharply a moment, and then looked straight in front again. Then the
+birches seemed to fall away beneath them, and they moved out across
+the dim gully with the loosely-laid planking rattling under their
+feet, until they came to a strip scarcely three feet wide which
+spanned a gulf of blackness in the shadow of the trees.
+
+"Hold fast!" said Witham with a trace of hoarseness. "You are sure you
+feel quite steady?"
+
+"Of course!" said the girl with a little laugh, though she recognized
+the anxiety in his voice, and felt his hand close almost cruelly on
+her own. She was by no means timorous, and still less fanciful, but
+when they moved out into the blackness that closed about them above
+and beneath along the slender strip of swaying timber she was glad of
+the masterful grip. It seemed in some strange fashion portentous, for
+she felt that she would once more be willing to brave unseen perils,
+secure only in his guidance. What he felt she did not know, and was
+sensible of an almost overwhelming curiosity, until when at last
+well-stiffened timber lay beneath them, she contrived to drop a glove
+just where the moonlight smote the bridge. Witham stooped, and his
+face was clear in the silvery light when he rose again. Maud
+Barrington saw the relief in it, and, compelled by some influence,
+stood still looking at him with a little glow behind the smile in her
+eyes. A good deal was revealed to both of them in that instant, but
+the man dare not admit it, and was master of himself.
+
+"Yes," he said, very simply, "I am glad you are across."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed. "I scarcely fancy the risk was very great,
+but tell me about the bridge," she said. "You are living beside it?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham, "in a tent, I must have it finished before
+harvest, you see!"
+
+The girl understood why this was necessary, but deciding that she had
+on other occasions ventured sufficiently far with that topic, moved on
+across the bridge.
+
+"A tent," she said, "cannot be a very comfortable place to live in,
+and who cooks for you?"
+
+Witham smiled dryly. "I am used to it, and can do all the cooking that
+is necessary," he said. "It is the usual home for the beginner, and I
+lived six months in one--on grindstone bread, the tinctured glucose
+you are probably not acquainted with as 'drips,' and rancid pork--when
+I first came out to this country and hired myself, for ten dollars
+monthly, to another man. It is a diet one gets a little tired of
+occasionally, but after breaking prairie twelve hours every day one
+can eat almost anything, and when I afterwards turned farmer my credit
+was rarely good enough to provide the pork."
+
+The girl looked at him curiously, for she knew how some of the smaller
+settlers lived, and once more felt divided between wonder and
+sympathy. She could picture the grim self-denial, for she had seen the
+stubborn patience in this man's face as well as a stamp that was not
+borne by any other man at Silverdale. Some of the crofter settlers,
+who periodically came near starvation in their sod hovels, and the men
+from Ontario who staked their little handful of dollars on the first
+wheat crop to be wrested from the prairie, bore it, however. From what
+Miss Barrington had told her, it was clear that Courthorne's first
+year in Canada could not have been spent in this fashion, but there
+was no doubt in the girl's mind as she listened. Her faith was equal
+to a more strenuous test.
+
+"There is a difference in the present, but who taught you
+bridge-building? It takes years to learn the use of the axe," she
+said.
+
+Witham laughed. "I think it took me four, but the man who has not a
+dollar to spare usually finds out how to do a good many things for
+himself, and I had working drawings of the bridge made in Winnipeg.
+Besides, your friends have helped me with their hands as well as their
+good-will. Except at the beginning, they have all been kind to me, and
+one could not well have expected very much from them then."
+
+Maud Barrington coloured a trifle as she remembered her own attitude
+towards him. "Cannot you forget it?" she said, with a curious little
+ring in her voice. "They would do anything you asked them now."
+
+"One generally finds it useful to have a good memory, and I remember
+most clearly that, although they had very little reason for it, most
+of them afterwards trusted me. That made, and still makes, a great
+difference to me."
+
+The girl appeared thoughtful. "Does it?" she said. "Still, do you
+know, I fancy that if they had tried to drive you out, you would have
+stayed in spite of them."
+
+"Yes," said Witham dryly, "I believe I would, but the fact that in a
+very little while they held out a friendly hand to a stranger steeped
+in suspicion, and gave him the chance to prove himself their equal,
+carries a big responsibility. That, and your aunt's goodness, puts so
+many things one might have done out of the question."
+
+The obvious inference was that the prodigal had been reclaimed by the
+simple means of putting him on his honour, but that did not for a
+moment suggest itself to the girl. She had often regretted her own
+disbelief, and once more felt the need for reparation.
+
+"Lance," she said, very quietly, "my aunt was wiser than I was, but
+she was mistaken. What she gave you out of her wide charity was
+already yours by right."
+
+That was complete and final, for Maud Barrington did nothing by half,
+and Witham recognized that she held him blameless in the past, which
+she could not know, as well as in the present, which was visible to
+her. Her confidence stung him as a whip, and when in place of
+answering he looked away, the girl fancied that a smothered groan
+escaped him. She waited, curiously expectant, but he did not speak,
+and just then the fall of hoofs rose from behind the birches in the
+bluff. Then a man's voice came through it singing a little French
+song, and Maud Barrington glanced at her companion.
+
+"Lance," she said, "how long is it since you sang that song?"
+
+"Well," said Witham, doggedly conscious of what he was doing, "I do
+not know a word of it, and never heard it in my life."
+
+Maud Barrington stared at him. "Think," she said. "It seems ever so
+long ago, but you cannot have forgotten. Surely you remember Madame
+Aubert, who taught me to prattle in French, and the day you slipped
+into the music-room and picked up the song, while she tried in vain to
+teach it me. Can't you recollect how I cried, when you sang it in the
+billiard-room, and Uncle Geoffrey gave you the half-sovereign which
+had been promised to me?"
+
+"No," said Witham a trifle hoarsely, and with his head turned from her
+watched the trail.
+
+A man in embroidered deerskin jacket was riding into the moonlight,
+and though the little song had ceased, and the wide hat hid his face,
+there was an almost insolent gracefulness in his carriage that seemed
+familiar to Witham. It was not the _abandon_ of the swashbuckler
+stock-rider from across the frontier, but something more finished and
+distinguished that suggested the bygone cavalier. Maud Barrington, it
+was evident, also noticed it.
+
+"Geoffrey Courthorne rode as that man does," she said. "I remember
+hearing my mother once tell him that he had been born too late,
+because his attributes and tastes would have fitted him to follow
+Prince Rupert."
+
+Witham made no answer, and the man rode on until he drew bridle in
+front of them. Then he swung his hat off, and while the moonlight
+shone into his face looked down with a little ironical smile at the
+man and woman standing beside the horse. Witham closed one hand a
+trifle, and slowly straightened himself, feeling that there was need
+of all his self-control, for he saw his companion glance at him, and
+then almost too steadily at Lance Courthorne.
+
+The latter said nothing for a space of seconds, for which Witham hated
+him, and yet in the tension of the suspense he noticed that the signs
+of indulgence he had seen on the last occasion were plainer in
+Courthorne's face. The little bitter smile upon his lips was also not
+quite in keeping with the restlessness of his fingers upon the bridle.
+
+"Is that bridge fit for crossing, farmer?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly. "You must lead your horse."
+
+Maud Barrington had in the meanwhile stood very still, and now moved
+as by an effort. "It is time I rode on, and you can show the stranger
+across," she said. "I have kept you at least five minutes longer than
+was necessary."
+
+Courthorne, Witham fancied, shifted one foot from the stirrup, but
+then sat still as the farmer held his hand for the girl to mount by,
+while when she rode away he looked at his companion with a trace of
+anger as well as irony in his eyes.
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "What you heard was correct. Miss Barrington's
+horse fell lame coming from one of the farms, which accounts for her
+passing here so late. I had just led the beast across the incompleted
+bridge. Still, it is not on my account I tell you this. Where have you
+been and why have you broken one of my conditions?"
+
+Courthorne laughed. "It seems to me you are adopting a somewhat
+curious tone. I went to my homestead to look for you."
+
+"You have not answered my other question, and in the meanwhile I am
+your tenant, and the place is mine."
+
+"We really needn't quibble," said Courthorne. "I came for the very
+simple reason that I wanted money."
+
+"You had one thousand dollars," said Witham dryly.
+
+Courthorne made a little gesture of resignation. "It is, however,
+certain that I haven't got them now. They went as dollars usually do.
+The fact is, I have met one or two men recently who apparently know
+rather more about games of chance than I do, and I passed on the fame,
+which was my most valuable asset, to you."
+
+"You passed me on the brand of a crime I never committed," said Witham
+grimly. "That, however, is not the question now. Not one dollar,
+except at the time agreed upon, will you get from me. Why did you come
+here dressed as we usually are on the prairie?"
+
+Courthorne glanced down at the deerskin jacket and smiled as he
+straightened himself into a caricature of Witham's mounted attitude.
+It was done cleverly.
+
+"When I ride in this fashion we are really not very unlike, you see,
+and I let one or two men I met get a good look at me," he said. "I
+meant it as a hint that it would be wise of you to come to terms with
+me."
+
+"I have done so already. You made the bargain."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne smiling, "a contract may be modified at any
+time when both parties are willing."
+
+"One is not," said Witham dryly. "You heard my terms, and nothing that
+you can urge will move me a hairsbreadth from them."
+
+Courthorne looked at him steadily, and some men would have found his
+glance disconcerting, for now and then all the wickedness that was in
+him showed in his half-closed eyes. Still, he saw that the farmer was
+unyielding.
+
+"Then we will let it go; in the meanwhile," he said, "take me across
+the bridge."
+
+They were half-way along it when he pulled the horse up, and once more
+looked down on Witham.
+
+"Your hand is a tolerably good one so long as you are willing to
+sacrifice yourself, but it has its weak points, and there is one thing
+I could not tolerate," he said.
+
+"What is that?"
+
+Courthorne laughed wickedly, "You wish me to be explicit? Maud
+Barrington is devilishly pretty, but it is quite out of the question
+that you should ever marry her."
+
+Witham turned towards him with the veins on his forehead swollen.
+"Granting that it is so, what is that to you?"
+
+Courthorne nodded as if in comprehension. "Well, I'm probably not
+consistent, but one rarely quite loses touch with everything, and if I
+believed that my kinswoman was growing fond of a beggarly farmer, I'd
+venture to put a sudden stop to your love-making. This, at least, is
+perfectly _bona fide_, Witham."
+
+Witham had borne a good deal of late, and his hatred of the man flared
+up. He had no definite intention, but he moved a pace forward, and
+Courthorne touched the horse with his heel. It backed, and then
+growing afraid of the blackness about it plunged, while Witham for the
+first time saw that there was a gap in the loosely-laid planking close
+behind it. Another plunge or flounder, and horse and rider would go
+down together.
+
+For a moment he held his breath and watched. Then, as the beast,
+resisting its rider's efforts, backed again, sprang forward and seized
+the bridle.
+
+"Get your spurs in! Shove him forward for your life," he said.
+
+There was a momentary struggle on the slippery planking, and, almost
+as its hind hoofs overhung the edge, Witham dragged the horse away.
+Courthorne swung himself out of the saddle, left the farmer the
+bridle, and glanced behind him at the gap. Then he turned, and the two
+men looked at each other steadily. Their faces were a trifle paler
+than usual.
+
+"You saw it?" asked Courthorne.
+
+"Yes, but not until you backed the beast and he commenced plunging."
+
+"He plunged once or twice before you caught the bridle?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly.
+
+Courthorne laughed. "You are a curious man. It would have cleared the
+ground for you."
+
+"No," said Witham dryly, "I don't know that you will understand me,
+but I scarcely think it would. It may have been a mistake of mine to
+do what I did, but I have a good deal on my shoulders already."
+
+Courthorne made no answer as he led his horse across the bridge. Then
+he mounted and looked down on the farmer who stood beside him.
+
+"I remember some things, though I don't always let them influence me
+to my detriment," he said. "I'm going back to the railroad, and then
+West, and don't quite know when you will have the pleasure of seeing
+me again."
+
+Witham watched him quietly. "It would be wiser if you did not come
+back until I send for you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+COURTHORNE BLUNDERS
+
+
+Lance Courthorne had lightly taken a good many risks in his time, for
+he usually found a spice of danger stimulating, and there was in him
+an irresponsible daring that not infrequently served him better than a
+well-laid plan. There are also men of his type who, for a time at
+least, appear immune from the disasters which follow the one rash
+venture the prudent make, and it was half in frolic and half in malice
+he rode to Silverdale dressed as a prairie farmer in the light of day,
+and forgot that their occupation sets a stamp he had never worn upon
+the tillers of the soil. The same spirit induced him to imitate one or
+two of Witham's gestures for the benefit of his cook, and afterwards
+wait for a police trooper, who, apparently desired to overtake him
+when he had just left the homestead.
+
+He pulled his horse up when the other man shouted to him, and trusting
+to the wide hat that hid most of his face, smiled out of half-closed
+eyes when he handed a packet.
+
+"You have saved me a ride, Mr. Courthorne, I heard you were at the
+bridge," the trooper said, "If you'll sign for those documents I
+needn't keep you."
+
+He brought out a pencil, and Courthorne scribbled on the paper handed
+him. He was quite aware that there was a risk attached to this, but if
+Witham had any communications with the police it appeared advisable to
+discover what they were about. Then he laughed, as riding on again he
+opened the packet.
+
+"Agricultural Bureau documents," he said. "This lot to be returned
+filled in! Well, if I can remember, I'll give them to Witham."
+
+As it happened, he did not remember; but he made a worse mistake just
+before his departure from the railroad settlement. He had spent two
+nights at a little wooden hotel, which was not the one where Witham
+put up when he drove into the place, and to pass the time commenced a
+flirtation with the proprietor's daughter. The girl was pretty, and
+Courthorne a man of different type from the wheat-growers she had been
+used to. When his horse was at the door, he strolled into the saloon
+where he found the girl alone in the bar.
+
+"I'm a very sad man to-day, my dear," he said, and his melancholy
+became him.
+
+The girl blushed prettily. "Still," she said, "whenever you want to,
+you can come back again."
+
+"If I did, would you be pleased to see me?"
+
+"Of course!" said the girl. "Now, you wait a minute, and I'll give you
+something to remember me by. I don't mix this up for everybody."
+
+She busied herself with certain decanters and essences, and Courthorne
+held the glass she handed him high.
+
+"The brightest eyes and the reddest lips between Winnipeg and the
+Rockies!" he said. "This is nectar, but I would like to remember you
+by something sweeter still!"
+
+Their heads were not far apart when he laid down his glass, and before
+the girl quite knew what was happening an arm was round her neck. Next
+moment she had flung the man backwards, and stood very straight,
+quivering with anger and crimson in face, for Courthorne, as
+occasionally happens with men of his type, assumed too much, and did
+not always know when to stop. Then she called sharply, "Jake."
+
+There was a tramp of feet outside, and when a big, grim-faced man
+looked in at the door Courthorne decided it was time for him to effect
+his retreat while it could be done with safety. He knew already that
+there were two doors to the saloon, and his finger closed on the neck
+of a decanter. Next moment it smote the newcomer on the chest, and
+while he staggered backwards with the fluid trickling from him,
+Courthorne departed through the opposite entrance. Once outside, he
+mounted leisurely, but nobody came out from the hotel, and shaking the
+bridle with a little laugh he cantered out of the settlement.
+
+In the meanwhile, the other man carefully wiped his garments, and then
+turned to his companion.
+
+"Now what's all this about?" he said.
+
+The girl told him, and the man ruminated for a minute or two. "Well,
+he's gone, and I don't know that I'm sorry there wasn't a circus
+here," he said. "I figured there was something not square about that
+fellow, anyway. Registered as Guyler from Minnesota, but I've seen
+somebody like him among the boys from Silverdale. Guess I'll find out
+when I ride over about the horse, and then I'll have a talk with him
+quietly."
+
+In the meanwhile, the police trooper who had handed him the packet
+returned to the outpost, and, as it happened, found the grizzled
+Sergeant Stimson, who appeared astonished to see him back so soon
+there.
+
+"I met Courthorne near his homestead, and gave him the papers, sir,"
+he said.
+
+"You did?" said the Sergeant. "Now that's kind of curious, because
+he's at the bridge."
+
+"It couldn't have been anybody else, because he took the documents and
+signed for them," said the trooper.
+
+"Big bay horse?"
+
+"No, sir," said the trooper. "It was a bronco, and a screw at that."
+
+"Well," said Stimson dryly, "let me have your book. If Payne has come
+in, tell him I want him."
+
+The trooper went out, and when his comrade came in Stimson laid a
+strip of paper before him. "You have seen Courthorne's writing," he
+said; "would you call it anything like that?"
+
+"No, sir," said Trooper Payne. "I would not!"
+
+Stimson nodded. "Take a good horse and ride round by the bridge. If
+you find Courthorne there, as you probably will, head for the
+settlement and see if you can come across a man who might pass for
+him. Ask your question as though the answer didn't count, and tell
+nobody what you hear but me."
+
+Payne rode out, and when he returned three days later, Sergeant
+Stimson made a journey to confer with one of his superiors. The
+officer was a man who had risen in the service somewhat rapidly, and
+when he heard the tale said nothing, while he turned over a bundle of
+papers a trooper brought him. Then he glanced at Stimson thoughtfully.
+
+"I have a report of the Shannon shooting case here," he said. "How did
+it strike you at the time?"
+
+Stimson's answer was guarded. "As a curious affair. You see, it was
+quite easy to get at Witham's character from anybody down there, and
+he wasn't the kind of man to do the thing. There were one or two other
+trifles I couldn't quite figure out the meaning of."
+
+"Witham was drowned?" said the officer.
+
+"Well," said Stimson, "the trooper who rode after him heard him break
+through the ice, but nobody ever found him, though a farmer came upon
+his horse."
+
+The officer nodded. "I fancy you are right, and the point is this.
+There were two men, who apparently bore some resemblance to each
+other, engaged in an unlawful venture, and one of them commits a crime
+nobody believed him capable of, but which would have been less out of
+keeping with the other's character. Then the second man comes into an
+inheritance, and leads a life which seems to have astonished everybody
+who knows him. Now, have you ever seen these two men side by side?"
+
+"No, sir," said Stimson. "Courthorne kept out of our sight when he
+could in Alberta, and I don't think I or any of the boys, except
+Shannon, ever saw him for more than a minute or two. Now and then we
+passed Witham on the prairie or saw him from the trail, but I think I
+only once spoke to him."
+
+"Well," said the officer, "it seems to me I had better get you sent
+back to your old station, where you can quietly pick up the threads
+again. Would the trooper you mentioned be fit to keep an eye on things
+at Silverdale?"
+
+"No one better, sir," said Stimson.
+
+"Then it shall be done," said the officer. "The quieter you keep the
+affair the better."
+
+It was a week or two later when Witham returned to his homestead from
+the bridge, which was almost completed. Dusk was closing in, but as he
+rode down the rise he could see the wheat roll in slow ripples back
+into the distance. The steady beat of its rhythmic murmur told of
+heavy ears, and where the stalks stood waist-high on the rise, the
+last flush of saffron in the north-west was flung back in a dull
+bronze gleam. The rest swayed athwart the shadowy hollow, dusky indigo
+and green, but that flash of gold and red told that harvest was nigh
+again.
+
+Witham had seen no crop to compare with it during the eight years he
+had spent in the Dominion. There had been neither drought nor hail
+that year, and now, when the warm western breezes kept sweet and
+wholesome the splendid ears they fanned, there was removed from him
+the terrors of the harvest frost, which not infrequently blights the
+fairest prospects in one bitter night. Fate, which had tried him
+hardly hitherto, denying the seed its due share of fertilizing rain,
+sweeping his stock from existence with icy blizzard, and mowing down
+the tall green corn with devastating hail, was now showering favours
+on him when it was too late. Still, though he felt the irony of it, he
+was glad, for others had followed his lead, and while the lean years
+had left a lamentable scarcity of dollars at Silverdale, wealth would
+now pour in to every man who had had the faith to sow.
+
+He dismounted beside the oats which he would harvest first, and
+listened with a curious stirring of his pulses to their musical
+patter. It was not the full-toned song of the wheat, but there was
+that in the quicker beat of it which told that each graceful tassel
+would redeem its promise. He could not see the end of them, but by the
+right of the producer they were all his. He knew that he could also
+hold them by right of conquest, too, for that year a knowledge of his
+strength had been forced upon him. Still, from something he had seen
+in the eyes of a girl and grasped at in the words of a white-haired
+lady, he realized that there is a limit beyond which man's ambition
+may not venture, and a right before which even that of possession must
+bow.
+
+It had been shown him plainly that no man of his own devices can make
+the wheat grow, and standing beside it in the creeping dusk he felt in
+a vague, half-pagan fashion that there was, somewhere behind what
+appeared the chaotic chances of life, a scheme of order and justice
+immutable, which would in due time crush the too presumptuous human
+atom who opposed himself to it. Regret and rebellion were, it seemed,
+equally futile, and he must go out from Silverdale before retribution
+overtook him. He had done wrong, and, though he had made what
+reparation he could, knew that he would carry his punishment with him.
+
+The house was almost dark when he reached it, and as he went in his
+cook signed to him. "There's a man in here waiting for you," he said.
+"He doesn't seem in any way friendly or civil."
+
+Witham nodded as he went on, wondering with a grim expectancy whether
+Courthorne had returned again. If he had, he felt in a mood for very
+direct speech with him. His visitor was, however, not Courthorne.
+Witham could see that at a glance, although the room was dim.
+
+"I don't seem to know you, but I'll get a light in a minute," he said.
+
+"I wouldn't waste time," said the other. "We can talk just as straight
+in the dark, and I guess this meeting will finish up outside on the
+prairie. You've given me a good deal of trouble to trail you, Mr.
+Guyler."
+
+"Well," said Witham dryly, "it seems to me that you have found the
+wrong man."
+
+The stranger laughed unpleasantly. "I was figuring you'd take it like
+that, but you can't bluff me. Well now, I've come round to take it out
+of you for slinging that decanter at me, and if there is another
+thing, we needn't mention it."
+
+Witham stared at the man, and his astonishment was evident, but the
+fact that he still spoke with an English accentuation, as Courthorne
+did, was against him.
+
+"To the best of my recollection, I have never suffered the
+unpleasantness of meeting you in my life," he said. "I certainly never
+threw a decanter or anything else at you, though I understand that one
+might feel tempted to."
+
+The man rose up slowly, and appeared big and heavy-shouldered as he
+moved athwart the window. "I guess that is quite enough for me," he
+said. "What were you condemned Englishmen made for, anyway, but to
+take the best of what other men worked for, until the folks who've got
+grit enough run you out of the old country! Lord, why don't they drown
+you instead of dumping you and your wickedness on to us? Still, I'm
+going to show one of you, as I've longed to do, that you can't play
+your old tricks with the women of this country."
+
+"I don't see the drift of a word of it," said Witham. "Hadn't you
+better come back when you've worked the vapours off to-morrow?"
+
+"Come out!" said the other man grimly. "There's scarcely room in here.
+Well then, have it your own way, and the devil take care of you!"
+
+"I think there's enough," said Witham, and as the other swung forward,
+closed with him.
+
+He felt sick and dizzy for a moment, for he had laid himself open and
+the first blow got home, but he had decided that if the grapple was
+inevitable, it was best to commence it and end it speedily. A few
+seconds later there was a crash against the table, and the stranger
+gasped as he felt the edge of it pressed into his backbone. Then he
+felt himself borne backwards until he groaned under the strain, and
+heard a hoarse voice say, "If you attempt to use that foot again, I'll
+make the leg useless all your life to you. Come right in here, Tom."
+
+A man carrying a lantern came in, and stared at the pair as he set it
+down. "Do you want me to see a fair finish-up?" he said.
+
+"No," said Witham. "I want you to see this gentleman out with me. Nip
+his arms behind his back; he can't hurt you."
+
+It was done with a little difficulty, and there was a further scuffle
+in the hall, for the stranger resisted strenuously, but a minute later
+the trio reeled out of the door just as a buggy pulled up. Then, as
+the evicted man plunged forward alone, Witham, straightening himself
+suddenly, saw that Colonel Barrington was looking down on him, and
+that his niece was seated at his side. He stood still, flushed and
+breathless, with his jacket hanging rent half-way up about him, and
+the Colonel's voice was quietly ironical.
+
+"I had a question or two to ask you, but can wait," he said. "No doubt
+I shall find you less engaged another time."
+
+He flicked the horse, and as the buggy rolled away the other man
+walked up to Witham.
+
+"While I only wanted to get rid of you before, I feel greatly tempted
+to give you your wish now," said the latter.
+
+The stranger laughed dryly. "I guess you needn't worry. I don't fight
+because I'm fond of it, and you're not the man."
+
+"Not the man?" said Witham.
+
+"No, sir," said the other. "Not like him, now I can see you better.
+Well, I'm kind of sorry I started a circus here."
+
+A suspicion of the truth flashed upon Witham. "What sort of a man was
+the one you mistook for me?"
+
+"Usual British waster. Never done a day's work in his life, and never
+wanted to; too tired to open his eyes more than half-way when he
+looked at you, but if he ever fools round the saloon again, he'll know
+what he is before I'm through with him."
+
+Witham laughed. "I wouldn't be rash or you may get another
+astonishment. We really know one or two useful things in the old
+country, but you can't fetch the settlement before morning, and we'll
+put you up if you like."
+
+"No, sir," said the other dryly. "I'm not fond of Englishmen, and we
+might get arguing, while I've had 'bout enough of you for one night."
+
+He rode away, and Witham went back into the house very thoughtfully,
+wondering whether he would be called upon to answer for more of
+Courthorne's doings.
+
+It was two or three days later when Maud Barrington returned with her
+aunt from a visit to an outlying farm, where, because an account of
+what took place in the saloon had by some means been spread about, she
+heard a story brought in from the settlement. It kept her silent
+during the return journey, and Miss Barrington said nothing, but when
+the Colonel met them in the hall he glanced at his niece.
+
+"I see Mrs. Carndall has been telling you both a tale," he said. "It
+would have been more fitting if she had kept it to herself."
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington. "Still, you do not credit it?"
+
+Barrington smiled a trifle dryly. "I should very much prefer not to,
+my dear, but what we saw the other night appears to give it
+probability. The man Courthorne was dismissing somewhat summarily is,
+I believe, to marry the lady in question. You will remember I asked
+you once before whether the leopard can change his spots."
+
+The girl laughed a little. "Still, are you not presuming when you take
+it for granted that there are spots to change?"
+
+Colonel Barrington said nothing further, and it was late that night
+when the two women reopened the subject.
+
+"Aunt," said Maud Barrington, "I want to know what you think about
+Mrs. Carndall's tale."
+
+The little lady shook her head. "I should like to disbelieve it if I
+could."
+
+"Then," said Maud Barrington, "why don't you?"
+
+"Can you give me any reasons? One must not expect too much from human
+nature, my dear."
+
+The girl sat silent awhile, remembering the man whom she had at first
+sight, and in the moonlight, fancied was like her companion at the
+time. It was not, however, the faint resemblance that had impressed
+her, but a vague something in his manner--his grace, his half-veiled
+insolence, his poise in the saddle. She had only seen Lance Courthorne
+on a few occasions when she was very young, but she had seen others of
+his race, and the man reminded her of them. Still, she felt
+half-instinctively that as yet it would be better that nobody should
+know this, and she stooped over some lace on the table as she answered
+the elder lady.
+
+"I only know one, and it is convincing. That Lance should have done
+what he is credited with doing is quite impossible."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled. "I almost believe so, too, but others of his
+family have done such things somewhat frequently. Do you know that
+Lance has all along been a problem to me, for there is a good deal in
+my brother's question. Although it seems out of the question, I have
+wondered whether there could be two Lance Courthornes in Western
+Canada."
+
+The girl looked at her aunt in silence for a space, but each hid a
+portion of her thoughts. Then Maud Barrington laughed.
+
+"The Lance Courthorne now at Silverdale is as free from reproach as
+any man may be," she said. "I can't tell you why I am sure of it--but
+I know I am not mistaken."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE FACE AT THE WINDOW
+
+
+It was a hot morning when Sergeant Stimson and Corporal Payne rode
+towards the railroad across the prairie. The grassy levels rolled away
+before them, white and parched, into the blue distance, where willow
+grove and straggling bluff floated on the dazzling horizon, and the
+fibrous dust rose in little puffs beneath the horses' feet, until
+Stimson pulled his beast up in the shadow of the birches by the
+bridge, and looked back towards Silverdale. There, wooden homesteads
+girt about with barns and granaries rose from the whitened waste, and
+behind some of them stretched great belts of wheat. Then the Sergeant,
+understanding the faith of the men who had sown that splendid grain,
+nodded, for he was old and wise, and had seen many adverse seasons,
+and the slackness that comes, when hope has gone, to beaten men.
+
+"They will reap this year--a handful of cents on every bushel," he
+said. "A fine gentleman is Colonel Barrington, but some of them will
+be thankful there's a better head than the one he has at Silverdale.
+
+"Yes, sir," said Corporal Payne, who wore the double chevrons for the
+first time, and surmised that his companion's observations were not
+without their purpose.
+
+Stimson glanced at the bridge. "Good work," he said. "It will save
+them dollars on every load they haul in. A gambler built it! Do they
+teach men to use the axe in Montana saloons?"
+
+The corporal smiled and waited for what he felt would come. He was no
+longer the hot-blooded lad who had come out from the old country, for
+he had felt the bonds of discipline, and been taught restraint and
+silence on the lonely marches of the prairie.
+
+"I have," he said tentatively, "fancied there was something a little
+unusual about the thing."
+
+Stimson nodded, but his next observation was apparently quite
+unconnected with the topic. "You were a raw colt when I got you,
+Payne, and the bit galled you now and then, but you had good hands on
+a bridle, and somebody who knew his business had taught you to sit a
+horse in the old country. Still, you were not as handy with brush and
+fork at stable duty."
+
+The bronze seemed to deepen in the corporal's face, but it was turned
+steadily toward his officer. "Sir," he said, "has that anything to do
+with what you were speaking of?"
+
+Stimson laughed softly. "That depends, my lad. Now, I've taught you to
+ride straight and to hold your tongue. I've asked you no questions,
+but I've eyes in my head, and it's not without a purpose you've been
+made corporal. You're the kind they give commissions to now and
+then--and your folks in the old country never raised you for a police
+trooper."
+
+"Can you tell me how to win one?" asked the corporal, and Stimson
+noticed the little gleam in his eyes.
+
+"There's one road to advancement, and you know where to find the
+trooper's duty laid down plain," he said with a dry smile. "Now, you
+saw Lance Courthorne once or twice back there in Alberta?"
+
+"Yes, sir; but never close to."
+
+"And you knew Farmer Witham?"
+
+Payne appeared thoughtful. "Of course I met him a few times on the
+prairie, always on horseback, with his big hat on; but Witham is
+dead--that is, I heard him break through the ice."
+
+The men's eyes met for a moment, and Stimson smiled curiously. "There
+is," he said, "still a warrant out for him. Now, you know where I am
+going, and while I am away you will watch Courthorne and his
+homestead. If anything curious happens there you will let me know. The
+new man has instructions to find you any duty that will suit you."
+
+The corporal looked at his officer steadily, and again there was
+comprehension in his eyes. Then he nodded. "Yes, sir. I have wondered
+whether, if Shannon could have spoken another word that night, it
+would have been Witham the warrant was issued for."
+
+Stimson raised a restraining hand. "My lad," he said dryly, "the
+police trooper who gets advancement is the one that carries out his
+orders and never questions them until he can show that they are wrong.
+Then he uses a good deal of discretion. Now you know your duty?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said Payne, and Stimson shaking his bridle cantered off
+across the prairie.
+
+Then, seeing no need to waste time, the corporal rode towards
+Courthorne's homestead and found its owner stripping a binder. Pieces
+of the machine lay all around him, and from the fashion in which he
+handled them it was evident that he was capable of doing what the
+other men at Silverdale left to the mechanic at the settlement. Payne
+wondered, as he watched him, who had taught the gambler to use spanner
+and file.
+
+"I will not trouble you if you are busy, Mr. Courthorne; but if you
+would give me the returns the Bureau ask for, it would save me riding
+round again," he said.
+
+"I'm afraid I can't," said Witham. "You see, I haven't had the
+papers."
+
+"Trooper Bacon told me he had given them to you."
+
+"I don't seem to remember it," said Witham.
+
+Payne laughed. "One forgets things when he is busy. Still, you had
+them--because you signed for them."
+
+Witham looked up suddenly, and in another moment smiled; but he was a
+trifle too late, for Payne had seen his astonishment, and that he was
+now on guard.
+
+"Well," he said, "I haven't got them now. Send me a duplicate. You
+have, no doubt, some extra forms at the outpost."
+
+Payne decided that the man had never had the documents, but was too
+clever to ask any questions or offer explanations that might involve
+him. It was evident he knew that somebody had personated him, and the
+fact sent a little thrill through the corporal; he was at least on the
+trail.
+
+"I'll bring you one round the next time I'm in the neighbourhood," he
+said; and Witham sat still with the spanner lying idle in his hand
+when he rode away.
+
+He realized that Courthorne had taken the papers, and his face grew
+anxious as well as grim. The harvest was almost ready now, and a
+little while would see it in. Then his work would be over; but he had
+of late felt a growing fear lest something, that would prevent its
+accomplishment, might happen in the meanwhile. Then almost fiercely he
+resumed the stripping of the machine.
+
+An hour or two later Dane rode up, and sat still in his saddle looking
+down on Witham with a curious smile in his face.
+
+"I was down at the settlement and found a curious story going round,"
+he said. "Of course, it had its humorous aspect, but I don't know that
+the thing was quite discreet. You see, Barrington has once or twice
+had to put a stern check on the indulgence in playfulness of that kind
+by some of the younger men, and you are becoming an influence at
+Silverdale."
+
+"You naturally believed what you heard. It was in keeping with what
+you have seen of me?"
+
+Dane's eyes twinkled. "I didn't want to, and I must admit that it
+isn't. Still, a good many of you quiet men are addicted to
+occasionally astonishing our friends, and I can't help a fancy that
+you could do that kind of thing as well as most folks, if it pleased
+you. It fact, there was an artistic finish to the climax that
+suggested your usual thoroughness."
+
+"It did?" said Witham grimly, remembering his recent visitor and one
+or two of Courthorne's Albertan escapades. "Still, as I'm afraid I
+haven't the dramatic instinct, do you mind telling me how?"
+
+Dane laughed. "Well, it is probable there are other men who would have
+kissed the girl, but I don't know that it would have occurred to them
+to smash a decanter on the irate lover's head."
+
+Witham felt his finger tingle for a grip on Courthorne's throat. "And
+that's what I've been doing lately? You, of course, concluded that
+after conducting myself in an exemplary fashion an astonishing time it
+was a trifling lapse?"
+
+"Well," said Dane dryly. "As I admitted, it appeared somewhat out of
+your usual line; but when I heard that a man from the settlement had
+been ejected with violence from your homestead, what could one
+believe?"
+
+"Colonel Barrington told you that!"
+
+"No," said Dane; "you know he didn't. Still, he had a hired man riding
+a horse he'd bought, and I believe--though it is not my affair--Maud
+Barrington was there. Now, of course, one feels diffident about
+anything that may appear like preaching, but you see a good many of us
+are following you, and I wouldn't like you to have many little lapses
+of that kind while I am backing you. You and I have done with these
+frivolities some time ago, but there are lads here they might appeal
+to. I should be pleased if you could deny the story."
+
+Witham's face was grim. "I'm afraid it would not suit me to do as much
+just now," he said. "Still, between you and me, do you believe it
+likely that I would fly at that kind of game?"
+
+Dane laughed softly. "Well," he said, "tastes differ, and the girl is
+pretty, while, you know, after all they're very much the same. We
+have, however, got to look at the thing sensibly, and you admit you
+can't deny it."
+
+"I told you it wouldn't suit me."
+
+"Then there is a difference?"
+
+Witham nodded. "You must make the best of that, but the others may
+believe exactly what they please. It will be a favour to me if you
+remember it."
+
+Dane smiled curiously. "Then I think it is enough for me, and you will
+overlook my presumption. Courthorne, I wonder now and then when I
+shall altogether understand you!"
+
+"The time will come," said Witham dryly, to hide what he felt; for his
+comrade's simple avowal had been wonderfully eloquent. Then Dane
+touched his horse with his heel and rode away.
+
+It was two or three weeks later when Witham, being requested to do so,
+drove over to attend one of the assemblies at Silverdale Grange. It
+was dark when he reached the house, for the nights were drawing in;
+but because of the temperature, few of the great oil lamps were
+lighted, and the windows were open wide. Somebody had just finished
+singing when he walked into the big general room, and he would have
+preferred another moment to make his entrance, but disdained to wait.
+He, however, felt a momentary warmth in his face when Miss Barrington,
+stately as when he had first seen her in her rustling silk and ancient
+laces, came forward to greet him with her usual graciousness. He knew
+that every eye was upon them, and guessed why she had done so much.
+
+What she said was of no moment, but the fact that she had received him
+without sign of coldness was eloquent, and the man bent very
+respectfully over the little white hand. Then he stood straight and
+square for a moment and met her eyes.
+
+"Madam," he said, "I shall know who to come to when I want a friend."
+
+Afterwards he drifted towards a group of married farmers and their
+wives, who, except for that open warranty, might have been less
+cordial to him; and presently, though he was never quite sure how it
+came about, found himself standing beside Maud Barrington. She smiled
+at him and then glanced towards one of the open windows, outside which
+one or two of the older men were sitting.
+
+"The room is very hot," said Witham tentatively.
+
+"Yes," said the girl, "I fancy it would be cooler in the hall."
+
+They passed out together into the shadowy hall, but a little gleam of
+light from the doorway behind them rested on Maud Barrington as she
+sat down. She looked inquiringly at the man as though in wait for
+something.
+
+"It is distinctly cooler here," he said.
+
+Maud Barrington laughed impatiently. "It is," she said.
+
+"Well," said Witham, with a little smile. "I will try again. Wheat has
+made another advance lately."
+
+The girl turned towards him with a little sparkle in her eyes. Witham
+saw it, and the faint shimmer of the pearls upon the whiteness of her
+neck and then moved his head so that he looked out upon the dusky
+prairie.
+
+"Pshaw!" she said. "You know why you were brought here to-night."
+
+Witham admired her courage, but did not turn round, for there were
+times when he feared his will might fail him. "I fancy I know why your
+aunt was so gracious to me. Do you know that her confidence almost
+hurts me."
+
+"Then why don't you vindicate it and yourself? Dane would be your
+mouthpiece, and two or three words would be sufficient."
+
+Witham made no answer for a space. Somebody was singing in the room
+behind them, and through the open window he could see the stars in the
+soft indigo above the great sweep of prairie. He noticed them
+vacantly, and took a curious impersonal interest in the two dim
+figures standing close together outside the window. One was a young
+English lad, and the other a girl in a long white dress. What they
+were doing there was no concern of his, but any trifle that diverted
+his attention a moment was welcome in that time of strain, for he had
+felt of late that exposure was close at hand, and was fiercely anxious
+to finish his work before it came. Maud Barrington's finances must be
+made secure before he left Silverdale, and he must remain at any cost
+until the wheat was sold.
+
+Then he turned slowly towards her. "It is not your aunt's confidence
+that hurts me the most."
+
+The girl looked at him steadily, the colour a trifle plainer in her
+face, which she would not turn from the light, and a growing wonder in
+her eyes.
+
+"Lance," she said, "we both know that it is not misplaced. Still, your
+impassiveness does not please us."
+
+Witham groaned inwardly, and the swollen veins showed on his forehead.
+His companion had leaned forward a little, so that she could see him,
+and one white shoulder almost touched his own. The perfume of her hair
+was in his nostrils, and when he remembered how cold she had once been
+to him, a longing that was stronger than the humiliation that came
+with it grew almost overwhelming. Still, because of her very trust in
+him, there was a wrong he could not do, and it dawned on him that a
+means of placing himself beyond further temptation was opening to him.
+Maud Barrington, he knew, would have scanty sympathy with an intrigue
+of the kind Courthorne's recent adventure pointed to.
+
+"You mean, why do I not deny what you have no doubt heard?" he said.
+"What could one gain by that if you had heard the truth?"
+
+Maud Barrington laughed softly. "Isn't the question useless?"
+
+"No," said Witham, a trifle hoarsely now.
+
+The girl touched his arm almost imperiously as he turned his head
+again.
+
+"Lance," she said, "men of your kind need not deal in subterfuge. The
+wheat and the bridge you built speak for you."
+
+"Still----" persisted Witham, and the girl checked him with a smile.
+
+"I fancy you are wasting time," she said. "Now, I wonder whether, when
+you were in England, you ever saw a play founded on an incident in the
+life of a once famous actor. At the time it rather appealed to me. The
+hero, with a chivalric purpose, assumed various shortcomings he had
+really no sympathy with--but while there is, of course, no similarity
+beyond the generous impulse between the cases, he did not do it
+clumsily. It is, however, a trifle difficult to understand what
+purpose you could have, and one cannot help fancying that you owe a
+little to Silverdale and yourself."
+
+It was a somewhat daring parallel; for Witham, who dare not look at
+his companion and saw that he had failed, knew the play.
+
+"Isn't the subject a trifle difficult?" he asked.
+
+"Then," said Maud Barrington, "we will end it. Still, you promised
+that I should understand--a good deal--when the time came."
+
+Witham nodded gravely. "You shall," he said.
+
+Then, somewhat to his embarrassment, the two figures moved further
+across the window, and as they were silhouetted against the blue
+duskiness, he saw that there was an arm about the waist of the girl's
+white dress. He became sensible that Maud Barrington saw it too, and
+then that, perhaps to save the situation, she was smiling. The two
+figures, however, vanished, and a minute later a young girl in a long
+white dress came in and stood still, apparently dismayed, when she saw
+Maud Barrington. She did not notice Witham, who sat further in the
+shadow. He, however, saw her face suddenly crimson.
+
+"Have you been here long?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington, with a significant glance towards the
+window. "At least ten minutes. I am sorry, but I really couldn't help
+it. It was very hot in the other room, and Allender was singing."
+
+"Then," said the girl, with a little tremor in her voice, "you will
+not tell?"
+
+"No," said Maud Barrington. "But you must not do it again."
+
+The girl stooped swiftly and kissed her, then recoiled with a gasp
+when she saw the man, but Maud Barrington laughed.
+
+"I think," she said, "I can answer for Mr. Courthorne's silence.
+Still, when I have an opportunity, I am going to lecture you."
+
+Witham turned with a twinkle he could not quite repress in his eyes,
+and with a flutter of her dress the girl whisked away.
+
+"I'm afraid this makes me an accessory, but I can only neglect my
+manifest duty, which would be to warn her mother," said Maud
+Barrington.
+
+"Is it a duty?" asked Witham, feeling that the further he drifted away
+from the previous topic, the better it would be for him.
+
+"Some people would fancy so," said his companion. "Lily will have a
+good deal of money by and by, and she is very young. Atterly has
+nothing but an unprofitable farm; but he is an honest lad, and I know
+she is very fond of him."
+
+"And would that count against the dollars?"
+
+Maud Barrington laughed a little. "Yes," she said quietly. "I think it
+would if the girl is wise. Even now such things do happen; but I fancy
+it is time I went back again."
+
+She moved away, but Witham stayed where he was until the lad came in
+with a cigar in his hand.
+
+"Hallo, Courthorne!" he said. "Did you notice anybody pass the window
+a little while ago?"
+
+"You are the first come in through it," said Witham dryly. "The kind
+of things you wear admit of climbing."
+
+The lad glanced at him with a trace of embarrassment.
+
+"I don't quite understand you; but I meant a man," he said. "He was
+walking curiously, as if he was half asleep, but he slipped round the
+corner of the building, and I lost him."
+
+Witham laughed. "There's a want of finish in the tale, but you needn't
+worry about me. I didn't see a man."
+
+"There's rather less wisdom than usual in your remarks to-night; but I
+tell you I saw him," said the lad.
+
+He passed on, and a minute later there was a cry from the inner room.
+"It's there again! Can't you see the face at the window?"
+
+Witham was in the larger room next moment, and saw, as a startled girl
+had evidently done, a face that showed distorted and white to
+ghastliness through the window. He also recognized it, and running
+back through the hall was outside in another few seconds. Courthorne
+was leaning against one of the casements as though faint with weakness
+or pain, and collapsed when Witham dragged him backwards into the
+shadow. He had scarcely laid him down when the window was opened and
+Colonel Barrington's shoulders showed black against the light.
+
+"Come outside alone, sir," said Witham. Barrington did so, and Witham
+stood so that no light fell on the pallid face in the grass. "It's a
+man I have dealings with," he said. "He has evidently ridden out from
+the settlement and fallen from his horse."
+
+"Why should he fall?" asked the Colonel.
+
+Witham laughed. "There is a perfume about him that is tolerably
+conclusive. I was, however, on the point of going, and if you will
+tell your hired man to get my wagon out, I'll take him away quietly.
+You can make light of the affair to the others."
+
+"Yes," said Barrington. "Unless you think the man is hurt, that would
+be best, but we'll keep him if you like."
+
+"No, sir. I couldn't trouble you," said Witham hastily. "Men of his
+kind are also very hard to kill."
+
+Five minutes later he and the hired man hoisted Courthorne into the
+wagon and packed some hay about him, while, soon after the rattle of
+wheels sank into the silence of the prairie, the girl Maud Barrington
+had spoken to rejoined her companion.
+
+"Could Courthorne have seen you coming in?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said the girl, blushing. "He did."
+
+"Then it can't be helped, and, after all, Courthorne wouldn't talk,
+even if he wasn't what he is," said the lad. "You don't know why, and
+I'm not going to tell you, but it wouldn't become him."
+
+"You don't mean Maud Barrington?" asked his companion.
+
+"No," said the lad with a laugh. "Courthorne is not like me. He has no
+sense. It's quite another kind of girl, you see."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+COLONEL BARRINGTON IS CONVINCED
+
+
+It was not until early morning that Courthorne awakened from the
+stupor he sank into, soon after Witham conveyed him into his
+homestead. First, however, he asked for a little food, and ate it with
+apparent difficulty. When Witham came in, he looked up from the bed
+where he lay, with the dust still white upon his clothing, and his
+face showed grey and haggard in the creeping light.
+
+"I'm feeling a trifle better now," he said; "still, I scarcely fancy I
+could get up just yet. I gave you a little surprise last night?"
+
+Witham nodded. "You did. Of course, I knew how much your promise was
+worth, but in view of the risks you ran, I had not expected you to
+turn up at the Grange."
+
+"The risks!" said Courthorne with an unpleasant smile.
+
+"Yes," said Witham wearily; "I have a good deal on hand I would like
+to finish here, and it will not take me long, but I am quite prepared
+to give myself up now, if it is necessary."
+
+Courthorne laughed. "I don't think you need, and it wouldn't be wise.
+You see, even if you made out your innocence, which you couldn't do,
+you rendered yourself an accessory by not denouncing me long ago. I
+fancy we can come to an understanding which would be pleasanter to
+both of us."
+
+"The difficulty," said Witham, "is that an understanding is useless
+when made with a man who never keeps his word."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne dryly, "we shall gain nothing by paying each
+other compliments, and whether you believe it or otherwise, it was not
+by intention I turned up at the Grange. I was coming here from a place
+west of the settlement and you can see that I have been ill if you
+look at me. I counted too much on my strength, couldn't find a
+homestead where I could get anything to eat, and the rest may be
+accounted for by the execrable brandy I had with me. Anyway, the horse
+threw me and made off, and after lying under some willows a good deal
+of the day, I dragged myself along until I saw a house."
+
+"That," said Witham, "is beside the question. What do you want of me?
+Dollars, in all probability. Well, you will not get them."
+
+"I'm afraid I'm scarcely fit for a discussion now," said Courthorne.
+"The fact is, it hurts me to talk, and there's an aggressiveness about
+you which isn't pleasant to a badly-shaken man. Wait until this
+evening, but there is no necessity for you to ride to the outpost
+before you have heard me."
+
+"I'm not sure it would be advisable to leave you here," said Witham
+dryly.
+
+Courthorne smiled ironically. "Use your eyes. Would any one expect me
+to get up and indulge in a fresh folly? Leave me a little brandy--I
+need it--and go about your work. You'll certainly find me here when
+you want me."
+
+Witham, glancing at the man's face, considered this very probable, and
+went out. He found his cook, who could be trusted, and said to him,
+"The man yonder is tolerably sick, and you'll let him have a little
+brandy, and something to eat when he asks for it. Still, you'll bring
+the decanter away with you, and lock him in whenever you go out."
+
+The man nodded, and making a hasty breakfast, Witham, who had business
+at several outlying farms, mounted and rode away. It was evening
+before he returned, and found Courthorne lying in a big chair with a
+cigar in his hand, languidly _debonair_ but apparently ill. His face
+was curiously pallid, and his eyes dimmer than they had been, but
+there was a sardonic twinkle in them.
+
+"You take a look at the decanter," said the man, who went up with
+Witham, carrying a lamp. "He's been wanting brandy all the time, but
+it doesn't seem to have muddled him."
+
+Witham dismissed the man and sat down in front of Courthorne.
+
+"Well?" he said.
+
+Courthorne laughed. "You ought to be a witty man, though one would
+scarcely charge you with that. You surmised correctly this morning. It
+is dollars I want."
+
+"You had my answer."
+
+"Of course. Still, I don't want very many in the meanwhile, and you
+haven't heard what led up to the demand, or why I came back to you.
+You are evidently not curious, but I'm going to tell you. Soon after I
+left you, I fell very sick, and lay in the saloon of a little desolate
+settlement for days. The place was suffocating, and the wind blew the
+alkali dust in. They had only horrible brandy, and bitter water to
+drink it with, and I lay there on my back, panting, with the flies
+crawling over me. I knew if I stayed any longer it would finish me,
+and when there came a merciful cool day I got myself into the saddle
+and started off to find you. I don't quite know how I made the
+journey, and during a good deal of it I couldn't see the prairie, but
+I knew you would feel there was an obligation on you to do something
+for me. Of course, I could put it differently."
+
+Witham had as little liking for Courthorne as he had ever had, but he
+remembered the time when he had lain very sick in his lonely log hut.
+He also remembered that everything he now held belonged to this man.
+
+"You made the bargain," he said, less decisively.
+
+Courthorne nodded. "Still, I fancy one of the conditions could be
+modified. Now, if I wait for another three months I may be dead before
+the reckoning comes, and while that probably wouldn't grieve you, I
+could, when it appeared advisable, send for a magistrate and make a
+deposition."
+
+"You could," said Witham. "I have, however, something of the same kind
+in contemplation."
+
+Courthorne smiled curiously. "I don't know that it will be necessary.
+Carry me on until you have sold your crop, and then make a reasonable
+offer, and it's probable you may still keep what you have at
+Silverdale. To be quite frank, I've a notion that my time in this
+world is tolerably limited, and I want a last taste of all it has to
+offer a man of my capacities before I leave it. One is a long while
+dead, you know."
+
+Witham nodded, for he understood. He had also during the grim cares of
+the lean years known the fierce longing for one deep draught of the
+wine of pleasure, whatever it afterwards cost him.
+
+"It was that which induced you to look for a little relaxation at the
+settlement at my expense," he said. "A trifle paltry, wasn't it?"
+
+Courthorne laughed. "It seems you don't know me yet. That was a
+frolic, indulged in out of humour, for your benefit. You see, your
+rôle demanded a good deal more ability than you ever displayed in it,
+and it did not seem fitting that a very puritanical and priggish
+person should pose as me at Silverdale. The little affair was the one
+touch of verisimilitude about the thing. No doubt my worthy connexions
+are grieving over your lapse."
+
+"My sense of humour had never much chance of developing," said Witham
+grimly. "What is the matter with you?"
+
+"Pulmonary haemorrhage!" said Courthorne. "Perhaps it was born in me,
+but I never had much trouble until after that night in the snow at the
+river. Would you care to hear about it? We're not fond of each other,
+but after the steer-drivers I've been herding with, it's a relief to
+talk to a man of moderate intelligence."
+
+"Go on," said Witham.
+
+"Well," said Courthorne, "when the trooper was close behind me, my
+horse went through the ice, but somehow I crawled out. We were almost
+across the river, and it was snowing fast, while I had a fancy that I
+might have saved the horse but, as the trooper would probably have
+seen a mounted man, I let him go. The stream sucked him under, and,
+though you may not believe it, I felt very mean when I saw nothing but
+the hole in the ice. Then, as the troopers didn't seem inclined to
+cross, I went on through the snow, and, as it happened, blundered
+across Jardine's old shanty. There was still a little prairie hay in
+the place, and I lay in it until morning, dragging fresh armfuls
+around me as I burnt it in the stove. Did you ever spend a night, wet
+through, in a place that was ten to twenty under freezing?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham dryly. "I have done it twice."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne, "I fancy that night narrowed in my life for
+me, but I made out across the prairie in the morning, and as we had a
+good many friends up and down the country, one of them took care of
+me."
+
+Witham sat silent a while. The story had held his attention, and the
+frankness of the man who lay panting a little in his chair had its
+effect on him. There was no sound from the prairie, and the house was
+very still.
+
+"Why did you kill Shannon?" he asked at length.
+
+"Is any one quite sure of his motives?" said Courthorne. "The lad had
+done something which was difficult to forgive him, but I think I would
+have let him go if he hadn't recognized me. The world is tolerably
+good to the man who has no scruples, you see, and I took all it
+offered me, while it did not seem fitting that a clod of a trooper
+without capacity for enjoyment, or much more sensibility than the
+beast he rode, should put an end to all my opportunities. Still, it
+was only when he tried to warn his comrades he threw his last chance
+away."
+
+Witham shivered a little at the dispassionate brutality of the speech,
+and then checked the anger that came upon him.
+
+"Fate, or my own folly, has put it out of my power to denounce you
+without abandoning what I have set my heart upon, and after all it is
+not my business," he said. "I will give you five hundred dollars and
+you can go to Chicago or Montreal, and consult a specialist. If the
+money is exhausted before I send for you, I will pay your hotel bills,
+but every dollar will be deducted when we come to the reckoning."
+
+Courthorne laughed a little. "You had better make it seven-fifty. Five
+hundred dollars will not go very far with me."
+
+"Then you will have to husband them," said Witham dryly. "I am paying
+you at a rate agreed upon for the use of your land and small bank
+balance handed me, and want all of it. The rent is a fair one in face
+of the fact that a good deal of the farm consisted of virgin prairie,
+which can be had from the Government for nothing."
+
+He said nothing further, and soon after he went out Courthorne went to
+sleep, but Witham sat by an open window with a burned-out cigar in his
+hand, staring at the prairie while the night wore through, until he
+rose with a shiver in the chill of early morning to commence his task
+again.
+
+A few days later he saw Courthorne safely into a sleeping car with a
+ticket for Chicago in his pocket, and felt that a load had been lifted
+off his shoulders when the train rolled out of the little prairie
+station. Another week had passed, when, riding home one evening, he
+stopped at the Grange, and, as it happened, found Maud Barrington
+alone. She received him without any visible restraint, but he realized
+that all that had passed at their last meeting was to be tacitly
+ignored.
+
+"Has your visitor recovered yet?" she asked.
+
+"So far as to leave my place, and I was not anxious to keep him," said
+Witham with a little laugh. "I am sorry he disturbed you."
+
+Maud Barrington seemed thoughtful. "I can scarcely think the man was
+to blame."
+
+"No?" said Witham.
+
+The girl looked at him curiously, and shook her head. "No," she said.
+"I heard my uncle's explanation, but it was not convincing. I saw the
+man's face."
+
+It was several seconds before Witham answered, and then he took the
+bold course.
+
+"Well?" he said.
+
+Maud Barrington made a curious little gesture. "I knew I had seen it
+before at the bridge, but that was not all. It was vaguely familiar,
+and I felt I ought to know it. It reminded me of somebody."
+
+"Of me?" and Witham laughed.
+
+"No. There was a resemblance, but it was very superficial. That man's
+face had little in common with yours."
+
+"These faint likenesses are not unusual," said Witham, and once more
+Maud Barrington looked at him steadily.
+
+"No," she said. "Of course not. Well, we will conclude that my fancies
+ran away with me, and be practical. What is wheat doing just now?"
+
+"Rising still," said Witham, and regretted the alacrity with which he
+had seized the opportunity of changing the topic when he saw that it
+had not escaped the notice of his companion. "You and I and a few
+others will be rich this year."
+
+"Yes, but I am afraid some of the rest will find it has only further
+anxieties for them."
+
+"I fancy," said Witham, "you are thinking of one."
+
+Maud Barrington nodded. "Yes; I am sorry for him."
+
+"Then it would please you if I tried to straighten out things for him?
+It would be difficult, but I believe it could be accomplished."
+
+Maud Barrington's eyes were grateful, but there was something that
+Witham could not fathom behind her smile.
+
+"If you undertook it. One could almost believe you had the wonderful
+lamp," she said.
+
+Witham smiled somewhat dryly. "Then all its virtues will be tested
+to-night, and I had better make a commencement while I have the
+courage. Colonel Barrington is in?"
+
+Maud Barrington went with him to the door, and then laid her hand a
+moment on his arm. "Lance," she said, with a little tremor in her
+voice, "if there was a time when our distrust hurt you, it has
+recoiled upon our heads. You have returned it with a splendid
+generosity."
+
+Witham did not trust himself to answer, but walked straight to
+Barrington's room, and finding the door open went quietly in. The head
+of the Silverdale settlement was sitting at a littered table in front
+of a shaded lamp, and the light that fell upon it showed the care in
+his face. It grew a trifle grimmer when he saw the younger man.
+
+"Will you sit down?" he said. "I have been looking for a visit from
+you for some little time. It would have been more fitting had you made
+it earlier."
+
+Witham nodded as he took a chair. "I fancy I understand you, but I
+have nothing that you expect to hear to tell you, sir."
+
+"That," said Barrington, "is unfortunate. Now, it is not my business
+to pose as a censor on the conduct of any man here, except when it
+affects the community, but their friends have sent out a good many
+young English lads, some of whom have not been too discreet in the old
+country, to me. They did not do so solely that I might teach them
+farming. A charge of that kind is no light responsibility, and I look
+for assistance from the men who have almost as large a stake as I have
+in the prosperity of Silverdale."
+
+"Have you ever seen me do anything you could consider prejudicial to
+it?" asked Witham.
+
+"I have not," said Colonel Barrington.
+
+"And it was by her own wish Miss Barrington, who, I fancy, is seldom
+mistaken, asked me to the Grange?"
+
+"Is is a good plea," said Barrington. "I cannot question anything my
+sister does."
+
+"Then we will let it pass, though I am afraid you will consider what I
+am going to ask a further presumption. You have forward wheat to
+deliver, and find it difficult to obtain it?"
+
+Barrington's smile was somewhat grim. "In both cases you have surmised
+correctly."
+
+Witham nodded. "Still, it is not mere inquisitiveness, sir. I fancy I
+am the only man at Silverdale who can understand your difficulties,
+and, what is more to the point, suggest a means of obviating them. You
+still expect to buy at lower prices before the time to make delivery
+comes?"
+
+Again the care crept into Barrington's face, and he sat silent for
+almost a minute. Then he said, very slowly, "I feel that I should
+resent the question, but I will answer. It is what I hope to do."
+
+"Well," said Witham, "I am afraid you will find prices higher still.
+There is very little wheat in Minnesota this year, and what there was
+in Dakota was cut down by hail. Millers in St. Paul and Minneapolis
+are anxious already, and there is talk of a big corner in Chicago.
+Nobody is offering again, while you know what land lies fallow in
+Manitoba, and the activity of their brokers shows the fears of
+Winnipeg millers with contracts on hand. This is not my opinion alone.
+I can convince you from the papers and market reports I see before
+you."
+
+Barrington could not controvert the unpleasant truth he was still
+endeavouring to shut his eyes to. "The demand from the East may
+slacken," he said.
+
+Witham shook his head. "Russia can give them nothing. There was a
+failure in the Indian monsoon, and South American crops were small.
+Now, I am going to take a further liberty. How much are you short?"
+
+Barrington was never sure why he told him, but he was hard pressed
+then, and there was a quiet forcefulness about the younger man that
+had its effect on him. "That," he said, holding out a document, "is
+the one contract I have not covered."
+
+Witham glanced at it. "The quantity is small. Still, money is very
+scarce, and bank interest almost extortionate just now."
+
+Barrington flushed a trifle, and there was anger in his face. He knew
+the fact that his loss on this sale should cause him anxiety was
+significant, and that Witham had surmised the condition of his
+finances tolerably correctly.
+
+"Have you not gone quite far enough?" he said.
+
+Witham nodded. "I fancy I need ask no more, sir. You can scarcely buy
+the wheat, and the banks will advance nothing further on what you have
+to offer at Silverdale. It would be perilous to put yourself in the
+hands of a mortgage-broker."
+
+Barrington stood up very grim and straight, and there were not many
+men at Silverdale who would have met his gaze.
+
+"Your content is a little too apparent, but I can still resent an
+impertinence," he said. "Are my affairs your business?"
+
+"Sit down, sir," said Witham. "I fancy they are, and had it not been
+necessary, I would not have ventured so far. You have done much for
+Silverdale, and it had cost you a good deal, while it seems to me that
+every man here has a duty to the head of the settlement. I am,
+however, not going to urge that point, but have, as you know, a
+propensity for taking risks. I can't help it. It was probably born in
+me. Now, I will take that contract up for you."
+
+Barrington gazed at him in bewildered astonishment. "But you would
+lose on it heavily. How could you overcome a difficulty that is too
+great for me?"
+
+"Well," said Witham with a little smile, "it seems I have some ability
+in dealing with these affairs."
+
+Barrington did not answer for a while, and when he spoke it was
+slowly. "You have a wonderful capacity for making any one believe in
+you."
+
+"That is not the point," said Witham. "If you will let me have the
+contract, or, and it comes to the same thing, buy the wheat it calls
+for, and if advisable sell as much again, exactly as I tell you, at my
+risk and expense, I shall get what I want out of it. My affairs are a
+trifle complicated, and it would take some little time to make you
+understand how this would suit me. In the meanwhile you can give me a
+mere I O U for the difference between what you sold at, and the price
+to-day, to be paid without interest and whenever it suits you. It
+isn't very formal, but you will have to trust me."
+
+Barrington moved twice up and down the room before he turned to the
+younger man. "Lance," he said, "when you first came here, any deal of
+this kind between us would have been out of the question. Now, it is
+only your due to tell you that I have been wrong from the beginning,
+and you have a good deal to forgive."
+
+"I think we need not go into that," said Witham, with a little smile.
+"This is a business deal, and if it hadn't suited me I would not have
+made it."
+
+He went out in another few minutes with a little strip of paper, and
+just before he left the Grange placed it in Maud Barrington's hand.
+
+"You will not ask any questions, but if ever Colonel Barrington is not
+kind to you, you can show him that," he said.
+
+He had gone in another moment, but the girl, comprehending dimly what
+he had done, stood still, staring at the paper with a warmth in her
+cheeks and a mistiness in her eyes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+SERGEANT STIMSON CONFIRMS HIS SUSPICIONS
+
+
+It was late in the afternoon when Colonel Barrington drove up to
+Witham's homestead. He had his niece and sister with him, and when he
+pulled up his team, all three were glad of the little breeze that came
+down from the blueness of the north and rippled the whitened grass. It
+had blown over leagues of sun-bleached prairie, and the great
+desolation beyond the pines of the Saskatchewan, but had not wholly
+lost the faint wholesome chill it brought from the Pole.
+
+There was no cloud in the vault of ether, and slanting sunrays beat
+fiercely down upon the prairie, until the fibrous dust grew fiery, and
+the eyes ached from the glare of the vast stretch of silvery grey. The
+latter was, however, relieved by stronger colour in front of the
+party, for, blazing gold on the dazzling stubble, the oat sheaves
+rolled away in long rows that diminished and melted into each other,
+until they cut the blue of the sky in a delicate filigree. Oats had
+moved up in value in sympathy with wheat, and the good soil had most
+abundantly redeemed its promise that year. Colonel Barrington,
+however, sighed a little as he looked at them, and remembered that
+such a harvest might have been his.
+
+"We will get down and walk towards the wheat," he said. "It is a good
+crop, and Lance is to be envied."
+
+"Still," said Miss Barrington, "he deserved it, and those sheaves
+stand for more than the toil that brought them there."
+
+"Of course!" said the Colonel with a curious little smile. "For
+rashness, I fancied, when they showed the first blade above the clod,
+but I am less sure of it now. Well, the wheat is even finer."
+
+A man who came up took charge of the horses, and the party walked in
+silence towards the wheat. It stretched before them in a vast
+parallelogram, and while the oats were the pale gold of the austral,
+there was the tint of the ruddier metal of their own North-West in
+this. It stood tall and stately, murmuring as the sea does, until it
+rolled before a stronger puff of breeze in waves of ochre, through
+which the warm bronze gleamed when its rhythmic patter swelled into
+deeper-toned harmonies. There was that in the elfin music and blaze of
+colour which appealed to sensual ear and eye, and something which
+struck deeper still, as it did in the days men poured libations on the
+fruitful soil, and white-robed priest blessed it, when the world was
+young.
+
+Maud Barrington felt it vaguely, but she recognized more clearly, as
+her aunt had done, the faith and daring of the sower. The earth was
+very bountiful, but that wheat had not come there of itself; and she
+knew the man who had called it up had done more than bear his share of
+the primeval curse which, however, was apparently more or less evaded
+at Silverdale. Even when the issue appeared hopeless, the courage that
+held him resolute in face of other's fears, and the greatness of his
+projects, had appealed to her, and it almost counted for less that he
+had achieved success. Then, glancing further across the billowing
+grain she saw him--still, as it seemed it had always been with him,
+amidst the stress and dust of strenuous endeavour.
+
+Once more, as she had seen them when the furrows were bare at seed
+time, and there was apparently only ruin in store for those who raised
+the Eastern people's bread, lines of dusty teams came plodding down
+the rise. They advanced in echelon, keeping their time and distance
+with a military precision; but in place of the harrows the tossing
+arms of the binders flashed and swung. The wheat went down before
+them, their wake was strewn with gleaming sheaves, and one man came
+foremost, swaying in the driving-seat of a rattling machine. His face
+was the colour of a Blackfoot's, and she could see the darkness of his
+neck above the loose-fronted shirt and a bare blackened arm that was
+raised to hold the tired beasts to their task. Their trampling and the
+crash and rattle that swelled in slow crescendo drowned the murmur of
+the wheat, until one of the machines stood still, and the leader,
+turning a moment in his saddle, held up a hand. Then those that came
+behind swung into changed formation, passed, and fell into indented
+line again, while Colonel Barrington nodded with grim approval.
+
+"It is very well done," he said. "The best of harvesters! No newcomers
+yonder. They're capable Manitoba men. I don't know where he got them,
+and, in any other year, one would have wondered where he would find
+the means of paying them. We have never seen farming of this kind at
+Silverdale."
+
+He seemed to sigh a little, while his hand closed on the bridle; and
+Maud Barrington fancied she understood his thoughts just then.
+
+"Nobody can be always right, and the good years do not come alone,"
+she said. "You will plough every acre next one."
+
+Barrington smiled dryly. "I'm afraid that will be a little late, my
+dear. Any one can follow, but since, when everybody's crop is good,
+the price comes down, the man who gets the prize is the one who shows
+the way."
+
+"He was content to face the risk," said Miss Barrington.
+
+"Of course," said the Colonel quietly. "I should be the last to make
+light of his foresight and courage. Indeed, I am glad I can
+acknowledge it, in more ways than one, for I have felt lately that I
+am getting an old man. Still, there is one with greater capacities
+ready to step into my shoes; and though it was long before I could
+overcome my prejudice against him, I think I should now be content to
+let him have them. Whatever Lance may have been, he was born a
+gentleman, and blood is bound to tell."
+
+Maud Barrington, who was of a patrician parentage, and would not at
+one time have questioned this assertion, wondered why she felt less
+sure of it just then.
+
+"But if he had not been, would not what he has done be sufficient to
+vouch for him?" she said.
+
+Barrington smiled a little, and the girl felt that her question was
+useless as she glanced at him. He sat very straight in his saddle,
+immaculate in dress, with a gloved hand on his hip and a stamp which
+he had inherited, with the thinly-covered pride that usually
+accompanies it, from generations of a similar type, on his clean-cut
+face. It was evidently needless to look for any sympathy with that
+view from him.
+
+"My dear," he said, "there are things at which the others can beat us;
+but, after all, I do not think they are worth the most; and while
+Lance has occasionally exhibited a few undesirable characteristics, no
+doubt acquired in this country, and has not been always blameless, the
+fact that he is a Courthorne at once covers and accounts for a good
+deal."
+
+Then Witham recognized them, and made a sign to one of the men behind
+him as he hauled his binder clear of the wheat. He had dismounted in
+another minute and came towards them, with the jacket he had not
+wholly succeeded in struggling into loose about his shoulders.
+
+"It is almost time I gave my team a rest," he said. "Will you come
+with me to the house?"
+
+"No," said Colonel Barrington. "We only stopped in passing. The crop
+will harvest well."
+
+"Yes," said Witham, turning with a little smile to Miss Barrington.
+"Better than I expected, and prices are still moving up. You will
+remember, madam, who it was wished me good fortune. It has undeniably
+come!"
+
+"Then," said the white-haired lady, "next year I will do as much
+again, though it will be a little unnecessary, because you have my
+good wishes all the time. Still, you are too prosaic to fancy they can
+have anything to do with--this."
+
+She pointed to the wheat, but though Witham smiled again, there was a
+curious expression in his face as he glanced at her niece.
+
+"I certainly do, and your good-will has made a greater difference than
+you realize to me," he said.
+
+Miss Barrington looked at him steadily. "Lance," she said, "there is
+something about you and your speeches that occasionally puzzles me.
+Now, of course, that was the only rejoinder you could make, but I
+fancied you meant it."
+
+"I did," said Witham, with a trace of grimness in his smile. "Still,
+isn't it better to tell any one too little rather than too much?"
+
+"Well," said Miss Barrington, "you are going to be franker with me by
+and by. Now, my brother has been endeavouring to convince us that you
+owe your success to qualities inherited from bygone Courthornes."
+
+Witham did not answer for a moment and then he laughed. "I fancy
+Colonel Barrington is wrong," he said. "Don't you think there are
+latent capabilities in every man, though only one here and there gets
+an opportunity of using them? In any case, wouldn't it be pleasanter
+for any one to feel that his virtues were his own and not those of his
+family?"
+
+Miss Barrington's eyes twinkled but she shook her head. "That," she
+said, "would be distinctly wrong of him, but I fancy it is time we
+were getting on."
+
+In another few minutes Colonel Barrington took up the reins, and as
+they drove slowly past the wheat his niece had another view of the
+toiling teams. They were moving on tirelessly with their leader in
+front of them, and the rasp of the knives, trample of hoofs, and clash
+of the binders' wooden arms once more stirred her. She had heard those
+sounds often before, and attached no significance to them; but now she
+knew a little of the stress and effort that preceded them; she could
+hear through the turmoil the exultant note of victory.
+
+Then the wagon rolled more slowly up the rise and had passed from
+view behind it when a mounted man rode up to Witham with an envelope
+in his hand.
+
+"Mr. Macdonald was in at the settlement, and the telegraph clerk gave
+it him," he said. "He told me to come along with it."
+
+Witham opened the message, and his face grew grim as he read, "Send me
+five hundred dollars. Urgent."
+
+Then he thrust it into his pocket and went on with his harvesting,
+when he had thanked the man. He also worked until dusk was creeping up
+across the prairie before he concerned himself further about the
+affair; and then the note he wrote was laconic.
+
+"Enclosed you will find fifty dollars, sent only because you may be
+ill. In case of necessity, you can forward your doctor's or hotel
+bills," it ran.
+
+It was with a wry smile he watched the man ride off towards the
+settlement with it. "I shall not be sorry when the climax comes," he
+said. "The strain is telling."
+
+In the meanwhile, Sergeant Stimson had been quietly renewing his
+acquaintance with certain ranchers and herders of sheep scattered
+across the Albertan prairie some six hundred miles away. They found
+him more communicative and cordial than he used to be, and with one or
+two he unbent so far as, in the face of regulations, to refresh
+himself with whisky which had contributed nothing to the Canadian
+revenue. Now, the lonely ranchers have, as a rule, few opportunities
+of friendly talk with anybody, and as they responded to the sergeant's
+geniality, he became acquainted with a good many facts, some of which
+confirmed certain vague suspicions of his, though others astonished
+him. In consequence of this, he rode out one night with two or three
+troopers of a Western squadron.
+
+His apparent business was somewhat prosaic. Musquash, the Blackfoot,
+in place of remaining quietly on his reserve, had in a state of
+inebriation reverted to the primitive customs of his race, and taking
+the trail not only annexed some of his white neighbours' ponies and
+badly frightened their wives, but drove off a steer with which he
+feasted his people. The owner, following, came upon the hide, and
+Musquash, seeing it was too late to remove the brand from it,
+expressed his contrition, and pleaded in extenuation that he was
+rather worthy of sympathy than blame, because he would never have laid
+hands on what was not his had not a white man sold him deleterious
+liquor. As no white man is allowed to supply an Indian with alcohol in
+any form, the wardens of the prairie took a somewhat similar view of
+the case; and Stimson was, from motives which he did not mention,
+especially anxious to get his grip upon the other offender.
+
+The night when they rode out was very dark, and they spent half of it
+beneath a birch bluff, seeing nothing whatever, and only hearing a
+coyote howl. It almost appeared that there was something wrong with
+the information supplied them respecting the probable running of
+another load of prohibited whisky, and towards morning Stimson rode up
+to the young commissioned officer.
+
+"The man who brought us word has either played their usual trick and
+sent us here while his friends take the other trail, or somebody saw
+us ride out and went south to tell the boys," he said. "Now, you might
+consider it advisable that I and one of the troopers should head for
+the ford at Willow Hollow, sir."
+
+"Yes," said the young officer, who was quite aware that there was as
+yet many things connected with his duties he did not know. "Now I come
+to think of it, Sergeant, I do. We'll give you two hours, and then, if
+you don't turn up, ride over after you; it's condemnably shivery
+waiting for nothing here."
+
+Stimson saluted and shook his bridle, and rather less than an hour
+later faintly discerned a rattle of wheels that rose from a long way
+off across the prairie. Then he used the spur, and by and by it became
+evident that the drumming of their horses' feet had carried far, for
+though the rattle grew a little louder there was no doubt that whoever
+drove the wagon had no desire to be overtaken. Still, two horses
+cannot haul a vehicle over a rutted trail as fast as one can carry a
+man, and when the wardens of the prairie raced towards the black wall
+of birches that rose higher in front of them, the sound of wheels
+seemed very near. It, however, ceased suddenly, and was followed by a
+drumming that could only have been made by a galloping horse.
+
+"One beast!" said the Sergeant. "Well, they'd have two men, anyway, in
+that wagon. Get down and picket. We'll find the other fellow
+somewhere in the bluff."
+
+They came upon him within five minutes endeavouring to cut loose the
+remaining horse from the entangled harness in such desperate haste
+that he did not hear them until Stimson grasped his shoulder.
+
+"Hold out your hands," he said. "You have your carbine ready,
+trooper?"
+
+The man made no resistance, and Stimson laughed when the handcuffs
+were on.
+
+"Now," he said, "where's your partner?"
+
+"I don't know that I mind telling you," said the prisoner. "It was a
+low down trick he played on me. We got down to take out the horses,
+when we saw we couldn't get away from you, and I'd a blanket girthed
+round the best of them, when he said he'd hold him while I tried what
+I could do with the other. Well, I let him, and the first thing I knew
+he was off at a gallop, leaving me with the other kicking devil two
+men couldn't handle. You'll find him rustling south over the Montana
+trail."
+
+"Mount and ride!" said Stimson, and when his companion galloped off
+turned once more to his prisoner.
+
+"You'll have a lantern somewhere, and I'd like a look at you," he
+said. "If you're the man I expect, I'm glad I found you."
+
+"It's in the wagon," said the other dejectedly.
+
+Stimson got a light, and when he had released and picketed the
+plunging horse, held it so that he could see his prisoner. Then he
+nodded with evident contentment.
+
+"You may as well sit down. We've got to have a talk," he said.
+
+"Well," said the other, "I'd help you to catch Harmon if I could, but
+I can prove he hired me to drive him over to Kemp's in the wagon, and
+you'd find it difficult to show I knew what there was in the packages
+he took along."
+
+Stimson smiled dryly. "Still," he said, "I think it could be done, and
+I've another count against you. You had one or two deals with the boys
+some little while ago."
+
+"I'm not afraid of your fixing up against me anything I did then,"
+said the other man.
+
+"No?" said Stimson. "Now, I guess you're wrong, and it might be a good
+deal more serious than whisky-running. One night a man crawled up to
+your homestead through the snow, and you took him in."
+
+He saw the sudden fear in his companion's face before he turned it
+from the lantern.
+
+"It has happened quite a few times," said the latter. "We don't turn
+any stranger out in this country."
+
+"Of course!" said the Sergeant gravely, though he felt a little thrill
+of content as he saw the shot, he had been by no means sure of, had
+told. "That man, however, had lost his horse in the river, and it was
+the one he got from you that took him out of the country. Now, if we
+could show you knew what he had done, it might go as far as hanging
+somebody."
+
+The man was evidently not a confirmed law-breaker, but merely one of
+the small farmers who were willing to pick up a few dollars by
+assisting the whisky-runners now and then, and he abandoned all
+resistance.
+
+"Sergeant," he said, "it was most a week before I knew, and if anybody
+had told me at the time I'd have turned him out to freeze before I'd
+have let him have a horse of mine."
+
+"That wouldn't go very far if we brought the charge against you," said
+Stimson grimly. "If you'd sent us word when you did know, we'd have
+had him."
+
+"Well," said the man, "he was across the frontier by that time, and I
+don't know that most folks would have done it, if they'd had the
+warning the boys sent me."
+
+Stimson appeared to consider for almost a minute, and then gravely
+rapped his companion's arm.
+
+"It seems to me that the sooner you and I have an understanding, the
+better it will be for you," he said.
+
+They were some time arriving at it, and the Sergeant's superiors might
+not have been pleased with all he promised during the discussion.
+Still, he was flying at higher game and had to sacrifice a little,
+while he knew his man.
+
+"We'll fix it up without you, as far as we can; but if we want you to
+give evidence that the man who lost his horse in the river was not
+Farmer Witham, we'll know where to find you," he said. "You'll have to
+take your chance of being tried with him, if we find you trying to get
+out of the country."
+
+It was half an hour later when the rest of the troopers arrived, and
+Stimson had some talk with their officer aside.
+
+"A little out of the usual course, isn't it?" said the latter. "I
+don't know that I'd have countenanced it, so to speak, off my own bat
+at all, but I had a tolerably plain hint that you were to use your
+discretion over this affair. After all, one has to stretch a point or
+two occasionally."
+
+"Yes, sir," said Stimson; "a good many now and then."
+
+The officer smiled a little and went back to the rest. "Two of you
+will ride after the other rascal," he said. "Now look here, my man;
+the first time my troopers, who'll call round quite frequently, don't
+find you about your homestead, you'll land yourself in a tolerably
+serious difficulty. In the meanwhile, I'm sorry we can't bring a
+charge of whisky-running against you, but another time be careful who
+you hire your wagon to."
+
+Then there was a rapid drumming of hoofs as two troopers went off at a
+gallop, while when the rest turned back towards the outpost, Stimson
+rode with them, quietly content.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE REVELATION
+
+
+Witham's harvesting prospered as his sowing had done, for day by day
+the bright sunshine shone down on standing wheat and lengthening rows
+of sheaves. It was in the bracing cold of sunrise the work began, and
+the first pale stars were out before the tired men and jaded horses
+dragged themselves home again. Not infrequently it happened that the
+men wore out the teams and machines, but there was no stoppage then,
+for fresh horses were led out from the corral or a new binder was
+ready. Every minute was worth a dollar, and Witham, who had apparently
+foreseen and provided for everything, wasted none.
+
+Then--for wheat is seldom stacked in that country--as the days grew
+shorter and the evenings cool, the smoke of the big thrasher streaked
+the harvest field, and the wagons went jolting between humming
+separator and granary, until the latter was gorged to repletion, and
+the wheat was stored within a willow framing beneath the chaff and
+straw that streamed from the shoot of the great machine. Witham had
+round him the best men that dollars could hire, and toiled tirelessly
+with the grimy host in the whirling dust of the thrasher and amidst
+the sheaves, wherever another pair of hands, or the quick decision
+that would save an hour's delay, was needed most.
+
+As compared with the practice of insular Britain, there were not half
+enough of them; but wages are high in that country, and the crew of
+the thrasher paid by the bushel, while the rest had long worked for
+their own hand on the levels of Manitoba and in the bush of Ontario,
+and knew that the sooner their toil was over the sooner they would go
+home again with well-lined pockets. So, generously fed, splendid human
+muscle kept pace with clinking steel under a stress that is seldom
+borne outside the sun-bleached prairie at harvest time, and Witham
+forgot everything save the constant need for the utmost effort of body
+and brain. It was even of little import to him that prices moved
+steadily upwards as he toiled.
+
+At last it was finished, and only knee-high stubble covered his land
+and that of Maud Barrington; while--for he was one who could venture
+fearlessly and still know when he had risked enough--soon after it was
+thrashed out the wheat was sold. The harvesters went home with enough
+to maintain them through the winter; and Witham, who spent two days
+counting his gain, wrote asking Graham to send him an accountant from
+Winnipeg. With him he spent a couple more, and then, with an effort he
+was never to forget, prepared himself for the reckoning. It was time
+to fling off the mask before the eyes of all who had trusted him.
+
+He had thought over it carefully, and his first decision had been to
+make the revelation alone to Colonel Barrington. That, however, would,
+he felt be too simple, and his pride rebelled against anything that
+would stamp him as one who dare not face the men he had deceived. One
+by one they had tacitly offered him their friendship and then their
+esteem, until he knew that he was virtually leader at Silverdale; and
+it seemed fitting that he should admit the wrong he had done them, and
+bear the obloquy before them all. For a while the thought of Maud
+Barrington restrained him, and then he brushed that aside. He had
+fancied with masculine blindness that what he felt for her had been
+well concealed, and that her attitude to him could be no more than
+kindly sympathy with one who was endeavouring to atone for a
+discreditable past. Her anger and astonishment would be hard to bear,
+but once more his pride prompted him, and he decided that she should
+at least see he had the courage to face the results of his
+wrong-doing. As it happened, he was also given an opportunity when he
+was invited to the harvest celebration that was held each year at
+Silverdale.
+
+It was a still, cool evening when every man of the community, and most
+of the women gathered in the big dining-room of the Grange. The
+windows were shut now, for the chill of the early frost was on the
+prairie, and the great lamps burned steadily above the long tables.
+Cut glass, dainty china and silver gleamed beneath them amidst the
+ears of wheat that stood in clusters for sole and appropriate
+ornamentation. They merited the place of honour, for wheat had brought
+prosperity to every man at Silverdale who had had the faith to sow
+that year.
+
+On either hand were rows of smiling faces: the men's burned and
+bronzed, the women's kissed into faintly warmer colour by the sun, and
+white shoulders shone amidst the sombrely covered ones, while here and
+there a diamond gleamed on a snowy neck. Barrington sat at the head of
+the longest table, with his niece and sister, Dane, and his oldest
+followers about him, and Witham at its foot, dressed very simply after
+the usual fashion of the prairie farmers. There were few in the
+company who had not noticed this, though they did not as yet
+understand its purport.
+
+Nothing happened during dinner, but Maud Barrington noticed that
+although some of his younger neighbours rallied him, Witham was grimly
+quiet. When it was over, Barrington rose, and the men who knew the
+care he had borne that year never paid him more willing homage than
+they did when he stood smiling down on them. As usual, he was
+immaculate in dress, erect, and quietly commanding; but, in spite of
+its smile, his face seemed worn, and there were thickening wrinkles,
+which told of anxiety, about his eyes.
+
+"Another year has gone, and we have met again to celebrate with
+gratefulness the fulfilment of the promise made when the world was
+young," he said. "We do well to be thankful, but I think humility
+becomes us, too. While we doubted, the sun and the rain have been with
+us for a sign that, though men grow faint-hearted and spare their
+toil, seed time and harvest shall not fail."
+
+It was the first time Colonel Barrington had spoken in quite that
+strain, and when he paused a moment there was a curious stillness, for
+those who heard him noticed an unusual tremor in his voice. There was
+also a gravity that was not far removed from sadness in his face when
+he went on again, but the intentness of his retainers would have been
+greater had they known that two separate detachments of police
+troopers were then riding toward Silverdale.
+
+"The year has brought its changes and set its mark deeply on some of
+us," he said. "We cannot recall it, or retrieve our blunders, but we
+can hope they will be forgiven us, and endeavour to avoid them again.
+This is not the fashion in which I had meant to speak to you to-night,
+but after the bounty showered upon us I feel my responsibility. The
+law is unchangeable. The man who would have bread to eat or sell must
+toil for it, and I, in disregard of it, bade you hold your hand. Well,
+we have had our lesson, and we will be wiser another time; but I have
+felt that my usefulness as your leader is slipping away from me. This
+year has shown me that I am getting an old man."
+
+Dane kicked the foot of a lad beside him, and glanced at the piano as
+he stood up.
+
+"Sir," he said simply, "although we have differed about trifles and
+may do again, we don't want a better one--and if we did, we couldn't
+find him."
+
+A chord from the piano rang through the approving murmurs, and the
+company rose to their feet before the lad had beaten out the first bar
+of the jingling rhythm. Then the voices took it up, and the great hall
+shook to the rafters with the last "Nobody can deny."
+
+Trite as it was, Barrington saw the darker flush in the bronzed faces,
+and there was a shade of warmer colour in his own as he went on again.
+
+"The things one feels the most are those one can least express, and I
+will not try to tell you how I value your confidence," he said.
+"Still, the fact remains that sooner or later I must let the reins
+fall into younger hands, and there is a man here who will, I fancy,
+lead you farther than you would ever go with me. Times change, and he
+can teach you how those who would do the most for the Dominion need
+live to-day. He is also, and I am glad of it, one of us, for
+traditions do not wholly lose their force, and we know that blood will
+tell. That this year has not ended hi disaster irretrievable is due to
+our latest comrade, Lance Courthorne."
+
+This time there were no musical honours or need of them, for a shout
+went up that called forth an answering rattle from the cedar
+panelling. It was flung back from table to table up and down the great
+room, and when the men sat down flushed and breathless, their eyes
+still shining, the one they admitted had saved Silverdale rose up
+quietly at the foot of the table. The hand he laid on the snowy cloth
+shook a little, and the bronze that generally suffused it was less
+noticeable in his face. All who saw it felt that something unusual was
+coming, and Maud Barrington leaned forward a trifle with a curious
+throbbing of her heart.
+
+"Comrades! It is, I think, the last time you will hear the term from
+me," he said--"I am glad that we have made and won a good fight at
+Silverdale, because it may soften your most warranted resentment when
+you think of me."
+
+Every eye was turned upon him, and an expression of bewilderment crept
+into the faces, while a lad who sat next to him touched his arm
+reassuringly.
+
+"You'll feel your feet in a moment, but that's a curious fashion of
+putting it," he said.
+
+Witham turned to Barrington, and stood silent a moment. He saw Maud
+Barrington's face showing strained and intent, but less bewildered
+than the others, and that of her aunt, which seemed curiously
+impassive, and a little thrill ran through him. It passed, and once
+more he only saw the leader of Silverdale.
+
+"Sir," he said, "I did you a wrong when I came here, and with your
+convictions you would never tolerate me as your successor."
+
+There was a rustle of fabric as some of the women moved, and a murmur
+of uncontrollable astonishment, while those who noticed it remembered
+Barrington's gasp. It expressed absolute bewilderment, but in another
+moment he smiled.
+
+"Sit down, Lance," he said. "You need make no speeches. We expect
+better things from you."
+
+Witham stood very still. "It was the simple truth I told you, sir," he
+said. "Don't make it too hard for me."
+
+Just then there was a disturbance at the rear of the room, and a man,
+who shook off the grasp of one that followed him, came in. He moved
+forward with uneven steps, and then, resting his hand on a chair-back,
+faced about and looked at Witham. The dust was thick upon his clothes,
+but it was his face that seized and held attention. It was horribly
+pallid, save for the flush that showed in either cheek, and his
+half-closed eyes were dazed.
+
+"I heard them cheering," he said. "Couldn't find you at your
+homestead. You should have sent the five hundred dollars. They would
+have saved you this."
+
+The defective utterance would alone have attracted attention, and,
+with the man's attitude, was very significant, but it was equally
+evident to most of those who watched him that he was also struggling
+with some infirmity. Western hospitality has, however, no limit, and
+one of the younger men drew out a chair.
+
+"Hadn't you better sit down, and if you want anything to eat we'll get
+it you," he said. "Then you can tell us what your errand is."
+
+The man made a gesture of negation, and pointed to Witham.
+
+"I came to find a friend of mine. They told me at his homestead that
+he was here," he said.
+
+There was an impressive silence, until Colonel Barrington glanced at
+Witham, who still stood, quietly impassive, at the foot of the table.
+
+"You know our visitor?" he said. "The Grange is large enough to give a
+stranger shelter."
+
+The man laughed. "Of course, he does! It's my place he's living in!"
+
+Barrington turned again to Witham and his face seemed to have grown a
+trifle stern.
+
+"Who is this man?" he said.
+
+Witham looked steadily in front of him, vacantly noticing the rows of
+faces turned towards him under the big lamps. "If he had waited a few
+minutes longer, you would have known," he said. "He is Lance
+Courthorne!"
+
+This time the murmurs implied incredulity, but the man who stood
+swaying a little with his hand on the chair, and a smile in his
+half-closed eyes, made an ironical inclination.
+
+"It's evident you don't believe it, or wish to. Still, it's true," he
+said.
+
+One of the men nearest him rose and quietly pushed him into the chair.
+
+"Sit down in the meanwhile," he said dryly. "By and by, Colonel
+Barrington will talk to you."
+
+Barrington thanked him with a gesture, and glanced at the rest. "One
+would have preferred to carry out this inquiry more privately," he
+said, very slowly, but with hoarse distinctness. "Still, you have
+already heard so much."
+
+Dane nodded. "I fancy you are right, sir. Because we have known and
+respected the man who has, at least, done a good deal for us, it would
+be better that we should hear the rest."
+
+Barrington made a little gesture of agreement, and once more fixed his
+eyes on Witham. "Then will you tell us who you are?"
+
+"A struggling prairie farmer," said Witham quietly. "The son of an
+English country doctor, who died in penury, and one who, from your
+point of view, could never have been entitled to more than courteous
+toleration from any of you."
+
+He stopped, but--for the astonishment was passing--there was negation
+in the murmurs which followed, while somebody said, "Go on!"
+
+Dane stood up. "I fancy our comrade is mistaken," he said. "Whatever
+he may have been, we recognize our debt to him. Still, I think he owes
+us a more complete explanation."
+
+Then Maud Barrington, sitting where all could see her, signed
+imperiously to Alfreton, who was on his feet next moment, with
+Macdonald and more of the men following him.
+
+"I," he said with a little ring in his voice and a flush in his young
+face, "owe him everything, and I'm not the only one. This, it seems to
+me, is the time to acknowledge it."
+
+Barrington checked him with a gesture. "Sit down, all of you. Painful
+and embarrassing as it is, now we have gone so far, this affair must
+be elucidated. It would be better if you told us more."
+
+Witham drew back a chair, and when Courthorne moved, the man who sat
+next to him laid a grasp on his arm. "You will oblige me by not making
+any remarks just now," he said dryly. "When Colonel Barrington wants
+to hear anything from you he'll ask you."
+
+"There is little more," said Witham. "I could see no hope in the old
+country, and came out to this one with one hundred pounds, a distant
+connexion lent me. That sum will not go very far anywhere, as I found
+when, after working for other men, I bought stock and took up
+Government land. To hear how I tried to do three men's work for six
+weary years, and at times went for months together half-fed, might not
+interest you, though it has its bearing on what came after. The
+seasons were against me, and I had not the dollars to tide me over the
+time of drought and blizzard until a good one came. Still, though my
+stock died, and I could scarcely haul in the little wheat the frost
+and hail left me, with my worn-out team, I held on, feeling that I
+could achieve prosperity if I once had the chances of other men."
+
+He stopped a moment, and Macdonald poured out a glass of wine and
+passed it across to him in a fashion that made the significance of
+what he did evident.
+
+"We know what kind of a struggle you made by what we have seen at
+Silverdale," he said.
+
+Witham put the glass aside, and turned once more to Colonel
+Barrington.
+
+"Still," he said, "until Courthorne crossed my path, I had done no
+wrong, and I was in dire need of the money that tempted me to take his
+offer. He made a bargain with me that I should ride his horse and
+personate him, that the police troopers might leave him unsuspected to
+lead his comrades running whisky, while they followed me. I kept my
+part of the bargain, and it cost me what I fancy I can never recover,
+unless the trial I shall shortly face will take the stain from me.
+While I passed for him your lawyer found me, and I had no choice
+between being condemned as a criminal for what Courthorne had in the
+meanwhile done, or continuing the deception. He had, as soon as I had
+left him, taken my horse and garments, so that if seen by the police
+they would charge me. I could not take your money, but, though
+Courthorne was apparently drowned I did wrong when I came to
+Silverdale. For a time the opportunities dazzled me; ambition drew me
+on, and I knew what I could do."
+
+He stopped again, and once more there was a soft rustle of dresses,
+and a murmur, as those who listened gave inarticulate expression to
+their feelings. Moving a little, he looked steadily at Maud
+Barrington, and her aunt, who sat close together.
+
+"Then," he said very slowly, "it was borne in upon me that I could not
+persist in deceiving you. Courthorne, I fancied, could not return to
+trouble me, but the confidence that little by little you placed in me
+rendered it out of the question. Still, I saw that I could save some
+at least at Silverdale from drifting to disaster, and there was work
+for me here which would go a little way in reparation, and now that it
+is done I was about to bid you good-bye and ask you not to think too
+hardly of me."
+
+There was a moment's intense silence until once more Dane rose up, and
+pointed to Courthorne sitting with half-closed eyes, dusty, partly
+dazed by indulgence, and with the stamp of dissolute living on him, in
+his chair. Then, he glanced at Witham's bronzed face, which showed
+quietly resolute at the bottom of the table.
+
+"Whatever we would spare you and ourselves, sir, we must face the
+truth," he said. "Which of these men was needed at Silverdale?"
+
+Again the murmurs rose up, but Witham sat silent, his pulses throbbing
+with a curious exultation. He had seen the colour creep into Maud
+Barrington's face, and her aunt's eyes, when he told her what had
+prompted him to leave Silverdale, and knew they understood him. Then,
+in the stillness that followed, the drumming of hoofs rose from the
+prairie. It grew louder, and when another sound became audible too,
+more than one of those who listened recognized the jingle of
+accoutrements. Courthorne rose unsteadily, and made for the door.
+
+"I think," he said with a curious laugh, "I must be going. I don't
+know whether the troopers want me or your comrade."
+
+A lad sprang to his feet, and as he ran to the door called "Stop him!"
+
+In another moment Dane had caught his arm, and his voice rang through
+the confusion, as everybody turned or rose.
+
+"Keep back all of you," he said. "Let him go!"
+
+Courthorne was outside by this time, and only those who reached the
+door before Dane closed it heard a faint beat of hoofs as somebody
+rode quietly away beneath the bluff, while as the rest clustered
+together, wondering, a minute or two later, Corporal Payne, flecked
+with spume and covered with dust came in. He raised his hand in
+salutation to Colonel Barrington, who sat very grim in face in his
+chair at the head of the table.
+
+"I'm sorry, sir, but it's my duty to apprehend Lance Courthorne," he
+said.
+
+"You have a warrant?" asked Barrington.
+
+"Yes, sir," said the corporal.
+
+There was intense silence for a moment. Then the Colonel's voice broke
+through it very quietly.
+
+"He is not here," he said.
+
+Payne made a little deprecatory gesture. "We knew he came here. It is
+my duty to warn you that proceedings will be taken against any one
+concealing or harbouring him."
+
+Barrington rose up very stiffly, with a little grey tinge in his face,
+but words seemed to fail him, and Dane laid his hand on the corporal's
+shoulder.
+
+"Then," he said grimly, "don't exceed it. If you believe he's here, we
+will give you every opportunity of finding him."
+
+Payne called to a comrade outside, who was, as it happened, new to the
+force, and they spent at least ten minutes questioning the servants
+and going up and down the house. Then, as they glanced into the
+general room, the trooper looked deprecatingly at his officer.
+
+"I fancied I heard somebody riding by the bluff just before we reached
+the house," he said.
+
+Payne wheeled round with a flash in his eyes. "Then you have lost us
+our man. Out with you, and tell Jackson to try the bluff for a trail."
+
+They had gone in another moment, and Witham still sat at the foot of
+the table and Barrington at the head, while the rest of the company
+were scattered, some wonderingly silent, though others talked in
+whispers, about the room. As yet they felt only consternation and
+astonishment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+COURTHORNE MAKES REPARATION
+
+
+The silence in the big room had grown oppressive when Barrington
+raised his head and sat stiffly upright.
+
+"What has happened has been a blow to me, and I am afraid I am
+scarcely equal to entertaining you to-night," he said. "I should,
+however, like Dane and Macdonald, and one or two of the older men, to
+stay a while. There is still, I fancy, a good deal for us to do."
+
+The others turned towards the door, but as they passed Witham, Miss
+Barrington turned and touched his shoulder. The man, looking up
+suddenly, saw her and her niece standing close beside her.
+
+"Madam," he said hoarsely, though it was Maud Barrington he glanced
+at, "the comedy is over. Well, I promised you an explanation, and now
+you have it you will try not to think too bitterly of me. I cannot ask
+you to forgive me."
+
+The little white-haired lady pointed to the ears of wheat which stood
+gleaming ruddy-bronze in front of him.
+
+"That," she said very quietly, "will make it easier."
+
+Maud Barrington said nothing, but every one in the room saw her
+standing a moment beside the man with a little flush in her face and
+no blame in her eyes. Then she passed on, but, short as it was, the
+pause had been very significant, for it seemed that whatever the
+elders of the community might decide, the two women, whose influence
+was supreme at Silverdale, had given the impostor absolution.
+
+The girl could not analyse her feelings, but through them all a vague
+relief was uppermost; for whatever he had been, it was evident the man
+had done one wrong only, and daringly, and that was a good deal easier
+to forgive than several incidents in Courthorne's past would have
+been. Then she was conscious that Miss Barrington's eyes were upon
+her.
+
+"Aunt," she said with a little tremor in her voice, "it is almost
+bewildering. Still one seemed to feel that what that man has done
+could never have been the work of Lance Courthorne."
+
+Miss Barrington made no answer, but her face was very grave; and just
+then those nearest it drew back a little from the door. A trooper
+stood outside it, his carbine glinting in the light, and another was
+silhouetted against the sky, sitting motionless in his saddle further
+back on the prairie.
+
+"The police are still there," said somebody.
+
+One by one they passed out under the trooper's gaze, but there was the
+usual delay in harnessing and saddling, and the first vehicle had
+scarcely rolled away when again the beat of hoofs and thin jingle of
+steel came portentously out of the silence. Maud Barrington shivered a
+little as she heard it.
+
+In the meanwhile, the few who remained had seated themselves about
+Colonel Barrington. When there was quietness again he glanced at
+Witham, who still sat at the foot of the table.
+
+"Have you anything more to tell us?" he asked. "These gentlemen are
+here to advise me if necessary."
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly. "I shall probably leave Silverdale before
+morning, and have now to hand you a statement of my agreement with
+Courthorne and the result of my farming here, drawn up by a Winnipeg
+accountant. Here is also a document in which I have taken the liberty
+of making you and Dane my assigns. You will, as authorized by it, pay
+to Courthorne the sum due to him, and with your consent, which you
+have power to withhold, I propose taking one thousand dollars only of
+the balance that remains to me. I have it here now, and in the
+meanwhile surrender it to you. Of the rest, you will make whatever use
+that appears desirable for the general benefit of Silverdale.
+Courthorne has absolutely no claim upon it."
+
+He laid a wallet on the table, and Dane glanced at Colonel Barrington,
+who nodded when he returned it unopened.
+
+"We will pass it without counting. You accept the charge, sir?" he
+said.
+
+"Yes," said Barrington gravely. "It seems it is forced on me. Well, we
+will glance through the statement."
+
+For at least ten minutes nobody spoke, and then Dane said, "There are
+prairie farmers who would consider what he is leaving behind him a
+competence."
+
+"If this agreement, which was apparently verbal, is confirmed by
+Courthorne, the entire sum rightfully belongs to the man he made his
+tenant," said Barrington; and Macdonald smiled gravely as he glanced
+at Witham.
+
+"I think we can accept the statement that it was made, without
+question, sir," he said.
+
+Witham shook his head. "I claim one thousand dollars as the fee of my
+services, and they should be worth that much; but I will take no
+more."
+
+"Are we not progressing a little too rapidly, sir?" said Dane. "It
+seems to me we have yet to decide whether it is necessary that the man
+who has done so much for us should leave Silverdale."
+
+Witham smiled a trifle grimly. "I think," he said, "that question will
+very shortly be answered for you."
+
+Macdonald held his hand up, and a rapid thud of hoofs came faintly
+through the silence.
+
+"Troopers! They are coming here," he said.
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "I fancy they will relieve you from any further
+difficulty."
+
+Dane strode to one of the windows, and glanced at Colonel Barrington
+as he pulled back the catch. Witham, however, shook his head, and a
+little flush crept into Dane's bronzed face.
+
+"Sorry. Of course, you are right," he said. "It will be better that
+they should acquit you."
+
+No one moved for a few more minutes, and then with a trooper behind
+him Sergeant Stimson came in, and laid his hand on Witham's shoulder.
+
+"I have a warrant for your apprehension, Farmer Witham," he said. "You
+probably know the charge against you."
+
+"Yes," said Witham, simply. "I hope to refute it. I will come with
+you."
+
+He went out, and Barrington stared at the men about him. "I did not
+catch the name before. That was the man who shot the police trooper in
+Alberta?"
+
+"No, sir," said Dane very quietly. "Nothing would induce me to believe
+it of him."
+
+Barrington looked at him in bewilderment. "But he must have
+done--unless," he said, and ended with a little gasp. "Good Lord!
+There was the faint resemblance, and they changed horses--it is
+horrible."
+
+Dane's eyes were very compassionate as he laid his hand gently on his
+leader's shoulder.
+
+"Sir," he said, "you have our sympathy, and I am sorry that to offer
+it is all we can do. Now, I think, we have stayed too long already."
+
+They went out and left Colonel Barrington sitting alone with a grey
+face at the head of the table.
+
+It was a minute or two later when Witham swung himself into the saddle
+at the door of the Grange; All the vehicles had not left as yet, and
+there was a little murmur of sympathy--when the troopers closed in
+about him. Still before they rode away, one of the men wheeled his
+horse aside, and Witham saw Maud Barrington standing bareheaded by his
+stirrup. The moonlight showed that her face was impassive but
+curiously pale.
+
+"We could not let you go without a word; and you will come back to us
+with your innocence made clear," she said.
+
+Her voice had a little ring in it that carried far, and her companions
+heard her. What Witham said, they could not hear, and he did not
+remember it, but he swung his hat off, and those who saw the girl at
+his stirrup recognized with confusion that she alone had proclaimed
+her faith, while they had stood aside from him. Then the Sergeant
+raised his hand and the troopers rode forward with their prisoner.
+
+In the meanwhile, Courthorne was pressing south for the American
+frontier and daylight was just creeping across the prairie when the
+pursuers, who had found his trail and the ranch he obtained a fresh
+horse at, had sight of him. There were three of them, riding wearily,
+grimed with dust, when a lonely mounted figure showed for a moment on
+the crest of a rise. In another minute it dipped into a hollow, and
+Corporal Payne smiled grimly.
+
+"I think we have him now. The creek can't be far away, and he's west
+of the bridge," he said. "While we try to head him off, you'll follow
+behind him Hilton."
+
+One trooper sent the spurs in and, while the others swung off, rode
+straight on. Courthorne was at least a mile from them, but they were
+nearer the bridge, and Payne surmised that his jaded horse would fail
+him if he essayed to ford the creek and climb the farther side of the
+deep ravine it flowed through. They saw nothing of him when they swept
+across the rise, for here and there a grove of willows stretched out
+across the prairie from the sinuous band of trees in front of them.
+These marked the river hollow, and Payne knowing that the chase might
+be ended in a few more minutes did not spare the spur. He also
+remembered, as he tightened his grip on the bridle, the white face of
+Trooper Shannon flecked with the drifting snow.
+
+The bluff that rose steadily higher came back to them, willow and
+straggling birch flashed by, and at last Payne drew bridle where a
+rutted trail wound down between the trees to the bridge in the hollow.
+A swift glance showed him that a mounted man could scarcely make his
+way between them and he smiled dryly as he signed to his companion.
+
+"Back your horse clear of the trail," he said; and there was a rattle
+as he flung his carbine across the saddle. "With Hilton behind him,
+he'll ride straight into our hands."
+
+He wheeled his horse in among the birches, and then sat still, with
+fingers that quivered a little on the carbine stock, until a faint
+drumming rose from the prairie.
+
+"He's coming!" said the trooper. "Hilton's hanging on to him!"
+
+Payne made no answer, and the sound that rang more loudly every moment
+through the greyness of the early daylight was not pleasant to hear.
+Man's vitality is near its lowest about that hour, and the troopers
+had ridden furiously the long night through, while one of them, who
+knew Lance Courthorne, surmised that there was grim work before him.
+Still, though he shivered as a little chilly wind shook the birch
+twigs, he set his lips, and once more remembered the comrade who had
+ridden far and kept many a lonely vigil with him.
+
+Then a mounted man appeared in the space between the trees. His horse
+was jaded, and he rode loosely, swaying once or twice in his saddle;
+but he came straight on, and there was a jingle and rattle as the
+troopers swung out into the trail. The man saw them, for he glanced
+over his shoulder, as if at the rider who appeared behind, and then
+sent the spurs in again.
+
+"Pull him up," cried Corporal Payne, and his voice was a little
+strained. "Stop right where you are before we fire on you!"
+
+The man must have seen the carbines, for he raised himself a trifle,
+and Payne saw his face under the flapping hat. It was drawn and grey,
+but there was no sign of yielding or consternation in the half-closed
+eyes. Then he lurched in his saddle, as from exhaustion or weariness,
+and straightened himself again with both hands on the bridle. Payne
+saw his heels move and the spurs drip red, and slid his left hand
+further along the carbine stock. The trail was steep and narrow. A
+horseman could scarcely turn in it, and the stranger was coming on at
+a gallop.
+
+"He will have it," said the trooper hoarsely. "If he rides one of us
+down he may get away."
+
+"We have got to stop him," said Corporal Payne.
+
+Once more the swaying man straightened himself, flung his head back,
+and with a little breathless laugh drove his horse furiously at Payne.
+He was very close now, and his face showed livid under the smearing
+dust; but his lips were drawn up in a little bitter smile as he rode
+straight upon the levelled carbines. Payne at least understood it, and
+the absence of flung-up hand or cry. Courthorne's inborn instincts
+were strong to the end.
+
+There was a hoarse shout from the trooper, and no answer, and a
+carbine flashed. Then Courthorne loosed the bridle, reeled sideways
+from the saddle, rolled half round with one foot in the stirrup and
+his head upon the ground, and was left behind, while the riderless
+horse and pursuer swept past the two men who, avoiding them by a
+hairsbreadth, sat motionless a moment in the thin drifting smoke.
+
+Then Corporal Payne swung himself down, and, while the trooper
+followed, stooped over the man who lay, a limp huddled object, in the
+trail. He blinked up at them out of eyes that were almost closed.
+
+"I think you have done for me," he said.
+
+Payne glanced at his comrade. "Push on to the settlement," he said.
+"They've a doctor there. Bring him and Harland the magistrate out."
+
+The trooper seemed glad to mount and ride away, and Payne once more
+bent over the wounded man.
+
+"Very sorry," he said. "Still, you see, you left me no other means of
+stopping you. Now, is there anything I can do for you?"
+
+A little wry smile crept into Courthorne's face. "Don't worry," he
+said. "I had no wish to wait for the jury, and you can't get at an
+injury that's inside me."
+
+He said nothing more, and it seemed a very long while to Corporal
+Payne and Trooper Hilton, who rejoined him, before a wagon with two
+men in it beside the trooper came jolting up the trail. They got out,
+and one of them, who was busy with Courthorne for some minutes, nodded
+to Payne.
+
+"Any time in the next twelve hours. He may last that long," he said.
+"Nobody's going to worry him now, but I'll see if I can revive him a
+little when we get to Adamson's. It can't be more than a league away."
+
+They lifted Courthorne, who appeared insensible, into the wagon, and
+Payne signed to Trooper Hilton. "Take my horse and tell Colonel
+Barrington. Let him understand there's no time to lose. Then you can
+bring Stimson."
+
+The tired lad hoisted himself into his saddle and groaned a little as
+he rode away, but he did his errand, and late that night Barrington
+and Dane drove up to a lonely homestead. A man led them into a room
+where a limp figure was lying on a bed.
+
+"Been kind of sleeping most of the day, but the doctor has given him
+something that has wakened him," he said.
+
+Barrington returned Payne's greeting and sat down with Dane close
+beside him, while, when the wounded man raised his head, the doctor
+spoke softly to the magistrate from the settlement a league or two
+away.
+
+"I fancy he can talk to you, but you had better be quick if you wish
+to ask him anything," he said.
+
+Courthorne seemed to have heard him, for he smiled a little as he
+glanced at Barrington. "I'm afraid it will hurt you to hear what I
+have to tell this gentleman," he said. "Now, I want you to listen
+carefully, and every word put down. Doctor, a little more brandy."
+
+Barrington apparently would have spoken, but while the doctor held a
+glass to the bloodless lips the magistrate, who took up a strip of
+paper, signed to him.
+
+"We'll have it in due form. Give him that book, doctor," he said.
+"Now, repeat after me, and then we'll take your testimony."
+
+It was done, and a flicker of irony showed in Courthorne's half-closed
+eyes.
+
+"You feel more sure of me after that?" he said, in a voice that was
+very faint and strained. "Still, you see, I could gain nothing by
+deviating from the truth now. Well, I shot Trooper Shannon. You'll
+have the date in the warrant. Don't know if it will seem strange to
+you, but I forget it. I borrowed Farmer Witham's horse and rifle
+without his knowledge, though I had paid him a trifle to personate me
+and draw the troopers off the whisky-runners. That was Witham's only
+complicity. The troopers, who fancied they were chasing him, followed
+me until his horse which I was riding went through the ice; but Witham
+was in Montana at the time, and did not know that I was alive until a
+very little while ago. Now, you can straighten that up and read it out
+to me."
+
+The magistrate's pen scratched noisily in the stillness of the room,
+but before he had finished, Sergeant Stimson, hot and dusty, came in.
+Then he raised his hand, and for a while his voice rose and fell
+monotonously until Courthorne nodded.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "I'll sign."
+
+The doctor raised him a trifle, and moistened his lips with brandy as
+he gave him the pen. It scratched for a moment or two, and then fell
+from his relaxing fingers, while the man who took the paper wrote
+across the foot of it, and then would have handed it to Colonel
+Barrington, but that Dane quietly laid his hand upon it.
+
+"No," he said. "If you want another witness, take me."
+
+Barrington thanked him with a gesture; and Courthorne, looking round,
+saw Stimson.
+
+"You have been very patient, Sergeant, and it's rough on you that the
+one man you can lay your hands upon is slipping away from you," he
+said. "You'll see by my deposition that Witham thought me as dead as
+the rest of you did."
+
+Stimson nodded to the magistrate. "I heard what was read, and it is
+confirmed by the facts I have picked up," he said.
+
+Then Courthorne turned to Barrington. "I sympathize with you, sir," he
+said, "This must be horribly mortifying; but, you see, Witham once
+stopped my horse backing over a bridge into a gully when just to hold
+his hand would have rid him of me. You will not grudge me the one good
+turn I have probably done any man, when I shall assuredly not have the
+chance of doing another."
+
+Barrington winced a little, for he recognized the irony in the failing
+voice; but he rose and moved towards the bed.
+
+"Lance," he said, a trifle hoarsely, "it is not that which makes what
+has happened horrible to me, and I am only glad that you have righted
+this man. Your father had many claims on me, and things might have
+gone differently if, when you came out to Canada, I had done my duty
+by his son."
+
+Courthorne smiled a little, but without bitterness. "It would have
+made no difference, sir; and, after all, I led the life that suited
+me. By and by you will be grateful to me. I sent you a man who will
+bring prosperity to Silverdale."
+
+Then he turned to Stimson, and his voice sank almost beyond hearing as
+he said, "Sergeant, remember Witham fancied I was dead."
+
+He moved his head a trifle, and the doctor, stooping over him, signed
+to the rest, who went out except Barrington.
+
+It was some hours later, and very cold, when Barrington came softly
+into the room where Dane lay half asleep in a big chair. The latter
+glanced at him with a question in his eyes, and the Colonel nodded
+very gravely.
+
+"Yes," he said. "He has slipped out of the troopers' hands and beyond
+our reproaches--but I think the last thing he did will count for a
+little."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+WITHAM RIDES AWAY
+
+
+The first of the snow was driving across the prairie before a bitter
+wind when Maud Barrington stood by a window of the Grange looking out
+into the night. The double casements rattled, the curtains behind her
+moved with the icy draughts, until, growing weary of watching the
+white flakes whirl past, she drew them to and walked slowly towards a
+mirror. Then a faint tinge of pink crept into her cheeks, and a
+softness that became her into her eyes. They, however, grew critical
+as she smoothed back a tress of lustrous hair a trifle from her
+forehead, straightened the laces at neck and wrist, and shook into
+more flowing lines the long black dress. Maud Barrington was not
+unduly vain, but it was some time before she seemed contented, and one
+would have surmised that she desired to appear her best that night.
+
+The result was beyond cavil in its artistic simplicity, for the girl,
+knowing the significance that trifles have at times, had laid aside
+every adornment that might hint at wealth, and the sombre draperies
+alone emphasized the polished whiteness of her face and neck. Still,
+and she did not know whether she was pleased or otherwise at this, the
+mirror had shown the stamp which revealed itself even in passive pose
+and poise of head. It was her birthright, and would not be disguised.
+
+Then she drew a low chair towards the stove, and once more the faint
+colour crept into her face as she took up a note. It was laconic, and
+requested permission to call at the Grange, but Maud Barrington was
+not deceived, and recognized the consideration each word had cost the
+man who wrote it. Afterwards she glanced at her watch, raised it with
+a little gesture of impatience to make sure it had not stopped, and
+sat still, listening to the moaning of the wind, until the door
+opened, and Miss Barrington came in. She glanced at her niece, who
+felt that her eyes had noticed each detail of her somewhat unusual
+dress, but said nothing until the younger woman turned to her.
+
+"They would scarcely come to-night, aunt," she said.
+
+Miss Barrington, listening a moment, heard the wind that whirled the
+snow about the lonely building, but smiled incredulously.
+
+"I fancy you are wrong, and I wish my brother were here," she said.
+"We could not refuse Mr. Witham permission to call, but whatever
+passes between us will have more than its individual significance.
+Anything we tacitly promise the others will agree to, and I feel the
+responsibility of deciding for Silverdale."
+
+Miss Barrington went out; but her niece, who understood her smile and
+that she had received a warning, sat with a strained expression in her
+eyes. The prosperity of Silverdale had been dear to her, but she knew
+she must let something that was dearer still slip away from her, or,
+since they must come from her, trample on her pride as she made the
+first advances. It seemed a very long while before there was a
+knocking at the outer door, and she rose with a little quiver when
+light steps came up the stairway.
+
+In the meanwhile, two men stood beside the stove in the hall until an
+English maid returned to them.
+
+"Colonel Barrington is away, but Miss Barrington and Miss Maud are at
+home," she said. "Will you go forward into the morning-room when you
+have taken off your furs?"
+
+"Did you know Barrington was not here?" asked Witham, when the maid
+moved away.
+
+Dane appeared embarrassed. "The fact is, I did."
+
+"Then," said Witham dryly, "I am a little astonished you did not think
+fit to tell me."
+
+Dane's face flushed, but he laid his hand on his comrade's arm. "No,"
+he said. "I didn't. Now, listen to me for the last time, Witham. I've
+not been blind, you see; and, as I told you, your comrades have
+decided that they wish you to stay. Can't you sink your confounded
+pride and take what is offered you?"
+
+Witham shook his grasp off, and there was weariness in his face. "You
+need not go through it all again. I made my decision a long while
+ago."
+
+"Well," said Dane, with a gesture of hopelessness, "I've done all I
+could and, since you are going on, I'll look at that trace clip while
+you tell Miss Barrington. I mean the younger one."
+
+"The harness can wait," said Witham. "You are coming with me."
+
+A little grim smile crept into Dane's eyes. "I am not. I wouldn't
+raise a finger to help you now," he said, and retreated hastily.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was five minutes later when Witham walked quietly into Maud
+Barrington's presence, and sat down when the girl signed to him. He
+wondered if she guessed how his heart was beating.
+
+"It is very good of you to receive me, but I felt I could not slip
+away without acknowledging the kindness you and Miss Barrington have
+shown me," he said. "I did not know Colonel Barrington was away."
+
+The girl smiled a little. "Or you would not have come? Then we should
+have had no opportunity of congratulating you on your triumphant
+acquittal. You see it must be mentioned."
+
+"I'm afraid there was a miscarriage of justice," said Witham quietly.
+"Still, though it is a difficult subject, the deposition of the man I
+supplanted went a long way, and the police did not seem desirous of
+pressing a charge against me. Perhaps I should have insisted on
+implicating myself, but you would scarcely have looked for that after
+what you now know of me."
+
+Maud Barrington braced herself for an effort, though she was outwardly
+very calm. "No," she said, "no one would have looked for it from any
+man placed as you were, and you are purposing to do more than is
+required of you. Why will you go away?"
+
+"I am a poor man," said Witham. "One must have means to live at
+Silverdale."
+
+"Then," said the girl with a soft laugh which cost her a good deal,
+"it is because you prefer poverty, and you have at least one
+opportunity at Silverdale. Courthorne's land was mine to all intents
+and purposes before it was his, and now it reverts to me. I owe him
+nothing, and he did not give it me. Will you stay and farm it on
+whatever arrangement Dane and Macdonald may consider equitable? My
+uncle's hands are too full for him to attempt it."
+
+"No," said Witham, and his voice trembled a little. "Your friends
+would resent it."
+
+"Then," said the girl, "why have they urged you to stay?"
+
+"A generous impulse. They would repent of it by and by. I am not one
+of them, and they know it now, as I did at the beginning. No doubt
+they would be courteous, but you see a half-contemptuous toleration
+would gall me."
+
+There was a little smile on Maud Barrington's lips, but it was not in
+keeping with the tinge in her cheek and the flash in her eyes.
+
+"I once told you that you were poor at subterfuge, and you know you
+are wronging them," she said. "You also know that even if they were
+hostile to you, you could stay and compel them to acknowledge you. I
+fancy you once admitted as much to me. What has become of this pride
+of the democracy you showed me?"
+
+Witham made a deprecatory gesture. "You must have laughed at me. I had
+not been long at Silverdale then," he said dryly. "I should feel very
+lonely now. One man against long generations. Wouldn't it be a trifle
+unequal?"
+
+Maud Barrington smiled again. "I did not laugh, and this is not
+England, though what you consider prejudices do not count for so much
+as they used to there, while there is, one is told quite frequently,
+no limit to what a man may attain to here, if he dares sufficiently."
+
+A little quiver ran through Witham, and he rose and stood looking down
+on her, with one brown hand clenched on the table and the veins
+showing on his forehead.
+
+"You would have me stay?" he said.
+
+Maud Barrington met his eyes, for the spirit that was in her was the
+equal of his. "I would have you be yourself--what you were when you
+came here in defiance of Colonel Barrington, and again when you sowed
+the last acre of Courthorne's land, while my friends, who are yours
+too, looked on wondering. Then you would stay--if it pleased you.
+Where has your splendid audacity gone?"
+
+Witham slowly straightened himself and the girl noticed the damp the
+struggle had brought there on his forehead, for he understood that if
+he would stretch out his hand and take it what he longed for might be
+his.
+
+"I do not know, any more than I know where it came from, for until I
+met Courthorne I had never made a big venture in my life," he said.
+"It seems it has served its turn and left me--for now there are things
+I am afraid to do."
+
+"So you will go away and forget us?"
+
+Witham stood very still a moment, and the girl, who felt her heart
+beating noticed that his face was drawn. Still, she could go no
+further. Then he said very slowly, "I should be under the shadow
+always if I stay, and my friends would feel it even more deeply than I
+would do. I may win the right to come back again if I go away."
+
+Maud Barrington made no answer, but both knew no further word could be
+spoken on that subject until, if fate ever willed it, the man returned
+again, and it was a relief when Miss Barrington came in with Dane. He
+glanced at his comrade keenly, and then, seeing the grimness in his
+face, quietly declined the white-haired lady's offer of hospitality.
+Five minutes later the farewells were said and Maud Barrington stood
+with the stinging flakes whirling about her in the doorway, while the
+sleigh slid out into the filmy whiteness that drove across the
+prairie. When it vanished she turned back into the warmth and
+brightness with a little shiver and one hand tightly closed.
+
+The great room seemed very lonely when, while the wind moaned outside,
+she and her aunt sat down to dinner. Neither of them appeared
+communicative, and both felt it a relief when the meal was over. Then
+Maud Barrington smiled curiously as she rose and stood with hands
+stretched out towards the stove.
+
+"Aunt," she said, "Twoinette has twice asked me to go back to
+Montreal, and I think I will. The prairie is very dreary in the
+winter."
+
+It was about this time when, as the whitened horses floundered through
+the lee of a bluff where there was shelter from the wind, the men in
+the sleigh found opportunity for speech.
+
+"Now," said Dane quietly, "I know that we have lost you, for a while
+at least. Will you ever come back, Witham?"
+
+Witham nodded. "Yes," he said. "When time has done its work and
+Colonel Barrington asks me, if I can buy land enough to give me a
+standing at Silverdale."
+
+"That," said Dane, "will need a good many dollars, and you insisted on
+flinging those you had away. How are you going to make them?"
+
+"I don't know," said Witham simply. "Still, by some means it will be
+done."
+
+It was next day when he walked into Graham's office at Winnipeg, and
+laughed when the broker who shook hands, passed the cigar box across
+to him.
+
+"We had better understand each other first," he said. "You have heard
+what has happened to me, and will not find me a profitable customer
+to-day."
+
+"These cigars are the best in the city, or I wouldn't ask you to take
+one," said Graham dryly. "You understand me, anyway. Wait until I tell
+my clerk that if anybody comes round I'm busy."
+
+A bell rang, a little window opened and shut again, and Witham smiled
+over his cigar.
+
+"I want to make thirty thousand dollars as soon as I can, and it seems
+to me there are going to be opportunities in this business. Do you
+know anybody who would take me as clerk or salesman?"
+
+Graham did not appear astonished.
+
+"You'll scarcely make them that way if I find you a berth at fifty a
+month," he said.
+
+"No," said Witham. "Still, I wouldn't purpose keeping it for more than
+six months or so. By that time I should know a little about the
+business."
+
+"Got any dollars now?"
+
+"One thousand," said Witham quietly.
+
+Graham nodded. "Smoke that cigar out, and don't worry me. I've got
+some thinking to do."
+
+Witham took up a journal, and laid it down again twenty minutes later.
+"Well," he said, "you think it's too big a thing?"
+
+"No," said Graham. "It depends upon the man, and it might be done.
+Knowing the business goes a good way, and so does having dollars in
+hand, but there's something that's born in one man in a thousand that
+goes a long way further still. I can't tell you what it is, but I know
+it when I see it."
+
+"Then," said Witham, "you have seen this thing in me?"
+
+Graham nodded gravely. "Yes, sir, but you don't want to get proud. You
+had nothing to do with the getting of it. It was given you. Now, we're
+going to have a year that will not be forgotten by those who handle
+wheat and flour, and the men with the long heads will roll the dollars
+in. Well, I've no use for another clerk, and my salesman's good enough
+for me, but if we can agree on the items I'll take you for a partner."
+
+The offer was made and accepted quietly, and when a rough draft of the
+arrangement had been agreed upon, Graham nodded as he lighted another
+cigar.
+
+"You may as well take hold at once, and there's work ready now," he
+said. "You've heard of the old St. Louis mills back on the edge of the
+bush country. Never did any good. Folks who had them were short of
+dollars, and didn't know how they should be run. Well, I and two other
+men have bought them for a song, and while the place is tumbling in,
+the plant seems good. Now, I can get hold of orders for flour when I
+want them, and everybody with dollars to spare will plank them right
+into any concern handling food-stuffs this year. You go down to-morrow
+with an engineer, and, when you've got the mills running and orders
+coming in, we'll sell out to a company if we don't want them."
+
+Witham sat silent a space, turning over a big bundle of plans and
+estimates. Then he said, "You'll have to lay out a pile of dollars."
+
+Graham laughed. "That's going to be your affair. When you want them
+the dollars will be ready, and there's only one condition. Every
+dollar we put down has got to bring another in."
+
+"But," said Witham, "I don't know anything about milling."
+
+"Then," said Graham dryly, "you have got to learn. A good many men
+have got quite rich in this country running things they didn't know
+much about when they took hold of them."
+
+"There's one more point," said Witham. "I must make those thirty
+thousand dollars soon, or they'll be no great use to me, and when I
+have them I may want to leave you."
+
+"That's all right," said Graham. "By the time you've done it, you'll
+have made sixty for me. We'll go out and have some lunch to clinch the
+deal if you're ready."
+
+It might have appeared unusual in England, but it was much less so in
+a country where the specialization of professions is still almost
+unknown, and the man who can adapt himself attains ascendency, and on
+the morrow Witham arrived at a big wooden building beside a
+pine-shrouded river. It appeared falling to pieces, and the engineer
+looked disdainfully at some of the machinery, but, somewhat against
+his wishes, he sat up with his companion most of the night in a little
+log hotel, and orders that occasioned one of Graham's associates
+consternation were mailed to the city next morning. Then machines came
+out by the carload, and men with tools in droves. Some of them
+murmured mutinously when they found they were expected to do as much
+as their leader who was not a tradesman, but these were forthwith sent
+back again, and the rest were willing to stay and earn the premium he
+promised them for rapid work.
+
+Before the frost grew Arctic, the building stood firm and the hammers
+rang inside it night and day until when the ice had bound the dam and
+lead the fires were lighted and the trials under steam again. It cost
+more than water, but buyers with orders from the East were clamouring
+for flour just then. For a fortnight Witham snatched his food in
+mouthfuls, and scarcely closed his eyes, when Graham found him pale
+and almost haggard when he came down with several men from the cities
+in response to a telegram. For an hour they moved up and down,
+watching whirring belt and humming roller, and then, whitened with the
+dust, stood very intent and quiet while one of them dipped up a little
+flour from the delivery hopper. His opinions on, and dealings in that
+product were famous in the land. He said nothing for several minutes,
+and then, brushing the white dust from his hands, turned with a little
+smile to Graham.
+
+"We'll have some baked, but I don't know that there's much use for it.
+This will grade a very good first," he said. "You can book me the
+thousand two eighties for a beginning now."
+
+Witham's fingers trembled, but there was a twinkle in Graham's eyes as
+he brought his hand down on his shoulder.
+
+"Gentlemen," he said, "I was figuring right on this when I brought the
+champagne along. It was all I could do, but Imperial Tokay wouldn't be
+good enough to rinse this dust down with, when every speck of it
+that's on you means dollars by the handful rolling in."
+
+It was a very contented and slightly hilarious party that went back to
+the city, but Witham sat down before a shaded lamp with a wet rag
+round his head when they left him, and bent over a sheaf of drawings
+until his eyes grew dim. Then he once more took up a little strip of
+paper that Graham had given him, and leaned forward with his arms upon
+the table. The mill was very silent at last, for of all who toiled in
+it that day one weary man alone sat awake, staring, with aching eyes,
+in front of him. There was, however, a little smile in them, for
+roseate visions floated before them. If the promise that strip of
+paper held out was redeemed, they might be materialized, for those who
+had toiled and wasted their substance that the eastern peoples might
+be fed would that year, at least, not go without their reward. Then he
+stretched out his arms wearily above his head.
+
+"It almost seems that what I have hoped for may be mine," he said.
+"Still, there is a good deal to be done first, and not two hours left
+before I begin it to-morrow."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REINSTATION
+
+
+A year of tireless effort and some anxiety had passed since Witham had
+seen the first load of flour sent to the east, when he and Graham sat
+talking in their Winnipeg office. The products of the St. Louis mills
+were already in growing demand, and Graham appeared quietly contented
+as he turned over the letters before him. When he laid down the last
+one, however, he glanced at his companion somewhat anxiously.
+
+"We have got to fix up something soon," he said. "I have booked all
+the St. Louis can turn out for six months ahead, and the syndicate is
+ready to take the business over, though I don't know quite whether it
+would be wise to let them. It seems to me that milling is going to pay
+tolerably well for another year, and if I knew what you were wanting,
+it would suit me better."
+
+"I told you I wanted thirty thousand dollars," said Witham quietly.
+
+"You've got them," said Graham. "When the next balance comes out
+you'll have a good many more. The question is, what you're going to do
+with them now they're yours?"
+
+Witham took out a letter from Dane and passed it across to Graham.
+"I'm sorry to tell you the Colonel is getting no better," it ran. "The
+specialist we brought in seems to think he will never be quite himself
+again, and now he has let the reins go, things are falling to pieces
+at Silverdale. Somebody left Atterly a pile of money, and he is going
+back to the old country, Carshalton is going, too; and, as they can't
+sell out to any one we don't approve of, the rest insisted on my
+seeing you. I purpose starting to-morrow."
+
+"What happened to Colonel Barrington?" asked Graham.
+
+"His sleigh turned over," said Witham. "Horse trampled on him, and it
+was an hour or two before his hired man could get him under shelter."
+
+"You would be content to turn farmer again?"
+
+"I think I would," said Witham. "At least, at Silverdale."
+
+Graham made a little grimace. "Well," he said resignedly, "I guess
+it's human nature; but I'm thankful now and then there's nothing about
+me but my dollars that would take the eye of any young woman. I figure
+they're kind of useful to wake up a man so he'll stir round looking
+for something to offer one of them, but he is apt to find his business
+must go second when she has got it and him, and he has to waste on
+house fixings what would give a man a fair start in life. Still, it's
+no use talking. What have you told him?"
+
+Witham laughed a little. "Nothing," he said. "I will let him come, and
+you shall have my decision when I've been to Silverdale."
+
+It was next day when Dane arrived at Winnipeg, and Witham listened
+gravely to all he had to tell him.
+
+"I have two questions to ask," he said. "Would the others be unanimous
+in receiving me, and does Colonel Barrington know of your mission?"
+
+"Yes to both," said Dane. "We haven't a man there who would not hold
+out his hand to you, and Barrington has been worrying and talking a
+good deal about you lately. He seems to fancy nothing has gone right
+at Silverdale since you left it, and others share his opinion. The
+fact is, the old man is losing his grip tolerably rapidly."
+
+"Then," said Witham quietly, "I'll go down with you, but I can make no
+promise until I have heard the others."
+
+Dane smiled a little. "That is all I want. I don't know whether I told
+you that Maud Barrington is there. Would to-morrow suit you?"
+
+"No," said Witham. "I will come to-day."
+
+It was early next morning when they stepped out of the stove-warmed
+car into the stinging cold of the prairie. Fur-clad figures, showing
+shapeless in the creeping light, clustered about them, and Witham felt
+himself thumped on the shoulders by mittened hands, while Alfreton's
+young voice broke through the murmurs of welcome.
+
+"Let him alone while he's hungry," he said. "It's the first time in
+its history they've had breakfast ready at this hour in the hotel, and
+it would not have been accomplished if I hadn't spent most of
+yesterday playing cards with the man who keeps it and making love to
+the young women!"
+
+"That's quite right," said another lad. "When he takes his cap off
+you'll see how one of them rewarded him. But come along, Witham.
+It--is--ready."
+
+The greetings might, of course, have been expressed differently, but
+Witham also was not addicted to displaying all he felt, and the little
+ring in the lads' voices was enough for him. As they moved towards the
+hotel he saw that Dane was looking at him.
+
+"Well?" said the latter, "you see, they want you."
+
+That was probably the most hilarious breakfast that had ever been held
+in the wooden hotel; and before it was over, three of his companions
+had said to Witham, "Of course, you'll drive in with me!"
+
+"Boys," he said, as they put their furs on, and his voice shook a
+trifle, "I can't ride in with everybody who has asked me unless you
+dismember me."
+
+Finally, Alfreton, who was a trifle too quick for the others, got him
+into his sleigh, and they swept out behind a splendid team into the
+frozen stillness of the prairie. The white leagues rolled behind them,
+the cold grew intense; but while Witham was for the most part silent
+and apparently preoccupied, Alfreton talked almost incessantly, and
+only once looked grave. That happened when Witham asked about Colonel
+Barrington.
+
+The lad shook his head. "I scarcely think he will ever take hold
+again," he said. "You will understand me better when you see him."
+
+They stopped awhile at mid-day at an outlying farm, but Witham glanced
+inquiringly at Alfreton when one of the sleighs went on. The lad
+smiled at him.
+
+"Yes," he said. "He is going on to tell them we have got you."
+
+"They would have found it out in a few more hours," said Witham.
+
+Alfreton's eyes twinkled. "No doubt they would," he said dryly.
+"Still, you see, somebody was offering two to one that Dane couldn't
+bring you, and you know we're generally keen about any kind of wager."
+
+The explanation, which was not quite out of keeping with the customs
+of the younger men at Silverdale did not content Witham, but he said
+nothing. So far his return had resembled a triumph, and while the
+sincerity of the welcome had its effect on him, he shrank a little
+from what he fancied might be waiting him.
+
+The creeping darkness found them still upon the waste, and the cold
+grew keener when the stars peeped out. Even sound seemed frozen, and
+the faint muffled beat of hoofs unreal and out of place in the icy
+stillness of the wilderness. Still, the horses knew they were nearing
+home, and swung into faster pace, while the men drew fur caps down and
+the robes closer round them as the draught their passage made stung
+them with a cold that seemed to sear the skin where there was an inch
+left uncovered on the face. Now and then a clump of willows or a birch
+bluff flitted out of the dimness, grew a trifle blacker, and was left
+behind; but there was still no sign of habitation, and Alfreton, too
+chilled at last to speak, passed the reins to Witham and beat his
+mittened hands. Witham could scarcely grasp them, for he had lived of
+late in the cities, and the cold he had been sheltered from was
+numbing.
+
+For another hour they slid onwards, and then a dim blur crept out of
+the white waste. It rose higher, cutting more blackly against the sky;
+and Witham recognized with a curious little quiver the birch bluff
+that sheltered Silverdale Grange. Then, as they swept through the
+gloom of it, a row of ruddy lights blinked across the snow; and Witham
+felt his heart beat as he watched the homestead grow into form. He had
+first come there an impostor, and had left it an outcast; while now it
+was amidst the acclamations of those who had once looked on him with
+suspicion he was coming back again.
+
+Still, he was almost too cold for any definite feeling but the sting
+of the frost, and it was very stiffly he stood up, shaken by vague
+emotions, when at last the horses stopped. A great door swung open,
+somebody grasped his hand, there was a murmur of voices, and partly
+dazed by the change of temperature he blundered into the warmth of the
+hall. The blaze of light bewildered him, and he was but dimly sensible
+that the men who greeted him were helping him to shake off his furs;
+while the next thing he was sure of was that a little white-haired
+lady was holding out her hand.
+
+"We are all very glad to see you back," she said, with a simplicity
+that yet suggested stateliness. "Your friends insisted on coming over
+to welcome you, and Dane will not let you keep them waiting too long.
+Dinner is almost ready."
+
+Witham could not remember what he answered, but Miss Barrington smiled
+at him as she moved away, for the flush in his face was very eloquent.
+The man was very grateful for that greeting, and what it implied. It
+was a few minutes later when he found himself alone with Dane, who
+laughed softly as he nodded to him.
+
+"You are convinced at last?" he said. "Still there is a little more of
+the same thing to be faced; and, if it would relieve you, I will send
+for Alfreton, who has some taste in that direction, to fix that tie
+for you. You have been five minutes over it, and it evidently does not
+please you. It's the first time I've ever seen you worry about your
+dress."
+
+Witham turned, and a curious smile crept into his face as he laid a
+lean hand that shook a little on the toilet table.
+
+"I also think it's the first time these fingers wouldn't do what I
+wanted them. You can deduce what you please from that," he said.
+
+Dane only nodded, and when they went down together laid a kindly grasp
+upon his comrade's arm as he led him into the great dining-room. Every
+man at Silverdale was apparently there, as were most of the women; and
+Witham stood still a moment, very erect, with shoulders square,
+because the posture enabled him to conceal the tremor that ran through
+him when he saw the smiling faces turned upon him. Then he moved
+slowly down the room towards Maud Barrington, and felt her hand rest
+for a second between his fingers, which he feared were too responsive.
+After that, everybody seemed to speak to him, and he was glad when he
+found himself sitting next to Miss Barrington at the head of the long
+table, with her niece opposite him.
+
+He could not remember what he or the others talked about during the
+meal, but he had a vague notion that there was now and then a silence
+of attention when he answered a question, and that the little lady's
+face grew momentarily grave when, as the voice sank a trifle, he
+turned to her.
+
+"I would have paid my respects to Colonel Barrington, but Dane did not
+consider it advisable," he said.
+
+"No," said Miss Barrington. "He has talked a good deal about you
+during the last two days, but he is sleeping now, and we did not care
+to disturb him. I am afraid you will find a great change in him when
+you see him."
+
+Witham asked no more questions on that topic until later in the
+evening, when he found a place apart from the rest by Miss
+Barrington's side. He fancied this would not have happened without her
+connivance and she seemed graver than usual when he stood by her
+chair.
+
+"I don't wish to pain you, but I surmise that Colonel Barrington is
+scarcely well enough to be consulted about anything of importance just
+now," he said.
+
+Miss Barrington made a little gesture of assent. "We usually pay him
+the compliment, but I am almost afraid he will never make a decision
+of moment again."
+
+"Then," said Witham slowly, "you stand in his place, and I fancy you
+know why I have come back to Silverdale. Will you listen for a very
+few minutes while I tell you about my parents and what my upbringing
+has been? I must return to Winnipeg, for a time, at least, to-morrow."
+
+Miss Barrington signed her willingness, and the man spoke rapidly with
+a faint trace of hoarseness. Then he looked down on her.
+
+"Madam," he said, "I have told you everything, partly from respect for
+those who only by a grim sacrifice did what they could for me, and
+that you may realize the difference between myself and the rest at
+Silverdale. I want to be honest now at least, and I discovered, not
+without bitterness at the time, that the barriers between our castes
+are strong in the old country."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled a little. "Have I ever made you feel it here?"
+
+"No," said Witham gravely. "Still, I am going to put your forbearance
+to a strenuous test. I want your approval. I have a question to ask
+your niece to-night."
+
+"If I withheld it?"
+
+"It would hurt me," said Witham. "Still, I would not be astonished,
+and I could not blame you."
+
+"But it would make no difference?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham gravely. "It would, but it would not cause me to
+desist. Nothing would do that, if Miss Barrington can overlook the
+past."
+
+The little white-haired lady smiled at him. "Then," she said, "if it
+is any comfort to you, you have my good wishes. I do not know what
+Maud's decision will be, but that is the spirit which would have
+induced me to listen in times long gone by!"
+
+She rose and left him, and it may have been by her arranging that
+shortly afterwards Witham found Maud Barrington passing through the
+dimly-lighted hall. He opened the door she moved towards a trifle, and
+then stood facing her, with it in his hand.
+
+"Will you wait a moment, and then you may pass if you wish," he said.
+"I had one great inducement for coming here to-night. I wonder if you
+know what it is?"
+
+The girl stood still and met his gaze, though, dim as the light was,
+the man could see the crimson in her cheeks.
+
+"Yes," she said, very quietly.
+
+"Then," said Witham with a little smile, though the fingers on the
+door quivered visibly, "I think the audacity you once mentioned must
+have returned to me, for I am going to make a very great venture."
+
+For a moment Maud Barrington turned her eyes away. "It is the daring
+venture that most frequently succeeds."
+
+Then she felt the man's hand on her shoulder, and that he was
+compelling her to look up at him.
+
+"It is you I came for," he said quietly. "Still, for you know the
+wrong I have done, I dare not urge you, and have little to offer. It
+is you who must give everything, if you can come down from your
+station and be content with mine."
+
+"One thing," said Maud Barrington, very softly, "is, however,
+necessary."
+
+"That," said Witham, "was yours ever since we spent the night in the
+snow."
+
+The girl felt his grip upon her shoulder grow almost painful, but her
+eyes shone softly when she lifted her head again.
+
+"Then," she said, "what I can give is yours--and it seems you have
+already taken possession."
+
+Witham drew her towards him, and it may have been by Miss Barrington's
+arranging that nobody entered the hall, but at last the girl glanced
+up at the man half-shyly as she said, "Why did you wait so long?"
+
+"It was well worth while," said Witham. "Still, I think you know."
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington softly. "Now, at least, I can tell you I
+am glad you went away--but if you had asked me I would have gone with
+you."
+
+It was some little time later when Miss Barrington came in and, after
+a glance at Witham, kissed her niece. Then she turned to the man. "My
+brother is asking for you," she said. "Will you come up with me?"
+
+Witham followed her, and hid his astonishment when he found Colonel
+Barrington lying in a big chair. His face was haggard and pale, his
+form seemed to have grown limp and fragile, and the hand he held out
+trembled.
+
+"Lance," he said, "I am very pleased to have you home again. I hear
+you have done wonders in the city, but you are, I think, the first of
+your family who could ever make money. I have, as you will see, not
+been well lately."
+
+"I am relieved to find you better than I expected, sir," Witham said
+quietly. "Still, I fancy you are forgetting what I told you the night
+I went away."
+
+Barrington nodded, and then made a little impatient gesture. "There
+was something unpleasant, but my memory seems to be going, and my
+sister has forgiven you. I know you did a good deal for us at
+Silverdale, and showed yourself a match for the best of them in the
+city. That pleases me. By and by, you will take hold here after me."
+
+Witham glanced at Miss Barrington, who smiled somewhat sadly.
+
+"I am glad you mentioned that, sir, because I purpose staying at
+Silverdale now," he said. "It leads up to what I have to ask you."
+
+Barrington's perceptions seemed to grow clearer, and he asked a few
+pertinent questions before he nodded approbation.
+
+"Yes," he said, "she is a good girl--a very good girl, and it would be
+a suitable match. I should like somebody to send for her."
+
+Maud Barrington came in softly, with a little glow in her eyes and a
+flush in her face, and Barrington smiled at her.
+
+"My dear, I am very pleased, and I wish you every happiness," he said.
+"Once I would scarcely have trusted you to Lance, but he will forgive
+me, and has shown me that I was wrong. You and he will make Silverdale
+famous, and it is comforting to know, now my rest is very near, that
+you have chosen a man of your own station to follow me. With all our
+faults and blunders, blood is bound to tell."
+
+Witham saw that Miss Barrington's eyes were a trifle misty, and he
+felt his face grow hot, but the girl's fingers touched his arm, and he
+followed, when, while her aunt signed approbation, she led him away.
+Then, when they stood outside she laid her hands upon his face and
+drew it down to her.
+
+"You will forget it, dear, and he is still wrong. If you had been
+Lance Courthorne, I should never have done this," she said.
+
+"No," said the man gravely. "I think there are many ways in which he
+is right, but you can be content with Witham the prairie farmer?"
+
+Maud Barrington drew closer to him with a little smile in her eyes.
+"Yes," she said simply. "There never was a Courthorne who could stand
+beside him."
+
+
+London: Ward, Lock & Co., Ltd.
+
+
+
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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Impostor, by Harold Bindloss</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ p.center {text-align:center}
+ p.tight {margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0}
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+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Impostor, by Harold Bindloss, Illustrated
+by Victor Prout</h1>
+<p>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 <a
+href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></p>
+<p>Title: The Impostor</p>
+<p>Author: Harold Bindloss</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 14, 2012 [eBook #39698]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IMPOSTOR***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
+ and the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdpcanada.net">http://www.pgdpcanada.net</a>)<br />
+ from images of public domain material generously made available<br />
+ by the University of Toronto Libraries<br />
+ (<a href="http://onesearch.library.utoronto.ca">http://onesearch.library.utoronto.ca</a>)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:1.4em;'>THE IMPOSTOR.</p>
+<hr style='border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; width:70%; margin:2em auto' />
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>
+<img src='images/illus-001.jpg' alt=''/>
+<p class='caption'>“In the meanwhile, Maud Barrington sat by the open window in her room.” (Chapter XVI.)</p>
+</div>
+<hr style='border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; width:70%; margin:2em auto' />
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:1.4em;margin-bottom:2em;'>THE IMPOSTOR</p>
+
+<p class='center tight' style=''>By</p>
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:2em;'>HAROLD BINDLOSS</p>
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:0.8em;'>Author of “Hawtrey’s Deputy,” “The Liberationist,”</p>
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:2em;'>“A Sower of Wheat,” “The Pioneer,” etc.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class='center tight' style=''>WARD, LOCK &amp; CO., LIMITED</p>
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:0.8em;'>LONDON, MELBOURNE AND TORONTO</p>
+<hr style='border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; width:70%; margin:2em auto' />
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:1.2em;'>CONTENTS</p>
+
+<table id='toc' style='margin:auto' summary='TOC'>
+<tr><td align='right'>I</td><td><a href='#clink01'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Rancher Witham</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II</td><td><a href='#clink02'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Lance Courthorne</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>III</td><td><a href='#clink03'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Trooper Shannon’s Quarrel</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IV</td><td><a href='#clink04'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>In the Bluff</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>V</td><td><a href='#clink05'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Miss Barrington Comes Home</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VI</td><td><a href='#clink06'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Anticipations</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VII</td><td><a href='#clink07'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Witham’s Decision</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VIII</td><td><a href='#clink08'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Witham Comes to Silverdale</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IX</td><td><a href='#clink09'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>An Armistice</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>X</td><td><a href='#clink10'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Maud Barrington’s Promise</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XI</td><td><a href='#clink11'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Speed the Plough</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XII</td><td><a href='#clink12'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Mastery Recognized</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIII</td><td><a href='#clink13'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A Fair Advocate</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIV</td><td><a href='#clink14'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Unexpected</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XV</td><td><a href='#clink15'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Facing the Flame</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVI</td><td><a href='#clink16'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Maud Barrington is Merciless</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVII</td><td><a href='#clink17'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>With the Stream</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVIII</td><td><a href='#clink18'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Under Test</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIX</td><td><a href='#clink19'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Courthorne Blunders</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XX</td><td><a href='#clink20'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Face at the Window</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXI</td><td><a href='#clink21'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Colonel Barrington is Convinced</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXII</td><td><a href='#clink22'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Sergeant Stimson Confirms his Suspicions</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIII</td><td><a href='#clink23'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Revelation</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIV</td><td><a href='#clink24'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Courthorne makes Reparation</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXV</td><td><a href='#clink25'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Witham Rides Away</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVI</td><td><a href='#clink26'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Reinstation</span></a></td></tr>
+</table>
+<hr style='border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; width:70%; margin:2em auto' />
+
+<p class='center tight' style='font-size:1.4em;'>THE IMPOSTOR</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink01'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER I—RANCHER WITHAM</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was a bitter night, for although there was no snow
+as yet, the frost had bound the prairie in its iron grip,
+when Rancher Witham stood shivering in a little
+Canadian settlement in the great, lonely land which
+runs north from the American frontier to Athabasca.
+There was no blink of starlight in the murky sky, and
+a stinging wind that came up out of the great waste
+of grass moaned about the frame houses clustering
+beside the trail that led south over the limited levels
+to the railroad and civilization. It chilled Witham
+through his somewhat tattered furs, and he strode
+up and down, glancing expectantly into the darkness,
+and then across the unpaved street, where the ruts
+were ploughed a foot deep in the prairie sod, towards
+the warm, red glow from the windows of the wooden
+hotel. He knew that the rest of the outlying farmers
+and ranchers who had ridden in for their letters were
+sitting snug about the stove, but it was customary
+for all who sought shelter there to pay for their share
+of the six o’clock supper, and the half-dollar Witham
+had then in his pocket was required for other purposes.</p>
+
+<p>He had also retained through all his struggles a
+measure of his pride, and because of it strode up and
+down buffeted by the blasts until a beat of horse-hoofs
+came out of the darkness and was followed by a rattle
+of wheels. It grew steadily louder, a blinking ray
+of brightness flickered across the frame houses, and
+presently dark figures were silhouetted against the
+light on the hotel veranda as a lurching wagon drew
+up beneath it. Two dusky objects, shapeless in their
+furs, sprang down, and one stumbled into the post
+office close by with a bag while the other man answered
+the questions hurled at him as he fumbled with stiffened
+fingers at the harness.</p>
+
+<p>“Late? Well, you might be thankful you’ve got
+your mail at all,” he said. “We had to go round by
+Willow Bluff, and didn’t think we’d get through the
+ford. Ice an inch thick, anyway, and Charley talked
+that much he’s not said anything since, even when
+the near horse put his foot into a badger hole.”</p>
+
+<p>Rude banter followed this, but Witham took no
+part in it. Hastening into the post office, he stood
+betraying his impatience by his very impassiveness
+while a sallow-faced woman tossed the letters out
+upon the counter. At last she took up two of them,
+and the man’s fingers trembled a little as he stretched
+out his hand, when she said—</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all there are for you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham recognized the writing on the envelopes,
+and it was with difficulty he held his eagerness in
+check, but other men were waiting for his place, and
+he went out and crossed the street to the hotel where
+there was light to read by. As he entered it a girl,
+bustling about a long table in the big stove-warmed
+room, turned with a little smile.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s only you!” she said. “Now I was figuring
+it was Lance Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham, impatient as he was, stopped and laughed,
+for the hotel-keeper’s daughter was tolerably
+well-favoured and a friend of his.</p>
+
+<p>“And you’re disappointed?” he said. “I haven’t
+Lance’s good looks, or his ready tongue.”</p>
+
+<p>The room was empty, for the guests were thronging
+about the post office then, and the girl’s eyes twinkled
+as she drew back a pace and surveyed the man. There
+was nothing in his appearance that would have aroused
+a stranger’s interest, or attracted more than a passing
+glance, and he stood before her in a very old fur coat,
+with a fur cap that was in keeping with it in his hand.
+His face had been bronzed almost to the colour of a
+Blackfoot Indian’s by frost and wind and sun, and
+it was of English type from the crisp fair hair above
+the broad forehead to the somewhat solid chin. The
+mouth was hidden by the bronze-tinted moustache,
+and the eyes alone, were noticeable. They were
+grey, and there was a steadiness in them which was
+almost unusual even in that country, where men look
+into long distances. For the rest, he was of average
+stature, and stood impassively straight, looking down
+upon the girl without either grace or awkwardness,
+while his hard brown hands, suggested, as his attire
+did, strenuous labour for a very small reward.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the girl with Western frankness,
+“there’s a kind of stamp on Lance that you haven’t
+got. I figure he brought it with him from the old
+country. Still, one might take you for him if you
+stood with the light behind you, and you’re not quite
+a bad-looking man. It’s a kind of pity you’re so
+solemn.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled. “I don’t fancy that’s astonishing
+after losing two harvests in succession,” he said.
+“You see, there’s nobody back there in the old country
+to send remittances to me.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl nodded with quick sympathy. “Oh,
+yes. The times are bad,” she said. “Well, you
+read your letters; I’m not going to worry you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat down and opened the first envelope
+under the big lamp. It was from a land agent and
+mortgage-broker, and his face grew a trifle grimmer
+as he read, “In the present condition of the money
+market your request that we should carry you over
+is unreasonable, and we regret that unless you can
+extinguish at least half the loan we will be compelled
+to foreclose upon your holding.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a little more of it, but that was sufficient
+for Witham, who knew it meant disaster, and it was
+with the feeling of one clinging desperately to the last
+shred of hope he tore open the second envelope. The
+letter it held was from a friend he had made in a
+Western city, and once entertained for a month at
+his ranch, but the man had evidently sufficient
+difficulties of his own to contend with.</p>
+
+<p>“Very sorry, but it can’t be done,” he wrote. “I’m
+loaded up with wheat nobody will buy, and couldn’t
+raise five hundred dollars to lend any one just now,”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sighed a little, but when he rose and slowly
+straightened himself nobody would have suspected
+he was looking ruin in the face. He had fought a
+slow, losing battle for six weary years, holding on
+doggedly though defeat appeared inevitable, and now
+when it had come he bore it impassively, for the
+struggle which, though he was scarcely twenty-six,
+had crushed all mirth and brightness out of his life,
+had given him endurance in place of them. Just then
+a man came bustling towards him, with the girl who
+bore a tray close behind.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you doing with that coat on?” he said.
+“Get it off and sit down right there. The boys are
+about through with the mail and supper’s ready,”</p>
+
+<p>Witham glanced at the steaming dishes hungrily,
+for he had passed most of the day in the bitter frost,
+eating very little, and there was still a drive of twenty
+miles before him.</p>
+
+<p>“It is time I was taking the trail,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He was sensible of a pain in his left side, which, as
+other men have discovered, not infrequently follows
+enforced abstinence from food, but he remembered
+what he wanted the half-dollar in his pocket for. The
+hotel-keeper had possibly some notion of the state of
+affairs, for he laughed a little.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve got to sit down,” he said. “Now, after
+the way you fixed me up when I stopped at your ranch,
+you don’t figure I’d let you go before you had some
+supper with me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham may have been unduly sensitive, but he
+shook his head. “You’re very good, but it’s a long
+ride, and I’m going now,” he said. “Good-night,
+Nettie.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned as he spoke, with the swift decision that
+was habitual with him, and when he went out the girl
+glanced at her father reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>“You always get spoiling things when you put your
+hand in,” she said. “Now that man’s hungry, and
+I’d have fixed it so he’d have got his supper if you had
+left it to me.”</p>
+
+<p>The hotel-keeper laughed a little. “I’m kind of
+sorry for Witham because there’s grit in him, and
+he’s never had a show,” he said. “Still, I figure he’s
+not worth your going out gunning after, Nettie.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl said nothing, but there was a little flush
+in her face which had not been there before, when she
+busied herself with the dishes.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Witham was harnessing two bronco
+horses to a very dilapidated wagon. They were
+vicious beasts, but he had bought them cheap from a
+man who had some difficulty in driving them, while
+the wagon had been given him, when it was apparently
+useless, by a neighbour. The team had, however,
+already covered thirty miles that day, and started
+homewards at a steady trot without the playful kicking
+they usually indulged in. Here and there a man
+sprang clear of the rutted road, but Witham did not
+notice him or return his greeting. He was abstractedly
+watching the rude frame houses flit by, and wondering,
+while the pain in his side grew keener, when he
+would get his supper, for it happens not infrequently
+that the susceptibilities are dulled by a heavy blow,
+and the victim finds a distraction that is almost welcome
+in the endurance of a petty trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Witham was very hungry, and weary alike in body
+and mind. The sun had not risen when he left his
+homestead, and he had passed the day under a
+nervous strain, hoping, although it seemed improbable,
+that the mail would bring him relief from his
+anxieties. Now he knew the worst he could bear it as
+he had borne the loss of two harvests, and the disaster
+which followed in the wake of the blizzard that killed
+off his stock; but it seemed unfair that he should
+endure cold and hunger too, and when one wheel sank
+in a rut and the jolt shook him in every stiffened limb,
+he broke out with a hoarse expletive. It was his first
+protest against the fate that was too strong for him,
+and almost as he made it he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“Pshaw! There’s no use kicking against what
+has to be, and I’ve got to keep my head just now,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>There was no great comfort in the reflection, but it
+had sustained him before, and Witham’s head was a
+somewhat exceptional one, though there was as a
+rule nothing in any way remarkable about his conversation,
+and he was apparently merely one of the
+many quietly-spoken, bronze-faced men who are even
+by their blunders building up a great future for the
+Canadian dominion. He accordingly drew his old
+rug tighter round him, and instinctively pulled his
+fur cap lower down when the lights of the settlement
+faded behind him and the creaking wagon swung out
+into the blackness of the prairie. It ran back league
+beyond league across three broad provinces, and the
+wind that came up out of the great emptiness emphasized
+its solitude. A man from the cities would have
+heard nothing but the creaking of the wagon and the
+drumming fall of hoofs, but Witham heard the grasses
+patter as they swayed beneath the bitter blasts stiff
+with frost, and the moan of swinging boughs in a far-off
+willow bluff. It was these things that guided him,
+for he had left the rutted trail, and here and there the
+swishen beneath the wheels told of taller grass, while the
+bluff ran black athwart the horizon when that had
+gone. Then twigs crackled beneath them as the
+horses picked their way amidst the shadowy trees
+stunted by a ceaseless struggle with the wind, and
+Witham shook the creeping drowsiness from him when
+they came out into the open again, for he knew it is
+not advisable for any man with work still to do to
+fall asleep under the frost of that country.</p>
+
+<p>Still, he grew a trifle dazed as the miles went by, and
+because of it indulged in memories he had shaken off
+at other times. They were blurred recollections of
+the land he had left eight years ago, pictures of sheltered
+England, half-forgotten music, the voices of
+friends who no longer remembered him, and the
+smiles in a girl’s bright eyes. Then he settled himself
+more firmly in the driving-seat, and with numbed
+fingers sought a tighter grip of the reins as the memory
+of the girl’s soft answer to a question he had asked
+brought his callow ambitions back.</p>
+
+<p>He was to hew his way to fortune in the West, and
+then come back for her, but the girl who had clung to
+him with wet cheeks when he left her had apparently
+grown tired of waiting, and Witham sent back her
+letters in return for a silver-printed card. That was
+six years ago, and now none of the dollars he had
+brought into the country remained to him. He
+realized, dispassionately and without egotism, that
+this was through no fault of his, for he knew that
+better men had been crushed and beaten.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, time he had done with these reflections,
+for while he sat half-dazed and more than half-frozen
+the miles had been flitting by, and now the team
+knew they were not very far from home. Little by
+little their pace increased, and Witham was almost
+astonished to see another bluff black against the
+night ahead of him. As usual in that country, the
+willows and birches crawled up the sides and just
+showed their heads above the sinuous crest of a river
+hollow. It was very dark when the wagon lurched
+in among them, and it cost the man an effort to discern
+the winding trail which led down into the blackness
+of the hollow. In places the slope was almost precipitous,
+and it behoved him to be careful of the horses,
+which could not be replaced. Without them he could
+not plough in spring, and his life did not appear of any
+especial value in comparison with theirs just then.</p>
+
+<p>The team, however, were evidently bent on getting
+home as soon as possible, and Witham’s fingers were too
+stiff to effectively grasp the reins. A swinging bough
+also struck one of the horses, and when it plunged
+and flung up its head the man reeled a little in his seat.
+Before he recovered the team were going down-hill at a
+gallop. Witham flung himself bodily backwards with
+tense muscles, and the reins slipping a trifle in his
+hands, knowing that though he bore against them with
+all his strength the team were leaving the trail. Then
+the wagon jolted against a tree, one horse stumbled,
+picked up its stride, and went on at a headlong gallop.
+The man felt the wind rush past him and saw
+the dim trees whirl by, but he could only hold on and
+wonder what would take place when they came to
+the bottom. The bridge the trail went round by was
+some distance to the right and because the frost had
+just set in he knew the ice on the river would not
+bear the load, even if the horses could keep their
+footing.</p>
+
+<p>He had not, however, long to wonder. Once more
+a horse stumbled, there was a crash, and a branch
+hurled Witham backwards into the wagon, which
+came to a standstill suddenly. When he rose something
+warm was running down his face, and there was
+a red smear on the hand he lighted the lantern with.
+When that was done he flung himself down from the
+wagon, dreading what he would find. The flickering
+radiance showed him that the pole had snapped, and
+while one bronco still stood trembling on its feet
+the other lay inert amidst a tangle of harness. The
+man’s face grew a trifle grimmer as he threw the light
+upon it, and then, stooping, glanced at one doubled
+leg. It was evident that fate, which did nothing by
+halves, had dealt him a crushing blow. The last
+faint hope he clung to had vanished now.</p>
+
+<p>He was, however, a humane man, and considerate
+of the beasts that worked for him, and accordingly
+thrust his hand inside the old fur coat, when he had
+loosed the uninjured horse, and drew out a long-bladed
+knife. Then he knelt and, setting down the lantern,
+felt for the place to strike. When he found it his courage
+almost deserted him, and meeting the eyes that
+seemed to look up at him with dumb appeal, turned
+his head away. Still, he was a man who would not
+shirk a painful duty, and shaking off the sense of revulsion
+turned again and stroked the beast’s head.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all I can do for you,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then his arm came down, and a tremor ran through
+the quivering frame, while Witham set his lips tightly
+as his hand grew warm. The thing was horrible to
+him, but the life he led had taught him the folly of
+weakness, and he was too pitiful to let his squeamishness
+overcome him.</p>
+
+<p>Still, he shivered when it was done, and rubbing
+the knife in the withered leaves, rose and made shift
+to gird a rug about the uninjured horse. Then he
+cut the reins and tied them, and mounting without
+stirrups rode towards the bridge. The horse went
+quietly enough now, and the man allowed it to choose
+its way. He was going home to find shelter from
+the cold, because his animal instincts prompted him,
+but otherwise, almost without volition, in a state of
+dispassionate indifference. Nothing more he fancied,
+could well befall him.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink02'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER II—LANCE COURTHORNE</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was late when Witham reached his log-built
+house, but he set out once more with his remaining
+horse before the lingering daylight crept out of the
+east, to haul the wagon home. He also spent most of
+the day in repairing it, because occupation of any kind
+that would keep him from unpleasant reflections appeared
+advisable, and to allow anything to fall out
+of use was distasteful to him, although as the wagon
+had been built for two horses he had little hope of
+driving it again. It was a bitter, grey day, with a low,
+smoky sky, and seemed very long to Witham; but
+evening came at last, and he was left with nothing
+between him and his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>He lay in a dilapidated chair beside the stove, and
+the little bare room through which its pipe ran was
+permeated with the smell of fresh shavings, hot iron,
+and the fumes of indifferent tobacco. A carpenter’s
+bench ran along one end of it, and was now occupied
+by a new wagon pole the man had fashioned out of a
+slender birch. A Marlin rifle, an axe, and a big saw
+hung beneath the head of an antelope on the wall
+above the bench, and all of them showed signs of use
+and glistened with oil. Opposite to them a few
+shelves were filled with simple crockery and cooking
+utensils, and these also shone spotlessly. There
+was a pair of knee boots in one corner with a patch
+partly sewn on to one of them, and the harness in
+another showed traces of careful repair. A bookcase
+hung above them, and its somewhat tattered
+contents indicated that the man who had chosen and
+evidently handled them frequently possessed tastes
+any one who did not know that country would scarcely
+have expected to find in a prairie farmer. A table
+and one or two rude chairs made by their owner’s
+hands completed the furniture; but while all hinted
+at poverty, it also suggested neatness, industry, and
+care, for the room bore the impress of its occupier’s
+individuality, as rooms not infrequently do.</p>
+
+<p>It was not difficult to see that he was frugal, though
+possibly from necessity rather than taste, not sparing
+of effort, and had a keen eye for utility, and if that
+suggested the question why, with such capacities, he
+had not attained to greater comfort, the answer was
+simple. Witham had no money, and the seasons had
+fought against him. He had done his uttermost with
+the means at his disposal, and now he knew he was
+beaten.</p>
+
+<p>A doleful wind moaned about the lonely building
+and set the roof shingles rattling overhead. Now and
+then the stove crackled, or the lamp flickered, and
+any one unused to the prairie would have felt the
+little loghouse very desolate and lonely. There was
+no other human habitation within a league, only a
+great waste of whitened grass relieved about the homestead
+by the raw clods of the fall ploughing; for,
+while his scattered neighbours, for the most part, put
+their trust in horses and cattle, Witham had been
+among the first to realize the capacities of that land
+as a wheat-growing country.</p>
+
+<p>Now, clad in well-worn jean trousers and an old
+deerskin jacket, he looked down at the bundle of documents
+on his knee, accounts unpaid, a banker’s intimation
+that no more cheques would be honoured
+and a mortgage deed. They were not pleasant reading,
+and the man’s face clouded as he pencilled notes
+on some of them, but there was no weakness or futile
+protest in it. Defeat was plain between the lines of
+all he read, but he was going on stubbornly until the
+struggle was ended, as others of his kind had done,
+there at the western limit of the furrows of the plough
+and in the great province further east which is one of
+the world’s granaries. They went under and were
+forgotten, but they showed the way, and while their
+guerdon was usually six feet of prairie soil, the wheat-fields,
+mills, and railroads came, for it is written
+plainly on the new North-West that no man may live
+and labour for himself alone, and there are many who,
+realizing it, instinctively ask very little, and freely
+give their best for the land that but indifferently
+shelters them.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, however, there was a knocking at the
+door, and though this was most unusual, Witham
+only quietly moved his head when a bitter blast came
+in, and a man wrapped in furs stood in the opening.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll put my horse in the stable while I’ve got my
+furs on. It’s a bitter night,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “You know where the lantern
+is,” he said. “There’s some chop in the manger, and
+you needn’t spare the oats in the bin. At present
+prices it doesn’t pay to haul them in.”</p>
+
+<p>The man closed the door silently, and it was ten
+minutes before he returned, and sloughing off his furs
+dropped into a chair beside the stove. “I got supper
+at Broughton’s, and don’t want anything but shelter
+to-night,” he said. “Shake that pipe out and try
+one of these instead.”</p>
+
+<p>He laid a cigar case on the table, and though well
+worn it was of costly make, with a good deal of silver
+about it, while Witham, who lighted one, knew that
+the cigars were good. He had no esteem for his visitor,
+but men are not censorious upon the prairie, and
+Western hospitality is always free.</p>
+
+<p>“Where have you come from, Courthorne?” he
+said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The other man laughed a little. “The long trail,” he
+said. “The Dakotas, Colorado, Montana. Cleaned
+up one thousand dollars at Regent, and might have
+got more, but some folks down there seemed tired
+of me. The play was quite regular, but they have
+apparently been getting virtuous lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“And now?” said Witham, with polite indifference.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne made a little gesture of deprecation.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m back again with the rustlers.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s nod signified comprehension, for the
+struggle between the great range-holders across the
+frontier and the smaller settlers who with legal right
+invaded their cattle runs was just over. It had been
+fought out bitterly with dynamite and rifles, and when
+at last, with the aid of the United States cavalry, peace
+was made, sundry broken men and mercenaries who
+had taken the pay of both parties, seeing their occupation
+gone, had found a fresh scope for their energies
+in smuggling liquor, and on opportunity transferring
+cattle, without their owners’ sanction, across
+the frontier. That was then a prohibition country,
+and the profits and risks attached to supplying it
+and the Blackfeet on the reserves with liquor were
+heavy.</p>
+
+<p>“Business this way?” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne appeared to consider a moment, and
+there was a curious little glint which did not escape
+his companion’s attention in his eyes, but he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, we’re making a big run,” he said, then
+stopped and looked straight at the rancher. “Did
+it ever strike you, Witham, that you were not unlike
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled, but made a little gesture of dissent
+as he returned the other’s gaze. They were about the
+same height and had the same English type of face,
+while Witham’s eyes were grey and his companion’s
+an indefinite blue that approached the former colour,
+but there the resemblance, which was not more than
+discernible, ended. Witham was quietly-spoken
+and somewhat grim, a plain prairie farmer in appearance,
+while a vague but recognizable stamp of breeding
+and distinction still clung to Courthorne. He
+would have appeared more in place in the States upon
+the southern Atlantic seaboard, where the characteristics
+the Cavalier settlers brought with them are not
+extinct, than he did upon the Canadian prairie. His
+voice had even in his merriment a little imperious
+ring, his face was refined as well as sensual, and there
+was a languid gracefulness in his movements and a
+hint of pride in his eyes. They, however, lacked the
+steadiness of Witham’s, and there were men who had
+seen the wild devil that was born in Courthorne look
+out of them. Witham knew him as a pleasant companion,
+but surmised from stories he had heard that
+there were men, and more women, who bitterly rued
+the trust they had placed in him.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he said dryly. “I scarcely think I am like
+you, although only last night Nettie at the settlement
+took me for you. You see, the kind of life I’ve
+led out here has set its mark on me, and my folks in
+the old country were distinctly middle-class people.
+There is something in heredity.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne did not parry the unexpressed question.
+“Oh, yes,” he said, with a little sardonic smile. “I
+know. The backbone of the nation—solemn, virtuous,
+and slow. You’re like them, but my folks
+were different, as you surmise. I don’t think they
+had many estimable qualities from your point of view,
+but if they all didn’t go quite straight they never went
+slow, and they had a few prejudices, which is why I
+found it advisable to leave the old country. Still,
+I’ve had my fill of all that life can offer most folks out
+here, while you scarcely seem to have found virtue
+pay you. They told me at the settlement things were
+bad with you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham, who was usually correct in his deductions,
+surmised that his companion had an object, and expected
+something in return for this confidence. There
+was also no need for reticence when every farmer in
+the district knew all about his affairs, while something
+urged him to follow Courthorne’s lead.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said quietly. “They are. You see,
+when I lost my cattle in the blizzard, I had to sell out
+or mortgage the place to the hilt, and during the last
+two years I haven’t made the interest. The loan falls
+due in August, and they’re going to foreclose on me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Courthorne, “what is keeping you
+here when the result of every hour’s work you put
+in will go straight into another’s man’s pocket?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled a little. “In the first place, I’ve
+nowhere else to go, and there’s something in the feeling
+that one has held on to the end. Besides, until
+a few days ago I had a vague hope that by working
+double tides, I might get another crop in. Somebody
+might have advanced me a little on it because the
+mortgage only claims the house and land.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne looked at him curiously. “No. We
+are not alike,” he said. “There’s a slow stubborn
+devil in you, Witham, and I think I’d be afraid of you
+if I ever did you an injury. But go on.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s very little more. My team ran away
+down the ravine, and I had to put one beast out of
+its misery. I can’t do my ploughing with one horse,
+and that leaves me stranded for the want of the dollars
+to buy another with. It’s usually a very little
+thing that turns the scale, but now the end has come,
+I don’t know that I’m sorry. I’ve never had a good
+time, you see, and the struggle was slowly crushing
+the life out of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham spoke quietly, without bitterness, but
+Courthorne, who had never striven at all but stretched
+out his hand and taken what was offered, the more
+willingly when it was banned alike by judicial and
+moral law, dimly understood him. He was a fearless
+man, but he knew his courage would not have been
+equal to the strain of that six years’ struggle against
+loneliness, physical fatigue, and adverse seasons,
+during which disaster followed disaster. He looked
+at the bronzed farmer as he said, “Still, you would
+do a little in return for a hundred dollars that would
+help you to go on with the fight?”</p>
+
+<p>A faint sparkle crept into Witham’s eyes. It was
+not hope, but rather the grim anticipation of the man
+offered a better weapon when standing with his back
+to the wall.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said slowly. “I would do almost anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even if it was against the law?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat silent for almost a minute, but there
+was no indecision in his face, which slightly perplexed
+Courthorne. “Yes,” he said. “Though I kept it
+while I could, the law was made for the safe-guarding
+of prosperous men, but with such as I am it is every
+man for his own hand and the devil to care for the
+vanquished. Still, there is a reservation.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne nodded. “It’s unlawful, but not
+against the unwritten code.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham quietly, “when you tell me
+what you want I should have a better opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed a little, though there was
+something unpleasant in his eyes. “When I first
+came out to this country I should have resented that,”
+he said. “Now, it seems to me that I’m putting
+too much in your hands if I make the whole thing
+clear before you commit yourself in any way.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “In fact, you have got to trust
+me. You can do so safely.”</p>
+
+<p>“The assurance of the guileless is astonishing and
+occasionally hard to bear,” said Courthorne. “Why
+not reverse the position?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s gaze was steady, and free from embarrassment.
+“I am,” he said, “waiting for your offer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Courthorne dryly, “here it is. We
+are running a big load through to the northern settlements
+and the reserves to-morrow, and while there’s
+a good deal of profit attached to the venture, I have
+a notion that Sergeant Stimson has had word of it.
+Now, the Sergeant knows just how I stand with the
+rustlers, though he can fasten no charge on me, and
+he will have several of his troopers looking out for me.
+Well, I want one of them to see and follow me south
+along the Montana trail. There’s no horse in the
+Government service can keep pace with that black
+of mine, but it would not be difficult to pull him and
+just keep the trooper out of carbine shot behind.
+When he finds he can’t overtake the black he’ll go
+off for his comrades, and the boys will run our goods
+across the river while they’re picking up the trail.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mentioned the horse, but not yourself,”
+said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “Yes,” he said; “I will
+not be there. I’m offering you one hundred dollars
+to ride the black for me. You can put my furs on,
+and anybody who saw you and knew the horse would
+certify it was me.”</p>
+
+<p>“And where will you be?”</p>
+
+<p>“Here,” said Courthorne dryly. “The boys will
+have no use for me until they want a guide, but they’ll
+leave an unloaded packhorse handy, and, as it wouldn’t
+suit any of us to make my connexion with them too
+plain, it will be a night or two later when I join them.
+In the meanwhile your part’s quite easy. No trooper
+could ride you down unless you wanted him to, and
+you’ll ride straight on to Montana—I’ve a route
+marked out for you. You’ll stop at the places I tell
+you, and the testimony of anybody who saw you on
+the black would be quite enough to clear me if Stimson’s
+men are too clever for the boys.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat still a moment, and it was not avarice
+which prompted him when he said, “Considering the
+risk, one hundred dollars is very little.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said Courthorne. “Still, it isn’t
+worth any more to me, and there will be your expenses.
+If it doesn’t suit you, I will do the thing myself
+and find the boys another guide.”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke indifferently, but Witham was not a fool,
+and knew that he was lying.</p>
+
+<p>“Turn your face to the light,” he said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>A little ominous glint became visible in Courthorne’s
+eyes, and there was just a trace of darker colour in his
+forehead, but Witham saw it and was not astonished.
+Still Courthorne did not move.</p>
+
+<p>“What made you ask me that?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham watched him closely, but his voice betrayed
+no special interest as he said, “I fancied I saw a mark
+across your cheek. It seemed to me that it had been
+made by a whip.”</p>
+
+<p>The deeper tint was more visible on Courthorne’s
+forehead, where the swollen veins showed a trifle, and
+he appeared to swallow something before he spoke.
+“Aren’t you asking too many questions? What has
+a mark on my face to do with you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” said Witham quietly. “Will you go
+through the conditions again?”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne nodded. “I pay you one hundred
+dollars—now,” he said. “You ride south to-morrow
+along the Montana trail and take the risk of the
+troopers overtaking you. You will remain away a
+fortnight at my expense, and pass in the meanwhile
+for me. Then you will return at night as rancher
+Witham, and keep the whole thing a secret from
+everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat silent and very still again for more than
+a minute. He surmised that the man who made the
+offer had not told him all and there was more behind,
+but that was, after all, of no great importance. He
+was prepared to do a good deal for one hundred
+dollars, and his bare life of effort and self-denial
+had grown almost unendurable. He had now
+nothing to lose, and while some impulse urged him
+to the venture, he felt that it was possible fate had in
+store for him something better than he had known
+in the past. In the meanwhile the cigar he held
+went out, and the striking of a match as Courthorne
+lighted another roused him suddenly from the retrospect
+he was sinking into. The bitter wind still
+moaned about the ranch, emphasizing its loneliness,
+and the cedar shingles rattled dolefully overhead,
+while it chanced that as Witham glanced towards the
+roof his eyes rested on the suspended piece of rancid
+pork which with a little flour and a few potatoes had
+during the last few months provided him with a
+sustenance. It was of course a trifle, but it tipped
+the beam, as trifles often do, and the man who was
+tired of all it symbolized straightened himself with
+a little mirthless laugh.</p>
+
+<p>“On your word of honour there is nothing beyond
+the risk of a few days’ detention which can affect
+me?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Courthorne solemnly, knowing that
+he lied. “On my honour. The troopers could only
+question you. Is it a deal?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham simply, stretching out his
+hand for the roll of bills the other flung down on the
+table, and, while one of the contracting parties knew
+that the other would regret it bitterly, the bargain
+was made.</p>
+
+<p>Then Courthorne laughed in his usual indolent
+fashion as he said, “Well, it’s all decided, and I don’t
+even ask your word. To-morrow will see the husk
+sloughed off and for a fortnight you’ll be Lance Courthorne.
+I hope you feel equal to playing the rĂ´le with
+credit, because I wouldn’t entrust my good fame to
+everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled dryly. “I fancy I shall,” he said,
+and long afterwards recalled the words. “You see,
+I had ambitions in my callow days, and it’s not
+my fault that hitherto I’ve never had a part to play.”</p>
+
+<p>Rancher Witham was, however, wrong in this.
+He had played the part of an honest man with a
+courage which had brought him to ruin, but there
+was now to be a difference.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink03'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER III—TROOPER SHANNON’S QUARREL</a></h2>
+
+<p>There was bitter frost in the darkness outside when
+two young men stood talking in the stables of a little
+outpost lying a long ride back from the settlement
+in the lonely prairie. One leaned against a manger
+with a pipe in his hand, while the spotless, softly-gleaming
+harness hung up behind him showed what
+his occupation had been. The other stood bolt
+upright with lips set, and a faint greyness which
+betokened strong emotion showing through his tan.
+The lantern above them flickered in the icy draughts,
+and from out of the shadows beyond its light came
+the stamping of restless horses and the smell of prairie
+hay, which is pungent with the odours of wild peppermint.</p>
+
+<p>The two lads, and they were very little more, were
+friends, in spite of the difference in their upbringing,
+for there are few distinctions between caste and caste
+in that country where manhood is still esteemed the
+greatest thing, and the primitive virtues count for
+more than wealth or intellect. Courage and endurance
+still command respect in the new North-West, and
+that both the lads possessed them was made evident
+by the fact that they were troopers of the North-West
+police, a force of splendid cavalry whose duty it is to
+patrol the wilderness at all seasons and in all weathers,
+under scorching sun and in blinding snow.</p>
+
+<p>The men who keep the peace of the prairie are
+taught what heat and thirst are, when they ride in
+couples through a desolate waste wherein there is
+only bitter water, parched by pitiless sunrays and
+whitened by the intolerable dust of alkali. They
+also discover just how much cold the human frame
+can endure, when they lie down with only the stars
+above them, long leagues from the nearest outpost,
+in a trench, scooped in the snow, and they know
+how near one may come to suffocation and yet live
+through the grassfire’s blinding smoke. It happens
+now and then that two who have answered to the last
+roster in the icy darkness do not awaken when the
+lingering dawn breaks across the great white waste, and
+only the coyote knows their resting-place, but the
+watch and ward is kept, and the lonely settler dwells
+as safe in the wilderness as he would in an English
+town.</p>
+
+<p>Trooper Shannon was an Irishman from the bush
+of Ontario, Trooper Payne, English, and a scion
+of a somewhat distinguished family in the old
+country, but while he told nobody why he left it
+suddenly, nobody thought of asking him. He was
+known to be a bold rider and careful of his beast,
+and that was sufficient for his comrades and the keen-eyed
+Sergeant Stimson. He glanced at his companion
+thoughtfully as he said, “She was a pretty girl.
+You knew her in Ontario?”</p>
+
+<p>Shannon’s hands trembled a little. “Sure,” he
+said, “Larry’s place was just a mile beyont our
+clearing, an’ there was never a bonnier thing than
+Ailly Blake came out from the old country—but is it
+need there is for talking when ye’ve seen her? There
+was once I watched her smile at ye with the black
+eyes that would have melted the heart out of any
+man. Waking and sleeping they’re with me still.”</p>
+
+<p>Three generations of the Shannons had hewn the
+lonely clearing further into the bush of Ontario and
+married the daughters of the soil, but the Celtic strain,
+it was evident, had not run out yet. Payne, however,
+came of English stock, and expressed himself differently.</p>
+
+<p>“It was a—shame,” he said. “Of course he
+flung her over. I think you saw him, Pat?”</p>
+
+<p>Shannon’s face grew greyer, and he quivered
+visibly as his passion shook him, while Payne felt his
+own blood pulse faster as he remembered the graceful
+dark-eyed girl who had given him and his comrade
+many a welcome meal when their duty took them near
+her brother’s homestead. That was, however, before
+one black day for Ailly and Larry Blake when Lance
+Courthorne also rode that way.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the lad from Ontario, “I was driving
+in for the stores when I met him in the willow bluff,
+an’ Courthorne pulls his divil of a black horse up
+with a little ugly smile on the lips of him when I
+swung the wagon right across the trail.</p>
+
+<p>“â€That’s not civil, trooper,’ says he.</p>
+
+<p>“â€I’m wanting a word,’ says I, with the black
+hate choking me at the sight of him. â€What have ye
+done with Ailly?’</p>
+
+<p>“â€Is it anything to you?’ says he.</p>
+
+<p>“â€It’s everything,’ says I. â€And if ye will not
+tell me I’ll tear it out of ye.’</p>
+
+<p>“Courthorne laughs a little, but I saw the divil in
+his eyes. â€I don’t think you’re quite man enough,’
+says he, sitting very quiet on the big black horse.
+â€Anyway, I can’t tell you where she is just now,
+because she left the dancing saloon she was in down in
+Montana when I last saw her.’</p>
+
+<p>“I had the big whip that day, and I forgot everything
+as I heard the hiss of it round my shoulder.
+It came home across the ugly face of him, and then I
+flung it down and grabbed the carbine as he swung the
+black round with one hand fumbling in his jacket.
+It came out empty, an’ we sat there a moment, the
+two of us, Courthorne white as death, his eyes like
+burning coals, and the fingers of me trembling on the
+carbine. Sorrow on the man that he hadn’t a pistol,
+or I’d have sent the black soul of him to the divil
+it came from.”</p>
+
+<p>The lad panted, and Payne, who had guessed at
+his hopeless devotion to the girl who had listened to
+Courthorne, made a gesture of disapproval that was
+tempered by sympathy. It was for her sake, he
+fancied, Shannon had left the Ontario clearing and
+followed Larry Blake to the West.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m glad he hadn’t, Pat,” said Payne. “What
+was the end of it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I remembered,” said the other with a groan,
+“remembered I was Trooper Shannon, an’ dropped
+the carbine into the wagon. Courthorne wheels
+the black horse round, an’ I saw the red line across
+the face of him.</p>
+
+<p>“â€You’ll be sorry for this, my lad,’ says he.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s a dangerous man,” Payne said thoughtfully.
+“Pat, you came near being a——ass that day.
+Anyway, it’s time we went in, and as Larry’s
+here I shouldn’t wonder if we saw Courthorne again
+before the morning.”</p>
+
+<p>The icy cold went through them to the bone as
+they left the stables, and it was a relief to enter the
+loghouse, which was heated to fustiness by the
+glowing stove. A lamp hung from a rough birch
+beam, and its uncertain radiance showed motionless
+figures wrapped in blankets in the bunks round the
+walls. Two men were, however, dressing, and one
+already in uniform sat at a table talking to another
+swathed in furs, who was from his appearance a
+prairie farmer. The man at the table was lean and
+weather-bronzed, with grizzled hair and observant
+eyes. They were fixed steadily upon the farmer,
+who knew that very little which happened upon
+the prairie escaped the vigilance of Sergeant Stimson.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s straight talk you’re giving me, Larry?
+What do you figure on making by it?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The farmer laughed mirthlessly. “Not much,
+anyway, beyond the chance of getting a bullet
+in me back or me best steer lifted one dark night.
+’Tis not forgiving the rustlers are, and Courthorne’s
+the divil,” he said. “But listen now, Sergeant;
+I’ve told ye where he is, and if ye’re not fit to corral
+him I’ll ride him down meself.”</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Stimson wrinkled his forehead. “If
+anybody knows what they’re after, it should be you,”
+he said, watching the man out of the corner of his
+eyes. “Still, I’m a little worried as to why, when
+you’ll get nothing for it, you’re anxious to serve the
+State.”</p>
+
+<p>The farmer clenched a big hand. “Sergeant,
+you that knows everything, will ye drive me mad,
+an’ to —— with the State!” he said. “Sure, it’s
+gospel I’m telling ye, an’ as you’re knowing well,
+it’s me could tell where the boys who ride at midnight
+drop many a keg. Well, if ye will have your
+reason, it was Courthorne who put the black shame
+on me an’ mine.”</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Stimson nodded, for he had already
+suspected this.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” he said dryly, “we’ll give you a chance
+of helping us to put the handcuffs on him. Now,
+because they wouldn’t risk the bridge, and the
+ice is not thick yet everywhere, there are just two
+ways they could bring the stuff across, and I figure
+we’d be near the thing if we fixed on Graham’s Pool.
+Still, Courthorne’s no kind of fool, and just because
+that crossing seems the likeliest he might try the
+other one. You’re ready for duty, Trooper Payne?”</p>
+
+<p>The lad stood straight. “I can turn out in ten
+minutes, sir,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” and Sergeant Stimson raised his voice a
+trifle, “you will ride at once to the rise a league
+outside the settlement, and watch the Montana
+trail. Courthorne will probably be coming over
+from Witham’s soon after you get there, riding the
+big black, and you’ll keep out of sight and follow
+him. If he heads for Carson’s Crossing ride for
+Graham’s at a gallop, where you’ll find me with
+the rest. If he makes for the bridge, you will overtake
+him if you can and find out what he’s after.
+It’s quite likely he’ll tell you nothing, and you will
+not arrest him, but bearing in mind that every
+minute he spends there will be a loss to the rustlers
+you’ll keep him so long as you can. Trooper Shannon,
+you’ll ride at once to the bluff above Graham’s
+Pool, and watch the trail. Stop any man who
+rides that way, and if it’s Courthorne keep him
+until the rest of the boys come up with me. You’ve
+got your duty quite straight, both of you?”</p>
+
+<p>The lads saluted, and went out, while the Sergeant
+smiled a little as he glanced at the farmer, and the
+men who were dressing.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s steep chances we’ll have Mr. Courthorne’s
+company to-morrow, boys,” he said. “Fill up
+the kettle, Tom, and serve out a pint of coffee.
+There are reasons why we shouldn’t turn out too soon.
+We’ll saddle in an hour or so.”</p>
+
+<p>Two of the men went out, and the stinging blast
+that swept in through the open door smote a smoky
+smear across the blinking lamp and roused a sharper
+crackling from the stove. Then one returned with
+the kettle and there was silence, when the fusty
+heat resumed its sway. Now and then a tired trooper
+murmured in his sleep, or there was a snapping in
+the stove, while the icy wind moaned about the
+building and the kettle commenced a soft sibilation,
+but nobody moved or spoke. Three shadowy
+figures in uniform sat just outside the light soaking
+in the grateful warmth while they could, for they
+knew that they might spend the next night unsheltered
+from the Arctic cold of the wilderness. The Sergeant
+sat with thoughtful eyes and wrinkled forehead
+where the flickering radiance forced up his lean
+face and silhouetted his spare outline on the rough
+boarding behind him, and close by the farmer
+sucked silently at his pipe, waiting, with a stony
+calm that sprang from fierce impatience, the reckoning
+with the man who had brought back shame
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time when Witham stood
+shivering a little with the bridle of a big black horse
+in his hand just outside the door of his homestead.
+A valise and two thick blankets were strapped to
+the saddle, and he had donned the fur cap and coat
+Courthorne usually wore. Courthorne himself stood
+close by, smiling at him sardonically.</p>
+
+<p>“If you keep the cap down and ride with your
+stirrups long, as I’ve fixed them, anybody would
+take you for me,” said he. “Go straight through
+the settlement, and let any man you come across
+see you. His testimony would come in useful if
+Stimson tries to fix a charge on me. You know
+your part of the bargain. You’re to be Lance
+Courthorne for a fortnight from to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham dryly. “I wish I was
+equally sure of yours.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “I’m to be Rancher Witham
+until to-morrow night, anyway. Don’t worry about
+me. I’ll borrow those books of yours and improve
+my mind. Possible starvation is the only thing
+that threatens me, and it’s unfortunate you’ve
+left nothing fit to eat behind you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham swung himself into the saddle, a trifle
+awkwardly, for Courthorne rode with longer stirrup
+leathers than he was accustomed to, then he raised
+one hand, and the other man laughed a little as he
+watched him sink into the darkness of the shadowy
+prairie. When the drumming of hoofs was lost
+in the moaning of the wind he strode towards the
+stable, and taking up the lantern surveyed Witham’s
+horse thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“The thing cuts with both edges, and the farmer
+only sees one of them,” he said. “That beast’s
+about as difficult to mistake as my black is.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he returned to the loghouse, and presently
+put on Witham’s old fur coat and tattered fur cap.
+Had Witham seen his unpleasant smile as he did it,
+he would probably have wheeled the black horse
+and returned at a gallop, but the farmer was sweeping
+across the waste of whitened grass at least a league
+away by this time. Now and then a half-moon
+blinked down between wisps of smoky cloud, but
+for the most part grey dimness hung over the prairie,
+and the drumming of hoofs rang stridently through
+the silence. Witham knew a good horse, and had
+bred several of them—before a blizzard which swept
+the prairie killed off his finest yearlings as well as
+their pedigree sire—and his spirits rose as the splendid
+beast swung into faster stride beneath him.</p>
+
+<p>For two weeks at least he would be free from
+anxiety, and the monotony of his life at the
+lonely homestead had grown horribly irksome.
+Witham was young, and, now when for a brief space
+he had left his cares behind, the old love of adventure
+which had driven him out from England once more
+awakened and set his blood stirring. For the first
+time in six years of struggle he did not know what
+lay before him, and he had a curious, half-instinctive
+feeling that the trail he was travelling would lead
+him farther than Montana. It was borne in upon
+him that he had left the old hopeless life behind,
+and, stirred by some impulse, he broke into a little
+song he had sung in England, long and forgotten.
+He had a clear voice, and the words, which were
+filled with the hope of youth, rang bravely through
+the stillness of the frozen wilderness until the horse
+blundered, and Witham stopped with a little smile.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s four long years since I felt as I do to-night,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then he drew bridle and checked the horse as
+the lights of the settlement commenced to blink
+ahead, for the trail was rutted deep and frozen into
+the likeness of adamant, but when the first frame
+houses flung tracks of yellow radiance across the
+whitened grass he dropped his left arm a trifle and
+rode in at a canter as he had seen Courthorne do.
+Witham did not like Courthorne, but he meant to
+keep his bargain.</p>
+
+<p>As he passed the hotel more slowly a man who
+came out called to him. “Hello, Lance! Taking
+the trail?” he said. “Well, it kind of strikes me
+it’s time you did. One of Stimson’s boys was down
+here, and he seemed quite anxious about you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham knew the man, and was about to urge the
+horse forward, but in place of it drew bridle, and
+laughed with a feeling that was wholly new to him
+as he remembered that his neighbours now and
+then bantered him about his English and that Courthorne
+only used the Western colloquialism when it
+suited him.</p>
+
+<p>“Sergeant Stimson is an enterprising officer,
+but there are as keen men as he is,” he said. “You
+will, in case he questions you, remember when you
+met me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” said the other. “Still, I wouldn’t
+fool too much with him—and where did you get
+those mittens from? That’s the kind of outfit that
+would suit Witham.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded, for though he had turned his
+face from the light the hand he held the bridle with
+was visible, and his big fur gloves were very old.</p>
+
+<p>“They are his. The fact is, I’ve just come from his
+place,” he said. “Well, you can tell Stimson
+you saw me starting out on the Montana trail.”</p>
+
+<p>He shook the bridle, laughed softly as the frame
+houses flitted by, and then grew intent when the
+darkness of the prairie once more closed down.
+It was, he knew probable that some of Stimson’s,
+men would be looking out for him, and he had not
+sufficient faith in Courthorne’s assurances to court
+an encounter with them.</p>
+
+<p>The lights had faded, and the harsh grass was,
+crackling under the drumming hoofs when the
+blurred outline of a mounted man showed up on the
+crest of a rise, and a shout came down.</p>
+
+<p>“Hallo! Pull up there a moment, stranger.”</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing alarming in the greeting, but
+Witham recognized the ring of command, as well as
+the faint jingle of steel which had preceded it, and
+pressed his heels home. The black swung forward
+faster, and Witham glancing over his shoulder, saw,
+the dusky shape was now moving down the incline,
+Then the voice rose again more commandingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Pull up; I want a talk with you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned his head a moment, and remembering
+Courthorne’s English, flung back the answer,
+“Sorry, I haven’t time.”</p>
+
+<p>The faint musical jingle grew plainer, there was a
+thud of hoofs behind, and the curious, exhilaration
+returned to Witham as the big black horse stretched
+out at a gallop. The soil was hard as granite, but
+the matted grasses formed a covering that rendered
+fast riding possible to a man who took the risks
+and Witham knew there were few horses in the
+Government service to match the one he rode.
+Still, it was evident that the trooper meant to overtake
+him, and recollecting his compact he tightened
+his grip on the bridle. It was a long way to the ranch
+where he was to spend the night, and he knew that
+the further he drew the trooper on the better it
+would suit Courthorne.</p>
+
+<p>So they swept on through the darkness over the
+empty waste, the trooper who was riding hard
+slowly creeping up behind. Still, Witham held the
+horse in until a glance over his shoulder showed
+him that there was less than a hundred yards between
+them, and he fancied he heard a portentous rattle
+as well as the thud of hoofs. It was not unlike
+that made by a carbine flung across the saddle.
+This suggested unpleasant possibilities, and he
+slackened his grip on the bridle. Then a breathless
+shout rang out, “Pull up or I’ll fire.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham wondered if the threat was genuine or
+what is termed “bluff” in that country, but as he had
+decided objections to being shot in the back to
+please Courthorne, sent his heels home. The horse
+shot forward beneath him, and though no carbine
+flashed, the next backward glance showed him that
+the distance between him and the pursuer was drawing
+out, while when he stared ahead again the dark
+shape of willows or birches cut the skyline. As they
+came back to him the drumming of hoofs swelled
+into a staccato roar, while presently the trail grew
+steep, and dark boughs swayed above him. In
+another few minutes something smooth and level
+flung back a blink of light, and the timbers of a
+wooden bridge rattled under his passage. Then
+he was racing upwards through the gloom of wind-dwarfed
+birches on the opposite side, listening for the
+rattle behind him on the bridge, and after a struggle
+with the horse pulled him up smoking when he did
+not hear it.</p>
+
+<p>There was a beat of hoofs across the river, but
+it was slower than when he had last heard it and
+grew momentarily less audible, and Witham laughed
+as he watched the steam of the horse and his own
+breath rise in a thin white cloud.</p>
+
+<p>“The trooper has given it up, and now for Montana,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink04'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER IV—IN THE BLUFF</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was very dark amidst the birches where Trooper
+Shannon sat motionless in his saddle, gazing down
+into the denser blackness of the river hollow. The
+stream ran deep below the level of the prairie, as
+the rivers of that country usually do, and the trees,
+which there alone found shelter from the winds,
+straggled, gnarled and stunted, up either side
+of the steep declivity. Close behind the trooper a
+sinuous trail seamed by ruts and the print of hoofs
+stretched away across the empty prairie. It forked on
+the outskirts of the bluff, and one arm dipped steeply
+to the river where, because the stream ran slow just
+there and the bottom was firm, a horseman might
+cross when the water was low, and heavy sledges
+make the passage on the ice in winter time. The
+other arm twisted in and out among the birches
+towards the bridge, but that detour increased the
+distance to any one travelling north or south by
+two leagues or so.</p>
+
+<p>The ice, however was not very thick as yet, and
+Shannon, who had heard it ring hollowly under him,
+surmised that while it might be possible to lead
+a laden horse across, there would be some risk
+attached to the operation. For that very reason,
+and although his opinion had not been asked, he
+agreed with Sergeant Stimson that the
+whisky-runners would attempt the passage. They were
+men who took the risks as they came, and that
+route would considerably shorten the journey it
+was especially desirable for them to make at night,
+while it would, Shannon fancied, appear probable
+to them that if the police had word of their intentions
+they would watch the bridge. Between it
+and the frozen ford the stream ran faster, and the
+trooper decided that no mounted man could cross the
+thinner ice.</p>
+
+<p>It was very cold as well as dark, for although the
+snow, which usually precedes the frost in that country,
+had not come as yet, it was evidently not far away,
+and the trooper shivered in the blasts from the pole
+which cut through fur and leather with the keenness
+of steel. The temperature had fallen steadily
+since morning, and now there was a presage of a
+blizzard in the moaning wind and murky sky. If
+it broke and scattered its blinking whiteness upon the
+roaring blast there would be but little hope for any man
+or beast caught shelterless in the empty wilderness,
+for it is beyond the power of anything made of flesh
+and blood to withstand that cold.</p>
+
+<p>Already a fine haze of snow swirled between the
+birch twigs every now and then, and stung the few
+patches of the trooper’s unprotected skin as though
+they had been pricked with red-hot needles. It,
+however, seldom lasted more than a minute, and when
+it whirled away, a half-moon shone down for a
+moment between smoky clouds. The uncertain
+radiance showed the thrashing birches rising from
+the hollow, row on row, struck a faint sparkle from
+the ice beneath them, and then went out, leaving the
+gloom intensified. It was evident to Shannon that
+his eyes would not be much use to him that night,
+for which reason he kept his ears uncovered at the
+risk of losing them, but though he had been born in
+the bush and all the sounds of the wilderness had
+for him a meaning, hearing did not promise to be of
+much assistance. The dim trees roared about him
+with a great thrashing of twigs, and when the wilder
+gusts had passed there was an eery moaning, through
+which came the murmur of leagues of tormented
+grasses. The wind was rising rapidly, and it would,
+he fancied, drown the beat of approaching hoofs as
+well as any cry from his comrades.</p>
+
+<p>Four of them were hidden amidst the birches
+where the trail wound steeply upwards through the
+bluff across the river, two on the nearer side not
+far below, and Trooper Shannon’s watch would
+serve two purposes. He was to let the rustlers pass
+him it they rode for the ford, and then help to cut off
+the retreat of any who escaped the sergeant, while if
+they found the ice too thin for loaded beasts or rode
+towards the bridge, a flash from his carbine would
+bring his comrades across in time to join the others
+who were watching that trail. It had, as usual
+with Stimson’s schemes, all been carefully thought
+out and the plan was eminently workable, but
+unfortunately for the grizzled sergeant a better
+brain than his had foreseen the combination.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile the lad felt his limbs grow stiff
+and almost useless, and a lethargic numbness blunt
+the keenness of his faculties as the heat went out of
+him. He had more than usual endurance, and
+utter cold, thirst, and the hunger that most ably
+helps the frost, are not infrequently the portion of
+the wardens of the prairie; but there is a limit to
+what man can bear, and the troopers who watched
+by the frozen river that night had almost reached it.
+Shannon could not feel the stirrups with his feet.
+One of his ears was tingling horribly as the blood
+that had almost left it resumed its efforts to penetrate
+the congealing flesh, while the mittened hands
+he beat upon his breast fell solidly on his wrappings
+without separate motion of the fingers. Once or
+twice the horse stamped fretfully, but a touch of
+hand and heel quieted him, for though the frozen
+flesh may shrink, unwavering obedience is demanded
+equally from man and beast enrolled in the service
+of the North-West police.</p>
+
+<p>“Stiddy now,” said the lad, partly to discover if
+he still retained the power of speech. “Sure ye
+know the order that was given me, and if it’s a
+funeral that comes of it the Government will bury
+ye.”</p>
+
+<p>He sighed as he beat his hands upon his breast
+again, and when a flicker of moonlight smote a
+passing track of brightness athwart the tossing
+birches his young face was very grim. Like many
+another trooper of the North-West police, Shannon
+had his story, and he remembered the one trace of
+romance that had brightened his hard, bare life that
+night as he waited for the man who had dissipated
+it.</p>
+
+<p>When Larry Blake moved West from Ontario,
+Shannon, drawn by his sister’s dark eyes, followed
+him, and took up a Government grant of prairie
+sod. His dollars were few, but he had a stout heart
+and two working oxen, and nothing seemed impossible
+while Ailly Blake smiled on him, and she smiled
+tolerably frequently, for Shannon was a well-favoured
+lad. He had worked harder than most grown men
+could do, won one good harvest, and had a few dollars
+in the bank when Courthorne rode up to Blake’s
+homestead on his big black horse. After that, all
+Shannon’s hopes and ambitions came down with
+a crash; and the day he found Blake grey in
+face with shame and rage he offered Sergeant
+Stimson his services. Now he was filled with
+an unholy content that he had done so, for he
+came of a race that does not forget an injury,
+and had sufficient cause for a jealous pride in the
+virtue of its women. He and Larry might have forgiven
+a pistol shot, but they could not forget the
+shame.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he stiffened to attention, for though a man
+of the cities would probably have heard nothing but
+the wailing of the wind, he caught a faint rhythmic
+drumming which might have been made by a galloping
+horse. It ceased, and he surmised, probably correctly,
+that it was Trooper Payne returning. It was, however,
+his business to watch the forking of the trail,
+and when he could only hear the thrashing of the
+birches, he moved his mittened hand from the
+bridle, and patted the restive horse. Just then
+the bluff was filled with sound as a blast that drove
+a haze of snow before it roared down. It was followed
+by a sudden stillness that was almost bewildering,
+and when a blink of moonlight came streaming down,
+Trooper Shannon grabbed at his carbine, for a man
+stood close beside him in the trail. The lad, who
+had neither seen nor heard him come, looked down
+on the glinting barrel of a Marlin rifle and saw a
+set white face behind it.</p>
+
+<p>“Hands up!” said a hoarse voice. “Throw
+that thing down,”</p>
+
+<p>Trooper Shannon recognized it, and all the fierce
+hate he was capable of flamed up. It shook him
+with a gust of passion, and it was not fear that
+caused his stiffened fingers to slip upon the carbine.
+It fell with a rattle, and while he sat still, almost
+breathless and livid in face, the man laughed a little.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s better; get down,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Trooper Shannon swung himself from the saddle,
+and alighted heavily as a flung-off sack would have
+done, for his limbs refused to bend. Still it was not
+from lack of courage that he obeyed, and during one
+moment he had clutched the bridle with the purpose
+of riding over his enemy. He had, however,
+been taught to think for himself swiftly and shrewdly
+from his boyhood up, and realized instinctively
+that if he escaped scathless the ringing of the rifle
+would warn the rustlers who, he surmised, were
+close behind. He was also a police trooper broken
+to the iron bond of discipline, and if a bullet from the
+Marlin was to end his career, he determined it should,
+if possible, also terminate his enemy’s liberty. The
+gust of rage had gone, and left him with the cold
+vindictive cunning the Celt who has a grievous
+injury to remember is also capable of, and there was
+contempt in his voice as he turned to Courthorne
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure it’s your turn now,” he said. “The
+last time I put my mark on the divil’s face of ye.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed wickedly. “It was a bad
+day’s work for you; I haven’t forgotten yet,”
+he said. “I’m only sorry you’re not a trifle older,
+but it will teach Sergeant Stimson the folly of sending
+a lad to deal with me. Well, walk straight into the
+bush, and remember that the muzzle of the rifle is
+scarcely three feet behind you!”</p>
+
+<p>Trooper Shannon did so with black rage in his
+heart, and his empty hands at his sides. He was a
+police trooper and a bushman born, and knew that
+the rustlers’ laden horses would find some difficulty
+in remounting the steep trail and could not escape
+to left or right once they were entangled amidst
+the trees. Then it would be time to give
+the alarm, and go down with a bullet in his body,
+or by some contrivance evade the deadly rifle and
+come to grips with his enemy. He also knew Lance
+Courthorne, and, remembering how the lash had
+seamed his face, expected no pity. One of them
+it was tolerably certain would have set out on the
+long trail before the morning, but they breed grim
+men in the bush of Ontario, and no other kind ride
+very long with the wardens of the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>“Stop where you are,” said Courthorne presently.
+“Now then, turn round. Move a finger or open your
+lips, and I’ll have great pleasure in shooting you.
+In the meanwhile you can endeavour to make favour
+with whatever saint is honoured by the charge of
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>Shannon smiled in a fashion that resembled a
+snarl as once more a blink of moonlight shone down
+upon them, and in place of showing apprehension,
+his young white face, from which the bronze had
+faded, was venomous.</p>
+
+<p>“And my folks were Orange, but what does that
+matter now?” said he. “There’ll be one of us
+in——to-morrow, but for the shame ye put on Larry
+ye’ll carry my mark there with ye.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne looked at him with a little glow in
+his eyes. “You haven’t felt mine yet,” he said.
+“You will probably talk differently when you do.”</p>
+
+<p>It may have been youthful bravado, but Trooper
+Shannon laughed. “In the meanwhile,” he said,
+“I’m wondering why you’re wearing an honest
+man’s coat and cap. Faith, if he saw them on ye,
+Witham would burn them.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne returned no answer and the moonlight
+went out, but they stood scarcely three feet apart,
+and one of them knew that any move he made would
+be followed by the pressure of the other’s finger
+on the trigger. He, however, did not move at all,
+and while the birches roared about them they stood
+silently face to face, the man of birth and pedigree
+with a past behind him and blood already upon his
+head, and the raw lad from the bush, his equal
+before the tribunal that would presently judge their
+quarrel.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Trooper Shannon heard a drumming
+of hoofs that grew steadily louder before
+Courthorne apparently noticed the sound, and his
+trained ears told him that the rustlers’ horses were
+coming down the trail. Now they had passed the
+forking, and when the branches ceased roaring again
+he knew they had floundered down the first of the
+declivity, and it would be well to wait a little until
+they had straggled out where the trail was narrow
+and deeply rutted. No one could turn them hastily
+there, and the men who drove them could scarcely
+escape the troopers who waited them, if they blundered
+on through the darkness of the bush. So five
+breathless minutes passed, Trooper Shannon standing
+tense and straight with every nerve tingling as he
+braced himself for an effort, Courthorne stooping a little
+with forefinger on the trigger, and the Marlin rifle at
+his hip. Then through a lull there rose a clearer thud
+of hoofs. It was lost in the thrashing of the twigs
+as a gust roared down again, and Trooper Shannon
+launched himself like a panther upon his enemy.</p>
+
+<p>He might have succeeded, and the effort was
+gallantly made, but Courthorne had never moved
+his eyes from the shadowy object before him, and
+even as it sprang, his finger contracted further on
+the trigger. There was a red flash and because he
+fired from the hip the trigger guard gashed his mitten.
+He sprang sideways, scarcely feeling the bite of the
+steel, for the lad’s hand brushed his shoulder. Then
+there was a crash as something went down heavily
+amidst the crackling twigs. Courthorne stooped a
+little, panting in the smoke that blew into his eyes,
+jerked the Marlin lever, and, as the moon came through
+again, had a blurred vision of a white, drawn face that
+stared up at him still with defiance in its eyes. He
+looked down into it as he drew the trigger once more.</p>
+
+<p>Shannon quivered a moment, and then lay very
+still, and it was high time for Courthorne to look to
+himself, for there was a shouting in the bluff, and
+something came crashing through the undergrowth.
+Even then his cunning did not desert him, and
+flinging the Marlin down beside the trooper, he
+slipped almost silently in and out among the birches
+and swung himself into the saddle of a tethered
+horse. Unlooping the bridle from a branch, he
+pressed his heels home, realizing as he did it that there
+was no time to lose, for it was evident that one of
+the troopers was somewhat close behind him, and
+others were coming across the river. He knew
+the bluff well, and having no desire to be entangled
+in it was heading for the prairie, when a blink of
+moonlight showed him a lad in uniform riding at a
+gallop between him and the crest of the slope. It
+was Trooper Payne, and Courthorne knew him for
+a very bold horseman.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it is possible that had one of the rustlers, who
+were simple men with primitive virtues as well as
+primitive passions, been similarly placed, he would
+have joined his comrades and taken his chance
+with them, but Courthorne kept faith with nobody
+unless it suited him, and was equally dangerous to
+his friends and enemies. Trooper Shannon had also
+been silenced for ever, and if he could cross the frontier
+unrecognized, nobody would believe the story of
+the man he would leave to bear the brunt in place of
+him. Accordingly he headed at a gallop down the
+winding trail, while sharp orders and a drumming
+of hoofs grew louder behind him, and hoarse cries
+rose in front. Trooper Payne was, it seemed, at
+least keeping pace with him, and he glanced over
+his shoulder as he saw something dark and shadowy
+across the trail. It was apparently a horse from
+which two men were struggling to loose its
+burden.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne guessed that the trail was blocked in
+front of it by other loaded beasts, and he could not
+get past in time, for the half-seen trooper was closing
+with him fast, and another still rode between him
+and the edge of the bluff cutting off his road to the
+prairie. It was evident he could not go on, while
+the crackle of twigs, roar of hoofs, and jingle of
+steel behind him, made it plain that to turn was to
+ride back upon the carbines of men who would be
+quite willing to use them. There alone remained
+the river. It ran fast below him, and the ice was
+thin, and for just a moment he tightened his grip on
+the bridle.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ve got you!” a hoarse voice reached him.
+“You’re taking steep chances if you go on.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne swung off from the trail. There was
+a flash above him, something whirred through the
+twigs above his head, and the horse plunged as he
+drove his heels in.</p>
+
+<p>“One of them gone for the river,” another shout
+rang out, and Courthorne was crashing through the
+undergrowth straight down the declivity, while thin
+snow whirled about him, and now and then he
+caught the faint glimmer flung back by the ice
+beneath.</p>
+
+<p>Swaying boughs lashed him, his fur cap was
+whipped away, and he felt that his face was bleeding,
+but there was another crackle close behind him,
+for Trooper Payne was riding as daringly, and he
+carried a carbine. Had he desired it Courthorne
+could not turn. The bronco he bestrode was madly
+excited and less than half broken, and it is probable
+no man could have pulled him up just then. It
+may also have been borne in upon Courthorne, that
+he owed a little to those he had left behind him in the
+old country, and he had not lost his pride. There
+was, it seemed, no escape, but he had at least a choice
+of endings, and with a little breathless laugh he rode
+straight for the river.</p>
+
+<p>It was with difficulty Trooper Payne pulled his
+horse up on the steep bank a minute later. A white
+haze was now sliding down the hollow between the
+two dark walls of trees, and something seemed to
+move in the midst of it while the ice rang about it.
+Then, as the trooper pitched up his carbine, there
+was a crash that was followed by a horrible floundering
+and silence again. Payne sat still, shivering a
+little in his saddle until the snow that whirled about
+him blotted out all the birches, and a roaring blast
+came down.</p>
+
+<p>He knew there was now nothing that he could do.
+The current had evidently sucked the fugitive under,
+and, dismounting, he groped his way up the slope,
+leading the horse by the bridle, and only swung
+himself into the saddle when he found the trail
+again. A carbine flashed in front of him, two dim
+figures went by at a gallop, and a third one flung an
+order over his shoulder as he passed.</p>
+
+<p>“Go back. The Sergeant’s hurt and Shannon
+has got a bullet in him.”</p>
+
+<p>Trooper Payne had surmised as much already, and
+went back as fast as he could ride, while the beat of
+hoofs grew fainter down the trail. Ten minutes
+later he drew bridle close by a man who held a lantern,
+and saw Sergeant Stimson sitting very grim in face on
+the ground. It transpired later that his horse had
+fallen and thrown him, and it was several weeks
+before he rode again.</p>
+
+<p>“You lost your man?” he said. “Get down.”</p>
+
+<p>Payne dismounted. “Yes, sir, I fancy he is
+dead,” he said. “He tried the river, and the ice
+wouldn’t carry him. I saw him ride away from here
+just after the first shot, and fancied he fired at
+Shannon. Have you seen him, sir?”</p>
+
+<p>The other trooper moved his lantern, and Payne
+gasped as he saw a third man stooping, with the
+white face of his comrade close by his feet. Shannon
+appeared to recognize him, for his eyes moved a
+little and the grey lips fell apart. Then Payne turned
+his head aside while the other trooper nodded compassionately
+in answer to his questioning glance.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve sent one of the boys to Graham’s for a
+wagon,” said the Sergeant. “You saw the man
+who fired at him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said Trooper Payne.</p>
+
+<p>“You knew him?” and there was a ring in the
+Sergeant’s voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said the trooper. “At least he was
+riding Witham’s horse, and had on the old, long
+coat of his.”</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Stimson nodded, and pointed to the
+weapon lying with blackened muzzle at his feet.
+“And I think you could recognize that rifle? There’s
+F. Witham cut on the stock of it.”</p>
+
+<p>Payne said nothing, for the trooper signed to him.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy Shannon wants to talk to you,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The lad knelt down, slipped one arm about his
+comrade’s neck, and took the mittened hand in his
+own. Shannon smiled up at him feebly.</p>
+
+<p>“Witham’s horse and his cap,” he said, and then
+stopped, gasping horribly.</p>
+
+<p>“You will remember that, boys,” said the Sergeant.</p>
+
+<p>Payne could say nothing. Trooper Shannon and
+he had ridden through icy blizzard and scorching
+heat together, and he felt his manhood melting as he
+looked down into his dimming eyes. There was a
+curious look in them which suggested a strenuous
+endeavour and an appeal, and the lips moved again.</p>
+
+<p>“It was,” said Shannon, and moved his head
+a little on Payne’s arm, apparently in an agony of
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>Then the birches roared about them, and drowned
+the feeble utterance, while, when the gust passed, all
+three, who had not heard what preceded it, caught
+only one word—“Witham.”</p>
+
+<p>Trooper Shannon’s eyes closed, and his head
+fell back, while the snow beat softly in to his upturned
+face, and there was a very impressive silence, intensified
+by the moaning of the wind, until the rattle of
+wheels came faintly down the trail.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink05'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER V—MISS BARRINGTON COMES HOME</a></h2>
+
+<p>The long train was slackening speed and two whistles
+rang shrilly through the roar of wheels when Miss
+Barrington laid down the book with which she had
+beguiled her journey of fifteen hundred miles, and
+rose from her seat in a corner of the big first-class
+car. The car was sumptuously upholstered, and
+its decorations tasteful as well as lavish, but just
+then it held no other passenger, and Miss Barrington
+smiled curiously as she stood, swaying a little, in
+front of the mirror at one end of it, wrapping her
+furs about her. There was, however, a faint suggestion
+of regret in the smile, and the girl’s eyes
+grew grave again, for the soft cushions, dainty curtains,
+gleaming gold and nickel, and equable temperature
+formed a part of the sheltered life she was about to
+leave behind her, and there would, she knew, be a difference
+in the future. Still, she laughed again as,
+drawing a little fur cap well down upon her broad,
+white forehead, she nodded at her own reflection.</p>
+
+<p>“One cannot have everything, and you might
+have stayed there and revelled in civilization if you
+had liked,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Crossing to the door of the portico she stood a
+moment with fingers on its handle, and once more
+looked about her. The car was very cosy, and Maud
+Barrington had all the average young woman’s
+appreciation of the smoother side of life, although she
+had also the capacity, which is by no means so
+common, for extracting the most it had to give from
+the opposite one. Still, it was with a faint regret
+she prepared to complete what had been a deed of
+renunciation. Montreal, with its gaieties and
+luxuries, had not seemed so very far away
+while she was carried West amid all the comforts
+artizans who were also artists could provide for the
+traveller, but once that door closed behind her she
+would be cut adrift from it all, and left face to face
+with the simple, strenuous life of the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington had, however, made her mind
+up some weeks ago; and when the lock closed with a
+little clack that seemed to emphasize the fact that
+the door was shut, she had shaken the memories
+from her, and was quietly prepared to look forward
+instead of back. It also needed some little courage,
+for, as she stood with the furs fluttering about her
+on the lurching platform, the cold went through her
+like a knife, and the roofs of the little prairie town
+rose up above the willows the train was now crawling
+through. The odours that greeted her nostrils
+were the reverse of pleasant, and glancing down
+with the faintest shiver of disgust, her eyes rested
+on the litter of empty cans, discarded garments,
+and other even more unsightly things which are
+usually dumped in the handiest bluff by the citizens
+of a springing Western town. They have, for the most
+part, but little appreciation of the picturesque,
+and it would take a good deal to affect their health.</p>
+
+<p>Then the dwarfed trees opened out, and flanked
+by two huge wheat elevators and a great water tank,
+the prairie city stood revealed. It was crude and
+repellent, devoid of anything that could please the
+most lenient eye, for the bare frame houses rose
+with their rough boarding weathered and cracked by
+frost and sun, hideous almost in their simplicity,
+from the white prairie. Paint was apparently an
+unknown luxury, and pavement there was none,
+though a rude plank platform straggled some distance
+above the ground down either side of the street, so
+that the citizens might not sink knee-deep in the
+mire of the spring thawing. Here and there a
+dilapidated wagon was drawn up in front of a store,
+but with a clanging of the big bell the locomotive
+rolled into the little station, and Maud Barrington
+looked down upon a group of silent men who had
+sauntered there to enjoy the one relaxation the
+desolate place afforded them.</p>
+
+<p>There was very little in their appearance to attract
+the attention of a young woman of Miss Barrington’s
+upbringing. They had grave, bronzed faces, and
+wore, for the most part, old fur coats stained here
+and there with soil. Nor were their mittens and
+moccasins in good repair, but there was a curious
+steadiness in their gaze which vaguely suggested
+the slow, stubborn courage that upheld them
+through the strenuous effort and grim self-denial of
+their toilsome lives. They were small wheat-growers
+who had driven in to purchase provisions or inquire
+the price of grain, and here and there a mittened
+hand was raised to a well-worn cap, for most of them
+recognized Miss Barrington of Silverdale Grange.
+She returned their greetings graciously, and then
+swung herself from the platform, with a smile in her
+eyes as a man came hastily and yet, as it were,
+with a certain deliberation in her direction.</p>
+
+<p>He was elderly, but held himself erect, while his
+furs, which were good, fitted him in a fashion which
+suggested a uniform. He also wore boots which
+reached half-way to the knee, and were presumably
+lined to resist the prairie cold, which few men at
+that season would do, and scarcely a speck of dust
+marred their lustrous exterior, while as much of his
+face as was visible beneath the great fur cap was
+lean and commanding. Its salient features were
+the keen and somewhat imperious grey eyes and
+long, straight nose, while something in the squareness
+of the man’s shoulders and his pose set him apart from
+the prairie farmers and suggested the cavalry officer.
+He was, in fact, Colonel Barrington, founder and autocratic
+ruler of the English community of Silverdale,
+and had been awaiting his niece somewhat impatiently.
+Colonel Barrington was invariably
+punctual, and resented the fact that the train had
+come in an hour later than it should have done.</p>
+
+<p>“So you have come back to us. We have been
+longing for you, my dear,” he said. “I don’t
+know what we should have done had they kept
+you in Montreal altogether.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington smiled, though there was a
+brightness in her eyes and a faint warmth in her
+cheek, for the sincerity of her uncle’s welcome was
+evident.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she said, “I have come back. It was
+very pleasant in the city, and they were all kind to
+me; but I think, henceforward, I would sooner
+stay with you on the prairie.”</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington patted the hand he drew
+through his arm, and there was a very kindly smile
+in his eyes as they left the station and crossed the
+tract towards a little, and by no means very comfortable,
+wooden hotel. He stopped outside it.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to see the horses put in and get our
+mail,” he said. “Mrs. Jasper expects you, and
+will have tea ready.”</p>
+
+<p>He disappeared behind the wooden building, and
+his niece standing a moment on the veranda watched
+the long train roll away down the faint blur of track
+that ran west to the farthest verge of the great white
+wilderness. Then with a little impatient gesture she
+went into the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>“That is another leaf turned down, and there
+is no use in looking back; but I wonder what is
+written on the rest,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty minutes later she watched Colonel Barrington
+cross the street with a bundle of letters in his
+hand. She fancied that his step was slower than
+it had been, and that he seemed a trifle preoccupied
+and embarrassed; but he spoke with quiet kindliness
+when he handed her into the waiting sleigh, and
+the girl’s spirits rose as they swung smoothly northwards
+behind two fast horses across the prairie.
+It stretched away before her, ridged here and there
+with a dusky birch bluff or willow grove under a
+vault of crystalline blue. The sun that had no
+heat in it struck a silvery glitter from the snow,
+and the trail swept back to the horizon a sinuous
+blue-grey smear, while the keen, dry cold and sense
+of swift motion set the girl’s blood stirring. After
+all, it seemed to her, there were worse lives than
+those the Western farmers led on the great levels
+under the frost and sun.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington watched her with a little
+gleam of approval in his eyes. “You are not sorry
+to come back to this and Silverdale?” he said,
+sweeping his mittened hand vaguely round the
+horizon.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the girl, with a little laugh. “At
+least, I shall not be sorry to return to Silverdale.
+It has a charm of its own, for while one is occasionally
+glad to get away from it, one is even more pleased
+to come home again. It is a somewhat purposeless
+life our friends are leading yonder in the cities. I, of
+course, mean the women.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington nodded. “And some of the men!
+Well, we have room here for the many who are going
+to the devil in the old country for the lack of something
+worth while to do; though I am afraid there is
+considerably less prospect than I once fancied there
+would be of their making money.”</p>
+
+<p>His niece noticed the gravity in his face, and sat
+thoughtfully silent for several minutes, while, with
+the snow hissing beneath it, the sleigh nipped into
+and swung out of a hollow.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington had founded the Silverdale
+settlement ten years earlier, and gathered about him
+other men with a grievance who had once served
+their nation, and the younger sons of English gentlemen
+who had no inclination for commerce, and
+found that lack of brains and capital debarred them
+from either a political or military career. He had
+settled them on the land, and taught them to farm,
+while, for the community had prospered at first when
+Western wheat was dear, it had taken ten years to
+bring home to him the fact that men who dined
+ceremoniously each evening and spent at least a
+third of their time in games and sport, could not
+well compete with the grim bushmen from Ontario,
+or the lean Dakota ploughmen, who ate their meals
+in ten minutes and toiled at least twelve hours
+every day.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington was slow to believe that the
+race he sprang from could be equalled and much
+less beaten at anything, while his respect for and
+scrupulous observance of insular traditions had
+cost him a good deal, and left him a poorer man
+than he had been when he founded Silverdale. Maud
+Barrington had been his ward, and he still directed
+the farming of a good many acres of wheat land which
+she now held in her own right. The soil was excellent,
+and would in all probability have provided one of the
+Ontario men with a very desirable revenue, but
+Colonel Barrington had no taste for small economies.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to hear all the news,” said the girl.
+“You can begin at the beginning—the price of
+wheat. I fancied, when I saw you, it had been
+declining.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington sighed a little. “Hard wheat is five
+cents down, and I am sorry I persuaded you to hold
+your crop. I am very much afraid we shall see the
+balance the wrong side again next half-year.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington smiled curiously. There was
+no great cause for merriment in the information
+given her, but it emphasized the contrast between
+the present and the careless life she had lately led
+when her one thought had been how to extract the
+greatest pleasure from the day. One had frequently
+to grapple with the problems arising from scanty
+finances at Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>“It will go up again,” she said. “Is there anything
+else?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington’s face grew a trifle grim as he nodded.
+“There is; and while I have not much expectation
+of an advance in prices, I have been worrying over
+another affair lately.”</p>
+
+<p>His niece regarded him steadily. “You mean,
+Lance Courthorne?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Barrington, who flicked the near
+horse somewhat viciously with the whip. “He is
+also sufficient to cause any man with my responsibilities
+anxiety.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington looked thoughtful. “You fancy
+he will come to Silverdale?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington appeared to be repressing an inclination
+towards vigorous speech with some difficulty,
+and a little glint crept into his eyes. “If I could
+by any means prevent it, the answer would be,
+No. As it is, you know that, while I founded it,
+Silverdale was one of Geoffrey Courthorne’s imperialistic
+schemes, and a good deal of the land was
+recorded in his name. That being so, he had every
+right to leave the best farm on it to the man he had
+disinherited, especially as Lance will not get a
+penny of the English property. Still, I do not
+know why he did so, because he never spoke of him
+without bitterness.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, while a little flush crept into
+her face. “I was sorry for the old man. It was a
+painful story.”</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington nodded. “It is one that is
+best forgotten—and you do not know it all. Still,
+the fact that the man may settle among us is not the
+worst. As you know, there was every reason to
+believe that Geoffrey intended all his property at
+Silverdale for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have much less right to it than his own son,
+and the colonial cure is not infrequently efficacious,”
+said Miss Barrington. “Lance may, after all,
+quieten down, and he must have some good qualities.”</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel’s smile was very grim. “It is
+fifteen years since I saw him at Westham, and they
+were not much in evidence then. I can remember
+two little episodes, in which he figured, with painful
+distinctness, and one was the hanging of a terrier
+which had in some way displeased him. The
+beast was past assistance when I arrived on the
+scene, but the devilish pleasure in the lad’s face
+sent a chill through me. In the other, the gardener’s
+lad flung a stone at a blackbird on the wall above
+the vinery, and Master Lance, who, I fancy, did not
+like the gardener’s lad, flung one through the glass.
+Geoffrey, who was angry, but had not seen what I
+did, haled the boy before him, and Lance looked
+him in the face and lied with the assurance of an
+ambassador. The end was that the gardener, who
+was admonished, cuffed the innocent lad. These,
+my dear, are somewhat instructive memories.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder,” said Maud Barrington, glancing
+out across the prairie which was growing dusky
+now, “why you took the trouble to call them up
+for me?”</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel smiled dryly. “I never saw a Courthorne
+who could not catch a woman’s eye, or had
+any undue diffidence about making the most of
+the fact; and that is partly why they have brought
+so much trouble on everybody connected with them.
+Further, it is unfortunate that women are not infrequently
+more inclined to be gracious to the
+sinner who repents, when it is worth his while,
+than they are to the honest man who has done no
+wrong. Nor do I know that it is only pity which
+influences them. Some of you take an exasperating
+delight in picturesque rascality.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington laughed, and fearlessly met her
+uncle’s glance. “Then you don’t believe in
+penitence?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the Colonel dryly, “I am, I hope,
+a Christian man, but it would be difficult to convince
+me that the gambler, cattle-thief, and whisky-runner
+who ruined every man and woman who
+trusted him will be admitted to the same place as
+clean-lived English gentlemen. There are, my dear,
+plenty of them still.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington spoke almost fiercely, and then
+flushed through his tan, when the girl, looking into
+his eyes, smiled a little. “Yes,” she said, “I can
+believe it, because I owe a good deal to one of them.”</p>
+
+<p>The ring in the girl’s voice belied the smile, and
+the speech was warranted; for, dogmatic, domineering,
+and vindictive as he was apt to be occasionally,
+the words he had used applied most
+fitly to Colonel Barrington. His word at least
+had never been broken, and had he not adhered
+steadfastly to his own rigid code, he would have
+been a good deal richer man than he was then.
+Nor did his little shortcomings, which were burlesqued
+virtues, and ludicrous now and then, greatly
+detract from the stamp of dignity which, for
+speech was his worst point, sat well upon him. He
+was innately conservative to the backbone, though
+since an ungrateful Government had slighted him,
+he had become an ardent Canadian, and in all
+political questions aggressively democratic.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, I sometimes fancy I am a hypercritical
+old fogey!” he said, and sighed a little, while once
+more the anxious look crept into his face. “Just
+now I wish devoutly I was a better business man.”</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was said for a little, and Miss
+Barrington watched the crimson sunset burn out
+low down on the prairie’s western rim. Then the
+pale stars blinked out through the creeping dusk,
+and a great silence and an utter cold settled down
+upon the waste. The muffled thud of hoofs, and
+the crunching beneath the sliding steel, seemed to
+intensify it, and there was a suggestion of frozen
+brilliancy in the sparkle flung back by the snow.
+Then a coyote howled dolefully in a distant bluff,
+and the girl shivered as she shrank down further
+amidst the furs.</p>
+
+<p>“Forty degrees of frost,” said the Colonel.
+“Perhaps more. This is very different from the
+cold of Montreal. Still, you’ll see the lights of
+Silverdale from the crest of the next rise.”</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, an hour before they reached
+them, and Miss Barrington was almost frozen when
+the first square loghouse rose out of the prairie.
+It and others that followed it flitted by, and then,
+flanked by a great birch bluff, with outlying barns,
+granaries and stables, looming black about it against
+a crystalline sky, Silverdale Grange grew into
+shape across their way. Its rows of ruddy windows
+cast streaks of flickering orange down the trail,
+the baying of dogs changed into a joyous clamour
+when the Colonel reined in his team, half-seen men
+in furs waved a greeting, and one who risked frost-bite,
+with his cap at his knee, handed Miss Barrington
+from the sleigh and up the veranda stairway.</p>
+
+<p>She had need of the assistance, for her limbs
+were stiff and almost powerless, and she gasped a
+little when she passed into the drowsy warmth and
+brightness of the great log-walled hall. The chilled
+blood surged back tingling to her skin, and swaying
+with a creeping faintness she found refuge in the
+arms of a grey-haired lady who stooped and kissed
+her gently. Then the door swung to, and she was
+home again in the wooden grange of Silverdale,
+which stood far remote from any civilization but
+its own on the frozen levels of the great white
+plain.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink06'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER VI—ANTICIPATIONS</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was late at night, and outside the prairie lay
+white and utterly silent under the Arctic cold,
+when Maud Barrington, who glanced at it through
+the double windows, flung back the curtains with a
+little shiver, and turning towards the fire, sat down
+on a little velvet footstool beside her aunt’s knee.
+She had shaken out the coils of lustrous brown
+hair which flowed about her shoulders glinting in
+the light of the shaded lamp, and it was with a little
+gesture of physical content she stretched her hands
+towards the hearth. A crumbling birch log still
+gleamed redly amidst the feathery ashes, but its
+effect was chiefly artistic, for no open fire could have
+dissipated the cold of the prairie, and a big tiled
+stove brought from Teutonic Minnesota furnished
+the needful warmth.</p>
+
+<p>The girl’s face was partly in shadow, and her figure
+foreshortened by her pose, which accentuated its
+rounded outline and concealed its willowy slenderness;
+but the broad white forehead and straight
+nose became visible when she moved her head a
+trifle, and a faintly humorous sparkle crept into
+the clear brown eyes. Possibly Maud Barrington
+looked her best just then, for the lower part of the
+pale-tinted face was a trifle too firm in its modelling.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I am not tired, aunt, and I could not sleep
+just now,” she said. “You see, after leaving all
+that behind one, one feels, as it were, adrift, and
+it is necessary to realize one’s self again.”</p>
+
+<p>The little silver-haired lady who sat in the big
+basket chair smiled down upon her and laid a thin
+white hand that was still beautiful upon the gleaming
+hair.</p>
+
+<p>“I can understand, my dear, and am glad you
+enjoyed your stay in the city, because sometimes
+when I count your birthdays, I can’t help a fancy
+that you are not young enough,” she said. “You
+have lived out here with two old people who belong
+to the past too much.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl moved a little, and swept her glance
+slowly round the room. It was small and scantily
+furnished, though great curtains shrouded door
+and window, and here and there a picture relieved
+the bareness of the walls, which were panelled with
+roughly-dressed British-Columbian cedar. The floor
+was of redwood, diligently polished and adorned,
+not covered, by one or two skins brought by some
+of Colonel Barrington’s younger neighbours from
+the Rockies. There were two basket-chairs and a
+plain, redwood table; but in contrast to them a
+cabinet of old French workmanship stood in one
+corner bearing books in dainty bindings, and two
+great silver candlesticks. The shaded lamp was
+also of the same metal, and the whole room with
+its faint resinous smell conveyed, in a fashion not
+uncommon on the prairie, a suggestion of taste
+and refinement held in check by the least comparative
+poverty. Colonel Barrington was a widower
+who had been esteemed a man of wealth, but the
+founding of Silverdale had made a serious inroad
+on his finances. Even yet, though he occasionally
+practised it, he did not take kindly to economy.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, “I enjoyed it all—and it
+was so different from the prairie.”</p>
+
+<p>There was comprehension, and a trace of sympathy,
+in Miss Barrington’s nod. “Tell me a
+little, my dear,” she said. “There was not a great
+deal in your letters.”</p>
+
+<p>Her niece glanced dreamily into the sinking fire
+as though she would call up the pictures there.
+“But you know it all—the life I have only had
+glimpses of. Well, for the first few months I almost
+lost my head, and was swung right off my
+feet by the whirl of it. It was then I was, perhaps,
+just a trifle thoughtless.”</p>
+
+<p>The while-haired lady laughed softly. “It is
+difficult to believe it, Maud.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl shook her head reproachfully. “I
+know what you mean, and perhaps you are right,
+for that was what Twoinette insinuated,” she said.
+“She actually told me that I should be thankful I
+had a brain since I had no heart. Still, at first I
+let myself go, and it was delightful—the opera,
+the dances, and the covered skating rink with the
+music and the black ice flashing beneath the lights.
+The whirr of the toboggans down the great slide was
+finer still, and the torchlight meets of the snowshoe
+clubs on the mountain. Yes, I think I was really
+young while it lasted.”</p>
+
+<p>“For a month,” said the elder. “And after?”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the girl slowly, “it all seemed to
+grow a trifle purposeless, and there was something
+that spoiled it. Twoinette was quite angry, and I
+know her mother wrote you—but it was not my
+fault, aunt. How was I, a guileless girl from the
+prairie, to guess that such a man would fling the
+handkerchief to me?”</p>
+
+<p>The evenness of tone and entire absence of embarrassment
+was significant. It also pointed to the
+fact that there was a closer confidence between Maud
+Barrington and her aunt than often exists between
+mother and daughter, and the elder lady stroked
+the lustrous head that rested against her knee with a
+little affectionate pride.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, you know you are beautiful, and you
+have the cachet that all the Courthornes wear.
+Still, you could not like him. Tell me about him.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington curled herself up further. “I
+think I could have liked him, but that was all,”
+she said. “He was nice to look at and did all the
+little things gracefully; but he had never done
+anything else, never would, and, I fancy, had never
+wanted to. Now, a man of that kind would very
+soon pall on me, and I should have lost my temper
+trying to waken him to his responsibilities.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what kind of man would please you?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington’s eyes twinkled, but the fact
+that she answered at all was a proof of the sympathy
+between herself and the questioner. “I do not
+know that I am anxious any of them should,” she
+said. “But, since you ask, he would have to be a
+man first: a toiling, striving animal, who could
+hold his own amidst his fellows wherever he was
+placed. Secondly, one would naturally prefer a
+gentleman, though I do not like the word, and one
+would fancy the combination a trifle rare, because
+brains and birth do not necessarily tally, and the
+man educated by the struggle for existence is apt to
+be taught more than he ever would be at Oxford
+or in the army. Still, men of that stamp forget a
+good deal, and learn so much that is undesirable,
+you see. In fact, I only know one man who would
+have suited me, and he is debarred by age and
+affinity—but, because we are so much alike, I can’t
+help fancying that you once knew another.”</p>
+
+<p>The smile in Miss Barrington’s face, which was
+still almost beautiful as well as patient, became a
+trifle wistful.</p>
+
+<p>“There are few better men than my brother,
+though he is not clever,” she said and dropped
+her voice a little. “As to the other, he died in
+India—beside his mountain gun—long ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you have never forgotten? He must
+have been worth it—I wonder if loyalty and chivalric
+faith belong only to the past,” said the girl, reaching
+up a rounded arm and patting her aunt’s thin
+hand. “And now we will be practical. I fancied
+the head of the settlement looked worried when he
+met me, and he is not very proficient at hiding his
+feelings.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington sighed. “I am afraid that is
+nothing very new, and with wheat steadily falling
+and our granaries full, he has cause for anxiety.
+Then the fact that Lance Courthorne has divided
+your inheritance and is going to settle here has been
+troubling him.”</p>
+
+<p>“The first is the lesser evil,” said the girl, with
+a little laugh. “I wore very short frocks when I
+last saw Lance in England, and so far as I can remember
+he had the face of an angel and the
+temper of a devil. But did not my uncle endeavour
+to buy him off, and—for I know you have been
+finding out things—I want you to tell me all about
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“He would not take the money,” said Miss Barrington,
+and sat in thoughtful silence a space. Then,
+and perhaps she had a reason, she quietly recounted
+Courthorne’s Canadian history so far as her brother’s
+agents had been able to trace it, not omitting,
+dainty in thought and speech as she was, one or
+two incidents which a mother might have kept
+back from her daughter’s ears. Still, it was very
+seldom that Miss Barrington made a blunder. There
+was a faint pinkness in her face when she concluded,
+but she was not surprised when, with a slow, sinuous
+movement, the girl rose to her feet. Her cheeks
+were very slightly flushed, but there was a significant
+sparkle in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” she said, with utter contempt. “How
+sickening! Are there men like that?”</p>
+
+<p>There was a little silence, emphasized by the
+snapping in the stove, and if Miss Barrington
+had spoken with an object she should have been
+contented. The girl was imperious in her anger,
+which was caused by something deeper than startled
+prudery.</p>
+
+<p>“It is,” said the little white-haired lady, “all
+quite true. Still, I must confess that my brother
+and myself were a trifle astonished at the report of
+the lawyer he sent to confer with Lance in Montana,
+One would almost have imagined that he had of late
+been trying to make amends.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl’s face was very scornful. “Could a
+man with a past like that ever live it down.”</p>
+
+<p>“We have a warrant for believing it,” said
+Miss Barrington quietly, as she laid her hand on
+her companion’s arm. “My dear, I have told you
+what Lance was, because I felt it was right that
+you should know; but none of us can tell what he
+may be, and if the man is honestly trying to lead a
+different life, all I ask is that you should not wound
+him by any manifest suspicion. Those who have
+never been tempted can afford to be merciful.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed somewhat curiously.
+“You are a very wise woman, aunt, but you are
+a little transparent now and then,” she said.
+“At least, he shall have a fair trial without
+prejudice or favour—and if he fails, as fail he will,
+we shall find the means of punishing him.”</p>
+
+<p>“We?” said the elder lady a trifle maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>The girl nodded as she moved towards the doorway,
+and then turned a moment with the folds
+of the big red curtain flung behind her. It forced
+up the sweeping lines of a figure so delicately moulded
+that its slenderness was scarcely apparent, for
+Maud Barrington still wore a long, sombre dress
+that had assisted in her triumphs in the city. It
+emphasized the clear pallor of her skin and the
+brightness of her eyes, as she held herself very
+erect in a pose which, while assumed in mockery,
+had yet in it something that was almost imperial.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she said. “We. You know who is the
+power behind the throne at Silverdale, and what
+the boys call me. And now, good night. Sleep
+well, dear.”</p>
+
+<p>She went out, and Miss Barrington sat very still
+gazing, with eyes that were curiously thoughtful,
+into the fire. “Princess of the Prairie—and it
+fits her well,” she said, and then sighed a little.
+“And if there is a trace of hardness in the girl it
+may be fortunate. We all have our troubles—and
+wheat is going down.”</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, late as it was, Colonel Barrington
+and his chief lieutenant, Gordon Dane, sat
+in his log-walled smoking-room talking with a man
+he sold his wheat through in Winnipeg. The room
+was big and bare. There were a few fine heads of
+antelope upon the walls, and beneath them an
+armoury of English-made shot guns and rifles,
+while a row of riding crops, silver-mounted, and
+some handled with ivory, stood in a corner. All
+these represented amusement, while two or three
+treatises on veterinary surgery and agriculture
+lying amidst English stud-books and racing records,
+presumably stood for industry. The comparison
+was significant, and Graham, the Winnipeg wheat-broker,
+noticed it as he listened patiently to the
+views of Colonel Barrington, who nevertheless
+worked hard enough in his own fashion.
+Unfortunately, it was rather the fashion of the English
+gentleman than that common on the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>“And now,” he said, with a trace of the anxiety
+he had concealed in his eyes, “I am open to hear
+what you can do for me.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham smiled a little. “It isn’t very much,
+Colonel. I’ll take all your wheat off you at three
+cents down.”</p>
+
+<p>Now Barrington did not like the broker’s smile.
+It savoured too much of equality; and, though he had
+already unbent as far as he was capable of doing,
+he had no great esteem for men of business. Nor
+did it please him to be addressed as “Colonel.”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” he said coldly, “is out of the question,
+I would not sell at the last market price. Besides,
+you have hitherto acted as my broker.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham nodded. “The market price will be
+less than what I offered you in a week, and I could
+scarcely sell your wheat at it to-day. I was going
+to hold it myself, because I can occasionally get a
+little more from one or two millers who like that
+special grade. Usual sorts I’m selling for a fall.
+Quite sure the deal wouldn’t suit you?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington lighted a fresh cigar, though Graham,
+noticed that he had smoked very little of the one
+he flung away. This was, of course, a trifle, but it is
+the trifles that count in the aggregate upon the
+prairie, as they not infrequently do elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy I told you so,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The broker glanced at Dane, who was a big,
+bronzed man, and, since Barrington could not see
+him, shook his head deprecatingly.</p>
+
+<p>“You can consider that decided, Graham,” he
+said. “Still, can you as a friendly deed give us
+any notion of what to do? As you know, farming,
+especially at Silverdale, costs money, and the banks
+are demanding an iniquitous interest just now,
+while we are carrying over a good deal of wheat.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham nodded. He understood why farming
+was unusually expensive at Silverdale, and was, in
+recollection of past favours, inclined to be disinterestedly
+friendly.</p>
+
+<p>“If I were you I would sell right along for forward
+delivery at a few cents under the market.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a trifle difficult to see how that would
+help us,” said Barrington, with a little gesture of
+irritation, for it almost seemed that the broker was
+deriding him.</p>
+
+<p>“No!” said the man from Winnipeg, “on the
+contrary, it’s quite easy. Now I can predict that
+wheat will touch lower prices still before you have
+to make delivery, and it isn’t very difficult to figure
+out the profit on selling a thing for a dollar and
+then buying it, when you have to produce it at
+ninety cents. Of course, there is a risk of the
+market going against you, but you could buy at
+the first rise, and you’ve your stock to dole out in
+case anybody cornered you.”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Dane thoughtfully, “appears
+quite sensible. Of course, it’s a speculation, but
+presumably we couldn’t be much worse off than we
+are. Have you any objections to the scheme,
+sir.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington laid down his cigar, and glanced with
+astonished severity at the speaker. “Unfortunately,
+I have. We are wheat growers, and not wheat
+stock jugglers. Our purpose is to farm, and not
+swindle and lie in the wheat pits for decimal
+differences. I have a distinct antipathy to anything
+of the kind.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, sir,” said Dane, and Barrington stopped
+with a gesture.</p>
+
+<p>“I would,” he said, “as soon turn gambler.
+Still, while it has always been a tradition at
+Silverdale that the head of the settlement’s lead is to be
+followed, that need not prevent you putting on the
+gloves with the wheat-ring blacklegs in Winnipeg.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane blushed a little under his tan, and then
+smiled as he remembered the one speculative venture
+his leader had indulged in, for Colonel Barrington
+was a somewhat hot-tempered and vindictive man.
+He made a little gesture of deprecation as he glanced
+at Graham, who straightened himself suddenly in
+his chair.</p>
+
+<p>“I should not think of doing so in face of your
+opinion, sir,” he said. “There is an end to the
+thing, Graham!”</p>
+
+<p>The broker’s face was a trifle grim. “I gave you
+good advice out of friendship, Colonel, and there
+are men with dollars to spare who would value a
+hint from me,” he said. “Still, as it doesn’t seem
+to strike you the right way, I’ve no use for arguing.
+Keep your wheat—and pay bank interest if you want
+any help to carry over.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks,” said Dane quietly. “They charge
+tolerably high, but I’ve seen what happens to the
+man who meddles with the mortgage-broker.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham nodded. “Well, as I’m starting out at
+six o’clock, it’s time I was asleep,” he said. “Good-night
+to you, Colonel.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington shook hands with Graham, and then
+sighed a little when he went out. “I believe the
+man is honest, and he is a guest of mine, or I should
+have dressed him down,” he said. “I don’t like
+the way things are going, Dane; and the fact is
+we must find accommodation somewhere, because
+now I have to pay out so much on my ward’s
+account to that confounded Courthorne, it is necessary
+to raise more dollars than the banks will give
+me. Now, there was a broker fellow wrote me
+a very civil letter.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane, who was a thoughtful man, ventured to
+lay his hand upon his leader’s arm. “Keep yourself
+and Miss Barrington out of those fellows’
+clutches, at any cost,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Barrington shook off his hand and looked at
+him sternly. “Are you not a trifle young to adopt
+that tone?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Dane nodded. “No doubt I am, but I’ve seen a
+little of mortgage jobbing. You must try to overlook
+it. I did not mean to offend.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out, and, while Colonel Barrington
+sat down before a sheaf of accounts, sprang into
+a waiting sleigh. “It’s no use; we’ve got to go
+through,” he said to the lad who shook the reins,
+“Graham made a very sensible suggestion, but
+our respected leader came down on him, as he did
+on me. You see, one simply can’t talk to the
+Colonel; and it’s unfortunate Miss Barrington
+didn’t marry that man in Montreal.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” said the lad. “Of course,
+there are not many girls like Maud Barrington,
+but is it necessary she should go outside Silverdale?”</p>
+
+<p>Dane laughed. “None of us would be old enough
+for Miss Barrington when we were fifty. The
+trouble is, that we spend half our time in play,
+and I’ve a notion it’s a man, and not a gentleman
+dilettante, she’s looking for.”</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t that a curious way of putting it?” asked
+his companion.</p>
+
+<p>Dane nodded. “It may be the right one.
+Woman is as she was made, and I’ve had more
+than a suspicion lately that a little less refinement
+would not come amiss at Silverdale. Anyway,
+I hope she’ll find him, for it’s a man with grit and
+energy, who could put a little desirable pressure
+on the Colonel occasionally, we’re all wanting.
+Of course, I’m backing my leader, though it’s
+going to cost me a good deal, but it’s time he had
+somebody to help him.”</p>
+
+<p>“He would never accept assistance,” said the
+lad thoughtfully. “That is, unless the man who
+offered it was, or became by marriage, one of the
+dynasty.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said Dane. “That’s why I’m
+inclined to take a fatherly interest in Miss Barrington’s
+affairs. It’s a misfortune we’ve heard
+nothing very reassuring about Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink07'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER VII—WITHAM’S DECISION</a></h2>
+
+<p>Farmer Witham crossed the frontier without
+molestation and spent one night in a little wooden
+town, where several people he did not speak to
+apparently recognized him. Then he pushed on
+southwards, and passed a week in the especially
+desolate settlement he had been directed to. A few
+dilapidated frame houses rose out of the white wilderness
+beside the broad, beaten trail, and, for here the
+prairie rolled south in long rises like the wakes of a
+frozen sea, a low wooden building on the crest of one
+cut the skyline a league away. It served as outpost
+for a squadron of United States cavalry, and the
+troopers daily maligned the Government which had
+sent them into that desolation on police duty.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing else visible but a few dusky
+groves of willows and dazzling snow. The ramshackle
+wooden hotel was rather more than usually badly kept
+and comfortless, and Witham, who had managed to
+conciliate his host, felt relieved one afternoon when
+the latter flung down the cards disgustedly.</p>
+
+<p>“I guess I’ve had enough,” he said. “Playing
+for stakes of this kind isn’t good enough for you!”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed a little to hide his resentment, as
+he said, “I don’t quite understand.”</p>
+
+<p>“Pshaw!” said the American with a contemptuous
+gesture. “Three times out of four I’ve spoiled your
+hand, and if I didn’t know that black horse I’d take
+you for some blamed Canadian rancher. You didn’t
+handle the pictures that way when you stripped the
+boys to the hide at Regent, Mr. Courthorne?”</p>
+
+<p>“Regent?” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>The hotel-keeper laughed. “Oh yes,” he said.
+“I wouldn’t go back there too soon, anyway. The
+boys seem quite contented, and I don’t figure they
+would be very nice to you. Well, now, I’ve no use for
+fooling with a man who’s too proud to take my dollars,
+and I’ve a pair of horses just stuffed with wickedness
+in the stable. There’s not much you don’t know
+about a beast, anyway, and you can take them out a
+league or two if you feel like it.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham, who had grown very tired of his host, was
+glad of any distraction, especially as he surmised that
+while the man had never seen Courthorne, he knew
+rather more than he did himself about his doings.
+Accordingly, he got into the sleigh that was brought
+out by and by, and enjoyed the struggle with the half-tamed
+team which stood with ears laid back, prepared
+for conflict. Oats had been very plentiful, and prices
+low that season. Witham, who knew at least as much
+about a horse as Lance Courthorne, however, bent
+them to his will and the team were trotting quietly
+through the shadow of a big birch bluff a league from
+town, when he heard a faint clip-clop coming down
+the trail behind him. It led straight beneath the
+leafless branches, and was beaten smooth and firm;
+while Witham, who had noticed already that whenever
+he strayed any distance from the hotel there was a
+mounted cavalryman somewhere, in the vicinity,
+shook the reins.</p>
+
+<p>The team swung into faster stride, the cold wind
+whistled past him, and the snow whirled up from beneath
+the runners; but while he listened the rhythmic
+drumming behind him also quickened a little. Then
+a faintly musical jingle of steel accompanied the beat
+of hoofs, and Witham glanced about him with a little
+laugh of annoyance. The dusk was creeping across the
+prairie, and a pale star or two growing into brilliancy
+in the cloudless sweep of indigo.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s getting a trifle tiresome. I’ll find out what the
+fellow wants,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Wheeling the team, he drove back the way he came,
+and, when a dusky object materialized out of the
+shadows beneath the birches, swung the horses right
+across the trail. The snow lay deep on either side of it
+just there, with a sharp crust upon its surface, which
+rendered it inadvisable to take a horse round the sleigh.
+The mounted man accordingly drew bridle, and the
+jingle and rattle betokened his profession, though it
+was already too dark to see him clearly.</p>
+
+<p>“Hallo!” he said. “Been buying this trail up,
+stranger?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham quietly, though he still held
+his team across the way. “Still, I’ve got the same
+right as any other citizen to walk or drive along it
+without anybody prowling after me, and just now I
+want to know if there is a reason I should be favoured
+with your company.”</p>
+
+<p>The trooper laughed a little. “I guess there is.
+It’s down in the orders that whoever’s on patrol near
+the settlement should keep his eye on you. You see,
+if you lit out of here we would want to know just
+where you were going to.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am,” said Witham, “a Canadian citizen, and I
+came out here for quietness.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the other, “you’re an American too.
+Anyway, when you were in a tight place down in Regent
+there, you told the boys so. Now, no sensible
+man would boast of being a Britisher unless it was
+helping him to play out his hand.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham kept his temper. “I want a straight
+answer. Can you tell me what you and the boys are
+trailing me for?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the trooper. “Still, I guess our
+commander could. If you don’t know of any reason,
+you might ask him.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham tightened his grip on the reins. “I’ll ride
+back with you to the outpost now.”</p>
+
+<p>The trooper shook his bridle, and trotted behind the
+sleigh, while, as it swung up and down over the billowy
+rises of the prairie, Witham became sensible of a
+curious expectancy. The bare, hopeless life he had
+led seemed to have slipped behind him, and though
+he suspected that there was no great difference between
+his escort and a prisoner’s guard, the old love of excitement
+he once fancied he had outgrown for ever awoke
+again within him. Anything that was different from
+the past would be a relief, and the man who had for
+eight long years of strenuous toil practised the grimmest
+self-denial wondered with a quickening of all his
+faculties what the future, that could not be more
+colourless, might have in store for him.</p>
+
+<p>It was dark, and very cold, when they reached the
+wooden building, but Witham’s step was lighter, and
+his spirits more buoyant than they had been for some
+months when, handing the sleigh over to an orderly,
+he walked into the guard-room, where bronzed men
+in uniform glanced at him curiously. Then he was
+shown into a bare, log-walled hall, where a young man
+in blue uniform with a weather-darkened face was
+writing at a table.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been partly expecting a visit,” he said. “I’m
+glad to see you, Mr. Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed with a very good imitation of the
+outlaw’s recklessness, and wondered the while because
+it cost him no effort. He who had, throughout the
+last two adverse seasons, seldom smiled at all, and
+then but grimly, experienced the same delight in an
+adventure that he had done when he came out to
+Canada.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know that I can return the compliment
+just yet,” he said. “I have one or two things to ask
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>The young soldier smiled good-humouredly, as he
+flung a cigar case on the table. “Oh, sit down and
+shake those furs off,” he said. “I’m not a worrying
+policeman, and we’re white men, anyway. If you’d
+been twelve months in this forsaken place you’d know
+what I’m feeling. Take a smoke, and start in with
+your questions when you feel like it.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham lighted a cigar, flung himself down in a hide
+chair, and stretched out his feet towards the stove.
+“In the first place, I want to know why your boys are
+shadowing me. You see, you couldn’t arrest me unless
+our folks in the Dominion had got their papers
+through.”</p>
+
+<p>The officer nodded. “No. We couldn’t lay hands
+on you, and we only had orders to see where you went
+to when you left this place, so the folks there could
+corral you if they got the papers. That’s about the
+size of it at present, but, as I’ve sent a trooper over to
+Regent, I’ll know more to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “It may appear a little astonishing,
+but I haven’t the faintest notion why the police
+in Canada should worry about me. Is there any
+reason you shouldn’t tell me?”</p>
+
+<p>The officer looked at him thoughtfully. “Bluff?
+I’m quite smart at it myself,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” and Witham shook his head. “It’s a
+straight question. I want to know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the other, “it couldn’t do much harm if
+I told you. You were running whisky a little while
+ago, and, though the folks didn’t seem to suspect it,
+you had a farmer or a rancher for a partner—it appears
+he has mixed up things for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Witham?” and the farmer turned to roll the cigar
+which did not need it between his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the man,” said his companion. “Well,
+though I guess it’s no news to you, the police came
+down upon your friends at a river-crossing, and farmer
+Witham put a bullet into a young trooper, Shannon,
+I fancy.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat upright, and the blood that surged to
+his forehead sank from it suddenly, and left his face
+grey with anger.</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” he said hoarsely. “He killed
+him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said the officer, “Killing’s not quite the
+word, because one shot would have been enough to
+free him of the lad, and the rancher fired twice into
+him. They figured, from the way the trooper was
+lying and the footprints, that he meant to finish
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>The farmer’s face was very grim as he said, “They
+were sure it was Witham?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” and the soldier watched him curiously.
+“Anyway, they were sure of his horse, and it was
+Witham’s rifle. Another trooper nearly got him,
+and he left it behind him. It wasn’t killing, for the
+trooper don’t seem to have had a show at all, and I’m
+glad to see it makes you kind of sick. Only that one
+of the troopers allows he was trailing you at a time
+which shows you had no hand in the thing, you
+wouldn’t be sitting there smoking that cigar.”</p>
+
+<p>It was almost a minute before Witham could trust
+his voice. Then he said slowly, “And what do they
+want me for?”</p>
+
+<p>“I guess they don’t quite know whether they do or
+not,” said the officer. “They crawl slow in Canada.
+In the meanwhile they wanted to know where you
+were, so they could take out papers if anything turned
+up against you.”</p>
+
+<p>“And Witham?” said the farmer.</p>
+
+<p>“Got away with a trooper close behind him. The
+rest of them had headed him off from the prairie, and
+he took to the river. Went through the ice and drowned
+himself, though as there was a blizzard nobody quite
+saw the end of him, and in case there was any doubt
+they’ve got a warrant out. Farmer Witham’s dead,
+and if he isn’t he soon will be, for the troopers have
+got their net right across the prairie, and the Canadians
+don’t fool time away as we do when it comes to hanging
+anybody. The tale seems to have worried you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat rigidly still and silent for almost a
+minute. Then he rose up with a curious little shake
+of his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>“And farmer Witham’s dead. Well he had a hard
+life. I knew him rather well,” he said. “Thank
+you for the story. On my word this is the first time
+I’ve heard it, and now it’s time I was going.”</p>
+
+<p>The officer laughed a little. “Sit right down again.
+Now, there’s something about you that makes me like
+you, and as I can’t talk to the boys, I’ll give you the
+best supper we can raise in the whole forsaken country,
+and you can camp here until to-morrow. It’s
+an arrangement that will meet the views of everybody,
+because I’ll know whether the Canadians want you or
+not in the morning.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham did not know what prompted him to agree,
+but it all seemed part of a purpose that impelled him
+against his reasoning will, and he sat still beside the
+stove while his host went out to give orders respecting
+supper and the return of the sleigh. He was also
+glad to be alone for a while, for now and then a fit of
+anger shook him as he saw how he had been duped by
+Courthorne. He had heard Shannon’s story, and,
+remembering it, could fancy that Courthorne had
+planned the trooper’s destruction with a devilish
+cunning that recognized by what means the blame
+could be laid upon a guiltless man. Witham’s face
+became mottled with grey again as he realized that
+if he revealed his identity he had nothing but his
+word to offer in proof of his innocence.</p>
+
+<p>Still, it was anger and not fear that stirred him,
+for nobody could arrest a man who was dead, and
+there was no reason that would render it undesirable
+for him to remain so. His farm would, when sold,
+realize the money borrowed upon it, and the holder of
+the mortgage had received a profitable interest already.
+Had the unforeseen not happened, Witham would
+have held out to the end of the struggle, but now he
+had no regret that this was out of the question. Fate
+had been too strong for him as farmer Witham, but
+it might deal more kindly with him as the outlaw
+Courthorne. He could also make a quick decision,
+and when the officer returned to say that supper was
+ready, he rose with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>They sat down to a meal that was barbaric in its
+simplicity and abundance, for men live and eat in
+Homeric fashion in the North-West, while when the
+green tea was finished and the officer pushed the
+whisky across, his guest laughed as he filled his glass.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s better fortune to farmer Witham!” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>The officer stared at him. “No, sir,” he said
+“If the old folks taught me aright, Witham’s in——”</p>
+
+<p>A curious smile flickered in the farmer’s eyes.
+“No,” he said slowly. “He was tolerably near
+it once or twice when he was alive, and, because of
+what he went through then, there may be something
+better in store for him.”</p>
+
+<p>His companion appeared astonished, but said
+nothing further until he brought out the cards. They
+played for an hour beside the snapping stove, and
+then, when Witham flung a trump away, the officer
+groaned.</p>
+
+<p>“I guess,” he said disgustedly, “you’re not well
+to-night, or something is worrying you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked up with a little twinkle in his eyes.
+“I don’t know that there’s very much wrong
+with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the officer decisively, “if the boys
+down at Regent know enough to remember what
+trumps are, you’re not Lance Courthorne. Now after
+what I’d heard of you, I’d have put up fifty dollars
+for the pleasure of watching your game—and it’s not
+worth ten cents when I’ve seen it.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Sit down and talk,” he said.
+“One isn’t always in his usual form, and there are
+folks who get famous too easily.”</p>
+
+<p>They talked until nearly midnight, sitting close to
+the stove, while a doleful wind that moaned without
+drove the dust of snow pattering against the windows,
+and the shadows grew darker in the corners of the great
+log-walled room each time the icy draughts set the
+lamp flickering. Then the officer, rising, expressed
+the feelings of his guest as he said, “It’s a forsaken
+country, and I’m thankful one can sleep and forget it.”</p>
+
+<p>He had, however, an honourable calling, and a
+welcome from friend and kinsman awaiting him
+when he went East again, to revel in the life of the
+cities, but the man who followed him silently to the
+sleeping-room had nothing but a half-instinctive
+assurance that the future could not well be harder or
+more lonely than the past had been. Still, farmer
+Witham was a man of courage with a quiet belief in
+himself, and in ten minutes he was fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>When he came down to breakfast his host was
+already seated with a bundle of letters before him,
+and one addressed to Courthorne lay unopened by
+Witham’s plate. The officer nodded when he saw
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“The trooper has come in with the mail, and your
+friends in Canada are not going to worry you,” he
+said. “Now, if you feel like staying here a few days,
+it would be a favour to me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham had in the meanwhile opened the envelope.
+He knew that when once the decision was made there
+could only be peril in half-measures, and his eyes
+grew thoughtful as he read. The letter had been
+written by a Winnipeg lawyer from a little town not
+very far away, and requested Courthorne to meet and
+confer with him respecting certain suggestions made
+by a Colonel Barrington. Witham decided to take
+the risk.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry, but I have got to go into Annerly at
+once,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the officer, “I’ll drive you. I’ve
+some stores to get down there.”</p>
+
+<p>They started after breakfast, but it was dusk
+next day when they reached the little town, and
+Witham walked quietly into a private room of the
+wooden hotel, where a middle-aged man with a
+shrewd face sat waiting him. The big nickelled
+lamp flickered in the draughts that found their way
+in, and Witham was glad of it, though he was outwardly
+very collected. The stubborn patience and
+self-control with which he had faced the loss of his
+wheat crops and frozen stock stood him in good stead
+now. He fancied the lawyer seemed a trifle astonished
+at his appearance, and sat down wondering whether
+he had previously spoken to Courthorne, until the
+question was answered for him.</p>
+
+<p>“Although I have never had the pleasure of meeting
+you before, I have acted as Colonel Barrington’s
+legal adviser ever since he settled at Silverdale, and
+am, therefore, well posted as to his affairs, which are,
+of course, connected with those of your own family,”
+said the lawyer. “We can accordingly talk with
+greater freedom, and I hope without the acerbity
+which in your recent communications somewhat
+annoyed the Colonel!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne, who had never heard
+of Colonel Barrington, “I am ready to listen.”</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer drummed on the table. “It might
+be best to come to the point at once,” he said.
+“Colonel Barrington does not deem it convenient
+that you should settle at Silverdale, and would be
+prepared to offer you a reasonable sum to relinquish
+your claim.”</p>
+
+<p>“My claim?” said Witham, who remembered
+having heard of the Silverdale Colony, which lay
+several hundred miles away.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said the lawyer. “The legacy lately
+left you by Roger Courthorne. I have brought you
+a schedule of the wheat in store, and amounts due to
+you on various sales made. You will also find the
+acreage, stock, and implements detailed at a well-known
+appraiser’s valuation, which you could, of
+course, confirm, and Colonel Barrington would hand
+you a cheque for half the total now. He however,
+asks four years to pay the balance, which would carry
+bank interest in the meanwhile, in.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham, who was glad of the excuse, spent at least
+ten minutes studying the paper, and realized that it
+referred to a large and well-appointed farm, though
+it occurred to him that the crop was a good deal smaller
+than it should have been. He noticed this, as
+it were, instinctively, for his brain was otherwise very
+busy.</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel Barrington seems somewhat anxious to
+get rid of me,” he said. “You see, this land is mine
+by right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the lawyer. “Colonel Barrington
+does not dispute it, though I am of opinion that he
+might have done so under one clause of the will. I
+do not think we need discuss his motives.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham moistened his lips with his tongue, and
+his lips quivered a little. He had hitherto been an
+honest man, and now it was impossible for him to
+take the money. It, however, appeared equally
+impossible to reveal his identity and escape the halter,
+and he felt that the dead man had wronged him
+horribly. He was entitled at least to safety by way
+of compensation, for by passing as Courthorne he
+would avoid recognition as Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“Still, I do not know how I have offended Colonel
+Barrington,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I would sooner,” said the lawyer, “not go into
+that. It is, I fancy, fifteen years since Colonel Barrington
+saw you, but he desired me to find means of
+tracing your Canadian record, and did not seem
+pleased with it. Nor, at the risk of offending you,
+could I deem him unduly prejudiced.”</p>
+
+<p>“In fact,” said Witham dryly, “this man who has
+not seen me for fifteen years is desirous of withholding
+what is mine from me at almost any cost.”</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer nodded. “There is nothing to be
+gained by endeavouring to controvert it. Colonel
+Barrington is also, as you know, a somewhat determined
+gentleman.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed, for he was essentially a stubborn
+man, and felt little kindliness towards any one connected
+with Courthorne, as the Colonel evidently
+was.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy I am not entirely unlike him in that respect,”
+he said. “What you have told me makes me
+the more determined to follow my own inclinations.
+Is there any one else at Silverdale prejudiced against
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer fell into the trap. “Miss Barrington,
+of course, takes her brother’s view, and her niece
+would scarcely go counter to them. She must have
+been a very young girl when she last saw you, but
+from what I know of her character I should expect
+her to support the Colonel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham. “I want to think over
+the thing. We will talk again to-morrow. You
+would require me to establish my identity, anyway?”</p>
+
+<p>“The fact that a famous inquiry agent has traced
+your movements down to a week or two ago, and told
+me where to find you, will render that simple,” said
+the lawyer dryly.</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat up late that night turning over the
+papers the lawyer left him, and thinking hard. It
+was evident that in the meanwhile he must pass as
+Courthorne, but as the thought of taking the money
+revolted him, the next step led to the occupation of
+the dead man’s property. The assumption of it would
+apparently do nobody a wrong, while he felt that
+Courthorne had taken so much from him that the farm
+at Silverdale would be a very small reparation. It
+was not, he saw, a great inheritance, but one that in
+the right hands could be made profitable, and Witham,
+who had fought a plucky fight with obsolete and
+worthless implements and indifferent teams, felt that
+he could do a great deal with what was, as it were,
+thrust upon him at Silverdale. It was not avarice
+that tempted him, though he knew he was tempted
+now, but a longing to find a fair outlet for his energies,
+and show what, once given the chance that most men
+had, he could do. He had stinted himself and toiled
+almost as a beast of burden, but now he could use his
+brains in place of wringing the last effort out of overtaxed
+muscle. He had also during the long struggle
+lost, to some extent, his clearness of vision, and only
+saw himself as a lonely man fighting for his own hand
+with fate against him. Now, when prosperity was
+offered him, it seemed but folly to stand aside when
+he could stretch out a strong hand and take it.</p>
+
+<p>During the last hour he sat almost motionless, the
+issue hung in the balance, and he laid himself down
+still undecided. Still, he had lived long in primitive
+fashion in close touch with the soil, and sank, as most
+men would have done, into restful sleep. The sun
+hung red above the rim of the prairie when he awakened,
+and going down to breakfast found the lawyer
+waiting for him.</p>
+
+<p>“You can tell Colonel Barrington I’m coming to
+Silverdale,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer looked at him curiously. “Would
+there be any use in asking you to consider?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “No,” he said. “Now, I rather
+like the way you talked to me, and if it wouldn’t be
+disloyalty to the Colonel, I should be pleased if you
+would undertake to put me in due possession of my
+property.”</p>
+
+<p>He said nothing further, and the lawyer sat down
+to write Colonel Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Courthorne proves obdurate,” he said. “He
+is, however, by no means the type of man I expected
+to find, and I venture to surmise that you will
+eventually discover him to be a less undesirable
+addition to Silverdale than you are at present inclined
+to fancy.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink08'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER VIII—WITHAM COMES TO SILVERDALE</a></h2>
+
+<p>There were warmth and brightness in the cedar-boarded
+general room of Silverdale Grange, and most
+of the company gathered there basked in it contentedly
+after their drive through the bitter night. Those
+who came from the homesteads lying farthest out
+had risked frost-nipped hands and feet, for when
+Colonel Barrington held a levee at the Grange nobody
+felt equal to refusing his invitation. Neither scorching
+heat nor utter cold might excuse compliance with the
+wishes of the founder of Silverdale, and it was not
+until Dane, the big middle-aged bachelor, had spoken
+very plainly, that he consented to receive his guests
+in time of biting frost dressed otherwise than as they
+would have appeared in England.</p>
+
+<p>Dane was the one man in the settlement who dare
+remonstrate with its ruler, but it was a painful astonishment
+to the latter when he said, in answer to one
+invitation, “I have never been frost-bitten, sir, and
+I stand the cold well, but one or two of the lads are
+weak in the chest, and this climate was never intended
+for bare-shouldered women. Hence, if I come, I
+shall dress myself to suit it.”</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington stared at him for almost a minute,
+and then shook his head. “Have it your own
+way,” he said, “Understand that in itself I care
+very little for dress, but it is only by holding fast to
+every traditional nicety we can prevent ourselves
+sinking into Western barbarism, and I am horribly
+afraid of the thin end of the wedge.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane having gained his point, said nothing further,
+for he was one of the wise and silent men who know
+when to stop, and that evening he sat in a corner
+watching his leader thoughtfully, for there was anxiety
+in the Colonel’s face. Barrington sat silent near
+the ample hearth whose heat would scarcely have
+kept water from freezing but for the big stove, and
+disdaining the dispensation made his guests, he was
+clad conventionally, though the smooth black fabric
+clung about him more tightly than it had once been
+intended to do. His sister stood, with the stamp of a
+not wholly vanished beauty still clinging to her gentle
+face, talking to one or two matrons from outlying
+farms, and his niece by a little table turning over
+Eastern photographs with a few young girls. She,
+too, wore black in deference to the Colonel’s taste,
+which was sombre, and the garment she had laughed
+at as a compromise, left uncovered a narrow strip of
+ivory shoulder and enhanced the polished whiteness
+of her neck. A slender string of pearls gleamed softly
+on the satiny skin, but Maud Barrington wore no other
+adornment and did not need it. She had inherited
+the Courthorne comeliness, and the Barringtons
+she sprang from on her father’s side had always borne
+the stamp of distinction.</p>
+
+<p>A young girl sat at the piano singing in a thin,
+reedy voice, while an English lad waited with ill-concealed
+jealousy of a too officious companion to
+turn over the music by her side. Other men,
+mostly young, with weather-bronzed faces, picturesque
+in embroidered deerskin or velvet lounge jackets,
+were scattered about the room, and all were waiting
+for the eight-o’clock dinner, which replaced the usual
+prairie supper at Silverdale. They were growers of
+wheat who combined a good deal of amusement with
+a little not very profitable farming, and most of them
+possessed a large share of insular English pride and
+a somewhat depleted exchequer.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Dane crossed over, and sat down by
+Colonel Barrington. “You are silent, sir, and not
+looking very well to-night,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Barrington nodded gravely, for he had a respect
+for the one man who occasionally spoke plain truth
+to him. “The fact is, I am growing old,” he said, and
+then added, with what was only an apparent lack of
+connexion, “Wheat is down three cents, and money
+tighter than ever.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane looked thoughtful, and noticed the older
+man’s glance in his niece’s direction, as he said, “I
+am afraid there are difficult times before us.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have no doubt we shall weather them as we have
+done before,” said the Colonel. “Still, I can’t help
+admitting that just now I feel—a little tired—and
+am commencing to think we should have been better
+prepared for the struggle had we worked a trifle
+harder during the recent era of prosperity. I could
+wish there were older heads on the shoulders of those
+who will come after me.”</p>
+
+<p>Just then Maud Barrington glanced at them, and
+Dane, who could not remember having heard his
+leader talk in that fashion before, and could guess
+his anxieties, was a little touched as he noticed his
+attempt at sprightliness. As it happened, one of the
+lads at the piano commenced a song of dogs and horses
+that had little to recommend it but the brave young
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>“They have the right spirit, sir,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said Barrington. “They are English
+lads, but I think a little more is required. Thank
+God we have not rated the dollar too high, but it is
+possible we have undervalued its utility, and I fear I
+have only taught them to be gentlemen.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is a good deal, sir,” Dane said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“It is. Still, a gentleman, in the restricted sense,
+is somewhat of an anachronism on the prairie, and it
+is too late to begin again. In the usual course of
+nature I must lay down my charge presently, and
+that is why I feel the want of a more capable successor,
+whom they would follow because of his connexion
+with mine and me.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane looked thoughtful. “If I am not taking a
+liberty—you still consider the one apparently born
+to fill the place quite unsuitable?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Barrington quietly. “I fear there
+is not a redeeming feature in Courthorne’s character.”</p>
+
+<p>Neither said anything further, until there was a
+tapping at the door, and, though this was a most
+unusual spectacle on the prairie, a trim English maid
+in white-banded dress stood in the opening.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Courthorne, Miss Barrington,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Now Silverdale had adopted one Western custom
+in that no chance guest was ever kept waiting, and
+the music ceased suddenly, while the stillness was
+very suggestive, when a man appeared in the doorway.
+He wore one of the Scandinavian leather jackets
+which are not uncommon in that country, and when
+his eyes had become accustomed to the light, moved
+forward with a quiet deliberation that was characterized
+neither by graceful ease nor the restraint of
+embarrassment. His face was almost the colour of
+a Blackfoot’s, his eyes steady and grey, but those of
+the men who watched him were next moment turned
+upon the Colonel’s sister, who rose to receive him,
+slight, silver-haired, and faded, but still stamped with
+a simple dignity that her ancient silks and lace curiously
+enhanced. Then there was a silence that could
+be felt, for all realized that a good deal depended
+on the stranger’s first words and the fashion of his
+reception.</p>
+
+<p>Witham, as it happened, felt this too, and something
+more. It was eight years since he had stood
+before an English lady, and he surmised that there
+could not be many to compare with this one, while
+after his grim, lonely life an intangible something
+that seemed to emanate from her gracious serenity
+compelled his homage. Then as she smiled at him
+and held out her hand, he was for a moment sensible
+of an almost overwhelming confusion. It passed as
+suddenly, for this was a man of quick perceptions, and
+remembering that Courthorne had now and then
+displayed some of the grace of bygone days he yielded
+to a curious impulse, and, stooping, kissed the little
+withered fingers.</p>
+
+<p>“I have,” he said, “to thank you for a welcome
+that does not match my poor deserts, madam.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Dane, standing beside his leader, saw the
+grimness grow a trifle less marked in his eyes. “It
+is in the blood,” he said half aloud, but Dane heard
+him and afterwards remembered it.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Miss Barrington had turned from
+the stranger to her niece. “It is a very long time
+since you have seen Lance, Maud, and, though I knew
+his mother well, I am less fortunate, because this is
+our first meeting,” she said. “I wonder if you still
+remember my niece.”</p>
+
+<p>Now, Witham had been gratified by his first success,
+and was about to venture on the answer that it
+was impossible to forget; but when he turned towards
+the very stately young woman in the long black dress,
+whose eyes had a sardonic gleam, and wondered
+whether he had ever seen anybody so comely or less
+inclined to be companionable, it was borne in upon him
+that any speech of the kind would be distinctly out
+of place. Accordingly, and because there was no
+hand held out in this case, he contented himself with
+a little bend of his head. Then he was presented to
+the Colonel, who was distantly cordial, and Witham
+was thankful when the maid appeared in the doorway
+again, to announce that dinner was ready. Miss
+Barrington laid her hand upon his arm.</p>
+
+<p>“You will put up with an old woman’s company
+to-night?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham glanced down deprecatingly at his attire.
+“I must explain that I had no intention of trespassing
+on your hospitality,” he said. “I purposed
+going on to my own homestead, and only called
+to acquaint Colonel Barrington with my arrival.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington laughed pleasantly. “That,”
+she said, “was neither dutiful nor friendly. I should
+have fancied you would also have desired to pay your
+respects to my niece and me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham was not quite sure what he answered, but
+he drew in a deep breath, for he had made the plunge
+and felt that the worst was over. His companion,
+evidently noticed the gasp of relief.</p>
+
+<p>“It was somewhat of an ordeal?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked down upon her gravely, and Miss
+Barrington noticed a steadiness in his eyes she had
+not expected to see. “It was, and I feel guilty because
+I was horribly afraid,” he said. “Now I only
+wonder if you will always be equally kind to me.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington smiled a little, but the man fancied
+there was just a perceptible tightening of the
+hand upon his arm. “I would like to be, for your
+mother’s sake,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham understood that while Courthorne’s iniquities
+were not to be brought up against him, the
+little gentle-voiced lady had but taken him on trial;
+but, perhaps because it was so long since any woman
+had spoken kindly words to him, his heart went out towards
+her, and he felt a curious desire to compel her
+good opinion. Then he found himself seated near the
+head of the long table, with Maud Barrington on his
+other hand, and had an uncomfortable feeling that
+most of the faces were turned somewhat frequently
+in his direction. It is also possible that he would
+have betrayed himself, had he been burdened with
+self-consciousness, but the long, bitter struggle he had
+fought alone had purged him of petty weaknesses and
+left him the closer grasp of essential things, with the
+strength of character which is one and the same in
+all men who possess it, whatever may be their upbringing.</p>
+
+<p>During a lull in the voices, Maud Barrington, who
+may have felt it incumbent on her to show him some
+scant civility, turned towards him as she said, “I am
+afraid our conversation will not appeal to you. Partly
+because there is so little else to interest us, we talk
+wheat throughout the year at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham with a curious little smile,
+“wheat as a topic is not quite new to me. In fact,
+I know almost more about cereals than some folks
+would care to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“In the shape of elevator warrants or Winnipeg
+market margins, presumably?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s eyes twinkled, though he understood the
+implication. “No,” he said. “The wheat I handled
+was in 250-pound bags, and I occasionally grew
+somewhat tired of pitching them into a wagon, while
+my speculations usually consisted in committing it
+to the prairie soil, in the hope of reaping forty bushels
+to the acre, and then endeavouring to be content
+with ten. It is conceivable that operations on the
+Winnipeg market are less laborious as well as more
+profitable, but I have no opportunity of trying
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked at him steadily, and Witham
+felt the blood surge to his forehead as he remembered
+having heard of a certain venture made by Courthorne,
+which brought discredit on one or two men, connected
+with the affairs of a grain elevator. It was evident
+that Miss Barrington had also heard of it, and no man
+cares to stand convicted of falsification in the eyes
+of a very pretty girl. Still, he roused himself with an
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>“It is neither wise nor charitable to believe all one
+hears,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled a little, but the man still winced
+inwardly under her clear brown eyes that would, he
+fancied, have been very scornful had they been less
+indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not remember mentioning having heard anything,”
+she said. “Were you not a trifle premature
+in face of the proverb?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s face was a trifle grim, though he laughed.
+“I’m afraid I was; but I am warned,” he said.
+“Excuses are, after all, not worth much, and when I
+make my defence it will be before a more merciful
+judge.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington’s curiosity was piqued. Lance
+Courthorne, outcast and gambler, was at least a
+different stamp of man from the type she had been
+used to, and, being a woman, the romance that was
+interwoven with his somewhat iniquitous career was
+not without its attractions for her.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not know that you included farming among
+your talents, and should have fancied you would have
+found it—monotonous,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“I did,” and the provoking smile still flickered in
+Witham’s eyes. “Are not all strictly virtuous occupations
+usually so?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is probably a question of temperament. I
+have, of course, heard sardonic speeches of the kind
+before, and felt inclined to wonder whether those who
+made them were qualified to form an opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded, but there was a little ring in his
+voice. “Perhaps I laid myself open to the thrust;
+but have you any right to assume I have never followed
+a commendable profession?”</p>
+
+<p>No answer was immediately forthcoming, but Witham
+did wisely when, in place of waiting, he turned
+to Miss Barrington. He had left her niece irritated,
+but the trace of anger she felt was likely to enhance
+her interest. The meal, however, was a trial to him,
+for he had during eight long years lived for the most
+part apart from all his kind, a lonely toiler, and now
+was constrained to personate a man known to be
+almost dangerously skilful with his tongue. At first
+sight the task appeared almost insuperably difficult,
+but Witham was a clever man, and felt all the thrill
+of one playing a risky game just then. Perhaps it
+was due to excitement that a readiness he had never
+fancied himself capable of came to him in his need,
+and, when at last the ladies rose, he felt that he had
+not slipped perilously. Still, he found how dry his
+lips had grown when somebody poured him a glass
+of wine. Then he became sensible that Colonel Barrington,
+who had apparently been delivering a lengthy
+monologue, was addressing him.</p>
+
+<p>“The outlook is sufficient to cause us some anxiety,”
+he said. “We are holding large stocks, and I can see
+no prospect of anything but a steady fall in wheat.
+It is, however, presumably a little too soon to ask
+your opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, “while I am prepared to act
+upon it, I would recommend it to others with some
+diffidence. No money can be made at present by
+farming, but I see no reason why we should not endeavour
+to cut our losses by selling forward down. If
+caught by a sudden rally, we could fall back on the
+grain we hold.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a sudden silence, until Dane said softly,
+“That is exactly what one of the cleverest brokers
+in Winnipeg recommended.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think,” said Colonel Barrington, “you heard
+my answer. I am inclined to fancy that such a measure
+would not be advisable or fitting, Mr. Courthorne.
+You, however, presumably know very little about
+the practical aspect of the wheat question?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled. “On the contrary, I know a
+great deal.”</p>
+
+<p>“You do?” said Barrington sharply, and while
+a blunderer would have endeavoured to qualify his
+statement, Witham stood by it.</p>
+
+<p>“You are evidently not aware, sir, that I have tried
+my hand at farming, though not very successfully.”</p>
+
+<p>“That, at least,” said Barrington dryly, as he rose,
+“is quite credible.”</p>
+
+<p>When they went into the smaller room, Witham
+crossed over to where Maud Barrington sat alone, and
+looked down upon her gravely. “One discovers
+that frankness is usually best,” he said. “Now, I
+would not like to feel that you had determined to be
+unfriendly with me.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington fixed a pair of clear brown eyes
+upon his face, and the faintest trace of astonishment
+crept into them. She was a woman with high principles,
+but neither a fool nor a prude, and she saw
+no sign of dissolute living there. The man’s gaze
+was curiously steady, his skin clear and brown, and
+his sinewy form suggested a capacity for, and she
+almost fancied an acquaintance with, physical toil.
+Yet he had already denied the truth to her. Witham,
+on his part, saw a very fair face with wholesome pride
+in it, and felt that the eyes which were coldly contemptuous
+now could, if there was a warrant for it,
+grow very gentle.</p>
+
+<p>“Would it be of any moment if I were?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham quietly. “There are two
+people here it is desirable for me to stand well with,
+and the first of them, your aunt, has, I fancy, already
+decided to give me a fair trial. She told me it was for
+my mother’s sake. Now, I can deal with your uncle.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled a little. “Are you quite sure?
+Everybody does not find it easy to get on with Colonel
+Barrington. His code is somewhat draconic.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “He is a man, and I hope to convince
+him I have at least a right to toleration. That
+leaves only you. The rest don’t count. They will
+come round by and by, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>The little forceful gesture with which he concluded
+pleased Maud Barrington. It was free from vanity,
+but conveyed an assurance that he knew his own
+value.</p>
+
+<p>“No friendship that is lightly given is worth very
+much,” she said. “I could decide better in another
+six months. Now it is perhaps fortunate that Colonel
+Barrington is waiting for us to make up his four
+at whist.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham allowed a faint gesture of dismay to escape
+him. “Must I play?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, smiling. “Whist is my
+uncle’s hobby, and he is enthusiastic over a clever
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham groaned inwardly. “And I am a fool at
+whist.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then it was poker you played?” and again a
+faint trace of anger crept into the girl’s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head. “No,” he said. “I
+had few opportunities of indulging in expensive luxuries.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think we had better take our places,” said Maud
+Barrington, with unveiled contempt.</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s forehead grew a trifle hot, and when he
+sat down Barrington glanced at him. “I should
+explain that we never allow stakes of any kind at
+Silverdale,” he said. “Some of the lads sent out to
+me have been a trifle extravagant in the old country.”</p>
+
+<p>He dealt out the cards, but a trace of bewildered
+irritation crept into his eyes as the game proceeded,
+and once or twice he appeared to check an exclamation
+of astonishment, while at last he glanced reproachfully
+at Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear sir! Still, you have ridden a long way,”
+he said, laying his finger on a king.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed to hide his dismay. “I am
+sorry, sir. It was scarcely fair to my partner. You
+would, however, have beaten us, anyway.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington gravely gathered up the cards. “We
+will,” he said, “have some music. I do not play
+poker.”</p>
+
+<p>Then, for the first time, Witham lost his head in
+his anger. “Nor do I, sir.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington only looked at him, but the farmer felt
+as though somebody had struck him in the face, and
+as soon as he conveniently could, bade Miss Barrington
+good night.</p>
+
+<p>“But we expected you would stay here a day or
+two. Your place is not ready,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled at her. “I think I am wise. I
+must feel my way.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington was won, and, making no further
+protest, signed to Dane. “You will take Mr. Courthorne
+home with you,” she said. “I would have
+kept him here, but he is evidently anxious to talk
+over affairs with some one more of his age than my
+brother is.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane appeared quite willing, and an hour later,
+Witham sat, cigar in hand, in a room of his outlying
+farm. It was furnished simply, but there were signs
+of taste, and the farmer who occupied it had already
+formed a good opinion of the man whose knowledge
+of his own profession astonished him.</p>
+
+<p>“So you are actually going to sell wheat in face of
+the Colonel’s views?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said Witham simply. “I don’t like
+unpleasantness, but I can allow no man to dictate
+my affairs to me.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane grinned. “Well,” he said, “the Colonel
+can be nasty, and he has no great reason for being
+fond of you already.”</p>
+
+<p>“No?” said Witham. “Now, of course, my
+accession will make a difference at Silverdale, but I
+would consider it a friendly act if you will let me know
+the views of the colony.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane looked thoughtful. “The trouble is that
+your taking up the land leaves less for Maud Barrington
+than there would have been. Barrington, who
+is fond of the girl, was trustee for the property, and
+after your—estrangement—from your father everybody
+expected she would get it all.”</p>
+
+<p>“So I have deprived Miss Barrington of part of
+her income?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said Dane. “Didn’t you know?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham found it difficult to answer. “I never
+quite realized it before. Are there more accounts
+against me?”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Dane slowly, “is rather a facer.
+We are all more or less friends of the dominant
+family, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laid down his cigar and stood up, “Now,”
+he said, “I generally talk straight, and you have
+held out a hand to me. Can you believe in the apparent
+improbability of such a man as I am in the opinion
+of the folks at Silverdale getting tired of a wasted
+life and trying to walk straight again? I want your
+answer, yes or no, before I head across the prairie
+for my own place.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down,” said Dane with a little smile. “Do
+you think I would have brought you here if I hadn’t
+believed it? And, if I have my way, the first man
+who flings a stone will be sorry for it. Still, I don’t
+think any of them will—or could afford it. If we
+had all been saints, some of us would never have come
+out from the old country.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped and poured out two glasses of wine.
+“It’s a long while since I’ve talked so much,” he
+said. “Here’s to our better acquaintance, Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>After that they talked wheat-growing and horses,
+and when his guest retired Dane still sat smoking
+thoughtfully beside the stove. “We want a man
+with nerve and brains,” he said. “I fancy the one
+who has been sent us will make a difference at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>It was about the same time when Colonel Barrington
+stood talking with his niece and sister in Silverdale
+Grange. “And the man threw that trick away
+when it was absolutely clear who had the ace—and
+wished me to believe that he forgot!” he said.</p>
+
+<p>His face was flushed with indignation, but Miss
+Barrington smiled at her niece. “What is your
+opinion, Maud?”</p>
+
+<p>The girl moved one white shoulder with a gesture
+of disdain. “Can you ask—after that! Besides, he
+twice wilfully perverted facts while he talked to me,
+though it was not in the least necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked thoughtful. “And yet,
+because I was watching him, I do not think he plays
+cards well.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he was a professional gambler,” said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>The elder lady shook her head. “So we—heard,”
+she said. “My dear, give him a little time. I have
+seen many men and women—and can’t help a fancy
+that there is good in him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can the leopard change his spots?” asked Colonel
+Barrington, with a grim smile.</p>
+
+<p>The little white-haired lady glanced at him as she
+said quietly, “When the wicked man——”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink09'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER IX—AN ARMISTICE</a></h2>
+
+<p>The dismal afternoon was drawing in when Witham,
+driving home from the railroad, came into sight of a
+lonely farm. It lifted itself out of the prairie, a blur
+of huddled buildings on the crest of a long rise, but
+at first sight Witham scarcely noticed it. He was
+gazing abstractedly down the sinuous smear of trail
+which unrolled itself like an endless riband across
+the great white desolation, and his brain was busy.
+Four months had passed since he came to Silverdale,
+and they had left their mark on him.</p>
+
+<p>At first there had been the constant fear of detection,
+and when that had lessened and he was accepted
+as Lance Courthorne, the latter’s unfortunate record
+had met him at every turn. It accounted for the
+suspicions of Colonel Barrington, the reserve of his
+niece, and the aloofness of some of his neighbours,
+while there had been times when Witham found
+Silverdale almost unendurable. He was, however,
+an obstinate man, and there was on the opposite side
+the gracious kindliness of the little grey-haired lady,
+who had from the beginning been his champion, and
+the friendship of Dane and one or two of the older
+men. Witham had also proved his right to be listened
+to, and treated, outwardly at least, with due
+civility, while something in his resolute quietness
+rendered an impertinence impossible. He knew
+by this time that he could hold his own at Silverdale,
+and based his conduct on the fact, but that was only
+one aspect of the question, and he speculated as to
+the consummation.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, evident that in the meanwhile
+he must continue to pose as Courthorne, and he felt,
+rightly or wrongly, that the possession of his estate,
+was, after all, a small reparation for the injury the
+outlaw had done him, but the affair was complicated
+by the fact that, in taking Courthorne’s inheritance,
+he had deprived Maud Barrington of part of hers.
+The girl’s coldness stung him, but her unquestionable
+beauty and strength of character had not been without
+their effect, and the man winced as he remembered
+that she had no pity for anything false or mean. He
+had decided only upon two things, first that he would
+vindicate himself in her eyes, and, since nobody else
+could apparently do it, pull the property that should
+have been hers out of the ruin it had been drifting
+into under her uncle’s guardianship. When this had
+been done, and the killing of Trooper Shannon forgotten,
+it would be time for him to slip back into the
+obscurity he came from.</p>
+
+<p>Then the fact that the homestead was growing
+nearer forced itself upon his perceptions, and he glanced
+doubtfully across the prairie as he approached
+the forking of the trail. A grey dimness was creeping
+across the wilderness and the smoky sky seemed to
+hang lower above the dully gleaming snow, while
+the moaning wind flung little clouds of icy dust about
+him. It was evident that the snow was not far away,
+and it was still two leagues to Silverdale, but Witham,
+who had been to Winnipeg, had business with the
+farmer, and had faced a prairie storm before. Accordingly
+he swung the team into the forking trail and
+shook the reins. There was, he knew, little time to
+lose, and in another five minutes he stood, still
+wearing his white-sprinkled furs, in a room of the birch-log
+building.</p>
+
+<p>“Here are your accounts, Macdonald, and while
+we’ve pulled up our losses, I can’t help thinking we
+have just got out in time,” he said. “The market
+is but little stiffer yet, but there is less selling, and
+before a few months are over we’re going to see a
+sharp recovery.”</p>
+
+<p>The farmer glanced at the documents, and smiled
+with contentment as he took the cheque. “I’m
+glad I listened to you,” he said. “It’s unfortunate
+for him and his niece that Barrington wouldn’t—at
+least, not until he had lost the opportunity.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand,” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the farmer, “you’ve been away.
+Well, you know it takes a long while to get an idea
+into the Colonel’s head, but once it’s in it’s even
+harder to get it out again. Now Barrington looked
+down on wheat jobbing, but money’s tight at Silverdale,
+and when he saw what you were making, he
+commenced to think. Accordingly he’s going to sell,
+and, as he seems convinced that wheat will not go up
+again, let half the acreage lie fallow this season. The
+worst of it is, the others will follow him up, and he
+controls Maud Barrington’s property as well as his
+own.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s face was grave. “I heard in Winnipeg
+that most of the smaller men who had lost courage
+were doing the same thing. That means a very small
+crop of western hard, and millers paying our own
+prices. Somebody must stop the Colonel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Macdonald dryly, “I wouldn’t like
+to be the man, and, after all, it’s only your opinion.
+As you have seen, the small men here and in Minnesota
+are afraid to plough.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed softly. “The man who makes
+the dollars is the one who sees farther than the crowd.
+Anyway, I found the views of one or two men who
+make big deals were much the same as mine, and I’ll
+speak to Miss Barrington.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then if you will wait a little, you will have an
+opportunity. She is here, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked disconcerted. “She should not
+have been. Why didn’t you send her home?
+There’ll be snow before she reaches Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Macdonald laughed. “I hadn’t noticed the weather,
+and, though my wife wished her to stay, there
+is no use in attempting to persuade Miss Barrington
+to do anything when she does not want to. In some
+respects she is very like the Colonel.”</p>
+
+<p>The farmer led the way into another room, and
+Witham flushed a little when the girl returned his
+greeting in a fashion which he fancied the presence
+of Mrs. Macdonald alone rendered distantly cordial.
+Still, a glance through the windows showed him that
+delay was inadvisable.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you had better stay here all night, Miss
+Barrington,” he said. “There is snow coming.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sorry our views do not coincide,” said
+the girl. “I have several things to attend to at the
+Grange.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then Macdonald will keep your team, and I will
+drive you home,” said Witham. “Mine are the best
+horses at Silverdale, and I fancy we will need all their
+strength.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked up sharply. There had
+been a little ring in Witham’s voice, but there was
+also a solicitude in his face which almost astonished
+her, and when Macdonald urged her to comply she
+rose leisurely.</p>
+
+<p>“I will be ready in ten minutes,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham waited at least twenty, very impatiently,
+but when at last the girl appeared, handed her with
+quiet deference into the sleigh, and then took his
+place, as far as the dimensions of the vehicle permitted,
+apart from her. Once he fancied she noticed
+it with faint amusement, but the horses knew what
+was coming, and it was only when he pulled them up
+to a trot again on the slope of a rise that he found
+speech convenient.</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad we are alone, though I feel a little diffidence
+in asking a favour of you, because unfortunately
+when I venture to recommend anything you usually
+set yourself against it,” he said. “This is, in the
+language of this country, tolerably straight.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed. “I could find no
+fault with it on the score of ambiguity.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, “I believe your uncle is
+going to sell wheat for you, and let a good deal of
+your land go out of cultivation. Now, as you perhaps
+do not know, the laws which govern the markets
+are very simple and almost immutable, but the
+trouble is that a good many people do not understand
+their application.”</p>
+
+<p>“You apparently consider yourself an exception,”
+said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “I do just now. Still, I do not
+wish to talk about myself. You see, the people back
+there in Europe must be fed, and the latest news from
+wheat-growing countries does not promise more than
+an average crop, while half the faint-hearted farmers
+here are not going to sow much this year. Therefore
+when the demand comes for Western wheat there
+will be little to sell.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how is it that you alone see this? Isn’t it
+a trifle egotistical?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Can’t we leave my virtues,
+or the reverse, out of the question? I feel that I am
+right, and want you to dissuade your uncle. It
+would be even better if, when I return to Winnipeg,
+you would empower me to buy wheat for you.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington looked at him curiously. “I
+am a little perplexed as to why you should wish me
+to.”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt,” said Witham. “Still, is there any
+reason why I should be debarred the usual privilege
+of taking an interest in my neighbour’s affairs?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the girl slowly. “But can you not see
+that it is out of the question that I should entrust
+you with this commission?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s hands closed on the reins, and his face
+grew a trifle grim as he said, “From the point of view
+you evidently take, I presume it is.”</p>
+
+<p>A flush of crimson suffused the girl’s cheeks. “I
+never meant that, and I can scarcely forgive you for
+fancying I did. Of course I could trust you with—you
+have made me use the word—the dollars, but
+you must realize that I could not do anything in
+public opposition to my uncle’s opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham was sensible of a great relief, but it did not
+appear advisable to show it. “There are so many
+things you apparently find it difficult to forgive me—and
+we will let this one pass,” he said. “Still, I
+cannot help thinking that Colonel Barrington will
+have a good deal to answer for.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington made no answer, but she was sensible
+of a respect which appeared quite unwarranted
+for the dryly-spoken man who, though she guessed
+her words stung him now and then, bore them without
+wincing. While she sat silent, shivering under
+her furs, darkness crept down. The smoky cloud
+dropped lower, the horizon closed in as the grey
+obscurity rolled up to meet them across a rapidly-narrowing
+strip of snow. Then she could scarcely
+see the horses, and the muffled drumming of their
+hoofs was lost in a doleful wail of wind. It also seemed
+to her that the cold, which was already almost insupportable,
+suddenly increased, as it not infrequently
+does in that country before the snow. Then a white
+powder was whirled into her face, filling her eyes and
+searing the skin, while, when she could see anything
+again, the horses were plunging at a gallop through a
+filmy haze, and Witham, whitened all over, leaned forward
+with lowered head hurling hoarse encouragement
+at them. His voice reached her fitfully through the
+roar of wind, until sight and hearing were lost alike
+as the white haze closed about them, and it was
+not until the wild gust had passed she heard him
+again.</p>
+
+<p>He was apparently shouting, “Come nearer.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was not sure whether she obeyed
+him or he seized and drew her towards him. She,
+however, felt the furs piled high about her neck and
+that there was an arm round her shoulder, and for a
+moment was sensible of an almost overwhelming revulsion
+from the contact. She was proud and very
+dainty, and fancied she knew what this man had been,
+while now she was drawn in to his side, and felt her
+chilled blood respond to the warmth of his body.
+Indeed, she grew suddenly hot to the neck, and felt
+that henceforward she could never forgive him or
+herself, but the mood passed almost as swiftly, for
+again the awful blast shrieked about them and she
+only remembered her companion’s humanity as the
+differences of sex and character vanished under that
+destroying cold. They were no longer man and
+woman, but only beings of flesh and blood, clinging
+desperately to the life that was in them, for the first
+rush of the Western snowstorm has more than a
+physical effect, and man exposed to its fury loses
+all but his animal instincts in the primitive struggle
+with the elements.</p>
+
+<p>Then, while the snow folded them closely in its
+white embrace during a lull, the girl recovered herself,
+and her strained voice was faintly audible.</p>
+
+<p>“This is my fault; why don’t you tell me so?”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>A hoarse laugh seemed to issue from the whitened
+object beside her, and she was drawn closer to it
+again. “We needn’t go into that just now. You
+have one thing to do, and that is to keep warm.”</p>
+
+<p>One of the horses stumbled, the grasp that was
+around her became relaxed and she heard the swish
+of the whip followed by hoarse expletives, and did
+not resent it. The man, it seemed, was fighting for
+her life as well as his own, and even brutal virility
+was necessary. After that there was a space of
+oblivion, while the storm raged about them, until,
+when the wind fell a trifle, it became evident that the
+horses had left the trail.</p>
+
+<p>“You are off the track, and will never make the
+Grange unless you find it!” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham seemed to nod. “We are not going
+there,” he said, and if he added anything, it was lost
+in the scream of a returning gust.</p>
+
+<p>Again Maud Barrington’s reason reasserted itself,
+and remembering the man’s history she became
+sensible of a curious dismay, but it also passed, and
+left her with the vague realization that he and she
+were actuated alike only by the desire to escape extinction.
+Presently she became sensible that the
+sleigh had stopped beside a formless mound of white
+and the man was shaking her.</p>
+
+<p>“Hold those furs about you while I lift you down,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>She did his bidding, and did not shrink when she
+felt his arms about her, while next moment she was
+standing knee-deep in the snow and the man shouting
+something she did not catch. Team and sleigh seemed
+to vanish, and she saw her companion dimly for a
+moment before he was lost in the sliding whiteness
+too. Then a horrible fear came upon her.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed a very long while before he reappeared,
+and thrust her in through what seemed to be a door.
+Then there was another waiting before the light
+of a lamp blinked out, and she saw that she was
+standing in a little log-walled room with bare floor
+and a few trusses of straw in a corner. There was
+also a rusty stove, and a very small pile of billets beside
+it. Witham, who had closed the door, stood
+looking at them with a curious expression.</p>
+
+<p>“Where is the team?” she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“Heading for a birch bluff or Silverdale, though
+I scarcely think they will get there,” said the man.
+“I have never stopped here, and it wasn’t astonishing
+they fancied the place a pile of snow. While
+I was getting the furs out they slipped away from
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington now knew where they were. The
+shanty was used by the remoter settlers as a half-way
+house where they slept occasionally on their long
+journey to the railroad, and as there was a birch bluff
+not far away, it was the rule that whoever occupied it
+should replace the fuel he had consumed. The last
+man had, however, not been liberal.</p>
+
+<p>“But what are we to do?” she asked, with a little
+gasp of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>“Stay here until the morning,” said Witham
+quietly. “Unfortunately I can’t even spare you
+my company. The stable has fallen in, and it would
+be death to stand outside, you see. In the meanwhile,
+pull out some of the straw and put it in the
+stove.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you not do that?” asked Miss Barrington,
+feeling that she must commence at once, if she was
+to keep this man at a befitting distance.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Oh, yes, but you will freeze
+if you stand still, and these billets require splitting.
+Still, if you have special objections to doing
+what I ask you, you can walk up and down
+rapidly.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl glanced at him a moment, and then
+lowered her eyes. “Of course I was wrong! Do
+you wish to hear that I am sorry?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham, answering nothing, swung an axe round
+his head, and the girl, kneeling beside the stove,
+noticed the sinewy suppleness of his frame and the
+precision with which the heavy blade cleft the billets.
+The axe, she knew, is by no means an easy tool to
+handle. At last the red flame crackled, and though
+she had not intended the question to be malicious,
+there was a faint trace of irony in her voice as she
+asked, “Is there any other thing you wish me to do?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham flung two bundles of straw down beside
+the stove, and stood looking at her gravely. “Yes,”
+he said. “I want you to sit down and let me wrap
+this sleigh robe about you.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl submitted, and did not shrink from his
+touch visibly when he drew the fur robe about her
+shoulders and packed the end of it round her feet.
+Still, there was a faint warmth in her face, and she
+was grateful for his unconcernedness.</p>
+
+<p>“Fate or fortune has placed me in charge of you
+until to-morrow, and if the position is distasteful to
+you it is not my fault,” he said. “Still, I feel the
+responsibility, and it would be a little less difficult
+if you could accept the fact tacitly.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington would not have shivered if she
+could have avoided it, but the cold was too great for
+her, and she did not know whether she was vexed
+or pleased at the gleam of compassion in the man’s
+grey eyes. It was more eloquent than anything of
+the kind she had ever seen, but it had gone and he
+was only quietly deferent when she glanced at him
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“I will endeavour to be good,” she said, and then
+flushed with annoyance at the adjective. Half-dazed
+by the cold as she was, she could not think of
+a more suitable one. Witham, however, retained
+his gravity.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, Macdonald gave you no supper, and he has
+dinner at noon,” he said. “I brought some eatables
+along, and you must make the best meal you can.”</p>
+
+<p>He opened a packet, and laid it, with a little silver
+flask, upon her knee.</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot eat all this—and it is raw spirit,” said
+Maud Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Are you not forgetting your
+promise? Still, we will melt a little snow into the
+cup.”</p>
+
+<p>An icy gust swept in when he opened the door, and
+it was only by a strenuous effort he closed it again,
+while, when he came back panting with the top of
+the flask a little colour crept into Maud Barrington’s
+face. “I am sorry,” she said. “That at least is
+your due.”</p>
+
+<p>“I really don’t want my due,” said Witham with
+a deprecatory gesture as he laid the silver cup upon
+the stove. “Can’t we forget we are not exactly
+friends, just for to-night? If so, you will drink this
+and commence at once on the provisions—to please
+me!”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was glad of the reviving draught,
+for she was very cold, but presently she held out the
+packet.</p>
+
+<p>“One really cannot eat many crackers at once;
+will you help me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed as he took one of the biscuits.
+“If I had expected any one would share my meal, I
+would have provided a better one. Still, I have
+been glad to feast upon more unappetizing things
+occasionally!”</p>
+
+<p>“When were you unfortunate?” said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled somewhat dryly. “I was unfortunate
+for six years on end.”</p>
+
+<p>He was aware of the blunder when he had spoken,
+but Maud Barrington appeared to be looking at the
+flask thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“The design is very pretty,” she said. “You got
+it in England?”</p>
+
+<p>The man knew that it was the name F. Witham
+his companion’s eyes rested on, but his face was
+expressionless. “Yes,” he said. “It is one of the
+things they make for presentation in the old country.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington noticed the absence of any attempt
+at explanation, and having considerable pride of her
+own, was sensible of a faint approval. “You are
+making slow progress,” she said, with a slight but
+perceptible difference in her tone. “Now, you can
+have eaten nothing since breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham said nothing, but by and by poured a little
+of the spirit into a rusty can, and the girl, who understood
+why he did so, felt that it covered several of
+his offences. “Now,” she said graciously, “you
+may smoke if you wish to.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham pointed to the few billets left and shook
+his head. “I’m afraid I must get more wood.”</p>
+
+<p>The roar of the wind almost drowned his voice,
+and the birch logs seemed to tremble under the impact
+of the blast, while Maud Barrington shivered
+as she asked, “Is it safe?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is necessary,” said Witham, with the little
+laugh she had already found reassuring.</p>
+
+<p>He had gone out in another minute, and the girl
+felt curiously lonely as she remembered stories of
+men who had left their homesteads during a blizzard
+to see to the safety of the horses in a neighbouring
+stable, and were found afterwards as still as the snow
+that covered them. Maud Barrington was not unduly
+timorous, but the roar of that awful icy gale would
+have stricken dismay into the hearts of most men,
+and she found herself glancing with feverish impatience
+at a diminutive gold watch and wondering
+whether the cold had retarded its progress. Ten
+minutes passed very slowly, lengthened to twenty
+more slowly still, and then it flashed upon her that
+there was at least something she could do; and,
+scraping up a little of the snow that sifted in, she
+melted it in the can. Then she set the flask-top upon
+the stove, and once more listened for the man’s footsteps
+very eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>She did not hear them, but at last the door swung
+open, and carrying a load of birch branches Witham
+staggered in. He dropped them, strove to close the
+door, and failed, then leaned against it, gasping, with
+a livid face, for there are few men who can withstand
+the cold of a snow-laden gale at forty degrees below.</p>
+
+<p>How Maud Barrington closed the door she did not
+know; but it was with a little imperious gesture she
+turned to the man.</p>
+
+<p>“Shake those furs at once,” she said; and drawing
+him towards the stove held up the steaming cup.
+“Now sit there and drink it.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stooped and reached out for the can, but
+the girl swept it off the stove. “Oh, I know the
+silver was for me,” she said. “Still, is this a time
+for trifles such as that?”</p>
+
+<p>Worn out by a very grim struggle, Witham did as
+he was bidden, and looked up with a twinkle in his
+eyes, when with the faintest trace of colour in her
+cheeks the girl sat down close to him and drew part
+of the fur robe about him.</p>
+
+<p>“I really believe you were a little pleased to see
+me come back just now,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Was that quite necessary?” asked Maud Barrington.
+“Still, I was.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham made a little deprecatory gesture. “Of
+course,” he said. “Now we can resume our former
+footing to-morrow, but in the meanwhile I would like
+to know why you are so hard upon me, Miss Barrington,
+because I really have not done much harm to
+any one at Silverdale. Your aunt”—and he made a
+little respectful inclination of his head which pleased
+the girl—“is at least giving me a fair trial.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is difficult to tell you—but it was your own
+doing,” said Maud Barrington. “At the beginning
+you prejudiced us when you told us you could only
+play cards indifferently. It was so unnecessary,
+and we knew a good deal about you!”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham quietly, “I have only my
+word to offer, and I wonder if you will believe me
+now, but I don’t think I ever won five dollars at cards
+in my life.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington watched him closely, but his
+tone carried conviction, and again she was glad that
+he attempted no explanation. “I am quite willing
+to take it,” she said. “Still, you can understand——”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham. “It puts a strain upon
+your faith, but some day I may be able to make a
+good deal that puzzles you quite clear.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington glanced at the flask. “I wonder
+if that is connected with the explanation, but I will
+wait. Now, you have not lighted your cigar.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham understood that the topic was dismissed,
+and sat thoughtfully still while the girl nestled
+against the birch logs close beside him under the same
+furs; for the wind went through the building and
+the cold was unbearable a few feet from the stove.
+The birch rafters shook above their heads, and every
+now and then it seemed that a roaring gust would
+lift the roof from them. Still the stove glowed and
+snapped, and close in about it there was a drowsy
+heat, while presently the girl’s eyes grew heavy.
+Finally—for there are few who can resist the desire
+for sleep in the cold of the North-West—her head
+sank back, and Witham, rising very slowly, held
+his breath as he piled the furs about her. That done,
+he stooped and looked down upon her while the blood
+crept to his face. Maud Barrington lay very still,
+the long, dark lashes resting on her cold-tinted cheeks,
+and the patrician serenity of her face was even more
+marked in her sleep. Then he turned away, feeling
+like one who had committed a desecration, knowing
+that he had looked too long already upon the sleeping
+girl who believed he had been an outcast and yet had
+taken his word; for it was borne in upon him that
+a time would come when he would try her faith even
+more severely. Moving softly, he paced up and down
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>Witham afterwards wondered how many miles he
+walked that night, for though the loghouse was not
+longer than thirty feet, the cold bit deep; but at
+last he heard a sigh as he glanced towards the stove,
+and immediately swung round again. When he next
+turned, Miss Barrington stood upright, a little flushed
+in face, but otherwise very calm; and the man stood
+still, shivering in spite of his efforts, and blue with
+cold. The wind had fallen, but the sting of the frost
+that followed it made itself felt beside the stove.</p>
+
+<p>“You had only your deerskin jacket—and you
+let me sleep under all the furs,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head, and hoped he did not look
+as guilty as he felt, when he remembered that it must
+have been evident to his companion that the furs did
+not get into the position they had occupied themselves.</p>
+
+<p>“I only fancied you were a trifle drowsy and not
+inclined to talk,” he said, with an absence of concern,
+for which Miss Barrington, who did not believe him,
+felt grateful. “You see”—and the inspiration was
+a trifle too evident—“I was too sleepy to notice anything
+myself. Still, I am glad you are awake now,
+because I must make my way to the Grange.”</p>
+
+<p>“But the snow will be ever so deep, and I could
+not come,” said Maud Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head. “I’m afraid you must
+stay here; but I will be back with Colonel Barrington
+in a few hours at latest.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl deemed it advisable to hide her consternation.
+“But you might not find the trail,” she
+said. “The ravine would lead you to Graham’s
+homestead.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” said Witham slowly, “I am going to
+the Grange.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Maud Barrington remembered, and glanced
+aside from him. It was evident this man thought
+of everything; and she made no answer when
+Witham, who thrust more billets into the stove,
+turned to her with a little smile.</p>
+
+<p>“I think we need remember nothing when we meet
+again, beyond the fact that you will give me a chance
+of showing that the Lance Courthorne, whose fame
+you know, has ceased to exist.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he went out, and the girl stood with flushed
+cheeks looking down at the furs he had left behind
+him.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink10'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER X—MAUD HARRINGTON’S PROMISE</a></h2>
+
+<p>Daylight had not broken across the prairie, when,
+floundering through a foot of dusty snow, Witham
+reached the Grange. He was aching from fatigue
+and cold, and the deerskin jacket stood out from his
+numbed body, stiff with frost, when, leaning heavily
+on a table, he awaited Colonel Barrington. The
+latter, on entering, stared at him and then flung open
+a cupboard and poured out a glass of wine.</p>
+
+<p>“Drink that before you talk. You look half
+dead,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head. “Perhaps you had
+better hear me first.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington thrust the glass upon him. “I could
+make nothing of what you told me while you speak
+like that. Drink it, and then sit until you get used
+to the different temperature.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham drained the glass and sank limply into a
+chair. As yet his face was colourless, though his
+chilled flesh tingled horribly as the blood once more
+crept into the surface tissues. Then he fixed his
+eyes upon his host as he told his story. Barrington
+stood very straight watching his visitor, but his
+face was drawn, for the resolution which supported
+him through the day was less noticeable in the early
+morning, and it was evident now at least that he was
+an old man carrying a heavy load of anxiety. Still,
+as the story proceeded, a little blood crept into his
+cheeks, while Witham guessed that he found it difficult
+to retain his grim immobility.</p>
+
+<p>“I am to understand that an attempt to reach the
+Grange through the snow would have been perilous?”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The older man stood very still regarding him intently,
+until he said, “I don’t mind admitting that
+it was distinctly regrettable!”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stopped him with a gesture. “It was at
+least unavoidable, sir. The team would not face the
+snow, and no one could have reached the Grange
+alive.”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt you did your best—and, as a connexion
+of the family, I am glad it was you. Still—and
+there are cases in which it is desirable to speak plainly—the
+affair, which you will, of course, dismiss from
+your recollection, is to be considered as closed now.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled, and a trace of irony he could not
+quite repress was just discernible in his voice. “I
+scarcely think that was necessary, sir. It is, of course,
+sufficient for me to have rendered a small service to
+the distinguished family which has given me an
+opportunity of proving my right to recognition, and
+neither you, nor Miss Barrington, need have any apprehension
+that I will presume upon it!”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington wheeled round. “You have the Courthorne
+temper, at least, and perhaps I deserved this
+display of it. You acted with commendable discretion
+in coming straight to me—and the astonishment
+I got drove the other aspect of the question out of my
+head. If it hadn’t been for you, my niece would
+have frozen.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I spoke unguardedly, sir; but I am
+very tired. Still, if you will wait a few minutes, I
+will get the horses out without troubling the hired
+man.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington made a little gesture of comprehension,
+and then shook his head. “You are fit for nothing
+further, and need rest and sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will want somebody, sir,” said Witham.
+“The snow is very loose and deep.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out, and Barrington, who looked after him
+with a curious expression in his face, nodded twice as
+if in approval. Twenty minutes later he took his
+place in the sleigh that slid away from the Grange,
+which lay a league behind it when the sunrise flamed
+across the prairie. The wind had gone, and there was
+only a pitiless brightness and a devastating cold,
+while the snow lay blown in wisps, dried dusty and fine
+as flour by the frost. It had no cohesion, the runners
+sank in it, and Witham was almost waist deep
+when he dragged the floundering team through the
+drifts. A day had passed since he had eaten anything
+worth mention, but he held on with an endurance
+which his companion, who was incapable of
+rendering him assistance, wondered at. There were
+belts of deep snow the almost buried sleigh must be
+dragged through, and tracts from which the wind had
+swept the dusty covering, leaving bare the grasses
+the runners would not slide over, where the team
+came to a standstill, and could scarcely be urged
+to continue the struggle.</p>
+
+<p>At last, however, the loghouse rose, a lonely mound
+of whiteness, out of the prairie, and Witham drew in
+a deep breath of contentment when a dusky figure
+appeared for a moment in the doorway. His weariness
+seemed to fall from him, and once more his companion
+wondered at the tirelessness of the man, as,
+floundering on foot beside them, he urged the team
+through the powdery drifts beneath the big birch
+bluff. Witham did not go in, however, when they
+reached the house; and when, five minutes later,
+Maud Barrington came out, she saw him leaning with
+a drawn face against the sleigh. He straightened
+himself suddenly at the sight of her, but she had seen
+sufficient, and her heart softened towards him.
+Whatever the man’s history had been he had borne
+a good deal for her.</p>
+
+<p>The return journey was even more arduous, and
+now and then Maud Barrington felt a curious throb
+of pity for the worn-out man, who during most of it
+walked beside the team; but it was accomplished at
+last, and she contrived to find means of thanking him
+alone when they reached the Grange.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head, and then smiled a little.
+“It isn’t nice to make a bargain,” he said. “Still,
+it is less pleasant now and then to feel under an
+obligation, though there is no reason why you should.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was not altogether pleased, but
+she could not blind herself to facts, and it was plain
+that there was an obligation. “I am afraid I cannot
+quite believe that, but I do not see what you are
+leading to.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s eyes twinkled. “Well,” he said reflectively,
+“I don’t want you to fancy that last night
+commits you to any line of conduct in regard to me.
+I only asked for a truce, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was a trifle nettled. “Yes?”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Then, I want to show you how you can discharge
+any trifling obligation you may fancy you may owe
+me, which of course would be more pleasant to you.
+Do not allow your uncle to sell any wheat forward for
+you, and persuade him to sow every acre that belongs
+to you this spring.”</p>
+
+<p>“But however would this benefit you,” asked the
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I have a fancy that I can
+straighten up things at Silverdale, if I can get my
+way. It would please me, and I believe they want
+it. Of course, a desire to improve anything appears
+curious in me!”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was relieved of the necessity of
+answering, for the Colonel came up just then; but,
+moved by some sudden impulse, she nodded as if in
+agreement.</p>
+
+<p>It was afternoon when she awakened from a refreshing
+sleep, and descending to the room set apart
+for herself and her aunt, sat thoughtfully still awhile
+in a chair beside the stove. Then, stretching out
+her hand, she took up a little case of photographs and
+slipped out one of them. It was a portrait of a boy and
+pony, but there was a significance in the fact that
+she knew just where to find it. The picture was a
+good one, and once more Maud Barrington noticed
+the arrogance, which did not, however, seem out of
+place there, in the lad’s face. It was also a comely
+face, but there was a hint of sensuality in it that
+marred its beauty. Then with a growing perplexity
+she compared it with that of the weary man who had
+plodded beside the team. Witham was not arrogant
+but resolute, and there was no stamp of indulgence
+in his face. Indeed, the girl had from the beginning
+recognized the virility in it that was tinged with
+asceticism and sprang from a simple, strenuous life
+of toil in the wind and sun.</p>
+
+<p>Just then there was a rustle of fabric, and she laid
+down the photograph a moment too late, as her aunt
+came in. As it happened, the elder lady’s eyes rested
+on the picture, and a faint flush of annoyance crept
+into the face of the girl. It was scarcely perceptible,
+but Miss Barrington saw it, and though she felt
+tempted, did not smile.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not know you were down,” she said. “Lance
+is still asleep. He seemed very tired.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl. “That is very probable.
+He left the railroad before daylight, and had driven
+round to several farms before he came to Macdonald’s,
+and he was very considerate. He had made me take
+all the furs, and, I fancy, walked up and down with
+nothing but his indoor clothing on all night long, though
+the wind went through the building, and one could
+scarcely keep alive a few feet from the stove.”</p>
+
+<p>Again the flicker of colour crept into the girl’s
+cheeks, and the eyes that were keen, as well as
+gentle, noticed it.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you owe him a good deal,” said Miss Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said her niece, with a little laugh which
+appeared to imply a trace of resentment. “I believe
+I do, but he seemed unusually anxious to relieve
+me of that impression. He was also good
+enough to hint that nothing he might have done need
+prevent me being—the right word is a trifle difficult
+to find—but I fancy he meant unpleasant to him if
+I wished it.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a little twinkle in Miss Barrington’s
+eyes. “Are you not a trifle hard to please, my dear?
+Now, if he had attempted to insist on a claim to your
+gratitude, you would have resented it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said the girl reflectively. “Still, it
+is annoying to be debarred from offering it. There
+are times, aunt, when I can’t help wishing that Lance
+Courthorne had never come to Silverdale. There are
+men who leave nothing just as they found it, and
+whom one can’t ignore.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington shook her head. “I fancy you are
+wrong. He has offended after all?”</p>
+
+<p>She was pleased to see her niece’s face relax into
+a smile that expressed unconcern. “We are all
+exacting now and then,” said the girl. “Still, he made
+me promise to give him a fair trial, which was not
+flattering, because it suggested that I had been unnecessarily
+harsh, and then hinted this morning that
+he had no intention of holding me to it. It really was
+not gratifying to find he held the concession he asked
+for of so small account. You are, however, as easily
+swayed by trifles as I am, because Lance can do no
+wrong since he kissed your hand.”</p>
+
+<p>“I really think I liked him the better for it,” said
+the little silver-haired lady. “The respect was not
+assumed, but wholly genuine, you see; and whether
+I was entitled to it or not, it was a good deal in Lance’s
+favour that he should offer it to me. There must
+be some good in the man who can be moved to reverence
+anything, even if he is mistaken.”</p>
+
+<p>“No man with any sense could help adoring you,”
+said Maud Barrington. “Still, I wonder why you
+believe I was wrong in wishing he had not come to
+Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked thoughtful. “I will tell
+you, my dear. There are few better men than my
+brother; but his thoughts, and the traditions he is
+bound by, are those of fifty years ago, while the restless
+life of the prairie is a thing of to-day. We have
+fallen too far behind it at Silverdale, and a crisis is
+coming that none of us are prepared for. Even Dane
+is scarcely fitted to help my brother to face it, and the
+rest are either over-fond of their pleasure or untrained
+boys. Brave lads they are, but none of them have
+been taught that it is only by mental strain, or the
+ceaseless toil of his body, the man without an inheritance
+can win himself a competence now. This is
+why they want a leader who has known hardship
+and hunger, instead of ease, and won what he holds
+with his own hand in place of having it given him.”</p>
+
+<p>“You fancy we could find one in such a man as
+Lance has been?”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked grave. “I believe the
+prodigal was afterwards a better, as well as a wiser,
+man than the one who stayed at home, and I am
+not quite sure that Lance’s history is so nearly like
+that of the son in the parable as we have believed it
+to be. A residence in the sty is apt to leave a stain,
+which I have not, though I have looked for it,
+found on him.”</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the two women met, and, though
+nothing more was said, each realized that the other
+was perplexed by the same question, while the girl
+was astonished to find her vague suspicions shared.
+While they sat silent, Colonel Barrington came in.</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad to see you looking so much better,
+Maud,” he said, with a trace of embarrassment.
+“Courthorne is resting still. Now, I can’t help
+feeling that we have been a trifle more distant than
+was needful with him. The man has really behaved
+very discreetly. I mean in everything.”</p>
+
+<p>This was a great admission, and Miss Barrington
+smiled. “Did it hurt you very much to tell us
+that?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel laughed. “I know what you mean,
+and if you put me on my mettle I’ll retract. After
+all, it was no great credit to him, because blood
+will tell, and he is, of course, a Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Almost without her intention, Maud Barrington’s
+eyes wandered towards the photograph, and then
+looking up she met those of her aunt, and once more
+saw the thought that troubled her in them.</p>
+
+<p>“The Courthorne blood is responsible for a good
+deal more than discretion,” said Miss Barrington,
+who went out quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Her brother appeared a trifle perplexed. “Now,
+I fancied your aunt had taken him under her wing,
+and when I was about to suggest that, considering
+the connexion between the families, we might ask
+him over to dinner occasionally, she goes away,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked down a moment, for, realizing
+that her uncle recognized the obligation he was
+under to the man he did not like, she remembered
+that she herself owed him considerably more and
+he had asked for something in return. It was not
+altogether easy to grant, but she had tacitly pledged
+herself, and turning suddenly she laid a hand on
+Barrington’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course; but I want to talk of something
+else just now,” she said. “You know I have very
+seldom asked you questions about my affairs, but I
+wish to take a little practical interest in them this
+year.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” said Barrington, with a smile. “Well,
+I am at your service, my dear, and quite ready to
+account for my stewardship. You are no longer my
+ward, except by your own wishes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am still your niece,” said the girl, patting his
+arm. “Now, there is, of course, nobody who could
+manage the farming better than you do, but I would
+like to raise a large crop of wheat this season.”</p>
+
+<p>“It wouldn’t pay,” and the Colonel grew suddenly
+grave. “Very few men in the district are going
+to sow all their holding. Wheat is steadily going
+down.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then if nobody sows there will be very little,
+and shouldn’t that put up the prices?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington’s eyes twinkled. “Who has been
+teaching you commercial economy? You are too
+pretty to understand such things, and the argument
+is fallacious, because the wheat is consumed in Europe—and
+even if we have not much to offer, they can
+get plenty from California, Chile, India, and Australia.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes—and Russia,” said the girl. “Still,
+you see, the big mills in Winnipeg and Minneapolis
+depend upon the prairie. They couldn’t very well
+bring wheat in from Australia.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington was still smiling with his eyes, but
+his lips were set. “A little knowledge is dangerous,
+my dear, and if you could understand me better,
+I could show you where you were wrong. As it
+is, I can only tell you that I have decided to sell
+wheat forward and plough very little.”</p>
+
+<p>“But that was a policy you condemned with
+your usual vigour. You really know you did.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear,” said the Colonel, with a little impatient
+gesture, “one can never argue with a lady. You
+see—circumstances alter cases considerably.”</p>
+
+<p>He nodded with an air of wisdom as though that
+decided it; but the girl persisted. “Uncle,” she
+said, drawing closer to him with lithe gracefulness,
+“I want you to let me have my own way just for once,
+and if I am wrong I will never do anything you do
+not approve of again. After all, it is a very little
+thing, and you would like to please me.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a trifle that is likely to cost you a good deal
+of money,” said the Colonel dryly.</p>
+
+<p>“I think I could afford it, and you could not
+refuse me.”</p>
+
+<p>“As I am only your uncle, and no longer a trustee,
+I could not,” said Barrington. “Still, you would
+not act against my wishes?”</p>
+
+<p>His eyes were gentle, unusually so, for he was
+not as a rule very patient when any one questioned
+his will; but there was a reproach in them that
+hurt the girl. Still, because she had promised,
+she persisted.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said. “That is why it would be
+ever so much nicer if you would just think as I did.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington looked at her steadily. “If you insist,
+I can at least hope for the best,” he said, with a
+gravity that brought a faint colour to the listener’s
+cheek.</p>
+
+<p>It was next day when Witham took his leave, and
+Maud Barrington stood beside him as he put on his
+driving furs.</p>
+
+<p>“You told me there was something you wished
+me to do, and, though it was difficult, it is done,”
+she said. “My holding will be sown with wheat
+this spring.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned his head aside a moment and
+apparently found it needful to fumble at the fastenings
+of the furs, while there was a curious expression in
+his eyes when he looked round again.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” he said with a little smile, “we are
+quits. That cancels any little obligation which
+may have existed.”</p>
+
+<p>He had gone in another minute, and Maud Barrington
+turned back into the stove-warmed room very
+quietly. Her lips were, however, somewhat closely
+set.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink11'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XI—SPEED THE PLOUGH</a></h2>
+
+<p>Winter had fled back beyond the barrens to the
+lonely North at last, and though here and there
+a little slushy snow still lay soaking the black loam
+in a hollow, a warm wind swept the vast levels when
+one morning Colonel Barrington rode with his niece
+and sister across the prairie. Spring comes suddenly
+in that region, and the frost-bleached sod was steaming
+under an effulgent sun, while in places a hardy
+flower peeped through. It was six hundred miles
+to the forests of the Rockies’ eastern slope, and as
+far to the Athabascan pines, but it seemed to Maud
+Barrington that their resinous sweetness was in
+the glorious western wind, which awoke a musical
+sighing from the sea of rippling grass. It rolled
+away before her in billows of lustrous silver-grey,
+and had for sole boundary the first upward spring
+of the arch of cloudless blue, across which the vanguard
+of the feathered host pressed on, company by company
+towards the Pole.</p>
+
+<p>The freshness of it all stirred her blood like wine,
+and the brightness that flooded the prairie had
+crept into her eyes; for those who bear the iron
+winter of that lonely land realize the wonder of the
+reawakening, which in a little space of day, dresses
+the waste which has lain for long months white
+and silent as the dead, in living green. It also has
+its subtle significance that the grimmest toiler feels,
+and the essence of it is hope eternal and triumphant
+life. The girl felt the thrill of it, and gave thanks
+by an answering brightness, as the murmuring
+grasses and peeping flowerets did; but there was
+behind her instinctive gladness a vague wonder and
+expectancy. She had read widely, and seen the
+life of the cities with understanding eyes, and now
+she was to be provided with the edifying spectacle
+of the gambler and outcast turned farmer.</p>
+
+<p>Had she been asked a few months earlier whether
+the man who had, as Courthorne had done, cast
+away his honour and wallowed in the mire, could
+come forth again and purge himself from the stain,
+her answer would have been coldly sceptical; but
+now, with the old familiar miracle and what it
+symbolized before her eyes, the thing looked less
+improbable. Why this should give pleasure she
+did not know, or would not admit that she did,
+but the fact remained that it was so.</p>
+
+<p>Trotting down the slope of the next rise, they
+came upon him, and he stood with very little sign of
+dissolute living upon him by a great breaker plough.
+In front of him, the quarter-mile furrow led on
+beyond the tall sighting poles on the crest of the next
+rise, and four splendid horses, of a kind not very
+usual on the prairie, were stamping the steaming
+clods at his side. Bronzed by frost and sun, with his
+brick-red neck and arch of chest revealed by the
+coarse blue shirt that, belted at the waist, enhanced
+his slenderness of flank, the repentant prodigal
+was at least a passable specimen of the animal man,
+but it was the strength and patience in his face that
+struck the girl, as he turned towards her, bareheaded,
+with a little smile in his eyes. She also
+noticed the difference he presented with his ingrained
+hands and the stain of the soil upon him to her uncle,
+who sat his horse, immaculate as usual with gloved
+hand on the bridle, for the Englishmen at Silverdale
+usually hired other men to do their coarser work
+for them.</p>
+
+<p>“So you are commencing in earnest in face of my
+opinion?” said Barrington. “Of course, I wish
+you success, but that consummation appears distinctly
+doubtful.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed as he pointed to a great machine
+which, hauled by four horses, rolled towards them,
+scattering the black clods in its wake. “I’m doing
+what I can to achieve it, sir,” he said. “In fact,
+I’m staking somewhat heavily. That team with the
+gang ploughs and cultivators cost me more dollars
+than I care to remember.”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt,” said Barrington dryly. “Still,
+we have always considered oxen good enough for
+breaking prairie at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “I used to do so, sir, when
+I could get nothing better, but after driving oxen
+for eight years one finds out their disadvantages.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington’s face grew a trifle stern. “There
+are times when you tax our patience, Lance,” he
+said. “Still, there is nothing to be gained by questioning
+your assertion. What I fail to see is where
+your reward for all this will come from, because I
+am still convinced that the soil will, so to speak,
+give you back eighty cents for every dollar you
+put into it. I would, however, like to look at those
+implements. I have never seen better ones.”</p>
+
+<p>He dismounted and helped his companion down,
+for Witham made no answer. The farmer was never
+sure what actuated him, but, save in an occasional
+fit of irony, he had not attempted by any reference
+to make his past fall into line with Courthorne’s
+since he had first been accepted as the latter at
+Silverdale. He had taken the dead man’s inheritance,
+for a while, but he would stoop no further, and to
+speak the truth, which he saw was not credited,
+brought him a grim amusement as well as flung
+a sop to his pride. Presently, however, Miss Barrington
+turned to him, and there was a kindly gleam
+in her eyes as she glanced at the splendid horses and
+widening strip of ploughing.</p>
+
+<p>“You have the hope of youth, Lance, to make
+this venture when all looks black—and it pleases
+me,” she said. “Sometimes I fancy that men had
+braver hearts than they have now when I was young.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham flushed a trifle, and stretching out an
+arm swept his hand round the horizon. “All that
+looked dead a very little while ago, and now you
+can see the creeping greenness in the sod,” he said.
+“The lean years cannot last for ever, and, even if
+one is beaten again, there is a consolation in knowing
+that one has made a struggle. Now, I am quite
+aware that you are fancying a speech of this kind does
+not come well from me.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington had seen his gesture, and something
+in the thought that impelled it, as well as the
+almost statuesque pose of his thinly-clad figure,
+appealed to her. Courthorne as farmer, with the
+damp of clean effort on his forehead and the stain
+of the good soil that would faithfully repay it on
+his garments, had very little in common with the
+profligate and gambler. Vaguely she wondered
+whether he was not working out his own redemption
+by every wheat furrow torn from the virgin
+prairie, and then again the doubt crept in. Could
+this man have ever found pleasure in the mire?</p>
+
+<p>“You will plough all your holding, Lance?”
+asked the elder lady, who had not answered his last
+speech yet, but meant to do.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the man. “All I can. It’s a big
+venture, and if it fails will cripple me; but I seem to
+feel, apart from any reason I can discern, that wheat
+is going up again, and I must go through with this
+ploughing. Of course, it does not sound very
+sensible.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked at him gravely, for there
+was a curious and steadily-tightening bond between the
+two. “It depends upon what you mean by sense.
+Can we reason out all we feel, and is there nothing
+intangible but real behind the impulses which may
+be sent to us?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, with a little smile, “that
+is a trifle too deep for me, and it’s difficult to think
+of anything but the work I have to do. But you
+were the first at Silverdale to hold out a hand to
+me—and I have a feeling that your good wishes would
+go a long way now. Is it altogether fantastic to
+believe that the good-will of my first friend would
+help to bring me prosperity?”</p>
+
+<p>The white-haired lady’s eyes grew momentarily
+soft, and, with a gravity that did not seem out of
+place, she moved forward and laid her hand on a big
+horse’s neck, and smiled when the dumb beast responded
+to her gentle touch.</p>
+
+<p>“It is a good work,” she said. “Lance, there
+is more than dollars, or the bread that somebody
+is needing, behind what you are doing, and because
+I loved your mother I know how her approval would
+have followed you. And now sow in hope, and
+God speed your plough!”</p>
+
+<p>She turned away almost abruptly, and Witham
+stood still, with one hand closed tightly and a little
+deeper tint in the bronze of his face, sensible at once
+of an unchanged resolution and a horrible degradation.
+Then he saw that the Colonel had helped Miss
+Barrington into the saddle and her niece was speaking.</p>
+
+<p>“I have something to ask Mr. Courthorne, and
+will overtake you,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>The others rode on, and the girl turned to Witham,
+“I made you a promise and did my best to keep it
+but I find it harder than I fancied it would be,”
+she said. “I want you to release me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to hear your reasons,” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>The girl made a faint gesture of impatience.
+“Of course, if you insist!”</p>
+
+<p>“I do,” said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I promised you to have all my holding
+sown this year, and I am still willing to do so; but,
+though my uncle makes no protests I know he
+feels my opposition very keenly, and it hurts me
+horribly. Unspoken reproaches are the worst to
+bear, you know, and now Dane and some of the
+others are following your lead, it is painful to feel
+that I am taking part with them against the man
+who has always been kind to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you would prefer to be loyal to Colonel
+Barrington even if it cost you a good deal?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said Maud Barrington. “Can
+you ask me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham saw the sparkle in her eyes and the half-contemptuous
+pride in the poise of the shapely head.
+Loyalty, it was evident, was not a figure of speech
+with her, but he felt that he had seen enough and
+turned his face aside.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew it would be difficult when I asked,” he
+said. “Still, I cannot give you back that promise.
+We are going to see a great change this year, and I
+have set my heart on making all I can for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why should you?” asked Maud Barrington,
+somewhat astonished that she did not feel more angry.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham gravely, “I may tell you by
+and by, and in the meanwhile you can set it down to
+vanity. This may be my last venture at Silverdale,
+and I want to make it a big success.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl glanced at him sharply, and it was because
+the news caused her an unreasonable concern that
+there was a trace of irony in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Your last venture! Have we been unkind to
+you or does it imply that, as you once insinuated,
+an exemplary life becomes monotonous?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “No. I should like to stay here—a
+very long while,” he said; and the girl saw he
+spoke the truth as she watched him glance wistfully
+at the splendid teams, great ploughs, and
+rich, black soil. “In fact, strange as it may appear,
+it will be virtue, given the rein for once, that drives
+me out when I go away.”</p>
+
+<p>“But where are you going to?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham glanced vaguely across the prairie, and
+the girl was puzzled by the look in his eyes. “Back
+to my own station,” he said softly, as though to
+himself, and then turned with a little shrug of his
+shoulders. “In the meanwhile there is a good deal to
+do, and once more I am sorry I cannot release you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then, there is an end of it. You could not
+expect me to beg you to, so we will discuss the
+practical difficulty. I cannot under the circumstances
+borrow my uncle’s teams, and I am told
+I have not sufficient men or horses to put a large
+crop in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said Witham quietly. “Well,
+I have now the best teams and machines on this
+part of the prairie, and am bringing Ontario men in.
+I will do the ploughing—and, if it will make it
+easier for you, you can pay me for the services.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a little flush on the girl’s face. “It
+is all distasteful, but as you will not give me back
+my word, I will keep it to the letter. Still, it almost
+makes me reluctant to ask you a further favour.”</p>
+
+<p>“This one is promised before you ask it,” said
+Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>It cost Maud Barrington some trouble to make
+her wishes clear, and Witham’s smile was not wholly
+one of pleasure as he listened. One of the young
+English lads, who was, it appeared, a distant connexion
+of the girl’s, had been losing large sums of money at
+a gaming table, and seeking other equally undesirable
+relaxations at the railroad settlement. For the
+sake of his mother in England, Miss Barrington
+desired him brought to his senses, but was afraid to
+appeal to the Colonel, whose measures were occasionally
+more draconic than wise.</p>
+
+<p>“I will do what I can,” said Witham. “Still,
+I am not sure that a lad of the kind is worth your
+worrying over, and I am a trifle curious as to what
+induced you to entrust the mission to me?”</p>
+
+<p>The girl felt embarrassed, but she saw that an
+answer was expected. “Since you ask, it occurred
+to me that you could do it better than anybody
+else,” she said. “Please don’t misunderstand me;
+but I fancy it is the other man who is leading him
+away.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled somewhat grimly. “Your meaning
+is quite plain, and I am already looking forward
+to the encounter with my fellow-gambler. You
+believe that I will prove a match for him?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington, to her annoyance, felt the blood
+creep to her forehead, but she looked at the man
+steadily, noticing the quiet forcefulness beneath his
+somewhat caustic amusement.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she said simply; “and I shall be grateful.”</p>
+
+<p>In another few minutes she was galloping across
+the prairie, and when she rejoined her aunt and
+Barrington, endeavoured to draw out the latter’s
+opinion respecting Courthorne’s venture by a few
+discreet questions.</p>
+
+<p>“Heaven knows where he was taught it, but there
+is no doubt that the man is an excellent farmer,”
+he said. “It is a pity that he is also, to all intents
+and purposes, mad.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington glanced at her niece, and both
+of them smiled, for the Colonel usually took for
+granted the insanity of any one who questioned his
+opinions.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, Witham sat swaying on the
+driving-seat, mechanically guiding the horses and
+noticing how the prairie sod rolled away in black
+waves beneath the great plough. He heard the crackle
+of fibres beneath the triple shares, and the swish
+of greasy loam along the mouldboard’s side; but
+his thoughts were far away, and when he raised his
+head, he looked into the dim future beyond the
+long furrow that cut the skyline on the rise.</p>
+
+<p>It was shadowy and uncertain, but one thing was
+clear to him, and that was that he could not stay
+in Silverdale. At first he had almost hoped he might
+do this, for the good land, and the means of efficiently
+working it, had been a horrible temptation. That
+was before he reckoned on Maud Barrington’s attractions;
+but of late he had seen what these were
+leading him to, and all that was good in him recoiled
+from an attempt to win her. Once he had dared
+to wonder whether it could be done, for his grim
+life had left him self-centred and bitter, but that
+mood had passed, and it was with disgust he looked
+back upon it. Now he knew that the sooner he left
+Silverdale, the less difficult it would be to forget her;
+but he was still determined to vindicate himself by
+the work he did, and make her affairs secure. Then,
+with or without a confession, he would slip back into
+the obscurity he came from.</p>
+
+<p>While he worked the soft wind rioted about him,
+and the harbingers of summer passed north in battalions
+overhead—crane, brent goose, and mallard—in
+crescents, skeins, and wedges, after the fashion of
+their kind. Little long-tailed gophers whisked
+across the whitened sod, and when the great plough
+rolled through the shadows of a bluff, jack rabbits,
+pied white and grey, scurried amidst the rustling
+leaves. Even the birches were fragrant in that
+vivifying air, and seemed to rejoice as all animate
+creatures did; but the man’s face grew more sombre
+as the day of toil wore on. Still, he did his work
+with the grim, unwavering diligence that had already
+carried him, dismayed but unyielding, through years
+of drought and harvest hail, and the stars shone
+down on the prairie when at last he loosed his second
+team.</p>
+
+<p>Then, standing in the door of his lonely homestead,
+he glanced at the great shadowy granaries and
+barns, and clenched his hand as he saw what
+he could do if the things that had been forced upon
+him were rightfully his. He knew his own mettle,
+and that he could hold them if he would; but the
+pale, cold face of a woman rose up in judgment
+against him, and he also knew that because of the
+love of her, that was casting its toils about him,
+he must give them up.</p>
+
+<p>Far back on the prairie a lonely coyote howled,
+and a faint wind, that was now like snow-cooled
+wine, brought the sighing of limitless grasses out of
+the silence. There was no cloud in the crystalline
+ether, and something in the vastness and stillness
+that spoke of infinity brought a curious sense of
+peace to him. Impostor though he was, he would
+leave Silverdale better than he found it, and afterwards
+it would be of no great moment what became
+of him. Countless generations of toiling men had
+borne their petty sorrows before him, and gone back
+to the dust they sprang from; but still, in due
+succession, harvest followed seed-time, and the world
+whirled on. Then, remembering that, in the meanwhile,
+he had much to do which would commence
+with the sun on the morrow, he went back into the
+house and shook the fancies from him.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink12'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XII—MASTERY RECOGNIZED</a></h2>
+
+<p>There was, considering the latest price of wheat,
+a somewhat astonishing attendance in the long room
+of the hotel at the railroad settlement one Saturday
+evening. A big stove in the midst of it diffused a
+stuffy and almost unnecessary heat, gaudy nickelled
+lamps an uncertain brilliancy, and the place was
+filled with the drifting smoke of indifferent tobacco.
+Oleographs, barbaric in colour and drawing, hung
+about the roughly-boarded walls, and any critical
+stranger would have found the saloon comfortless
+and tawdry.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, filled that night with bronzed-faced
+men who expected nothing better. Most of
+them wore jackets of soft black leather or embroidered
+deerskin, and the jean trousers and long boots of
+not a few apparently stood in need of repairing,
+though the sprinkling of more conventional apparel
+and paler faces showed that the storekeepers of the
+settlement had been drawn together, as well as the
+prairie farmers who had driven in to buy provisions
+or take up their mail. There was, however, but
+little laughter, and their voices were low, for boisterousness
+and assertion are not generally met with on
+the silent prairie. Indeed, the attitude of some
+of the men was mildly deprecatory, as though they
+felt that in assisting in what was going forward
+they were doing an unusual thing. Still, the eyes
+of all were turned toward the table where a man, who
+differed widely in appearance from most of them,
+dealt out the cards.</p>
+
+<p>He wore city clothes, and a white shirt with a fine
+diamond in the front of it, while there was a keen intentness
+behind the half-ironical smile in his somewhat
+colourless face. The whiteness of his long, nervous
+fingers and the quickness of his gestures would also have
+stamped him as a being of different order from the
+slowly-spoken prairie farmers, while the slenderness
+of the little pile of coins in front of him testified that
+his endeavours to tempt them to speculation on
+games of chance had met with no very marked success
+as yet. Gambling for stakes of moment is not a
+popular amusement in that country, where the soil
+demands his best from every man in return for the
+scanty dollars it yields him, but the gamester had
+chosen his time well, and the men who had borne
+the dreary solitude of winter in outlying farms,
+and now only saw another adverse season opening
+before them, were for once in the mood to clutch at
+any excitement that would relieve the monotony of
+their toilsome lives.</p>
+
+<p>A few were betting small sums with an apparent
+lack of interest which did not in the least deceive the
+dealer, and when he handed a few dollars out he
+laughed a little as he turned to the bar-keeper.</p>
+
+<p>“Set them up again. I want a drink to pass the
+time,” he said. “I’ll play you at anything you like
+to put a name to, boys, if this game don’t suit you,
+but you’ll have to give me the chance of making
+my hotel bill. In my country I’ve seen folks livelier at
+a funeral.”</p>
+
+<p>The glasses were handed round, but when the
+gambler reached out towards the silver at his side,
+a big bronzed-skinned rancher stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he drawled. “We’re not sticking you
+for a locomotive tank, and this comes out of my
+treasury. I’ll call you three dollars and take my
+chances on the draw.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the dealer, “that’s a little more
+encouraging. Anybody wanting to make it better?”</p>
+
+<p>A young lad in elaborately-embroidered deerskin
+with a flushed face leaned upon the table. “Show
+you how we play cards in the old country,” he said.
+“I’ll make it thirty—for a beginning.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a momentary silence, for the lad had
+staked heavily and lost of late, but one or two more
+bets were made. Then the cards were turned up,
+and the lad smiled fatuously as he took up his winnings.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, I’ll let you see,” he said. “This time we’ll
+make it fifty.”</p>
+
+<p>He won twice more in succession, and the men
+closed in about the table, while, for the dealer
+knew when to strike, the glasses went round again,
+and in the growing interest nobody quite noticed
+who paid for the refreshment. Then, while the
+dollars began to trickle in, the lad flung a bill for a
+hundred down.</p>
+
+<p>“Go on,” he said a trifle huskily. “To-night
+you can’t beat me!”</p>
+
+<p>Once more he won, and just then two men came
+quietly into the room. One of them signed to the
+hotel-keeper.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s going on? The boys seem kind of
+keen,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The other man laughed a little. “Ferris has struck
+a streak of luck, but I wouldn’t be very sorry if you
+got him away, Mr. Courthorne. He has had as much
+as he can carry already, and I don’t want anybody
+broke up in my house. The boys can look out for
+themselves, but the Silverdale kid has been losing a
+good deal lately, and he doesn’t know when to
+stop.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham glanced at his companion, who nodded.
+“The young fool,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>They crossed towards the table in time to see
+the lad take up his winnings again, and Witham
+laid his hand quietly upon his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Come along and have a drink while you give
+the rest a show,” he said. “You seem to have done
+tolerably well, and it’s usually wise to stop while the
+chances are going with you.”</p>
+
+<p>The lad turned and stared at him with languid
+insolence in his half-closed eyes, and, though he came
+of a lineage that had been famous in the old country,
+there was nothing very prepossessing in his appearance.
+His mouth was loose, his face weak in spite
+of its inherited pride, and there was little need to
+tell either of the men, who noticed his nervous fingers
+and muddiness of skin, that he was one who in the
+strenuous early days would have worn the woolly
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>“Were you addressing me?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I was,” said Witham quietly. “I was, in fact,
+inviting you to share our refreshment. You see we
+have just come in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the lad, “it was condemnable
+impertinence. Since you have taken this fellow up,
+couldn’t you teach him that it’s bad taste to thrust
+his company upon people who don’t want it, Dane?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham said nothing, but drew Dane, who flushed
+a trifle, aside, and when they sat down the latter
+smiled dryly.</p>
+
+<p>“You have taken on a big contract, Courthorne.
+How are you going to get the young ass out?” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, “it would gratify me to
+take him by the neck, but as I don’t know that it
+would please the Colonel if I made a public spectacle
+of one of his retainers, I fancy I’ll have to tackle the
+gambler. I don’t know him, but as he comes from
+across the frontier it’s more than likely he has heard
+of me. There are advantages in having a record
+like mine, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would, of course, be a kindness to the lad’s
+people—but the young fool is scarcely worth it, and
+it’s not your affair,” said Dane reflectively.</p>
+
+<p>Witham guessed the drift of the speech, but he
+could respect a confidence, and laughed a little.
+“It’s not often I have done any one a good turn,
+and the novelty has its attractions.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane did not appear contented with this explanation,
+but he asked nothing further, and the two
+sat watching the men about the table, who were
+evidently growing eager.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s two hundred the kid has let go,” said
+somebody.</p>
+
+<p>There was a murmur of excited voices, and one rose
+hoarse and a trifle shaky in the consonants above
+the rest.</p>
+
+<p>“Show you how a gentleman can stand up, boys.
+Throw them out again. Two hundred this time on
+the game!”</p>
+
+<p>There was silence and the rustle of shuffled cards;
+then once more the voices went up. “Against
+him! Better let up before he takes your farm.
+Oh, let him face it and show his grit—the man
+who slings round his hundreds can afford to lose!”</p>
+
+<p>The lad’s face showed a trifle paler through the
+drifting smoke, though a good many of the cigars
+had gone out now, and once more there was the
+stillness of expectancy through which a strained
+voice rose.</p>
+
+<p>“Going to get it all back. I’ll stake you four
+hundred.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham rose and moved forward quietly, with Dane
+behind him, and then stood still where he could see
+the table. He had also very observant eyes, and
+was free from the excitement of those who had
+a risk on the game. Still, when the cards were
+dealt, it was the gambler’s face he watched.
+For a brief space nobody moved, and then the lad
+flung down his cards and stood up with a greyness in
+his cheeks and his hands shaking.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve got all my dollars now,” he said. “Still,
+I’ll play you for doubles if you’ll take my paper.”</p>
+
+<p>The gambler nodded, and flung down a big pile of
+bills. “I guess I’ll trust you. Mine are here.”</p>
+
+<p>The bystanders waited motionless, and none of them
+made a bet, for any stakes they could offer would be
+trifles now; but they glanced at the lad who stood
+tensely still, while Witham watched the face of the
+man at the table in front of him. For a moment
+he saw a flicker of triumph in his eyes, and that
+decided him. Again, one by one, the cards went
+down, and then, when everybody waited in strained
+expectancy, the lad seemed to grow limp suddenly
+and groaned.</p>
+
+<p>“You can let up,” he said hoarsely. “I’ve
+gone down!”</p>
+
+<p>Then a hard brown hand was laid upon the table,
+and while the rest stared in astonishment, a voice
+which had a little stern ring in it said, “Turn the
+whole pack up, and hand over the other one.”</p>
+
+<p>In an instant the gambler’s hand swept beneath
+his jacket, but it was a mistaken move, for as swiftly
+the other hard, brown fingers closed upon the pile of
+bills, and the men, too astonished to murmur, saw
+Witham leaning very grim in face across the table.
+Then it tilted over beneath him, and the cards were
+on the gambler’s knees, while, as the two men rose
+and faced each other, something glinted in the hands
+of one of them.</p>
+
+<p>It is more than probable that the man did not
+intend to use it, and trusted to its moral effect,
+for the display of pistols is not regarded with much
+toleration on the Canadian prairie. In any case, he had
+not the opportunity, for in another moment Witham’s
+right hand closed upon his wrist, and the gambler
+was struggling fruitlessly to extricate it. He was a
+muscular man, with doubtless a sufficiency of nerve,
+but he had not toiled with his arms and led a Spartan
+life for eight long years. Before another few seconds
+had passed he was wondering whether he would
+ever use that wrist again, while Dane picked up the
+fallen pistol and put it in his pocket with the bundle
+of bills Witham handed him.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” said the latter, “I want to do the
+square thing. If you’ll let us strip you and turn out
+your pockets, we’ll see you get any winnings you’re
+entitled to when we’ve straightened up the cards.”</p>
+
+<p>The gambler was apparently not willing, for,
+though it is possible he would have found it advisable
+to play an honest game across the frontier, he had
+evidently surmised that there was less risk of detection
+among the Canadian farmers. He probably knew
+they would not wait long for his consent, but in the
+first stages of the altercation it is not as a rule insuperably
+difficult for a fearless man to hold his own
+against an indignant company who have no definite
+notion of what they mean to do, and it was to cover
+his retreat he turned to Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“And who the —— are you?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled grimly. “I guess you have heard
+of me. Anyway, there are a good many places in
+Montana where they know Lance Courthorne. Quite
+sure I know a straight game when I see it!”</p>
+
+<p>The man’s resistance vanished, but he had evidently
+been taught the necessity of making the best of defeat
+in his profession, and he laughed as he swept his
+glance round at the angry faces turned upon him.</p>
+
+<p>“If you don’t there’s nobody does,” he said.
+“Still, as you’ve got my pistol and â€most dislocated
+my wrist, the least you can do is to get a partner out
+of this.”</p>
+
+<p>There was an ominous murmur, and the lad’s face
+showed livid with fury and humiliation, but Witham
+turned quietly to the hotel-keeper.</p>
+
+<p>“You will take this man with you into your side
+room and stop with him there,” he said. “Dane,
+give him the bills. The rest of you had better sit
+down here and make a list of your losses, and you’ll
+get whatever the fellow has upon him divided amongst
+you. Then, because I ask you, and you’d have
+had nothing but for me, you’ll put him in his wagon
+and turn him out quietly upon the prairie.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s sense, and we don’t want no circus here,”
+said somebody.</p>
+
+<p>A few voices were raised in protest, but when it
+became evident that one or two of the company were
+inclined to adopt more draconic measures, Dane spoke
+quietly and forcibly, and was listened to. Then
+Witham reached out and grasped the shoulder of the
+English lad, who made the last attempt to rouse his
+companions.</p>
+
+<p>“Let them alone, Ferris, and come along. You’ll
+get most of what you lost back to-morrow, and we’re
+going to take you home,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Ferris turned upon him, hoarse with passion, flushed
+in face, and swaying a trifle on his feet, while Witham
+noticed that he drew one arm back.</p>
+
+<p>“Who are you to lay hands on a gentleman?” he
+asked. “Keep your distance. I’m going to stay here,
+and, if I’d have had my way, we’d have kicked you
+out of Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham dropped his hand, but next moment the
+ornament of a distinguished family was seized by the
+neck, and the farmer glanced at Dane.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ve had enough of this fooling, and he’ll be
+grateful to me to-morrow,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then his captive was thrust, resisting strenuously,
+out of the room, and with Dane’s assistance conveyed
+to the waiting wagon, into which he was flung, almost
+speechless with indignation.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” said Dane quietly, “you’ve given us a
+good deal more trouble than you’re worth, Ferris,
+and if you attempt to get out again, I’ll break your
+head for you. Tell Courthorne how much that fellow
+got from you.”</p>
+
+<p>In another ten minutes they had jolted across the
+railroad track, and were speeding through the silence
+of the lonely prairie. Above them the clear stars flung
+their cold radiance down through vast distances of
+liquid indigo, and the soft beat of hoofs was the only
+sound that disturbed the solemn stillness of the
+wilderness. Dane drew in a great breath of the cool
+night air and laughed quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a good deal more wholesome here in several
+ways,” said he. “If you’re wise, you’ll let up on
+card-playing and hanging round the settlement,
+Ferris, and stick to farming. Even if you lose
+almost as many dollars over it, it will pay you considerably
+better. Now that’s all I’m going to tell
+you, but I know what I’m speaking of, because I’ve
+had my fling—and it’s costing me more than I care to
+figure out still. You, however, can pull up, because
+by this time you have no doubt found out a good deal,
+if you’re not all a fool. Curiosity’s at the bottom
+of half our youthful follies, isn’t it, Courthorne?
+We want to know what the things forbidden actually
+taste like.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham dryly, “I don’t quite know.
+You see, I had very little money in the old country,
+and still less leisure here to spend either on that kind
+of experimenting. Where to get enough to eat was
+the one problem that worried me.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane turned a trifle sharply. “We are, I fancy,
+tolerably good friends. Isn’t it a little unnecessary
+for you to adopt that tone with me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed, but made no answer, and their
+companion said nothing at all. Either the night
+wind had a drowsy effect on him or he was moodily
+resentful, for it was not until Witham pulled up
+before the homestead whose lands he farmed indifferently
+under Barrington’s supervision that he opened
+his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>“You have got off very cheaply to-night, and if
+you’re wise you’ll let that kind of thing alone in
+future,” said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The lad stepped down from the wagon and then
+stood still. “I resent advice from you as much
+as I do your uncalled-for insolence an hour or two
+ago,” he said. “To lie low until honest men got
+used to him would be considerably more becoming to a
+man like you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, stung into forgetfulness,
+“I’m not going to offend in that fashion again, and
+you can go to the devil in the way that most pleases
+you. In fact, I only pulled you out of the pit to-night
+because a lady, who apparently takes a quite
+unwarranted interest in you, asked me to.”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris stared up at him, and his face showed almost
+livid through the luminous night.</p>
+
+<p>“She asked you to!” he said. “By the Lord,
+I’ll make you sorry for this.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham said nothing, but shook the reins, and
+when the wagon lurched forward Dane looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know that before,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham dryly, “if I hadn’t lost my
+temper with the lad you wouldn’t have done now.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane smiled. “You miss the point of it. Our
+engaging friend made himself the laughing-stock of
+the colony by favouring Maud Barrington with his
+attentions when he came out. In fact, I fancy the
+lady, in desperation, had to turn her uncle loose on
+him before he could be made to understand that they
+were not appreciated. I’d keep your eye on him,
+Courthorne, for the little beast has shown himself
+abominably vindictive occasionally, though I have
+a notion he’s scarcely to be held accountable. It’s a
+case of too pure a strain and consanguinity. Two
+branches of the family—marriage between land and
+money, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>“It will be my heel if he gets in my way,” said
+Witham grimly.</p>
+
+<p>It was late when they reached his homestead where
+Dane was to stay the night, and when they went in a
+youthful figure in uniform rose up in the big log-walled
+hall. For a moment Witham’s heart almost
+stood still, and then, holding himself in hand by a
+strenuous effort, he moved forward and stood where
+the light of a lamp did not shine quite fully upon him.
+He knew that uniform, and he had also seen the lad
+who wore it once or twice before, at an outpost six
+hundred miles away across the prairie. He knew
+the risk he took was great, but it was evident to
+him that if his identity escaped detection at first sight,
+use would do the rest, and while he had worn a short
+pointed beard on the Western prairie, he was cleanly-shaven
+now.</p>
+
+<p>The lad stood quite still a moment staring at him,
+and Witham returning his gaze steadily felt his
+pulses throb.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, trooper, what has brought you here?”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Homestead visitation, sir,” said the lad, who
+had a pleasant English voice. “Mr. Courthorne,
+I presume—accept my regrets if I stared too hard at
+you—but for a moment you reminded me of a man
+I knew. They’ve changed us round lately, and I’m
+from the Alberta Squadron just sent in to this district.
+It was late when I rode in, and your people were kind
+enough to put me up.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I have been taken for another
+man before. Would you like anything to drink, or a
+smoke before you turn in, trooper?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said the lad. “If you’ll sign my docket
+to show I’ve been here, I’ll get some sleep. I’ve
+sixty miles to ride to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham did as he was asked, and the trooper withdrew,
+while when they sat down to a last cigar it
+seemed to Dane that his companion’s face was graver
+than usual.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you notice the lad’s astonishment when you
+came in?” he asked. “He looked very much as if
+he had seen a ghost.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled. “I believe he fancied he had.
+There was a man in the district he came from whom
+some folks considered resembled me. In reality, I
+was by no means like him, and he’s dead now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Likenesses are curious things, and it’s stranger
+still how folks alter,” said Dane. “Now, they’ve a
+photograph at Barrington’s of you as a boy, and
+while there is a resemblance in the face, nobody with
+any discernment would have fancied that lad would
+grow into a man like you. Still, that’s of no great
+moment, and I want to know just how you spotted
+the gambler. I had a tolerably expensive tuition in
+most games of chance in my callow days, and haven’t
+forgotten completely what I was taught then, but
+though I watched the game I saw nothing that led me
+to suspect crooked play.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I watched his face, and what
+I saw there decided me to try a bluff, but it was not
+until he turned the table over I knew I was
+right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Dane dryly, “you don’t need your
+nerves toning up. With only a suspicion to go upon,
+it was a tolerably risky game. Still, of course, you had
+advantages.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have played a more risky one, but I don’t know
+that I have cause to be very grateful for anything
+I acquired in the past,” said Witham with a curious
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>Dane stood up and flung his cigar away. “It’s
+time I was asleep,” he said. “Still, since our talk
+has turned in this direction, I want to tell you that,
+as you have doubtless seen, there is something about
+you that puzzles me occasionally. I don’t ask your
+confidence until you are ready to give it me—but if
+ever you want anybody to stand behind you in a
+difficulty, you’ll find me rather more than willing.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out, and Witham sat still very grave in
+face for at least another hour.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink13'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XIII—A FAIR ADVOCATE</a></h2>
+
+<p>Thanks to the fashion in which the hotel-keeper
+managed the affair, the gambler left the settlement
+without personal injury, but very little richer than
+when he entered it. The rest of those who were
+present at his meeting with Witham were also not
+desirous that their friends should know they had
+been victimized, and because Dane was discreet,
+news of what had happened might never have
+reached Silverdale, had not one of the younger men
+ridden in to the railroad a few days later. Odd
+scraps of conversation overheard led him to suspect
+that something unusual had taken place, but as
+nobody seemed willing to supply details, he returned
+to Silverdale with his curiosity unsatisfied. As
+it happened, he was shortly afterwards present at a
+gathering of his neighbours at Macdonald’s farm and
+came across Ferris there.</p>
+
+<p>“I heard fragments of a curious story at the
+settlement,” he said. “There was trouble of some
+kind in which a professional gambler figured last
+Saturday night, and though nobody seemed to want
+to talk about it, I surmised that somebody from
+Silverdale was concerned in it.”</p>
+
+<p>He had perhaps spoken a trifle more loudly than
+he had intended, and there were a good many of the
+Silverdale farmers with a few of their wives and
+daughters whose attention was not wholly confined
+to the efforts of Mrs. Macdonald at the piano in the
+long room just then. In any case a voice broke
+through the silence that followed the final chords.</p>
+
+<p>“Ferris could tell us if he liked. He was there
+that night.”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris, who had cause for doing so, looked uncomfortable,
+and endeavoured to sign to the first
+speaker that it was not desirable to pursue the topic.</p>
+
+<p>“I have been in tolerably often of late. Had
+things to attend to,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The other man was, however, possessed by a
+mischievous spirit, or did not understand him.
+“You may just as well tell us now as later, because
+you never kept a secret in your life,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, several of the others had gathered
+about them, and Mrs. Macdonald, who had joined
+the group, smiled as she said, “There is evidently
+something interesting going on. Mayn’t I know,
+Gordon?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said the man, who had visited the
+settlement. “You shall know as much as I do,
+though that is little, and if it excites your curiosity
+you can ask Ferris for the rest. He is only anxious
+to enhance the value of his story by being mysterious.
+Well, there was a more or less dramatic
+happening, of the kind our friends in the old country
+unwarrantably fancy is typical of the West, in the
+saloon at the settlement not long ago. Cards, pistols,
+a professional gambler, and the unmasking of foul
+play, don’t you know. Somebody from Silverdale
+played the leading rôle.”</p>
+
+<p>“How interesting!” said a young English girl.
+“Now, I used to fancy something of that kind
+happened here every day before I came out to the
+prairie. Please tell us, Mr. Ferris! One would
+like to find there was just a trace of reality in our
+picturesque fancies of debonair desperadoes and big-hatted
+cavaliers.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a curious expression in Ferris’ face,
+but as he glanced round at the rest, who were
+regarding him expectantly, he did not observe that
+Maud Barrington and her aunt had just come in
+and stood close behind him.</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t you see there’s no getting out of it,
+Ferris?” said somebody.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the lad in desperation, “I can only
+admit that Gordon is right. There was foul play and a
+pistol drawn, but I’m sorry that I can’t add anything
+further. In fact, it wouldn’t be quite fair of me.”</p>
+
+<p>“But the man from Silverdale?” asked Mrs.
+Macdonald.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid,” said Ferris, with the air of one
+shielding a friend, “I can’t tell you anything about
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know Mr. Courthorne drove in that night,”
+said the young English girl, who was not endued
+with very much discretion.</p>
+
+<p>“Courthorne!” said one of the bystanders, and
+there was a momentary silence that was very expressive.
+“Was he concerned in what took place,
+Ferris?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the lad with apparent reluctance.
+“Mrs. Macdonald, you will remember that they
+dragged it out of me, but I will tell you nothing
+more whatever.”</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to me you have told us quite sufficient
+and perhaps a trifle too much,” said somebody.</p>
+
+<p>There was a curious silence. All of those present
+were more or less acquainted with Courthorne’s
+past history, and the suggestion of foul play coupled
+with the mention of a professional gambler had
+been significant. Ferris, while committing himself
+in no way, had certainly said sufficient. Then
+there was a sudden turning of heads as a young
+woman moved quietly into the midst of the group.
+She was ominously calm, but she stood very straight,
+and there was a little hard glitter in her eyes,
+which reminded one or two of them who noticed it
+of those of Colonel Barrington. The fingers of one
+hand were also closed at her side.</p>
+
+<p>“I overheard you telling a story, Ferris, but you
+have a bad memory and left rather too much out,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“They compelled me to tell them what I did,
+Miss Barrington,” said the lad, who winced beneath
+her gaze. “Now, there is really nothing to
+be gained by going any further into the affair.
+Shall I play something for you, Mrs. Macdonald?”</p>
+
+<p>He turned as he spoke, and would have edged
+away but that one of the men, at a glance from the
+girl, laid a hand on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be in a hurry, Ferris. I fancy Miss Barrington
+has something more to tell you,” he said dryly.</p>
+
+<p>The girl thanked him with a gesture. “I want
+you to supply the most important part,” she said,
+and the lad, saying nothing, changed colour under
+the glance she cast upon him. “You do not seem
+willing. Then perhaps I had better do it for you.
+There were two men from Silverdale directly concerned
+in the affair, and one of them at no slight
+risk to himself did a very generous thing. That one
+was Mr. Courthorne. Did you see him lay a single
+stake upon a card, or do anything that led you
+to suppose he was there for the purpose of gambling
+that evening?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the lad, seeing she knew the truth,
+and his hoarse voice was scarcely audible.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Maud Barrington, “I want you to
+tell us what you did see him do.”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris said nothing, and though the girl laughed
+a little as she glanced at the wondering group, her
+voice was icily disdainful.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” she said, “I will tell you. You saw
+him question a professional gambler’s play to save
+a man who had no claim on him from ruin, and,
+with only one comrade to back him, drive the swindler,
+who had a pistol, from the field. He had, you
+admit, no interest of any kind in the game?”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris had grown crimson again, and the veins
+on his forehead showed swollen high. “No,” he
+said, almost abjectly.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington turned from him to her hostess
+as she answered, “That will suffice, in the meanwhile,
+until I can decide whether it is desirable to
+make known the rest of the tale. I brought the
+new song Evelyn wanted, Mrs. Macdonald, and I
+will play it for her if she would care to try it.”</p>
+
+<p>She moved away with the elder lady, and left the
+rest astonished to wonder what had become of
+Ferris, who was seen no more that evening, while
+presently Witham came in.</p>
+
+<p>His face was a trifle weary, for he had toiled
+since the sun rose above the rim of the prairie, and
+when the arduous day was over, and those who
+worked for him were glad to rest their aching limbs,
+had driven two leagues to Macdonald’s. Why he
+had done so he was not willing to admit, but he
+glanced round the long room anxiously as he came
+in, and his eyes brightened as they rested on Maud
+Barrington. They were, however, observant eyes,
+and he noticed that there was a trifle more colour than
+usual in the girl’s pale-tinted face, and signs of suppressed
+curiosity about some of the rest. When he
+had greeted his hostess, he turned to one of the men.</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to me you are either trying not to see
+something, Gordon, or to forget it as soon as you
+can,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Gordon laughed a little. “You are not often
+mistaken, Courthorne? That is precisely what
+we are doing. I presume you haven’t heard what
+occurred here an hour ago?”</p>
+
+<p>“No!” said Witham. “I’m not very curious
+if it does not concern me.”</p>
+
+<p>Gordon looked at him steadily. “I fancy it
+does. You see, that young fool Ferris was suggesting
+that you had been mixed up in something not
+very creditable at the settlement lately. As it
+happened, Maud Barrington overheard him and
+made him retract before the company. She did it
+effectively, and if it had been any one else, the
+scene would have been almost theatrical. Still,
+you know nothing seems out of place when it comes
+from the Colonel’s niece. Nor if you had heard
+her would you have wanted a better advocate.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the bronze deepened in Witham’s
+forehead, and there was a gleam in his eyes, but
+though it passed as rapidly as it came, Gordon had
+seen it, and smiled when the farmer moved away.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a probability I never counted on,” he
+thought. “Still, I fancy if it came about, it would
+suit everybody but the Colonel.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned as Mrs. Macdonald came up to him.
+“What are you doing here alone when I see there is
+nobody talking to the girl from Winnipeg?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed a little. “I was wondering
+whether it is a good sign, or otherwise, when a young
+woman is, so far as she can decently be, uncivil to a
+man who desires her good-will.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Macdonald glanced at him sharply, and then
+shook her head. “The question is too deep for you—and
+it is not your affair. Besides, haven’t you
+seen that indiscreet freedom of speech is not encouraged
+at Silverdale?”</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Witham, crossing the room,
+took a vacant place at Maud Barrington’s side.
+She turned her head a moment and looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “Yes, I heard,” he said.
+“Why did you do it?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington made a little gesture of impatience.
+“That is quite unnecessary. You know
+I sent you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham a trifle dryly, “I see.
+You would have felt mean if you hadn’t defended
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the girl, with a curious smile. “That
+was not exactly the reason, but we cannot talk too
+long here. Dane is anxious to take us home in his
+new buggy, but it would apparently be a very tight
+fit for three. Will you drive me over?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham only nodded, for Mrs. Macdonald approached
+in pursuit of him, but he spent the rest of
+the evening in a state of expectancy, and Maud
+Barrington fancied that his hard hands were
+suspiciously unresponsive as she took them when
+he helped her into the Silverdale wagon—a vehicle
+a strong man could have lifted, and in no way
+resembling its English prototype. The team was
+mettlesome, the lights of Macdonald’s homestead
+soon faded behind them, and they were racing
+with many a lurch and jolt straight as the crow flies
+across the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>There was no moon, but the stars shone far up
+in the soft indigo, and the grasses whirled back in
+endless ripples to the humming wheels, dimmed to
+the dusky blue that suffused the whole intermerging
+sweep of earth and sky. The sweetness of wild
+peppermint rose through the coolness of the dew,
+and the voices of the wilderness were part of the
+silence that was but the perfect balance of the
+nocturnal harmonies. The two who knew and
+loved the prairie could pick out each one of them.
+Nor did it seem that there was any need of speech
+on such a night, but at last Witham turned with a
+little smile to his companion, as he checked the
+horses on the slope of a billowy rise.</p>
+
+<p>“One feels diffident about intruding on this
+great quietness,” he said. “Still, I fancy you had
+a purpose in asking me to drive you home.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, with a curious gentleness.
+“In the first place, though I know it isn’t necessary
+with you, I want to thank you. I made Dane tell
+me, and you have done all I wished—splendidly.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Well, you see, it naturally
+came easy to me.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington noticed the trace of grimness
+in his voice. “Please try to overlook our unkindness,”
+she said. “Is it really needful to keep
+reminding me? And how was I to know what you
+were, when I had only heard that wicked story?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham felt a little thrill run through him, for which
+reason he looked straight in front of him and shifted
+his grasp on the reins. Disdainful and imperious
+as she was at times, he knew there was a wealth of
+softer qualities in his companion now. Her daintiness
+in thought and person, and honesty of purpose,
+appealed to him, while that night her mere physical
+presence had an effect that was almost bewildering.
+For a moment he wondered vaguely how far a man
+with what fate had thrust upon him might dare to
+go, and then with a little shiver saw once more the
+barrier of deceit and imposture.</p>
+
+<p>“You believe it was not a true one?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said Maud Barrington. “How
+could it be? And you have been very patient
+under our suspicions. Now, if you still value the
+good-will you once asked for, it is yours absolutely.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you may still hear unpleasant stories about
+me,” said Witham, with a note the girl had not
+heard before in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>“I should not believe them,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” persisted Witham, “if the tales were true?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington did nothing by halves. “Then
+I should remember that there is always so much we
+do not know which would put a different colour
+on any story, and I believe they could never be
+true again.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham checked a little gasp of wonder and
+delight and Maud Barrington looked away across
+the prairie. She was not usually impulsive and
+seldom lightly bestowed gifts that were worth the
+having, and the man knew that the faith in him she
+had confessed to was the result of a conviction
+that would last until he himself shattered it. Then,
+in the midst of his elation, he shivered again and drew
+the lash across the near horse’s back. The wonder
+and delight he felt had suddenly gone.</p>
+
+<p>“Few would venture to predict as much. Now and
+then I feel that our deeds are scarcely contrived by
+our own will, and one could fancy our parts had
+been thrust upon us in a grim joke,” he said. “For
+instance, isn’t it strange that I should have a share
+in the rousing of Silverdale to a sense of its responsibilities?
+Lord, what I could make of it if fate
+had but given me a fair opportunity!”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke almost fiercely, but the words did not
+displease the girl. The forceful ring in his voice
+set something thrilling within her, and she knew
+by this time that his assertions seldom went beyond
+the fact.</p>
+
+<p>“But you will have the opportunity, and we
+need you here,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham slowly. “I am afraid not.
+Still, I will finish the work I see in front of me.
+That at least—one cannot hope for the unattainable.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was sensible of a sudden chill.
+“Still, if one has strength and patience, is anything
+quite unattainable?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked out across the prairie, and for a
+moment the demons of pride and ambition rioted
+within him. He knew there were in him the qualities
+that compel success, and the temptation to stretch
+out a daring hand and take all he longed for grew
+almost overmastering. Still, he also knew how
+strong the innate prejudices of caste and tradition
+are in most women of his companion’s station, and
+she had never hidden one aspect of her character
+from him. It was with a smothered groan he
+realized that if he flung the last shred of honour
+aside and grasped the forbidden fruit it would turn
+to bitterness in his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said very slowly. “There is a limit,
+which only fools would pass.”</p>
+
+<p>Then there was silence for a while, until, as they
+swept across the rise, Maud Barrington laughed
+as she pointed to the lights that blinked in the
+hollow, and Witham realized that the barrier between
+them stood firm again.</p>
+
+<p>“Our views seldom coincide for very long, but
+there is something else to mention before we reach
+the Grange,” she said. “You must have paid out
+a good many dollars for the ploughing of your land
+and mine, and nobody’s exchequer is inexhaustible
+at Silverdale. Now I want you to take a cheque
+from me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it necessary, that I should?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said the girl, with a trace of displeasure.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Then I shall be prepared
+to hand you my account whenever you demand it.”</p>
+
+<p>He did not look at his companion again, but
+with a tighter grip than there was any need for on
+the reins, sent the light wagon jolting down the
+slope to Silverdale Grange.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink14'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XIV—THE UNEXPECTED</a></h2>
+
+<p>The sun beat down on the prairie, which was
+already losing its flush of green, but it was cool
+where Maud Barrington and her aunt stood in the
+shadow of the bluff by Silverdale Grange. The
+birches, tasselled now with whispering foliage,
+divided the homestead from the waste which would lie
+white and desolate under the parching heat, and that
+afternoon it seemed to the girl that the wall of green
+shut out more than the driving dust and sun-glare
+from the Grange, for where the trees were thinner
+she could see moving specks of men and horses
+athwart the skyline.</p>
+
+<p>They had toiled in the sun-baked furrow since the
+first flush of crimson streaked the prairie’s rim, and
+the chill of dusk would fall upon the grasses before
+their work was done. Those men who bore the
+burden and heat of the day were, the girl knew,
+helots now, but there was in them the silent vigour
+and something of the sombreness of the land of
+rock and forest they came from, and a time would
+come when others would work for them. Winning
+slowly, holding grimly, they were moving on, while
+secure in its patrician tranquility Silverdale stood
+still, and Maud Barrington smiled curiously as she
+glanced down at the long white robe that clung very
+daintily about her and then towards her companions
+in the tennis field. Her apparel had cost many
+dollars in Montreal, and there was a joyous irresponsibility
+in the faces of those she watched.</p>
+
+<p>“It is a little unequal, isn’t it, aunt?” she said.
+“One feels inclined to wonder what we have done
+that we should have exemption from the charge
+laid upon the first tiller of the soil we and the men
+who are plodding through the dust there are descended
+from.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington laughed a little as she glanced
+with a nod of comprehension at the distant toilers,
+and more gravely towards the net. Merry voices
+came up to her through the shadows of the trees
+as English lad and English maiden, lissom and
+picturesque in many-hued jackets and light dresses,
+flitted across the little square of velvet green. The
+men had followed the harrow and seeder a while that
+morning. Some of them, indeed, had for a few hours
+driven a team, and then left the rest to the hired
+hands, for the stress and sweat of effort that was to
+turn the wilderness into a granary was not for such
+as them.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you think it is all made up to those
+others?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“In one sense—yes,” said the girl. “Of course,
+one can see that all effort must have its idealistic
+aspect, and there may be men who find their compensation
+in the thrill of the fight, and the knowledge
+of work well done when they rest at night.
+Still, I fancy most of them only toil to eat, and their
+views are not revealed to us. We are, you see,
+women—and we live at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Her aunt smiled again. “How long is it since
+the plough crossed the Red River, and what is
+Manitoba now? How did those mile furrows come
+there, and who drove the road that takes the wheat
+out through the granite of the Superior shore?
+It is more than their appetites that impelled those
+men, my dear. Still, it is scarcely wise to expect
+too much when one meets them, for though one
+could feel it is presumptuous to forgive its deficiencies,
+the Berserk type of manhood is not conspicuous
+for its refinement.”</p>
+
+<p>For no apparent reason Maud Barrington evaded
+her aunt’s gaze. “You,” she said dryly, “have
+forgiven one of that type a good deal already,
+but, at least, we have never seen him when the fit
+was upon him.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington laughed. “Still, I have no
+doubt that, sooner or later, you will enjoy the
+spectacle.”</p>
+
+<p>Just then a light wagon came up behind them,
+and when one of the hired men helped them in they
+swept out of the cool shade into the dust and glare
+of the prairie, and when, some little time later,
+with the thud of hoofs and rattle of wheels softened
+by the bleaching sod, they rolled down a rise, there
+was spread out before them evidence of man’s
+activity.</p>
+
+<p>Acre by acre, gleaming chocolate brown against
+the grey and green of the prairie, the wheat loam
+rolled away, back to the ridge, over it, and on again.
+It was such a breadth of sowing as had but once,
+when wheat was dear, been seen at Silverdale, but
+still across the foreground, advancing in echelon,
+came lines of dusty teams, and there was a meaning
+in the furrows they left behind them, for they were
+not ploughing where the wheat had been. Each
+wave of lustrous clods that rolled from the gleaming
+shares was so much rent from the virgin prairie, and
+a promise of what would come when man had
+fulfilled his mission and the wilderness would blossom.
+There was a wealth of food stored, little by little
+during ages past counting, in every yard of the
+crackling sod to await the time when the toiler
+with the sweat of the primeval curse upon his forehead
+should unseal it with the plough. It was
+also borne in upon Maud Barrington that the man
+who directed those energies was either altogether
+without discernment, or one who saw further than
+his fellows and had an excellent courage, when he
+flung his substance into the furrows while wheat
+was going down. Then, as the hired man pulled up
+the wagon, she saw him.</p>
+
+<p>A great plough with triple shares had stopped at
+the end of the furrow, and the leading horses were
+apparently at variance with the man who, while he
+gave of his own strength to the uttermost, was
+asking too much from them. Young and indifferently
+broken, tortured by swarming insects,
+and galled by the strain of the collar, they had laid
+back their ears, and the wickedness of the bronco
+strain shone in their eyes. One rose almost upright
+amidst a clatter of harness, its mate squealed
+savagely, and the man who loosed one hand from
+the headstall flung out an arm. Then he and the
+pair whirled round together amidst the trampled
+clods in a blurred medley of spume-flecked bodies,
+soil-stained jean, flung-up hoofs, and an arm that
+swung and smote again. Miss Barrington grew
+a trifle pale as she watched, but a little glow crept
+into her niece’s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle, however, ended suddenly, and
+hailing a man who plodded behind another team,
+Witham picked up his broad hat, which was trampled
+into shapelessness, and turned towards the wagon.
+There was dust and spume upon him, a rent in the
+blue shirt, and the knuckles of one hand dripped
+red, but he laughed as he said, “I did not know we
+had an audience, but this, you see, is necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it?” asked Miss Barrington, who glanced at
+the ploughing. “When wheat is going down?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “Yes,” he said. “I mean, to me;
+and the price of wheat is only part of the question.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington stretched out her hand, though
+her niece said nothing at all. “Of course, but I
+want you to help us down. Maud has an account
+you have not sent in, to ask you for.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham first turned to the two men who now stood
+by the idle machine. “You’ll have to drive those
+beasts of mine as best you can, Tom, and Jake will
+take your team. Get them off again now. This piece
+of breaking has to be put through before we loose
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he handed his visitors down, and Maud
+Barrington fancied as he walked with them to the
+house that the fashion in which the damaged hat
+hung down over his eyes would have rendered most
+other men ludicrous. He left them a space in his bare
+sitting-room, which suggested only grim utility, and
+Miss Barrington smiled when her niece glanced at
+her.</p>
+
+<p>“And this is how Lance, the profligate, lives!” said
+she.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington shook her head. “No,” she said.
+“Can you believe that this man was ever a prodigal?”</p>
+
+<p>Her aunt was a trifle less astonished than she
+would once have been, but before she could answer
+Witham, who had made a trifling change in his clothing,
+came in.</p>
+
+<p>“I can give you some green tea, though I am afraid
+it might be a good deal better than it is, and our
+crockery is not all you have been used to,” he said.
+“You see, we have only time to think of one thing
+until the sowing is through.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington’s eyes twinkled. “And then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham, with a little laugh, “there
+will be prairie hay to cut, and after that the harvest
+coming on.”</p>
+
+<p>“In the meanwhile, it was business that brought
+me here, and I have a cheque with me,” said Maud
+Barrington. “Please let us get it over first of all.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat down at a table and scribbled on a
+strip of paper. “That,” he said gravely, “is what
+you owe me for the ploughing.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a little flush in his face as he took the
+cheque the girl filled in, and both felt somewhat
+grateful for the entrance of a man in blue jean with
+the tea. It was of very indifferent quality, and he
+had sprinkled a good deal on the tray, but Witham
+felt a curious thrill as he watched the girl pour it out
+at the head of the bare table. Her white dress gleamed
+in the light of a dusty window, and the shadowy
+cedar boarding behind her forced up each line of the
+shapely figure. Again the maddening temptation
+took hold of him and he wondered whether he had
+betrayed too much, when he felt the elder lady’s eyes
+upon him. There was a tremor in his brown fingers
+as he took the cup held out to him, but his voice was
+steady.</p>
+
+<p>“You can scarcely fancy how pleasant this is,”
+he said. “For eight years, in fact, ever since I left
+England, no woman has ever done any of these graceful
+little offices for me.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington glanced at her niece, and both of
+them knew that, if the lawyer had traced Courthorne’s
+past correctly, this could not be true. Still, there
+was no disbelief in the elder lady’s eyes, and the girl’s
+faith remained unshaken.</p>
+
+<p>“Eight years,” she said, with a little smile, “is
+a very long while.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham, “horribly long, and one year
+at Silverdale is worth them all—that is, a year like
+this one, which is going to be remembered by all who
+have sown wheat on the prairie; and that leads up
+to something. When I have ploughed all my own
+holding I shall not be content, and I want to make
+another bargain. Give me the use of your unbroken
+land, and I will find horses, seed, and men, while we
+will share what it yields us when the harvest is in.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl was astonished. This, she knew, was
+splendid audacity, for the man had already staken
+very heavily on the crop he had sown, and while the
+daring of it stirred her she sat silent a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“I could lose nothing, but you will have to bring
+out a host of men and have risked so much,” she said.
+“Nobody but you, and I, and three or four others
+in all the province, are ploughing more than half
+their holdings.”</p>
+
+<p>The suggestion of comradeship set Witham’s blood
+tingling, but it was with a little laugh he turned over
+the pile of papers on the table, and then took them
+up in turn.</p>
+
+<p>“â€Very little ploughing has been done in the tracts
+of Minnesota previously alluded to. Farmers find
+wheat cannot be grown at present prices, and there
+is apparently no prospect of a rise,’” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“â€The Dakota wheat-growers are mostly following.
+They can’t quite figure how they would get
+eighty cents for the dollar’s worth of seeding this
+year.’</p>
+
+<p>“â€Milling very quiet in Winnipeg. No inquiries
+from Europe coming in, and Manitoba dealers generally
+find little demand for harrows or seeders this
+year. Reports from Assiniboia seem to show that
+the one hope this season will be mixed farming and
+the neglect of cereals.’”</p>
+
+<p>“There is only one inference,” he said. “When
+the demand comes there will be nothing to meet it
+with.”</p>
+
+<p>“When it comes,” said Maud Barrington quietly.
+“But you who believe it will stand alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Almost,” said Witham. “Still there are a few
+much cleverer men who feel as I do. I can’t give
+you all my reasons, or read you the sheaf of papers
+from the Pacific slope, London, New York, Australia;
+but, while men lose hope, and little by little the stocks
+run down, the world must be fed. Just as sure as the
+harvest follows the sowing, it will wake up suddenly
+to the fact that it is hungry. They are buying cotton
+and scattering their money in other nations’
+bonds in the old country now, for they and the rest
+of Europe forget their necessities at times, but it is
+impossible to picture them finding their granaries
+empty and clamouring for bread?”</p>
+
+<p>It was a crucial test of faith, and the man knew it,
+as the woman did. He stood alone, with the opinions
+of the multitude against him; but there was, Maud
+Barrington felt, a great if undefinable difference
+between his quiet resolution and the gambler’s recklessness.
+Once more the boldness of his venture
+stirred her, and this time there was a little flash in
+her eyes as she bore witness to her perfect confidence.</p>
+
+<p>“You shall have the land, every acre of it, to do
+what you like with, and I will ask no questions
+whether you win or lose,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Then Miss Barrington glanced at him in turn.
+“Lance, I have a thousand dollars I want you to turn
+into wheat for me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s fingers trembled, and a darker hue crept
+into his tan. “Madam,” he said, “I can take no
+money from you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must,” said the little white-haired lady.
+“For your mother’s sake, Lance. It is a brave thing
+you are doing, and you are the son of one who was
+my dearest friend.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned his head away, and both women
+wondered when he looked round again. His face
+seemed a trifle drawn, and his voice was strained.</p>
+
+<p>“I hope,” he said slowly, “it will in some degree
+make amends for others I have done. In the
+meanwhile, there are reasons why your confidence humiliates
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington rose and her niece after her.
+“Still I believe it is warranted, and you will remember
+there are two women who have trusted you, hoping
+for your success. And now, I fancy, we have kept
+you too long.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stood holding the door open a moment,
+with his head bent, and then suddenly straightened
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>“I can at least be honest with you in this venture,”
+he said, with a curious quietness.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing further was said, but when his guests drove
+away Witham sat still awhile, and then went back
+very grim in face to his ploughing. He had passed
+other unpleasant moments of that kind since he came
+to Silverdale, and long afterwards the memory of
+them brought a flush to his face. The excuses he
+had made seemed worthless when he strove to view
+what he had done, and was doing, through those
+women’s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It was dusk when he returned to the homestead
+worn out in body but more tranquil in mind, and
+stopped a moment in the doorway to look back on
+the darkening sweep of the ploughing. He felt with
+no misgivings that his time of triumph would come,
+and in the meanwhile the handling of this great farm
+with all the aids that money could buy him was a
+keen joy to him; but each time he met Maud Barrington’s
+eyes he realized the more surely that the
+hour of his success must also see accomplished an
+act of abnegation, which he wondered with a growing
+fear whether he could find the strength for. Then
+as he went in a man who cooked for his hired assistants
+came to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s a stranger inside waiting for you,” he
+said. “Wouldn’t tell me what he wanted, but sat
+right down as if the place was his and helped himself
+without asking to your cigars. Wanted something
+to drink, too, and smiled at me kind of wicked when I
+brought him the cider.”</p>
+
+<p>The room was almost dark when Witham entered
+it and stood still a moment staring at a man who
+sat, cigar in hand, quietly watching him. His appearance
+was curiously familiar, but Witham could not
+see his face until he moved forward another step or
+two. Then he stopped once more, and the two, saying
+nothing, looked at one another. It was Witham
+who spoke first, and his voice was very even.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you want here?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>The other man laughed. “Isn’t that a curious
+question when the place is mine? You don’t seem
+overjoyed to see me come to life again.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat down and slowly lighted a cigar. “We
+need not go into that. I asked you what you want.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne dryly, “it is not a great
+deal. Only the means to live in a manner more befitting
+a gentleman than I have been able to do lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have not been prospering?” and Witham
+favoured his companion with a slow scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” and Courthorne laughed again. “You
+see, I could pick up a tolerable living as Lance Courthorne,
+but there is very little to be made at my business
+when you commence in new fields as an unknown
+man.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham coldly, “I don’t know that
+it wouldn’t be better to face my trial than stay here
+at your mercy. So far as my inclinations go, I would
+sooner fight than have any further dealings with a
+man like you.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne shook his head. “I fixed up the thing
+too well, and you would be convicted. Still, we’ll
+not go into that, and you will not find me unreasonable.
+A life at Silverdale would not suit me, and
+you know by this time that it would be difficult to
+sell the place, while I don’t know where I could find
+a tenant who would farm it better than you. That
+being so, it wouldn’t be good policy to bleed you too
+severely. Still, I want a thousand dollars in the
+meanwhile. They’re mine, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat still a minute. He was sensible of a
+fierce distrust and hatred of the man before him, but
+he felt he must at least see the consummation of his
+sowing.</p>
+
+<p>“Then you shall have them on condition that you
+go away, and stay away, until harvest is over. After
+that I will send for you and shall have more to tell
+you. If in the meantime you come back here, or
+hint that I am Witham, I will surrender to the police
+or decide our differences in another fashion.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne nodded. “That is direct,” he said.
+“One knows where he is when he deals with a man
+who talks as you do. Now, are you not curious as to
+the way I cheated both the river and the police?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham grimly, “not in the least. We
+will talk business together when it is necessary, but I
+can only decline to discuss anything else with you.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “There’s nothing to be
+gained by pretending to misunderstand you, but it
+wouldn’t pay me to be resentful when I’m graciously
+willing to let you work for me. Still, I have been
+inclined to wonder how you were getting on with my
+estimable relatives and connexions. One of them has,
+I hear, unbent a trifle towards you, but I would like
+to warn you not to presume on any small courtesy
+shown you by the younger Miss Barrington.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stood up and set his back to the door.
+“You heard my terms, but if you mention that lady
+again in connexion with me it would suit me equally
+well to make good all I owe you very differently.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne did not appear in any way disconcerted,
+but before he could answer a man outside opened the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s Sergeant Stimson and one of his troopers
+wanting you,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked at Courthorne, but the latter smiled.
+“The visit has nothing to do with me. It is probably
+accidental; but I fancy Stimson knows me, and it
+wouldn’t be advisable for him to see us both together.
+Now, I wonder whether you could make it fifteen
+hundred dollars.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham. “Stay, if it pleases you.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne shook his head. “I don’t know that it
+would. You don’t do it badly, Witham.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out by another door almost as the grizzled
+sergeant came in and stood still, looking at the master
+of the homestead.</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t seen you since I came here, Mr. Courthorne,
+and now you remind me of another man I
+once had dealings with,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed a little. “I scarcely fancy that
+is very civil, Sergeant.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the prairie-rider, “there is a difference,
+when I look at you more closely. Let me see,
+I met you once or twice back there in Alberta?”</p>
+
+<p>He appeared to be reflecting, but Witham was on
+his guard. “More frequently, I fancy, but you had
+nothing definite against me, and the times have
+changed. I would like to point that out to you
+civilly. Your chiefs are also on good terms with us
+at Silverdale, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant laughed. “Well, sir, I meant no
+offence, and called round to requisition a horse. One
+of the Whitesod boys has been deciding a quarrel with
+a neighbour with an axe, and while I fancy they want
+me at once, my beast got his foot in a badger hole.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell Tom in the stables to let you have your
+choice,” said Witham. “If you like them, there’s
+no reason you shouldn’t take some of these cigars
+along.”</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant went out, and when the beat of hoofs
+sank into the silence of the prairie, Witham called
+Courthorne in. “I have offered you no refreshment,
+but the best in the house is at your service,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne looked at him curiously, and for the
+first time Witham noticed that the life he had led was
+telling upon his companion.</p>
+
+<p>“As your guest?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham. “I am tenant here, and,
+that I may owe you nothing, purpose paying you a
+second thousand dollars when the crop is in, as well
+as bank-rate interest on the value of the stock and
+machines and the money I have used, as shown in
+the documents handed me by Colonel Barrington.
+With wheat at its present price, nobody would give
+you more for the land. In return, I demand the
+unconditional use of the farm until within three
+months from harvest I have the elevator warrants for
+whatever wheat I raise, which will belong to me. If
+you do not agree, or remain here after sunrise to-morrow,
+I shall ride over to the outpost and make a
+declaration.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne slowly, “you can consider
+it a deal.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink15'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XV—FACING THE FLAME</a></h2>
+
+<p>Courthorne rode away next morning, and some
+weeks had passed when Maud Barrington came upon
+Witham sitting beside his mower in a sloo. He did not
+at first see her, for the rattle of the machines in a
+neighbouring hollow drowned the muffled beat of
+hoofs, and the girl, reining her horse in, looked down
+on him. The man was sitting very still, which was
+unusual with him, a hammer in his hand, gazing
+straight before him, as though he could see something
+beyond the shimmering heat that danced along the
+rim of the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>Summer had come, and the grass, which grew
+scarcely ankle-deep on the great levels, was once more
+white and dry; but in the hollows that had held the
+melting snow it stood waist-high, scented with peppermint,
+harsh and wiry, and Witham had set out with
+every man he had to harvest it. Already a line of
+loaded wagons crawled slowly across the prairie, and
+men and horses moved half-seen amid the dust that
+whirled about another sloo. Out of it came the
+trampling of hoofs and the musical tinkle of steel.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Witham looked up, and the care which was
+stamped upon it fled from his face when he saw
+the girl. The dust that lay thick upon his garments
+had spared her, and as she sat, patting the restless
+horse, with a little smile in her face which showed
+just touched by the sun beneath the big white hat,
+something in her dainty freshness reacted upon the
+tired man’s fancy. He had long borne the stress and
+the burden, and as he watched her a longing to taste
+for at least a space the life of leisure and refinement
+came upon him, as it had done too often for his tranquility
+since he came to Silverdale. This woman
+who had been born to it could, it seemed to him, lift
+the man she trusted beyond the sordid cares of the
+turmoil to her own high level, and as he waited for
+her to speak, a fit of passion shook him. It betrayed
+itself only by the sudden hardening of his face.</p>
+
+<p>“It is the first time I have surprised you idle.
+You were dreaming,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled a trifle mirthlessly. “I was, but
+I am afraid the fulfillment of the dreams is not for me.
+One is apt to be pulled up suddenly when he ventures
+over far.”</p>
+
+<p>“We are inquisitive, you know,” said Maud Barrington;
+“can’t you tell me what they were?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham did not know what impulse swayed him,
+and afterwards blamed himself for complying; but
+the girl’s interest compelled him, and he showed her
+a little of what was in his heart.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy I saw Silverdale gorging the elevators
+with the choicest wheat,” he said. “A new bridge
+flung level across the ravine where the wagons go
+down half-loaded to the creek; a dam turning the
+hollow into a lake, and big turbines driving our own
+flouring mill. Then there were herds of cattle
+fattening on the strippings of the grain that wasteful
+people burn, our products clamoured for, east in the
+old country, and west in British Columbia—and for
+a background, prosperity and power, even if it was
+paid for with half the traditions of Silverdale. Still,
+you see it may all be due to the effect of the fierce sunshine
+on an idle man’s fancy.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington regarded him steadily, and the
+smile died out of her eyes. “But,” she said, slowly
+“is all that quite beyond realization. Could you not
+bring it about?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham saw her quiet confidence and something
+of her pride. There was no avarice in this woman,
+but the slight dilation of the nostrils and the glow
+in her eyes told of ambition, and for a moment his
+soul was not his own.</p>
+
+<p>“I could,” he said; and Maud Barrington, who
+watched the swift straightening of his shoulders and
+lifting of his head, felt that he spoke no more than the
+truth. Then with a sudden access of bitterness,
+“But I never will.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” she asked. “Have you grown tired of
+Silverdale, or has what you pictured no charm for
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham leaned, as it were wearily against the
+wheel of the mower. “I wonder if you could understand
+what my life has been. The crushing poverty
+that rendered every effort useless from the beginning,
+the wounds that come from using imperfect tools, and
+the numb hopelessness that follows repeated failure.
+They are tolerably hard to bear alone, but it is more
+difficult to make the best of them when the poorly-fed
+body is as worn out as the mind. To stay here would
+be—paradise—but a glimpse of it will probably have
+to suffice. Its gates are well guarded and without are
+the dogs, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>Something in Maud Barrington thrilled in answer
+to the faint hoarseness in Witham’s voice, and she
+did not resent it. She was a woman with all her sex’s
+instinctive response to passion and emotion, though
+as yet the primitive impulses that stir the hearts of
+men had been covered, if not wholly hidden, from her
+by the thin veneer of civilization. Now, at least, she
+felt in touch with them, and for a moment she looked
+at the man with a daring that matched his own
+shining in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“And you fear the angel with the sword?” she
+said. “There is nothing so terrible at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham, “I think it is the load I have
+to carry I fear the most.”</p>
+
+<p>For the moment Maud Barrington had flung off
+the bonds of conventionality. “Lance,” she said,
+“you have proved your right to stay at Silverdale,
+and would not what you are doing now cover a great
+deal in the past?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled wryly. “It is the present that is
+difficult,” he said. “Can a man be pardoned and
+retain the offence?”</p>
+
+<p>He saw the faint bewilderment in the girl’s
+face give place to the resentment of frankness unreturned,
+and with a little shake of his shoulders shrank
+into himself. Maud Barrington, who understood it,
+once more put on the becoming reticence of Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>“We are getting beyond our depth, and it is very
+hot,” she said. “You have all this hay to cut!”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed as he bent over the mower’s
+knife. “Yes,” he said, “it is really more in my line,
+and I have kept you in the sun too long.”</p>
+
+<p>In another few moments Maud Barrington was
+riding across the prairie, but when the rattle of the
+machine rose from the sloo behind her she laughed
+curiously.</p>
+
+<p>“The man knew his place, but you came perilously
+near making a fool of yourself this morning, my dear,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>It was a week or two later, and very hot when,
+with others of his neighbours, Witham sat in the big
+hall at Silverdale Grange. The windows were open
+wide, and the smell of hot dust came in from the white
+waste which rolled away beneath the stars. There
+was also another odour in the little puffs of wind that
+flickered in, and far off where the arch of indigo
+dropped to the dusky earth wavy lines of crimson
+moved along the horizon. It was then the season when
+fires that are lighted by means which no man knows
+creep up and down the waste of grass, until they put
+on speed and roll in a surf of flame before a sudden
+breeze. Still, nobody was anxious about them, for
+the guarding furrows that would oppose a space of
+dusty soil to the march of the flame had been ploughed
+round every homestead at Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was at the piano, and her voice was
+good; while Witham, who had known what it is to
+toil from red dawn to sunset without hope of more
+than daily food, found the simple song she had chosen
+chime with his mood: “All day long the reapers.”</p>
+
+<p>A faint staccato drumming that rose from the
+silent prairie throbbed through the final chords of it,
+and when the music ceased, swelled into the gallop
+of a horse. It seemed in some curious fashion portentous,
+and when there was a rattle and jingle outside
+other eyes than Witham’s were turned towards the
+door. It swung open presently, and Dane came in.
+There was quiet elation and some diffidence in his
+bronzed face as he turned to Colonel Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“I could not get away earlier from the settlement,
+sir, but I have great news,” he said. “They have
+awoke to the fact that stocks are getting low in the
+old country. Wheat moved up at Winnipeg, and
+there was almost a rush to buy yesterday.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a sudden silence, for among those present
+were men who remembered the acres of good soil they
+had not ploughed, but a little grim smile crept into
+their leader’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“It is,” he said quietly, “too late for most of us.
+Still, we will not grudge you your good fortune, Dane.
+You and a few of the others owe it to Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Every eye was on the speaker, for it had become
+known among his neighbours that he had sold for a
+fall; but Barrington could lose gracefully. Then
+both his niece and Dane looked at Witham with a
+question in their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said very quietly, “it is the turning of
+the tide.”</p>
+
+<p>He crossed over to Barrington, who smiled at him
+dryly as he said, “It is a trifle soon to admit that
+I was wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham made a gesture of almost impatient deprecation.
+“I was wondering how far I might presume,
+sir. You have forward wheat to deliver?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have,” said Barrington; “unfortunately, a
+good deal. You believe the advance will continue?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham simply. “Still it is but the
+beginning, and there will be a reflux before the stream
+sets in. Wait a little, sir, and then telegraph your
+broker to cover all your contracts when the price
+drops again.”</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy it would be wiser to cut my losses now,”
+said Barrington dryly.</p>
+
+<p>Then Witham did a somewhat daring thing, for he
+raised his voice a trifle, in a fashion that seemed to
+invite the attention of the rest of the company.</p>
+
+<p>“The more certain the advance seems to be, the
+fiercer will be the bears’ last attack,” he said. “They
+have to get from under, and will take heavy chances
+to force prices back. As yet, they may contrive to
+check or turn the stream, and then every wise man
+who has sold down will try to cover, but no one can
+tell how far it may carry us, once it sets strongly in.”</p>
+
+<p>The men understood, as did Colonel Barrington,
+that they were being warned, above their leader’s
+head; and his niece, while resenting the slight, admitted
+the courage of the man. Barrington’s face was
+sardonic, and a less resolute man would have winced
+under the implication as he said:</p>
+
+<p>“This is, no doubt, intuition. I fancy you told
+us you had no dealings on the markets at Winnipeg.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked steadily at the speaker, and the
+girl noticed with a curious approval that he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps it is, but I believe events will prove me
+right. In any case, what I had the honour of telling
+you and Miss Barrington was the fact,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody spoke, and the girl was wondering by what
+means the strain, which, though few heard what Barrington
+said, all seemed to feel, could be relieved, when
+out of the darkness came a second beat of hoofs, and by
+and by a man swaying on the driving-seat of a jolting
+wagon swept into the light from the windows. Then
+there were voices outside, and a breathless lad came
+in.</p>
+
+<p>“A big grass fire coming right down on Courthorne’s
+farm!” he said. “It was tolerably close
+when I got away.”</p>
+
+<p>In an instant there was commotion, and every man
+in Silverdale Grange was on his feet. For the most
+part they took life lightly, and looked upon their farming
+as an attempt to combine the making of dollars
+with gentlemanly relaxation; but there were no laggards
+among them when there was perilous work to
+be done, and they went out to meet the fire joyously.
+Inside five minutes scarcely a horse remained in the
+stables, and the men were flying at a gallop across
+the dusky prairie, laughing at the risk of a stumble
+in a deadly badger hole. Yet in the haste of saddling,
+they found time to arrange a twenty-dollar sweepstake
+and the allowance for weight.</p>
+
+<p>Up the long rise and down the back of it they swept,
+stirrup as yet by stirrup and neck by neck, while
+the roar of the hoofs reft the silence of the prairie
+like the roll of musketry. Behind came the wagons,
+lurching up the slope, and the blood surged to the
+brave young faces as the night wind smote them and
+fanned into brightness the crimson smear on the
+horizon. They were English lads, and healthy
+Englishmen, of the stock that had furnished their nation’s
+fighting line, and not infrequently counted no sacrifice
+too great that brought their colours home first
+on the racing turf. Still, careless to the verge of irresponsibility
+as they were in most affairs that did not
+touch their pride, the man who rode with red spurs
+and Dane next behind him, a clear length before the
+first of them, asked no better allies in what was to be
+done.</p>
+
+<p>Then the line drew out as the pace began to tell,
+though the rearmost rode grimly, knowing the risks
+the leaders ran, and that the chance of being first to
+meet the fire might yet fall to them. There was not
+one among them who would not have killed his best
+horse for that honour, and for further incentive the
+Colonel’s niece, in streaming habit, flitted in front of
+them. She had come up from behind them, and
+passed them on a rise, for Barrington disdained to
+breed horses for dollars alone, and there was blood
+well known on the English turf in the beast she rode.</p>
+
+<p>By-and-by a straggling birch bluff rose blackly
+across their way, but nobody swung wide. Swaying
+low while the branches smote them, they went through,
+the twigs crackling under foot, and here and there the
+red drops trickling down a flushed, scarred face, for
+the slanting rent of a birch bough cuts like a knife.
+Dim trees whirled by them, undergrowth went
+down, and they were out on the dusty grass again,
+while hurled straight, like field guns wanted at the
+front, the bouncing wagons went through behind.
+Then the fire rose higher in front of them, and when
+they topped the last rise the pace grew faster still.
+The slope they thundered down was undermined by
+gophers and seamed by badger-holes, but they took
+their chances gleefully, sparing no effort of hand and
+heel, for the sum of twenty dollars and the credit of
+being first man in. Then the smoke rolled up to
+them, and when eager hands drew bridle at last a
+youthful voice rose breathlessly out of it:</p>
+
+<p>“Stapleton a good first, but he’ll go back on weight.
+It used to be black and orange when he was at home.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a ripple of hoarse laughter, a gasping
+cheer, and then silence, for now their play was over,
+and it was with the grim quietness, which is not
+unusual with their kind, the men of Silverdale turned
+towards the fire. It rolled towards the homestead, a
+waving crimson wall, not fast, but with remorseless
+persistency, out of the dusky prairie, and already
+the horses were plunging in the smoke of it. That,
+however, did not greatly concern the men, for the
+bare fire furrows stretched between themselves and
+it; but there was also another blaze inside the defences,
+and, unless it was checked, nothing could save
+house and barns and granaries, rows of costly binders,
+and stock of prairie hay. They looked for a leader,
+and found one ready, for Witham’s voice came up
+through the crackle of the fire:</p>
+
+<p>“Some of you lead the saddle-horses back to the
+willows and picket them. The rest to the stables
+and bring out the working beasts. The ploughs are
+by the corral, and the first team that comes up is to
+be harnessed to each in turn. Then start in, and turn
+over a fall-depth furrow a furlong from the fire.”</p>
+
+<p>There was no confusion, and already the hired
+men were busy with two great machines until Witham
+displaced two of them.</p>
+
+<p>“How that fire passed the guards I don’t know,
+but there will be time to find out later,” he said to
+Dane. “Follow with the big breaker—it wants a
+strong man to keep that share in—as close as you
+can.”</p>
+
+<p>Then they were off, a man at the heads of the leading
+horses harnessed to the great machines, and
+Witham sitting very intent in the driving-seat of one,
+while the tough sod crackled under the rending
+shares. Both the man and the reins were needed
+when the smoke rolled down on them, but it was for
+a moment torn aside again, and there roared up towards
+the blurred arch of indigo a great rush of flame.
+The heat of it smote into prickliness the uncovered
+skin, and in spite of all that Witham could do, the
+beasts recoiled upon the machine behind them. Then
+they swung round wrenching the shares from the
+triplex furrow, and for a few wild minutes man and
+terrified beast fought for the mastery. Breathless,
+half-strangled objurgations, the clatter of trace and
+swivel, and the thud of hoofs, rose muffled through
+the roar of the fire, for while swaying, plunging, panting,
+they fought with fist and hoof, it was rolling on,
+and now the heat was almost insupportable. The
+victory, however, was to the men, and when the great
+machine went on again, Maud Barrington, who with
+the wife of one of her neighbours had watched the
+struggle, stood wide-eyed, half-afraid, and yet thrilled
+in every fibre.</p>
+
+<p>“It was splendid!” she said. “They can’t be
+beaten.”</p>
+
+<p>Her companion seemed to shiver a little. “Yes,”
+she said, “perhaps it was, but I wish it was over. It
+would appeal to you differently, my dear, if you had
+a husband at one of those horse’s heads.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Maud Barrington wondered whether
+it would, and then, when a red flame flickered out
+towards the team, felt a little chill of dread. In
+another second the smoke whirled about them, and
+she moved backward choking with her companion.
+The teams, however, went on, and, though the men
+who led them afterwards wondered how they kept
+their grip on the horses’ heads, came out frantic
+with fear on the farther side. Then it was that
+while the machines swung round and other men ran
+to help, Witham, springing from the driving-seat,
+found Dane amidst the swaying, plunging medley
+of beasts and men.</p>
+
+<p>“If you can’t find hook or clevis, cut the trace,”
+he said. “It can’t burn the plough, and the devils
+are out of hand now. The fire will jump these furrows,
+and we’ve got to try again.”</p>
+
+<p>In another minute four maddened beasts were
+careering across the prairie with portions of their
+trappings banging about them, while one man who
+was badly kicked sat down grey in face and gasping,
+and the fire rolled up to the ridge of loam, checked,
+and then sprang across it here and there.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take one of those lad’s places,” said Dane:
+“That fellow can’t hold the breaker straight, Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a minute or two later when he flung a breathless
+lad away from his plough, and the latter turned
+upon him hoarse with indignation.</p>
+
+<p>“I raced Stapleton for it. Loose your hold, confound
+you. It’s mine,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Dane turned and laughed at him as he signed to
+one of the Ontario hired men to take the near horse’s
+head.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a plucky lad, and you’ve done what you
+could,” he said. “Still, if you get in the way of a
+grown man now, I’ll break your head for you.”</p>
+
+<p>He was off in another moment, crossed Witham,
+who had found fresh beasts, in his furrow, and had
+turned and doubled it before the fire that had passed
+the other barrier came close upon them. Once
+more the smoke grew blinding, and one of Dane’s
+beasts went down.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m out of action now,” he said. “Try back.
+That team will never face it, Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s face showed very grim under the tossing
+flame. “They’ve got to. I’m going through,”
+he said. “If the others are to stop it behind there,
+they must have time.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he and the husband of the woman who had
+spoken to Maud Barrington passed on with the
+frantic team into the smoke that was streaked with
+flame.</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” said Dane, and added more as,
+sitting on the horse’s head, he turned his tingling
+face from the fire.</p>
+
+<p>It was some minutes before he and the hired man
+who came up loosed the fallen horse, and led it and
+its fellow back towards the last defences the rest had
+been raising, while the first furrows checked but did
+not stay the conflagration. There he presently came
+upon the man who had been with Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know where Courthorne is,” he said.
+“The beasts bolted with us just after we’d gone
+through the worst of it, and I fancy they took the
+plough along. Anyway, I didn’t see what became
+of them, and don’t fancy anybody would have worried
+much about them after being trampled on by
+a horse in the lumbar region.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane saw that the man was limping and white in
+face, and asked no more questions. It was evident
+to him that Courthorne would be where he was
+most needed, and he did what he could with those
+who were adding furrow to furrow across the path
+of the fire. It rolled up to them roaring, stopped,
+flung a shower of burning filaments before it, sank
+and swept aloft again, while the sparks rained down
+upon the grass before the draught it made.</p>
+
+<p>Blackened men with smouldering clothes were,
+however, ready, and they fought each incipient
+blaze with soaked grain bags, and shovels, some of
+them also, careless of blistered arms, with their own
+wet jackets. As fast as each fire was trampled out
+another sprang into life, but the parent blaze that
+fed them sank and died, and at last there was a
+hoarse cheer. They had won, and the fire they had
+beaten passed on divided across the prairie, leaving
+the homestead unscathed between.</p>
+
+<p>Then they turned to look for their leader, and did
+not find him until a lad came up to Dane.</p>
+
+<p>“Courthorne’s back by the second furrows, and
+I fancy he’s badly hurt,” he said. “He didn’t appear
+to know me, and his head seems all kicked in.”</p>
+
+<p>It was not apparent how the news went round,
+but in a few more minutes Dane was kneeling beside
+a limp, blackened object stretched amidst the grass,
+and while his comrades clustered behind her, Maud
+Barrington bent over him. Her voice was breathless
+as she asked, “You don’t believe him dead?”</p>
+
+<p>Somebody had brought a lantern, and Dane felt
+inclined to gasp when he saw the girl’s white face,
+but what she felt was not his business then.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s of a kind that is very hard to kill. Hold
+that lantern so I can see him,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The rest waited silent, glad that there was somebody
+to take a lead, and in a few moments Dane looked
+round again.</p>
+
+<p>“Ride in to the settlement, Stapleton, and bring
+that doctor fellow out if you bring him by the neck.
+Stop just a moment. You don’t know where you’re
+to bring him to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Here, of course,” said the lad, breaking into a
+run.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait,” and Dane’s voice stopped him. “Now,
+I don’t fancy that would do. It seems to me that
+this is a case in which a woman to look after him
+would be necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>Then, before any of the married men or their wives
+who had followed them could make an offer, Maud
+Barrington touched his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“He is coming to the Grange,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Dane nodded, signed to Stapleton, then spoke
+quickly to the men about him and turned to Maud
+Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Ride on at a gallop and get everything ready.
+I’ll see he comes to no harm,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The girl felt curiously grateful as she rode out with
+her companion, and Dane who laid Witham carefully
+in a wagon, drew two of the other men aside
+when it rolled away towards the Grange.</p>
+
+<p>“There is something to be looked into. Did you
+notice anything unusual about the affair?” he said.
+“Since you asked me, I did,” said one of the men.
+“I, however, scarcely cared to mention it until I
+had time for reflection, but while I fancy the regulation
+guards would have checked the fire on the
+boundaries without our help, I don’t see how one
+started in the hollow inside them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly,” said Dane very dryly. “Well, we
+have got to discover it, and the more quickly we do
+it the better. I fancy, however, that the question
+who started it is what we have to consider.”</p>
+
+<p>The men looked at one another, and the third of
+them nodded.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy it comes to that—though it is horribly
+unpleasant to admit it,” he said.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink16'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XVI—MAUD BARRINGTON IS MERCILESS</a></h2>
+
+<p>Dane overtook the wagon close by the birch bluff
+at Silverdale Grange. It was late then, but there
+were lights in the windows that blinked beyond the
+trees, and, when the wagon stopped, Barrington
+stood in the doorway with one or two of his hired
+men. Accidents are not infrequent on the prairie,
+where surgical assistance is not always available,
+and there was a shutter ready on the ground beside
+him, for the Colonel had seen the field hospital in
+operation.</p>
+
+<p>“Unhook the tailboard,” he said sharply. “Two
+of you pick up the shutter. Four more here. Now,
+arms about his shoulders, hips, and knees. Lift and
+lower—step off with right foot leading bearer, with
+your left in the rear!”</p>
+
+<p>It was done in a few moments, and when the bearers
+passed into the big hall that rang with their shuffling
+steps, Maud Barrington shivered as she waited with
+her aunt in an inner room. That tramping was
+horribly suggestive, and she had seen but little of
+sickness and grievous wounds. Still, the fact scarcely
+accounted for the painful throbbing of her heart,
+and the dizziness that came upon her. Then the
+bearers came in, panting, with Barrington and Dane
+behind them, and the girl was grateful to her aunt,
+who laid a hand upon her arm when she saw the
+singed head, and blackened face that was smeared
+with a ruddier tint, upon the shutter.</p>
+
+<p>“Lower!” said Colonel Barrington. “Lift, as I
+told you,” and the huddled object was laid upon the
+bed. Then there was silence until the impassive
+voice rose again.</p>
+
+<p>“We shall not want you, Maud. Dane, you and
+I will get these burnt things off him.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl went out, and while she stood, feeling
+curiously chilly in an adjoining room, Barrington
+bent over his patient.</p>
+
+<p>“Well put together!” he said thoughtfully.
+“Most of his people were lighter in the frame. Well,
+we can only oil the burns, and get a cold compress about
+his head. All intact, so far as I can see, and I fancy
+he’d pull through a good deal more than has happened
+to him. I am obliged for your assistance, but I need
+not keep you.”</p>
+
+<p>The men withdrew, and when a rattle of wheels
+rose from the prairie, Maud Barrington waylaid her
+uncle in the hall. Her fingers were trembling, and,
+though her voice was steady, the man glanced at her
+curiously as she asked, “How is he?”</p>
+
+<p>“One can scarcely form an opinion yet,” he said
+slowly. “He is burned here and there, and his head
+is badly cut, but it is the concussion that troubles
+me. A frantic horse kicks tolerably hard, you know,
+but I shall be able to tell you more when the doctor
+comes to-morrow. In the meanwhile you had better
+rest, though you could look in and see if your aunt
+wants anything in an hour or two.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington passed an hour in horrible impatience,
+and then stole quietly into the sick-room.
+The windows were open wide, and the shaded lamp
+burned unsteadily as the cool night breeze flowed in.
+Its dim light just touched the man who lay motionless
+with a bandage round his head, and the drawn pallor
+of his face once more sent a shiver through the girl.
+Then Miss Barrington rose and lifted a warning hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Quite unconscious still,” she said softly. “I
+fancy he was knocked down by one of the horses and
+trampled on, but your uncle has hopes of him. He
+has evidently led a healthy life.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl was a little less serene than usual then, and
+drew back into the shadow.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she said. “We did not think so once.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington smiled curiously. “Are you
+very much astonished, Maud? Still, there is nothing
+you can do for me, and we shall want you to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Realizing that there was no need for her, the girl
+went out, and when the door closed behind her the
+little white-haired lady bent down and gazed at her
+patient long and steadily. Then she shook her head,
+and moved back to the seat she had risen from, with
+perplexity in her face.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Maud Barrington sat by the open
+window in her room, staring out into the night. There
+was a whispering in the birch bluff, and the murmuring
+of leagues of grasses rose from the prairie
+that stretched away beyond it. Still, though the
+wind fanned her throbbing forehead with a pleasant
+coolness, the nocturnal harmonies awoke no response
+in her. Sleep was out of the question, for her brain
+was in a whirl of vague sensation, through which fear
+came uppermost every now and then. Why anything
+which could befall this man who had come out
+of the obscurity and was he had told her, to go back
+into it again, should disturb her, Maud Barrington
+did not know; but there was no disguising the fact
+that she would feel his loss grievously, as others at
+Silverdale would do. Then with a little tremor she
+wondered whether they must lose him, and, rising,
+stood tensely still, listening for any sound from the
+room where the sick man lay.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing but the sighing of the grasses
+outside and the murmur of the birches in the bluff,
+until the doleful howl of a coyote stole faintly out of
+the night. Again the beast sent its cry out upon the
+wind, and the girl trembled as she listened. The
+unearthly wail seemed charged with augury, and
+every nerve in her thrilled.</p>
+
+<p>Then she sank down into her chair again, and sat
+still, hoping, listening, fearing, and wondering when
+the day would come, until at last her eyes grew heavy,
+and it was with a start she roused herself when a
+rattle of wheels came up out of the prairie in the
+early morning. Then a spume-flecked team swept
+up to the house, a door swung open, there was a murmur
+of voices and a sound of feet that moved softly
+in the hall, after which for what seemed an interminable
+time, silence reigned again. At last, when
+the stealthy patter of feet recommenced, the girl
+slipped down the stairway and came upon Barrington.
+Still, she could not ask the question that was trembling
+on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>“Is there anything I can do?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Barrington shook his head. “Not now! The
+doctor is here, and does not seem very anxious about
+him. The concussion is not apparently serious, and
+his other injuries will not trouble him much.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington said nothing and turned away,
+sensible of a great relief, while her aunt entering
+her room an hour later found her lying fast asleep
+but still dressed as she had last seen her. Then,
+being a discerning woman, she went out softly with
+a curious smile, and did not at any time mention
+what she had seen.</p>
+
+<p>It was that evening, and Barrington had departed
+suddenly on business to Winnipeg, when Dane rode
+up to the Grange. He asked for Miss Barrington and
+her niece, and when he heard that his comrade was
+recovering sensibility, sat down looking very grave.</p>
+
+<p>“I have something to tell you, but Courthorne
+must not know until he is better, while I’m not sure
+that we need tell him then,” he said. “In the
+meanwhile, I am also inclined to fancy it would
+be better kept from Colonel Barrington on his return.
+It is the first time anything of the kind has happened
+at Silverdale, and it would hurt him horribly, which
+decided us to come first to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must be more concise,” said Miss Barrington
+quietly, and Dane trifled with the hat in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>“It is,” he said, “a most unpleasant thing,
+and is known to three men only, of whom I am one.
+We have also arranged that nobody else will chance
+upon what we have discovered. You see, Ferris
+is unfortunately connected with you, and his people
+have had trouble enough already.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ferris?” said Maud Barrington, with a sudden
+hardening of her face. “You surely don’t mean——”</p>
+
+<p>Dane nodded. “Yes,” he said reluctantly. “I’m
+afraid I do. Now, if you will listen to me for a
+minute or two.”</p>
+
+<p>He told his story with a grim, convincing quietness,
+and the blood crept into the girl’s cheeks as she
+followed his discoveries step by step. Glancing
+at her aunt, she saw that there was horror as well as
+belief in the gentle lady’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” she said with cold incisiveness, “Ferris
+cannot stay here, and he shall be punished.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Dane. “We have no room for a lad
+of his disposition at Silverdale—but I’m very uncertain
+in regard to the rest. You see, it couldn’t be done
+without attracting attention—and I have the honour
+of knowing his mother. You will remember how
+she lost another son. That is why I did not tell
+Colonel Barrington. He is a trifle—precipitate—occasionally.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington glanced at him gratefully. “You
+have done wisely,” she said. “Ethel Ferris has
+borne enough, and she has never been the same
+since the horrible night they brought Frank home,
+for she knew how he came by his death, though the
+coroner brought it in misadventure. I also fancy my
+brother would be implacable in a case like this,
+though how far I am warranted in keeping the facts
+from him I do not know.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane nodded gravely. “We leave that to you.
+You will, however, remember what happened once
+before. We cannot go through what we did then
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington recalled the formal court-martial
+that had once been held in the hall of the Grange,
+when every man in the settlement had been summoned
+to attend, for there were offences in regard
+to which her brother was inflexible. When it was
+over and the disgraced man went forth an outcast,
+a full account of the proceedings had been
+forwarded to those at home who had hoped for
+much from him.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said. “For the sake of the woman
+who sent him here we must stop short of that.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Maud Barrington looked at them both.
+“There is one person you do not seem to consider
+at all, and that is the man who lies here in
+peril through Ferris’s fault,” she said. “Is there
+nothing due to him?”</p>
+
+<p>Dane noticed the sternness in her eyes, and glanced
+as if for support towards Miss Barrington. “I fancy
+he would be the last to claim it if he knew what
+we do. Still, in the meanwhile, I leave the affair
+to your aunt and you. We would like to have
+your views before doing anything further.”</p>
+
+<p>He rose as he spoke, and when he had gone out
+Maud Barrington sat down at a writing table.
+“Aunt,” she said quietly, “I will ask Ferris to come
+here at once.”</p>
+
+<p>It was next day when Ferris came, evidently ill
+at ease, though he greeted Miss Barrington with
+elaborate courtesy, and would have done the same
+with her niece but the girl turned from him with
+visible disdain.</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down,” she said coldly. “Colonel Barrington
+is away, but his sister will take his place, and after
+him I have the largest stake in the welfare of Silverdale.
+Now, a story has come to our ears which,
+if it had not been substantiated, would have appeared
+incredible. Shall Miss Barrington tell it
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris, who was a very young man, flushed, but
+the colour faded and left his cheeks a trifle grey.
+He was not a very prepossessing lad, for it requires
+a better physique than he was endowed with to
+bear the stamp of viciousness that is usually most
+noticeable on the feeble, but he was distinguished
+by a trace of arrogance that not infrequently served
+him as well as resolution.</p>
+
+<p>“If it would not inconvenience Miss Barrington,
+it would help me to understand a good deal I can
+find no meaning for now,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The elder lady’s face grew sterner, and very quietly
+but remorselessly she set forth his offence, until
+no one who heard the tale could have doubted the
+origin of the fire.</p>
+
+<p>“I should have been better pleased had you, if
+only when you saw we knew everything, appeared
+willing to confess your fault and make amends,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>Ferris laughed as ironically as he dared under
+the eyes which had lost their gentleness. “You will
+pardon me for telling you that I have no intention
+of admitting it now. That you should be so readily
+prejudiced against me is not gratifying, but, you
+see, nobody could take any steps without positive
+proof of the story, and my word is at least as credible
+as that of the interloper who told it you.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington raised her head suddenly, and
+looked at him with a curious light in her eyes, but the
+elder lady made a little gesture of deprecation.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Courthorne has told us nothing,” she said.
+“Still, three gentlemen whose worth is known at
+Silverdale are willing to certify every point of it.
+If we lay the affair before Colonel Barrington, you
+will have an opportunity of standing face to face
+with them.”</p>
+
+<p>The lad’s assurance, which, so far and no further,
+did duty for courage, deserted him. He was evidently
+not prepared to be made the subject of another
+court-martial, and the hand he laid on the table in
+front of him trembled a little.</p>
+
+<p>“Madam,” he said hoarsely, “if I admit everything
+what will you do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” said Maud Barrington coldly. “On
+conditions that within a month you leave Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris stared at her. “You can’t mean that. You
+see, I’m fond of farming, and nobody would give me
+what the place cost me. I couldn’t live among the
+outside settler fellows.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled coldly. “I mean exactly what you
+heard, and, if you do not enlighten them, the settlers
+would probably not object to you. Your farm will
+be taken over at what you gave for it.”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris stood up. “I am going to make a last
+appeal. Silverdale’s the only place fit for a gentleman
+to live in in Canada, and I want to stay here.
+You don’t know what it would cost me to go away,
+and I’d do anything for reparation—send a big
+cheque to a Winnipeg hospital and starve myself
+to make up for it if that would content you. Only,
+don’t send me away.”</p>
+
+<p>His tone grew almost abject as he proceeded, and
+while Miss Barrington’s eyes softened, her niece’s
+heart grew harder because of it, as she remembered
+that he had brought a strong man down.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said dryly. “That would punish
+your mother and sisters from whom you would
+cajole the money. You can decide between leaving
+Silverdale and having the story, and the proof of
+it, put into the hands of Colonel Barrington.”</p>
+
+<p>She sat near an open window regarding him with
+quiet scorn, and the light that shone upon her struck
+a sparkle from her hair and set the rounded cheek
+and neck gleaming like ivory. The severity of her
+pose became her, and the lad’s callow desire that
+had driven him to his ruin stirred him to impotent
+rage in his desperation. There were grey patches
+in his cheeks, and his voice was strained and hoarse.</p>
+
+<p>“You have no mercy on me because I struck
+at him,” he said. “The one thing I shall always be
+sorry for is that I failed, and I would go away with
+pleasure if the horse had trampled the life out of him.
+Well, there was a time when you could have made
+what you wished of me, and now, at least, I shall
+not see the blackleg you have showered your favours
+on drag you down to the mire he came from.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington’s face had grown very colourless,
+but she said nothing, and her aunt rose and
+raised the hammer of a gong.</p>
+
+<p>“Ferris,” she said, “do you wish to be led out
+by the hired men?”</p>
+
+<p>The lad laughed, and the hideous merriment
+set the white-haired lady’s nerves on edge. “Oh,
+I am going now; but, for once, let us be honest.
+It was for her I did it, and if it had been any other
+man I had injured, she would have forgiven me.”</p>
+
+<p>Then with an ironical farewell he swung out of
+the room, and the two women exchanged glances
+when the door closed noisily behind him. Miss
+Barrington was flushed with anger, but her niece’s
+face was paler than usual.</p>
+
+<p>“Are there men like him?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington shook off her anger and, rising,
+laid a gentle hand on her niece’s shoulder. “Very
+few, I hope,” she said. “Still, it would be better
+if we sent word to Dane. You would not care for
+that tale to spread?”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the girl’s cheek flamed, then she
+rose quietly and crossed the room.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said; and her aunt stood still, apparently
+lost in contemplation, after the door swung softly
+to. Then she sat down at the writing table. There
+was very little in the note, but an hour after Dane
+received it that night, a wagon drew up outside
+Ferris’s farm. Two men went quietly in and found
+the owner of the homestead sitting with a sheaf of
+papers scattered about the table in front of him.</p>
+
+<p>“Come back to-morrow. I can’t be worried
+now,” he said. “Well, why the devil don’t you
+go?”</p>
+
+<p>Dane laid a hand on his shoulder. “We are
+waiting for you. You are coming with us!”</p>
+
+<p>Ferris turned and stared at them. “Where to?”</p>
+
+<p>“To the railroad,” said Dane dryly. “After
+that you can go just where it pleases you. Now,
+there’s no use whatever making a fuss, and every
+care will be taken of your property until you can
+arrange to dispose of it. Hadn’t you better get
+ready?”</p>
+
+<p>The grim quietness of the voice was sufficient,
+and Ferris, who saw that force would be used if it
+was necessary, decided that it was scarcely likely
+his hired men would support him.</p>
+
+<p>“I might have expected it!” he said. “Of
+course, it was imprudent to speak the truth to our
+leader’s niece. You know what I have done.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know what you did the night Courthorne
+nearly lost his life,” said Dane. “One would have
+fancied that would have contented you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Ferris, “if you like to hear of a
+more serious offence, I’ll oblige you.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane’s finger closed on his arm. “If you attempt
+to tell me, I’ll break your head for you.”</p>
+
+<p>Next moment Ferris was lifted from his chair, and
+in less than ten minutes Dane thrust him into the
+wagon, where another man, who passed a hand
+through his arm, sat beside him. It was a very
+long drive to the railroad, but few words were exchanged
+during it, and when they reached the settlement
+one of Ferris’s companions mounted guard
+outside the hotel he found accommodation in, until
+the Montreal express crawled up above the rim of the
+prairie. Then both went with him to the station,
+and as the long cars rolled in Dane turned quietly
+to the lad.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, I am quite aware that we are incurring some
+responsibility, so you need not waste your breath,”
+he said. “There are, however, lawyers in Winnipeg,
+if you fancy it is advisable to make use of them, and
+you know where I and Macdonald are, if you want
+us. In the meanwhile, your farm will be run better
+than ever it was in your hands, until you dispose
+of it. That is all I have to tell you, except that if
+any undesirable version of the affair gets about,
+Courthorne or I will assuredly find you.”</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a scream of the whistle, and the
+train rolled away with Ferris standing white with fury
+on the platform of a car.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, Maud Barrington spent a sleepless
+night. Ferris’s taunt had reached its mark, and
+she realized with confusion that it was the truth
+he spoke. The fact that brought the blood to her
+cheeks would no longer be hidden, and she knew
+it was a longing to punish the lad who had struck
+down the man she loved that had led to her insistence
+on the former leaving Silverdale. It was a difficult
+admission, but she made it that night. The outcast
+who had stepped out of the obscurity and into
+her peaceful life, had shown himself a man that any
+woman might be proud to mate with; and, though
+he had said very little, and now and then his words
+were bitter, she knew that he loved her. Whatever
+he had done—and she felt against all the teachings
+of her reason that it had not been evil—he had
+shown himself the equal of the best at Silverdale,
+and she laughed as she wondered which of the men
+there she could set in the balance against him. Then
+she shivered a little, remembering that there was a
+barrier whose extent he alone realized between
+them, and wondered vaguely what the future would
+bring.</p>
+
+<p>It was a week or two before Witham was on his feet
+again, and Maud Barrington was one of the first
+to greet him when he walked feebly into the hall.
+She had, however, decided on the line of conduct
+that would be most fitting, and there was no hint
+of more than neighbourly kindliness in her tone.
+They had spoken about various trifles when Witham
+turned to her.</p>
+
+<p>“You and Miss Barrington have taken such good
+care of me that, if I consulted my inclinations I
+would linger in convalescence a long while,” he
+said. “Still, I must make an effort to get away
+to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“We cannot take the responsibility of letting
+you go under a week yet,” said Maud Barrington.
+“Have you anything especially important to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham—and the girl understood
+the grimness of his face—“I have.”</p>
+
+<p>“It concerns the fire?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked at her curiously. “I would
+sooner you did not ask me that question, Miss Barrington.”</p>
+
+<p>“I scarcely fancy it is necessary,” said the girl,
+with a little smile. “Still I have something to
+tell you, and a favour to ask. Ferris has left Silverdale,
+and you must never make any attempt to discover
+what caused the fire.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Maud Barrington. “Dane, Macdonald,
+and Hassal know, too; but you will not
+ask them, and if you did they would not tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can refuse you nothing,” said Witham with a
+laugh, though his voice betrayed him. “Still, I
+want a <i>quid pro quo</i>. Wait until Ferris’s farm is
+in the sale list, and then take it with the growing
+crop.”</p>
+
+<p>“I could not. There are reasons,” said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>Witham gazed at her steadily, and a little colour
+crept to his forehead, but he answered unconcernedly,
+“They can be over-ridden. It may be the last
+favour I shall ever ask you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Maud Barrington. “Anything else
+you wish, but not that. You must believe, without
+wondering why, that it is out of the question!”</p>
+
+<p>Witham yielded with a curious little smile. “Well,”
+he said, “we will let it drop. I ask no questions.
+You have accepted so much already without understanding
+it.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink17'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XVII—WITH THE STREAM</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was Witham’s last afternoon at the Grange, and
+almost unpleasantly hot, while the man whose
+vigour had not as yet returned to him was content
+to lounge in the big window-seat listlessly watching
+his companion. He had borne the strain of effort
+long, and the time of his convalescence amidst
+the tranquility of Silverdale Grange had, with the
+gracious kindliness of Miss Barrington and her
+niece, been a revelation to him. There were moments
+when it brought him bitterness and self-reproach,
+but these were usually brief, and he made the most of
+what he knew might never be his again, telling himself
+that it would at least be something to look back upon.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington sat close by, glancing through
+the letters a mounted man had brought in, and the
+fact that his presence put no restraint on her curiously
+pleased the man. At last, however, she opened
+a paper and passed it across to him.</p>
+
+<p>“You have been very patient, but no doubt you
+will find something that will atone for my silence
+there,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned over the journal, and then smiled
+at her. “Is there anything of moment in your
+letters?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the girl with a little laugh. “I
+scarcely think there is—a garden party, a big reception,
+the visit of a high official, and a description of
+the latest hat. Still, you know, that is supposed
+to be enough for us.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I wonder whether you will find this more
+interesting. â€The bears made a determined rally
+yesterday, and wheat moved back again. There
+was later in the day a rush to sell, and prices now
+stand at almost two cents below their lowest level.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Maud Barrington, noticing the sudden
+intentness of his pallid face. “I do. It is serious
+news for you?”</p>
+
+<p>“And for you! You see where I have led you.
+Ill or well, I must start for Winnipeg to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington smiled curiously. “You and
+I and a handful of others stand alone, but I told you
+I would not blame you whether we won or lost.
+Do you know that I am grateful for the glimpses
+of the realities of life that you have given me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham felt his pulses throb faster, for the girl’s
+unabated confidence stirred him, but he looked at her
+gravely. “I wonder if you realize what you have
+given me in return? Life as I had seen it was very
+grim and bare—and now I know what, with a little
+help, it is possible to make of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“With a little help?” said Maud Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded, and his face, which had grown
+almost wistful, hardened. “Those who strive in
+the pit are apt to grow blind to the best—the sweetness
+and order and all the little graces that mean
+so much. Even if their eyes are opened, it is usually
+too late. You see, they lose touch with all that
+lies beyond the struggle, and without some one to
+lead them they cannot get back to it. Still, if I
+talk in this fashion you will laugh at me; but every
+one has his weakness now and then—and no doubt
+I shall make up for it at Winnipeg to-morrow. One cannot
+afford to be fanciful when wheat is two cents down.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington was not astonished. Tireless
+in his activities and, more curious still, almost ascetic
+in his mode of life, the man had already given her
+glimpses of his inner self and the vague longings
+that came upon him. He never asked her pity,
+but she found something pathetic in his attitude, for
+it seemed he knew that the stress and the turmoil
+alone could be his. Why this was so, she did not
+know, but it was with a confidence that could not
+be shaken now she felt it was through no fault of his.
+His last words, however, showed her that the mask
+was on again.</p>
+
+<p>“I scarcely fancy you are well enough, but if
+you must go, I wonder whether you would do a good
+turn to Alfreton?” she said. “The lad has been
+speculating and he seems anxious lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is natural that they should all bring their
+troubles to you.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed. “I, however, generally
+pass them on to you.”</p>
+
+<p>A trace of colour crept into the man’s face, and
+his voice was a trifle hoarse as he said. “Do you
+know that I would ask nothing better than to take
+every care you had and bear it for you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” said the girl with a little smile, “that
+is very evidently out of the question.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham rose, and she saw that one hand was
+closed as he looked down upon her. Then he turned
+and stared out at the prairie, but there was something
+very significant in the rigidity of his attitude,
+and his face seemed to have grown suddenly careworn
+when he glanced back at her.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” he said quietly. “You see, I
+have been ill, and a little off my balance lately.
+That accounts for erratic speeches, though I meant
+it all. Colonel Barrington is still in Winnipeg?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, who was not convinced
+by the explanation, very quietly. “I am a little
+anxious about him, too. He sold wheat forward, and
+I gather from his last letter has not bought it yet.
+Now, as Alfreton is driving in to-morrow, he could
+take you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham was grateful to her, and still more to
+Miss Barrington, who came in just then; while
+he did not see the girl again before he departed
+with Alfreton on the morrow. When they had
+left Silverdale a league behind, the trail dipped
+steeply amidst straggling birches to a bridge which
+spanned the creek in a hollow, and Witham glanced
+at the winding ascent thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“It has struck me that going round by this
+place puts another six miles on to your journey to
+the railroad, and a double team could not pull a
+big load up,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The lad nodded. “The creek is a condemned
+nuisance. We have either to load light when we
+are hauling grain in and then pitch half the bags off
+at the bottom and come back for them—while, you
+know, one man can’t put up many four bushel bags—or
+keep a man and horses at the ravine until we’re
+through.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “Now, I wonder whether you
+ever figured how much those little things put up the
+price of your wheat.”</p>
+
+<p>“This is the only practicable way down,” said
+the lad. “You can scarcely climb up one side
+where the ravine’s narrow abreast of Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“Drive round. I want to see it,” said Witham.
+“Call at Rushforth for a spool of binder twine.”</p>
+
+<p>Half-an-hour later Alfreton pulled the wagon
+up amidst the birches on the edge of the ravine,
+which just there sloped steep as a railway cutting,
+and not very much broader, to the creek. Witham
+gazed at it, and then handed the twine to the hired man.</p>
+
+<p>“Take that with you, Charley, and get down,”
+he said. “If you strip your boots off you can wade
+through the creek.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know that I want to,” said the man.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, “it would please me if
+you did, as well as cool your feet. Then you could
+climb up and hold that twine down on the other
+side.”</p>
+
+<p>The man grinned; and, though Alfreton remembered
+that he was not usually so tractable with him,
+proceeded to do Witham’s bidding. When he came
+back there was a twinkle of comprehension in his
+eyes; and Witham, who cut off the length of twine,
+smiled at Alfreton.</p>
+
+<p>“It is,” he said dryly, “only a little idea of mine.”</p>
+
+<p>They drove on, and, reaching Winnipeg next
+day, went straight to Graham the wheat-broker’s
+offices. He kept them waiting some time, and in the
+meanwhile men with intent faces passed hastily
+in and out through the outer office. Some of them
+had telegrams or bundles of papers in their hands,
+and the eyes of all were eager. The corridor rang
+with footsteps, the murmur of voices seemed to
+vibrate through the great building; while it seemed
+to Alfreton there was a suggestion of strain and
+expectancy in all he heard and saw. Witham, however,
+sat gravely still, though the lad noticed that his
+eyes were keener than usual, for the muffled roar
+of the city, patter of messengers’ feet, ceaseless
+tinkle of telephone call bells, and whirr of the elevators,
+each packed with human freight, all stirred him.
+Hitherto, he had grappled with nature, but now he
+was to test his judgment against the keenest wits
+of the cities, and stand or fall by it, in the struggle
+that was to be waged over the older nation’s food.</p>
+
+<p>At last, however, a clerk signed to them from
+a doorway, and they found Graham sitting before
+a littered table. A man sat opposite him with the
+telephone receiver in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Sorry to keep you, but I’ve both hands full
+just now. Every man in this city is thinking wheat,”
+he said. “Has he word from Chicago, Thomson?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the clerk. “Bears lost hold this
+morning. General buying!”</p>
+
+<p>Just then the door swung open, and a breathless
+man came in. “Guess I scared that clerk of yours
+who wanted to turn me off,” he said. “Heard
+what Chicago’s doing? Well, you’ve got to buy
+for me now. They’re going to send her right up into
+the sky, and it’s ’bout time I got out before the bulls
+trample the life out of me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Quite sure you can’t wait until to-morrow?”
+asked Graham.</p>
+
+<p>The man shook his head. “No, sir. When I’ve
+been selling all along the line! Send off right away,
+and tell your man on the market to cover every
+blame sale for me.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham signed to the clerk, and as the telephone
+bell tinkled, a lad brought in a message. The broker
+opened it. “â€New York lost advance and recovered
+it twice in the first hour,’” he read. “â€At present
+a point or two better. Steady buying in Liverpool.’”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said the other man, “is quite enough
+for me. Let me have the contracts as soon as they’re
+ready.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out, and Graham turned to Witham.
+“There’s half-a-dozen more of them outside,” he
+said. “Do you buy or sell?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I want to know which a
+wise man would do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Graham, “I can’t tell you. The
+bulls rushed wheat up as I wired you, but the other
+folks got their claws in and worried it down again.
+Wheat’s anywhere and nowhere all the time, and
+I’m advising nobody just now. No doubt you’ve
+formed your own opinion.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “It’s the last of the grappled,
+and the bears aren’t quite beaten yet, but any time
+the next week or two the decisive turn will come.
+Then, if they haven’t got out, there’ll be very little
+left of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“You seem tolerably sure of the thing. Got
+plenty of confidence in the bulls?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled. “I fancy I know how Western
+wheat was sown this year better than any statistician
+of the ring, and it’s not the bulls I’m counting on
+but those millions of hungry folks in the old country.
+It’s not New York or Chicago, but Liverpool the
+spark is coming from.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Graham, “that’s my notion, too,
+but I’ve no time for anybody who hasn’t grist for
+me just now. Still, I’d be glad to come round and
+take you home to supper if you haven’t the prejudice,
+which is not unknown at Silverdale, against
+eating with a man who makes his dollars on the
+market and didn’t get them given him.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed, and held up a lean brown hand.
+“All I ever had until less than a year ago I earned
+with that. I’ll be ready for you.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out with Alfreton, and noticed that the
+lad ate little at lunch. When the meal was over
+he glanced at him with a smile through the cigar
+smoke.</p>
+
+<p>“I think it would do you good to take me into
+your confidence,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Alfreton, “it would be a relief
+to talk, and I feel I could trust you. Still, it’s only
+fair to tell you I didn’t at the beginning. I was an
+opinionated ass, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I don’t mind in the least,
+and we have most of us felt that way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the lad, “I was a little short of
+funds, and proud of myself, and when everybody
+seemed certain that wheat was going down for ever,
+I thought I saw my chance of making a little. Now
+I’ve more wheat than I care to think of to deliver,
+the market’s against me. If it stiffens any further
+it will break me; and that’s not all, you see. Things
+have gone tolerably badly with the folks at home,
+and I fancy it took a good deal of what should have
+been the girls’ portion to start me at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham, “it’s no use trying to
+show you how foolish you’ve been. That is the usual
+thing, and it’s easy; but what the man in the hole
+wants to know is the means of getting out again.”</p>
+
+<p>Alfreton smiled ruefully. “I’m tolerably far in.
+I could just cover at to-day’s prices if I pledged my
+crop, but it would leave me nothing to go on with
+and the next advance would swamp the farm.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham quietly, “don’t buy
+to-day. There’s going to be an advance that will
+take folks’ breath away, but the time’s not quite
+ripe yet. You’ll see prices knocked back a little
+the next day or two, and then you will cover your
+sales to the last bushel.”</p>
+
+<p>“But are you sure?” asked the lad a trifle hoarsely.
+“You see, if you’re mistaken, it will mean ruin to me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laid his hand on his shoulder. “If I am
+wrong, I’ll make your losses good.”</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was said on that subject, but Alfreton’s
+face grew anxious once more as they went up and
+down the city. Everybody was talking wheat,
+which was not astonishing, for that city and the
+two great provinces to the west of it lived by the
+trade in grain; and before the afternoon had passed
+they learned that there had been a persistent advance.
+The lad’s uneasiness showed itself, but when
+they went back to the hotel about the supper hour
+Witham smiled at him.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re feeling sick?” he said. “Still, I don’t
+fancy you need worry.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Graham appeared and claimed him, and
+it was next morning when he saw Alfreton again.
+He was breakfasting with Colonel Barrington and
+Dane, and Witham noticed that the older man did
+not appear to have much appetite. When the meal
+was finished he drew him aside.</p>
+
+<p>“You have covered your sales, sir?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said Barrington. “I have not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I wonder if it would be presumption if I
+asked you a question?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington looked at him steadily. “To be
+frank, I fancy it would be better if you did not.
+I have, of course, only my own folly to blame for
+believing I could equal your natural aptitude for
+this risky amusement, which I had, and still have,
+objections to. I was, however, in need of money,
+and seeing your success, yielded to the temptation.
+I am not laying any of the responsibility on you,
+but am not inclined to listen to more of your suggestions.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham met his gaze without embarrassment.
+“I am sorry you have been unfortunate, sir.”</p>
+
+<p>Just then Dane joined them. “I sat up late
+last night in the hope of seeing you,” he said. “Now,
+I don’t know what to make of the market, but
+there were one or two fellows who would have bought
+my estimated crop from me at a figure which would
+have about covered working expenses. Some of
+the others who did not know you were coming in,
+put their affairs in my hands, too.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sell nothing,” said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>It was an hour later when a messenger from Graham
+found them in the smoking-room, and Colonel Barrington
+smiled dryly as he tore up the envelope
+handed him.</p>
+
+<p>“â€Market opened with sellers prevailing. Chicago
+flat!’” he read.</p>
+
+<p>Dane glanced at Witham somewhat ruefully, but
+the latter’s eyes were fixed on Colonel Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“If I had anything to cover I should still wait,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Dane, “is not exactly good news
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Our turn will come,” said Witham gravely.</p>
+
+<p>That day, and during several which followed
+it, wheat moved down, and Dane said nothing to
+Witham about what he felt, though his face grew
+grimmer as the time went on. Barrington was
+quietly impassive when they met him, while Alfreton,
+who saw a way out of his difficulties, was hard to
+restrain. Witham long afterwards remembered that
+horrible suspense, but he showed no sign of what he
+was enduring then, and was only a trifle quieter
+than usual when he and Alfreton entered Graham’s
+office one morning. It was busier than ever, while
+the men who hastened in and out seemed to reveal
+by attitude and voice that they felt something was
+going to happen.</p>
+
+<p>“In sellers’ favour!” said the broker. “Everybody
+with a few dollars is hammering prices one way
+or the other. Nothing but wheat is heard of in this
+city. Well, we’ll simmer down when the turn comes,
+and though I’m piling up dollars, I’ll be thankful.
+Hallo, Thomson, anything going on now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Chicago buying,” said the clerk. “Now it’s
+Liverpool! Sellers holding off. Wanting a two-eights
+more the cental.”</p>
+
+<p>The telephone bell tinkled again, and there was a
+trace of excitement in the face of the man who answered
+it.</p>
+
+<p>“Walthew has got news ahead of us,” he said.
+“Chicago bears caved in. Buying orders from
+Liverpool broke them. Got it there strong.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham tapped Alfreton’s shoulder. “Now is
+the time. Tell him to buy,” he said. “We’ll wait
+outside until you’ve put this deal through, Graham.”</p>
+
+<p>It was twenty minutes before Graham came out
+to them. “I’ll let you have your contracts, Mr.
+Alfreton, and my man on the market just fixed them
+in time,” he said. “They’re up a penny on the
+cental in Liverpool now, and nobody will sell, while
+here in Winnipeg they’re falling over each other
+to buy. Never had such a circus since the trade
+began.”</p>
+
+<p>Alfreton, who seemed to quiver, turned to his
+companion, and then forgot what he had to tell him.
+Witham had straightened himself and his eyes were
+shining, while the lad was puzzled by his face. Still,
+save for the little tremor in it, his voice was very
+quiet.</p>
+
+<p>“It has come at last,” he said. “Two farms
+would not have covered your losses, Alfreton, if you
+had waited until to-morrrow. Have supper with
+us Graham—if you like it, lakes of champagne.”</p>
+
+<p>“I want my head, but I’ll come,” said Graham,
+with a curious smile. “I don’t know that it wouldn’t
+pay me to hire yours just now.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Witham turned suddenly, and running down
+the stairway shook the man awaiting him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>“The flood’s with us now,” he said. “Find
+Colonel Barrington, and make him cover everything
+before he’s ruined. Dane, you and I, and a few
+others, will see the dollars rolling into Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane found Barrington, who listened with a grim
+smile to what he had to tell him.</p>
+
+<p>“The words are yours, Dane, but that is all,” he said.
+“Wheat will go down again, and I do not know that
+I am grateful to Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane dare urge nothing further, and spent the rest
+of that day wandering up and down the city, in a
+state of blissful content, with Alfreton and Witham.
+One of them had turned his losses into a small profit,
+and the other two, who had, hoping almost against
+hope, sown when others had feared to plough, saw
+that the harvest would repay them beyond their
+wildest expectations. They heard nothing but
+predictions of higher prices everywhere, and the
+busy city seemed to throb with exultation. The
+turn had come, and there was hope for the vast
+wheat lands it throve upon.</p>
+
+<p>Graham had much to tell them when they sat
+down to the somewhat elaborate meal Witham
+termed supper that night, and he nodded approvingly
+when Dane held out his glass of champagne and
+touched his comrade’s.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not fond of speeches, Courthorne, and I
+fancy our tastes are the same,” he said. “Still,
+I can’t let this great night pass without greeting you
+as the man who has saved not a few of us at Silverdale.
+We were in a very tight place before you
+came, and we are with you when you want us from
+this time, soul and body, and all our possessions.”
+Alfreton’s eyes glistened, and his hand shook a little
+as he touched the rim of Witham’s goblet.</p>
+
+<p>“There are folks in the old country who will
+bless you when they know,” he said. “You’ll
+forget it, though I can’t, that I was once against you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded to them gravely, and when the
+glasses were empty shook hands with the three.</p>
+
+<p>“We have put up a good fight, and I think we
+shall win; but, while you will understand me better
+by-and-by what you have offered me almost hurts,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>“What we have given is yours. We don’t take
+it back,” said Dane.</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled, though there was a wistfulness
+in his eyes as he saw the faint bewilderment in his
+companions’ faces.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he said slowly, “you can do a little
+for me now. Colonel Barrington was right when
+he set his face against speculation, and it was only
+because I saw dollars were badly needed at Silverdale,
+and the one means of getting them, I made my
+deal. Still, if we are to succeed as farmers we must
+market our wheat as cheaply as our rivals, and we
+want a new bridge on the level. Now, I got a drawing
+of one and estimates for British Columbia stringers,
+yesterday, while the birches in the ravine will give
+us what else we want. I’ll build a bridge myself,
+but it will cheapen the wheat-hauling to everybody,
+and you might like to help me.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane glanced at the drawing laid before him, but
+Alfreton spoke first. “One hundred dollars. I’m
+only a small man, but I wish it was five,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll make it that much, and see the others do
+their share,” said Dane, and then glanced at the
+broker with a curious smile.</p>
+
+<p>“How does he do it—this and other things?
+He was never a business man!”</p>
+
+<p>Graham nodded. “He can’t help it. It was
+born in him. You and I can figure and plan, but
+Courthorne is different—the right thing comes to
+him. I knew, the first night I saw him, you had got
+the man you wanted at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Witham stood up, wineglass in hand. “I
+am obliged to you, but I fancy this has gone far
+enough,” he said. “There is one man who has
+done more for you than I could ever do. Prosperity
+is a good thing, but you at least know what he has
+aimed at stands high above that. May you have
+the head of the Silverdale community long with you!”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink18'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XVIII—UNDER TEST</a></h2>
+
+<p>The prairie lay dim and shadowy in the creeping
+dusk when Witham sat on a redwood stringer near
+the head of his partly-finished bridge. There was no
+sound from the hollow behind him but the faint
+gurgle of the creek and the almost imperceptible
+vibration of countless minute wings. The birches
+which climbed the slope to it wound away sinuously,
+a black wall on either hand, and the prairie lying
+grey and still stretched back into the silence in
+front of him. Here and there a smouldering fire
+showed dully red on the brink of the ravine, but the
+tired men who had lighted them were already wrapped
+in heavy slumber.</p>
+
+<p>The prairie hay was gathered, harvest had not
+come, and for the last few weeks Witham, with his
+hired men from the bush of Ontario, had toiled at
+the bridge with a tireless persistency which had
+somewhat astonished the gentlemen farmers of
+Silverdale. They, however, rode over every now and
+then, and most cheerfully rendered what assistance
+they could, until it was time to return for tennis
+or a shooting sweepstake, and Witham thanked
+them gravely, even when he and his Ontario axemen
+found it necessary to do the work again. He
+could have told nobody why he had undertaken to
+build the bridge, which could be of no use to him,
+but he was in a measure prompted by instincts
+born in him; for he was one of the Englishmen
+who, with a dim recognition of the primeval charge
+to subdue the earth and render it fruitful, gravitate
+to the newer lands, and usually leave their mark
+upon them. He had also a half-defined notion that
+it would be something he could leave behind in reparation,
+that the men of Silverdale might remember
+the stranger who had imposed on them more leniently,
+while in the strain of the mental struggle strenuous
+occupation was a necessity to him.</p>
+
+<p>A bundle of papers it was now too dim to see
+lay beside him, clammy with the dew, and he sat
+bareheaded, a pipe which had gone out in his hand,
+staring across the prairie with an ironical smile in
+his eyes. He had planned boldly and striven tirelessly,
+and now the fee he could not take would surely
+be tendered him. Wheat was growing dearer every
+day, and such crops as he had sown had not been
+seen at Silverdale. Still, the man, who had had
+few compunctions before he met Maud Barrington,
+knew now that in a little while he must leave all
+he had painfully achieved behind. What he would
+do then he did not know, for only one fact seemed
+certain—in another four months, or less, he would
+have turned his back on Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, however, the sound of horse-hoofs
+caught his ears, and he stood up when a mounted
+figure rose out of the prairie. The moon had just
+swung up, round and coppery, from behind a rise,
+and when horse and rider cut black and sharp against
+it his pulses throbbed faster and a little flush crept
+into his face, for he knew every line of the figure in
+the saddle. Some minutes had passed when Maud
+Barrington rode slowly to the head of the bridge,
+and pulled up her horse at the sight of him.</p>
+
+<p>The moon, turning silver now, shone behind her
+head, and a tress of hair sparkled beneath her wide
+hat, while the man had a glimpse of the gleaming
+whiteness of rounded cheek and neck. Her face
+he could not see, but shapely shoulders, curve of
+waist, and sweeping line of the light habit were
+forced up as in a daguerreotype, and as the girl sat
+still looking down on him, slender, lissom, dainty,
+etherealized almost by the brightening radiance,
+she seemed to him a visionary complement of the
+harmonies of the night. It also appeared wiser
+to think of her as such than a being of flesh and
+blood whom he had wildly ventured to long for, and
+he almost regretted when her first words dispelled
+the illusion.</p>
+
+<p>“It is dreadfully late,” she said. “Pluto went
+very lame soon after I left Macdonald’s, and I knew
+if I went back for another horse he would have
+insisted on riding home with me. I had slipped
+away while he was in the granary. One can cross
+the bridge?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not mounted,” said Witham. “There are
+only a few planks between the stringers here and
+there, but, if you don’t mind waiting, I can lead your
+horse across.”</p>
+
+<p>He smiled a little, for the words seemed trivial
+and out of place in face of the effect the girl’s appearance
+had on him, but she glanced at him questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>“No!” she said. “Now, I would have gone
+round by the old bridge, only that Allardyce told
+me you let him ride across this afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” and the man stopped a moment, “it
+was daylight then, you see.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed a little, for his face was
+visible, and she understood the slowness of his answer.
+“Is that all? It is moonlight now.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham dryly, “but one is apt
+to make an explanation too complete occasionally.
+Will you let me help you down?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington held out her hands, and when he
+swung her down watched him tramp away with the
+horse with a curious smile. A light compliment
+seldom afforded her much pleasure, but the man’s
+grim reserve had now and then piqued more than her
+curiosity, though she was sensible that the efforts she
+occasionally made to uncover what lay behind it were
+not without their risk. Then he came back, and
+turned to her very gravely.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me have your hand,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington gave it him, and hoped the curious
+little thrill that ran through her when his hard fingers
+closed upon her palm did not communicate itself to
+him. She also noticed that he moved his head sharply
+a moment, and then looked straight in front again.
+Then the birches seemed to fall away beneath them,
+and they moved out across the dim gully with the
+loosely-laid planking rattling under their feet, until
+they came to a strip scarcely three feet wide which
+spanned a gulf of blackness in the shadow of the trees.</p>
+
+<p>“Hold fast!” said Witham with a trace of hoarseness.
+“You are sure you feel quite steady?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said the girl with a little laugh,
+though she recognized the anxiety in his voice, and
+felt his hand close almost cruelly on her own. She
+was by no means timorous, and still less fanciful, but
+when they moved out into the blackness that closed
+about them above and beneath along the slender strip
+of swaying timber she was glad of the masterful grip.
+It seemed in some strange fashion portentous, for she
+felt that she would once more be willing to brave
+unseen perils, secure only in his guidance. What
+he felt she did not know, and was sensible of an almost
+overwhelming curiosity, until when at last well-stiffened
+timber lay beneath them, she contrived to
+drop a glove just where the moonlight smote the
+bridge. Witham stooped, and his face was clear in
+the silvery light when he rose again. Maud Barrington
+saw the relief in it, and, compelled by some influence,
+stood still looking at him with a little glow behind the
+smile in her eyes. A good deal was revealed to both
+of them in that instant, but the man dare not admit
+it, and was master of himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said, very simply, “I am glad you are
+across.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed. “I scarcely fancy
+the risk was very great, but tell me about the bridge,”
+she said. “You are living beside it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham, “in a tent, I must have
+it finished before harvest, you see!”</p>
+
+<p>The girl understood why this was necessary, but
+deciding that she had on other occasions ventured
+sufficiently far with that topic, moved on across the
+bridge.</p>
+
+<p>“A tent,” she said, “cannot be a very comfortable
+place to live in, and who cooks for you?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled dryly. “I am used to it, and can
+do all the cooking that is necessary,” he said. “It is
+the usual home for the beginner, and I lived six
+months in one—on grindstone bread, the tinctured
+glucose you are probably not acquainted with as
+â€drips,’ and rancid pork—when I first came out to
+this country and hired myself, for ten dollars monthly,
+to another man. It is a diet one gets a little tired of
+occasionally, but after breaking prairie twelve hours
+every day one can eat almost anything, and when I
+afterwards turned farmer my credit was rarely good
+enough to provide the pork.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at him curiously, for she knew how
+some of the smaller settlers lived, and once more felt
+divided between wonder and sympathy. She could
+picture the grim self-denial, for she had seen the
+stubborn patience in this man’s face as well as a
+stamp that was not borne by any other man at Silverdale.
+Some of the crofter settlers, who periodically
+came near starvation in their sod hovels, and the men
+from Ontario who staked their little handful of dollars
+on the first wheat crop to be wrested from the prairie,
+bore it, however. From what Miss Barrington had
+told her, it was clear that Courthorne’s first year in
+Canada could not have been spent in this fashion,
+but there was no doubt in the girl’s mind as she
+listened. Her faith was equal to a more strenuous
+test.</p>
+
+<p>“There is a difference in the present, but who
+taught you bridge-building? It takes years to
+learn the use of the axe,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I think it took me four, but
+the man who has not a dollar to spare usually finds
+out how to do a good many things for himself,
+and I had working drawings of the bridge made in
+Winnipeg. Besides, your friends have helped me
+with their hands as well as their good-will. Except
+at the beginning, they have all been kind to me, and
+one could not well have expected very much from
+them then.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington coloured a trifle as she remembered
+her own attitude towards him. “Cannot you forget
+it?” she said, with a curious little ring in her voice.
+“They would do anything you asked them now.”</p>
+
+<p>“One generally finds it useful to have a good
+memory, and I remember most clearly that, although
+they had very little reason for it, most of them
+afterwards trusted me. That made, and still makes,
+a great difference to me.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl appeared thoughtful. “Does it?” she
+said. “Still, do you know, I fancy that if they had
+tried to drive you out, you would have stayed in spite
+of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham dryly, “I believe I would, but
+the fact that in a very little while they held out a
+friendly hand to a stranger steeped in suspicion, and
+gave him the chance to prove himself their equal,
+carries a big responsibility. That, and your aunt’s
+goodness, puts so many things one might have done
+out of the question.”</p>
+
+<p>The obvious inference was that the prodigal had
+been reclaimed by the simple means of putting him
+on his honour, but that did not for a moment suggest
+itself to the girl. She had often regretted her own
+disbelief, and once more felt the need for reparation.</p>
+
+<p>“Lance,” she said, very quietly, “my aunt was
+wiser than I was, but she was mistaken. What
+she gave you out of her wide charity was already yours
+by right.”</p>
+
+<p>That was complete and final, for Maud Barrington
+did nothing by half, and Witham recognized that
+she held him blameless in the past, which she could
+not know, as well as in the present, which was visible
+to her. Her confidence stung him as a whip, and
+when in place of answering he looked away, the girl
+fancied that a smothered groan escaped him. She
+waited, curiously expectant, but he did not speak,
+and just then the fall of hoofs rose from behind the
+birches in the bluff. Then a man’s voice came
+through it singing a little French song, and Maud
+Barrington glanced at her companion.</p>
+
+<p>“Lance,” she said, “how long is it since you sang
+that song?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, doggedly conscious of what
+he was doing, “I do not know a word of it, and never
+heard it in my life.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington stared at him. “Think,” she
+said. “It seems ever so long ago, but you cannot
+have forgotten. Surely you remember Madame
+Aubert, who taught me to prattle in French, and the
+day you slipped into the music-room and picked up
+the song, while she tried in vain to teach it me. Can’t
+you recollect how I cried, when you sang it in the
+billiard-room, and Uncle Geoffrey gave you the half-sovereign
+which had been promised to me?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham a trifle hoarsely, and with his
+head turned from her watched the trail.</p>
+
+<p>A man in embroidered deerskin jacket was riding
+into the moonlight, and though the little song had
+ceased, and the wide hat hid his face, there was an
+almost insolent gracefulness in his carriage that
+seemed familiar to Witham. It was not the
+<i>abandon</i> of the swashbuckler stock-rider from across
+the frontier, but something more finished and distinguished
+that suggested the bygone cavalier.
+Maud Barrington, it was evident, also noticed it.</p>
+
+<p>“Geoffrey Courthorne rode as that man does,” she
+said. “I remember hearing my mother once tell
+him that he had been born too late, because his
+attributes and tastes would have fitted him to follow
+Prince Rupert.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham made no answer, and the man rode on
+until he drew bridle in front of them. Then he swung
+his hat off, and while the moonlight shone into his
+face looked down with a little ironical smile at the
+man and woman standing beside the horse. Witham
+closed one hand a trifle, and slowly straightened
+himself, feeling that there was need of all his self-control,
+for he saw his companion glance at him, and
+then almost too steadily at Lance Courthorne.</p>
+
+<p>The latter said nothing for a space of seconds, for
+which Witham hated him, and yet in the tension of
+the suspense he noticed that the signs of indulgence
+he had seen on the last occasion were plainer in
+Courthorne’s face. The little bitter smile upon his
+lips was also not quite in keeping with the restlessness
+of his fingers upon the bridle.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that bridge fit for crossing, farmer?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham quietly. “You must lead
+your horse.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington had in the meanwhile stood very
+still, and now moved as by an effort. “It is time I
+rode on, and you can show the stranger across,” she
+said. “I have kept you at least five minutes longer
+than was necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne, Witham fancied, shifted one foot from
+the stirrup, but then sat still as the farmer held his
+hand for the girl to mount by, while when she rode
+away he looked at his companion with a trace of anger
+as well as irony in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham. “What you heard was
+correct. Miss Barrington’s horse fell lame coming
+from one of the farms, which accounts for her passing
+here so late. I had just led the beast across the
+incompleted bridge. Still, it is not on my account
+I tell you this. Where have you been and why have
+you broken one of my conditions?”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “It seems to me you are
+adopting a somewhat curious tone. I went to my
+homestead to look for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have not answered my other question, and
+in the meanwhile I am your tenant, and the place is
+mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“We really needn’t quibble,” said Courthorne.
+“I came for the very simple reason that I wanted
+money.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had one thousand dollars,” said Witham
+dryly.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne made a little gesture of resignation.
+“It is, however, certain that I haven’t got them
+now. They went as dollars usually do. The fact
+is, I have met one or two men recently who apparently
+know rather more about games of chance
+than I do, and I passed on the fame, which was my
+most valuable asset, to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You passed me on the brand of a crime I never
+committed,” said Witham grimly. “That, however,
+is not the question now. Not one dollar, except
+at the time agreed upon, will you get from me. Why
+did you come here dressed as we usually are on the
+prairie?”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne glanced down at the deerskin jacket
+and smiled as he straightened himself into a caricature
+of Witham’s mounted attitude. It was done
+cleverly.</p>
+
+<p>“When I ride in this fashion we are really not very
+unlike, you see, and I let one or two men I met get a
+good look at me,” he said. “I meant it as a hint
+that it would be wise of you to come to terms with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have done so already. You made the bargain.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne smiling, “a contract may
+be modified at any time when both parties are willing.”</p>
+
+<p>“One is not,” said Witham dryly. “You heard
+my terms, and nothing that you can urge will move
+me a hairsbreadth from them.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne looked at him steadily, and some men
+would have found his glance disconcerting, for now
+and then all the wickedness that was in him showed
+in his half-closed eyes. Still, he saw that the farmer
+was unyielding.</p>
+
+<p>“Then we will let it go; in the meanwhile,” he
+said, “take me across the bridge.”</p>
+
+<p>They were half-way along it when he pulled the
+horse up, and once more looked down on Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“Your hand is a tolerably good one so long as you
+are willing to sacrifice yourself, but it has its weak
+points, and there is one thing I could not tolerate,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>“What is that?”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed wickedly, “You wish me to be
+explicit? Maud Barrington is devilishly pretty, but
+it is quite out of the question that you should ever
+marry her.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned towards him with the veins on
+his forehead swollen. “Granting that it is so, what
+is that to you?”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne nodded as if in comprehension. “Well,
+I’m probably not consistent, but one rarely quite loses
+touch with everything, and if I believed that my
+kinswoman was growing fond of a beggarly farmer,
+I’d venture to put a sudden stop to your love-making.
+This, at least, is perfectly <i>bona fide</i>, Witham.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham had borne a good deal of late, and his
+hatred of the man flared up. He had no definite
+intention, but he moved a pace forward, and Courthorne
+touched the horse with his heel. It backed,
+and then growing afraid of the blackness about it
+plunged, while Witham for the first time saw that
+there was a gap in the loosely-laid planking close
+behind it. Another plunge or flounder, and horse
+and rider would go down together.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment he held his breath and watched.
+Then, as the beast, resisting its rider’s efforts, backed
+again, sprang forward and seized the bridle.</p>
+
+<p>“Get your spurs in! Shove him forward for your
+life,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>There was a momentary struggle on the slippery
+planking, and, almost as its hind hoofs overhung the
+edge, Witham dragged the horse away. Courthorne
+swung himself out of the saddle, left the farmer the
+bridle, and glanced behind him at the gap. Then he
+turned, and the two men looked at each other steadily.
+Their faces were a trifle paler than usual.</p>
+
+<p>“You saw it?” asked Courthorne.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but not until you backed the beast and he
+commenced plunging.”</p>
+
+<p>“He plunged once or twice before you caught the
+bridle?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “You are a curious man.
+It would have cleared the ground for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham dryly, “I don’t know
+that you will understand me, but I scarcely think
+it would. It may have been a mistake of mine to do
+what I did, but I have a good deal on my shoulders
+already.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne made no answer as he led his horse
+across the bridge. Then he mounted and looked
+down on the farmer who stood beside him.</p>
+
+<p>“I remember some things, though I don’t always
+let them influence me to my detriment,” he said.
+“I’m going back to the railroad, and then West,
+and don’t quite know when you will have the pleasure
+of seeing me again.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham watched him quietly. “It would be
+wiser if you did not come back until I send for you.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink19'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XIX—COURTHORNE BLUNDERS</a></h2>
+
+<p>Lance Courthorne had lightly taken a good
+many risks in his time, for he usually found a spice
+of danger stimulating, and there was in him an irresponsible
+daring that not infrequently served him
+better than a well-laid plan. There are also men of
+his type who, for a time at least, appear immune
+from the disasters which follow the one rash venture
+the prudent make, and it was half in frolic and half
+in malice he rode to Silverdale dressed as a prairie
+farmer in the light of day, and forgot that their occupation
+sets a stamp he had never worn upon the tillers
+of the soil. The same spirit induced him to imitate
+one or two of Witham’s gestures for the benefit of his
+cook, and afterwards wait for a police trooper, who,
+apparently desired to overtake him when he had just
+left the homestead.</p>
+
+<p>He pulled his horse up when the other man shouted
+to him, and trusting to the wide hat that hid most
+of his face, smiled out of half-closed eyes when he
+handed a packet.</p>
+
+<p>“You have saved me a ride, Mr. Courthorne,
+I heard you were at the bridge,” the trooper said,
+“If you’ll sign for those documents I needn’t keep you.”</p>
+
+<p>He brought out a pencil, and Courthorne scribbled
+on the paper handed him. He was quite aware that
+there was a risk attached to this, but if Witham had
+any communications with the police it appeared
+advisable to discover what they were about. Then
+he laughed, as riding on again he opened the packet.</p>
+
+<p>“Agricultural Bureau documents,” he said. “This
+lot to be returned filled in! Well, if I can remember,
+I’ll give them to Witham.”</p>
+
+<p>As it happened, he did not remember; but he made
+a worse mistake just before his departure from the
+railroad settlement. He had spent two nights at a
+little wooden hotel, which was not the one where
+Witham put up when he drove into the place, and
+to pass the time commenced a flirtation with the
+proprietor’s daughter. The girl was pretty, and
+Courthorne a man of different type from the wheat-growers
+she had been used to. When his horse was
+at the door, he strolled into the saloon where he found
+the girl alone in the bar.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a very sad man to-day, my dear,” he said,
+and his melancholy became him.</p>
+
+<p>The girl blushed prettily. “Still,” she said,
+“whenever you want to, you can come back again.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I did, would you be pleased to see me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said the girl. “Now, you wait a
+minute, and I’ll give you something to remember me
+by. I don’t mix this up for everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>She busied herself with certain decanters and
+essences, and Courthorne held the glass she handed
+him high.</p>
+
+<p>“The brightest eyes and the reddest lips between
+Winnipeg and the Rockies!” he said. “This is
+nectar, but I would like to remember you by something
+sweeter still!”</p>
+
+<p>Their heads were not far apart when he laid down
+his glass, and before the girl quite knew what was
+happening an arm was round her neck. Next moment
+she had flung the man backwards, and stood very
+straight, quivering with anger and crimson in face,
+for Courthorne, as occasionally happens with men of
+his type, assumed too much, and did not always
+know when to stop. Then she called sharply, “Jake.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a tramp of feet outside, and when a big,
+grim-faced man looked in at the door Courthorne
+decided it was time for him to effect his retreat
+while it could be done with safety. He knew already
+that there were two doors to the saloon, and his finger
+closed on the neck of a decanter. Next moment it
+smote the newcomer on the chest, and while he
+staggered backwards with the fluid trickling from
+him, Courthorne departed through the opposite entrance.
+Once outside, he mounted leisurely, but nobody
+came out from the hotel, and shaking the bridle
+with a little laugh he cantered out of the settlement.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, the other man carefully wiped
+his garments, and then turned to his companion.</p>
+
+<p>“Now what’s all this about?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>The girl told him, and the man ruminated for a
+minute or two. “Well, he’s gone, and I don’t know
+that I’m sorry there wasn’t a circus here,” he said.
+“I figured there was something not square about that
+fellow, anyway. Registered as Guyler from Minnesota,
+but I’ve seen somebody like him among the boys from
+Silverdale. Guess I’ll find out when I ride over about
+the horse, and then I’ll have a talk with him quietly.”</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, the police trooper who had
+handed him the packet returned to the outpost, and,
+as it happened, found the grizzled Sergeant Stimson,
+who appeared astonished to see him back so soon there.</p>
+
+<p>“I met Courthorne near his homestead, and gave
+him the papers, sir,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“You did?” said the Sergeant. “Now that’s
+kind of curious, because he’s at the bridge.”</p>
+
+<p>“It couldn’t have been anybody else, because he
+took the documents and signed for them,” said the
+trooper.</p>
+
+<p>“Big bay horse?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said the trooper. “It was a bronco, and
+a screw at that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Stimson dryly, “let me have your
+book. If Payne has come in, tell him I want him.”</p>
+
+<p>The trooper went out, and when his comrade
+came in Stimson laid a strip of paper before him.
+“You have seen Courthorne’s writing,” he said;
+“would you call it anything like that?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said Trooper Payne. “I would not!”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson nodded. “Take a good horse and ride
+round by the bridge. If you find Courthorne there,
+as you probably will, head for the settlement and see
+if you can come across a man who might pass for him.
+Ask your question as though the answer didn’t count,
+and tell nobody what you hear but me.”</p>
+
+<p>Payne rode out, and when he returned three days
+later, Sergeant Stimson made a journey to confer
+with one of his superiors. The officer was a man
+who had risen in the service somewhat rapidly, and
+when he heard the tale said nothing, while he turned
+over a bundle of papers a trooper brought him. Then
+he glanced at Stimson thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“I have a report of the Shannon shooting case
+here,” he said. “How did it strike you at the time?”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson’s answer was guarded. “As a curious
+affair. You see, it was quite easy to get at Witham’s
+character from anybody down there, and he wasn’t
+the kind of man to do the thing. There were one or
+two other trifles I couldn’t quite figure out the
+meaning of.”</p>
+
+<p>“Witham was drowned?” said the officer.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Stimson, “the trooper who rode
+after him heard him break through the ice, but
+nobody ever found him, though a farmer came upon
+his horse.”</p>
+
+<p>The officer nodded. “I fancy you are right, and
+the point is this. There were two men, who apparently
+bore some resemblance to each other, engaged in an
+unlawful venture, and one of them commits a crime
+nobody believed him capable of, but which would
+have been less out of keeping with the other’s character.
+Then the second man comes into an inheritance, and
+leads a life which seems to have astonished everybody
+who knows him. Now, have you ever seen these
+two men side by side?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said Stimson. “Courthorne kept out
+of our sight when he could in Alberta, and I don’t
+think I or any of the boys, except Shannon, ever saw
+him for more than a minute or two. Now and then
+we passed Witham on the prairie or saw him from the
+trail, but I think I only once spoke to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the officer, “it seems to me I had
+better get you sent back to your old station, where
+you can quietly pick up the threads again. Would
+the trooper you mentioned be fit to keep an eye on
+things at Silverdale?”</p>
+
+<p>“No one better, sir,” said Stimson.</p>
+
+<p>“Then it shall be done,” said the officer. “The
+quieter you keep the affair the better.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a week or two later when Witham returned
+to his homestead from the bridge, which was almost
+completed. Dusk was closing in, but as he rode
+down the rise he could see the wheat roll in slow
+ripples back into the distance. The steady beat of
+its rhythmic murmur told of heavy ears, and where
+the stalks stood waist-high on the rise, the last flush
+of saffron in the north-west was flung back in a dull
+bronze gleam. The rest swayed athwart the shadowy
+hollow, dusky indigo and green, but that flash of
+gold and red told that harvest was nigh again.</p>
+
+<p>Witham had seen no crop to compare with it
+during the eight years he had spent in the Dominion.
+There had been neither drought nor hail that year,
+and now, when the warm western breezes kept
+sweet and wholesome the splendid ears they fanned,
+there was removed from him the terrors of the harvest
+frost, which not infrequently blights the fairest prospects
+in one bitter night. Fate, which had tried
+him hardly hitherto, denying the seed its due share
+of fertilizing rain, sweeping his stock from existence
+with icy blizzard, and mowing down the tall green
+corn with devastating hail, was now showering favours
+on him when it was too late. Still, though he felt
+the irony of it, he was glad, for others had followed
+his lead, and while the lean years had left a lamentable
+scarcity of dollars at Silverdale, wealth would
+now pour in to every man who had had the faith to
+sow.</p>
+
+<p>He dismounted beside the oats which he would
+harvest first, and listened with a curious stirring of
+his pulses to their musical patter. It was not the
+full-toned song of the wheat, but there was that in
+the quicker beat of it which told that each graceful
+tassel would redeem its promise. He could not see
+the end of them, but by the right of the producer
+they were all his. He knew that he could also hold
+them by right of conquest, too, for that year a knowledge
+of his strength had been forced upon him. Still,
+from something he had seen in the eyes of a girl and
+grasped at in the words of a white-haired lady, he
+realized that there is a limit beyond which man’s
+ambition may not venture, and a right before which
+even that of possession must bow.</p>
+
+<p>It had been shown him plainly that no man of his
+own devices can make the wheat grow, and standing
+beside it in the creeping dusk he felt in a vague,
+half-pagan fashion that there was, somewhere behind
+what appeared the chaotic chances of life, a scheme
+of order and justice immutable, which would in due
+time crush the too presumptuous human atom who
+opposed himself to it. Regret and rebellion were,
+it seemed, equally futile, and he must go out from
+Silverdale before retribution overtook him. He had
+done wrong, and, though he had made what reparation
+he could, knew that he would carry his punishment
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>The house was almost dark when he reached it,
+and as he went in his cook signed to him. “There’s
+a man in here waiting for you,” he said. “He
+doesn’t seem in any way friendly or civil.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded as he went on, wondering with a
+grim expectancy whether Courthorne had returned
+again. If he had, he felt in a mood for very direct
+speech with him. His visitor was, however, not
+Courthorne. Witham could see that at a glance,
+although the room was dim.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t seem to know you, but I’ll get a light in a
+minute,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t waste time,” said the other. “We
+can talk just as straight in the dark, and I guess this
+meeting will finish up outside on the prairie. You’ve
+given me a good deal of trouble to trail you, Mr.
+Guyler.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham dryly, “it seems to me that
+you have found the wrong man.”</p>
+
+<p>The stranger laughed unpleasantly. “I was figuring
+you’d take it like that, but you can’t bluff me.
+Well now, I’ve come round to take it out of you for
+slinging that decanter at me, and if there is another
+thing, we needn’t mention it.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stared at the man, and his astonishment
+was evident, but the fact that he still spoke with an
+English accentuation, as Courthorne did, was against
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“To the best of my recollection, I have never
+suffered the unpleasantness of meeting you in my life,”
+he said. “I certainly never threw a decanter or
+anything else at you, though I understand that one
+might feel tempted to.”</p>
+
+<p>The man rose up slowly, and appeared big and
+heavy-shouldered as he moved athwart the window.
+“I guess that is quite enough for me,” he said.
+“What were you condemned Englishmen made
+for, anyway, but to take the best of what other
+men worked for, until the folks who’ve got grit
+enough run you out of the old country! Lord, why
+don’t they drown you instead of dumping you and your
+wickedness on to us? Still, I’m going to show one
+of you, as I’ve longed to do, that you can’t play your
+old tricks with the women of this country.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see the drift of a word of it,” said Witham.
+“Hadn’t you better come back when you’ve worked
+the vapours off to-morrow?”</p>
+
+<p>“Come out!” said the other man grimly.
+“There’s scarcely room in here. Well then, have it
+your own way, and the devil take care of you!”</p>
+
+<p>“I think there’s enough,” said Witham, and as
+the other swung forward, closed with him.</p>
+
+<p>He felt sick and dizzy for a moment, for he had
+laid himself open and the first blow got home, but
+he had decided that if the grapple was inevitable,
+it was best to commence it and end it speedily.
+A few seconds later there was a crash against the
+table, and the stranger gasped as he felt the edge of
+it pressed into his backbone. Then he felt himself
+borne backwards until he groaned under the strain,
+and heard a hoarse voice say, “If you attempt to
+use that foot again, I’ll make the leg useless all your
+life to you. Come right in here, Tom.”</p>
+
+<p>A man carrying a lantern came in, and stared at
+the pair as he set it down. “Do you want me to see
+a fair finish-up?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham. “I want you to see this
+gentleman out with me. Nip his arms behind his
+back; he can’t hurt you.”</p>
+
+<p>It was done with a little difficulty, and there was a
+further scuffle in the hall, for the stranger resisted
+strenuously, but a minute later the trio reeled out of the
+door just as a buggy pulled up. Then, as the evicted
+man plunged forward alone, Witham, straightening
+himself suddenly, saw that Colonel Barrington was
+looking down on him, and that his niece was seated
+at his side. He stood still, flushed and breathless,
+with his jacket hanging rent half-way up about him,
+and the Colonel’s voice was quietly ironical.</p>
+
+<p>“I had a question or two to ask you, but can wait,”
+he said. “No doubt I shall find you less engaged
+another time.”</p>
+
+<p>He flicked the horse, and as the buggy rolled away
+the other man walked up to Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“While I only wanted to get rid of you before, I
+feel greatly tempted to give you your wish now,” said
+the latter.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger laughed dryly. “I guess you needn’t
+worry. I don’t fight because I’m fond of it, and
+you’re not the man.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not the man?” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said the other. “Not like him, now I
+can see you better. Well, I’m kind of sorry I started
+a circus here.”</p>
+
+<p>A suspicion of the truth flashed upon Witham.
+“What sort of a man was the one you mistook for
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Usual British waster. Never done a day’s work
+in his life, and never wanted to; too tired to open his
+eyes more than half-way when he looked at you, but
+if he ever fools round the saloon again, he’ll know
+what he is before I’m through with him.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “I wouldn’t be rash or you
+may get another astonishment. We really know
+one or two useful things in the old country, but you
+can’t fetch the settlement before morning, and we’ll
+put you up if you like.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said the other dryly. “I’m not fond of
+Englishmen, and we might get arguing, while I’ve had
+’bout enough of you for one night.”</p>
+
+<p>He rode away, and Witham went back into the house
+very thoughtfully, wondering whether he would be
+called upon to answer for more of Courthorne’s doings.</p>
+
+<p>It was two or three days later when Maud Barrington
+returned with her aunt from a visit to an outlying
+farm, where, because an account of what took
+place in the saloon had by some means been spread
+about, she heard a story brought in from the settlement.
+It kept her silent during the return journey,
+and Miss Barrington said nothing, but when the
+Colonel met them in the hall he glanced at his niece.</p>
+
+<p>“I see Mrs. Carndall has been telling you both a
+tale,” he said. “It would have been more fitting if
+she had kept it to herself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Maud Barrington. “Still, you do not
+credit it?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington smiled a trifle dryly. “I should very
+much prefer not to, my dear, but what we saw the
+other night appears to give it probability. The man
+Courthorne was dismissing somewhat summarily is,
+I believe, to marry the lady in question. You will
+remember I asked you once before whether the leopard
+can change his spots.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl laughed a little. “Still, are you not
+presuming when you take it for granted that there are
+spots to change?”</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Barrington said nothing further, and it was
+late that night when the two women reopened the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt,” said Maud Barrington, “I want to know
+what you think about Mrs. Carndall’s tale.”</p>
+
+<p>The little lady shook her head. “I should like to
+disbelieve it if I could.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Maud Barrington, “why don’t
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you give me any reasons? One must not
+expect too much from human nature, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl sat silent awhile, remembering the man
+whom she had at first sight, and in the moonlight,
+fancied was like her companion at the time. It
+was not, however, the faint resemblance that had
+impressed her, but a vague something in his manner—his
+grace, his half-veiled insolence, his poise in the
+saddle. She had only seen Lance Courthorne on a few
+occasions when she was very young, but she had seen
+others of his race, and the man reminded her of them.
+Still, she felt half-instinctively that as yet it would be
+better that nobody should know this, and she stooped
+over some lace on the table as she answered the elder
+lady.</p>
+
+<p>“I only know one, and it is convincing. That Lance
+should have done what he is credited with doing is
+quite impossible.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington smiled. “I almost believe so, too,
+but others of his family have done such things somewhat
+frequently. Do you know that Lance has all
+along been a problem to me, for there is a good deal
+in my brother’s question. Although it seems out of
+the question, I have wondered whether there could be
+two Lance Courthornes in Western Canada.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at her aunt in silence for a space,
+but each hid a portion of her thoughts. Then Maud
+Barrington laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“The Lance Courthorne now at Silverdale is as
+free from reproach as any man may be,” she said.
+“I can’t tell you why I am sure of it—but I know I
+am not mistaken.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink20'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XX—THE FACE AT THE WINDOW</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was a hot morning when Sergeant Stimson and
+Corporal Payne rode towards the railroad across the
+prairie. The grassy levels rolled away before them,
+white and parched, into the blue distance, where
+willow grove and straggling bluff floated on the dazzling
+horizon, and the fibrous dust rose in little puffs beneath
+the horses’ feet, until Stimson pulled his beast
+up in the shadow of the birches by the bridge, and
+looked back towards Silverdale. There, wooden
+homesteads girt about with barns and granaries rose
+from the whitened waste, and behind some of them
+stretched great belts of wheat. Then the Sergeant,
+understanding the faith of the men who had sown
+that splendid grain, nodded, for he was old and wise,
+and had seen many adverse seasons, and the slackness
+that comes, when hope has gone, to beaten men.</p>
+
+<p>“They will reap this year—a handful of cents on
+every bushel,” he said. “A fine gentleman is
+Colonel Barrington, but some of them will be
+thankful there’s a better head than the one he has at
+Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said Corporal Payne, who wore the
+double chevrons for the first time, and surmised that
+his companion’s observations were not without their
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Stimson glanced at the bridge. “Good work,”
+he said. “It will save them dollars on every load
+they haul in. A gambler built it! Do they teach
+men to use the axe in Montana saloons?”</p>
+
+<p>The corporal smiled and waited for what he felt
+would come. He was no longer the hot-blooded lad
+who had come out from the old country, for he had
+felt the bonds of discipline, and been taught restraint
+and silence on the lonely marches of the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>“I have,” he said tentatively, “fancied there
+was something a little unusual about the thing.”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson nodded, but his next observation was
+apparently quite unconnected with the topic. “You
+were a raw colt when I got you, Payne, and the bit
+galled you now and then, but you had good hands
+on a bridle, and somebody who knew his business
+had taught you to sit a horse in the old country.
+Still, you were not as handy with brush and fork
+at stable duty.”</p>
+
+<p>The bronze seemed to deepen in the corporal’s face,
+but it was turned steadily toward his officer. “Sir,”
+he said, “has that anything to do with what you
+were speaking of?”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson laughed softly. “That depends, my lad.
+Now, I’ve taught you to ride straight and to hold
+your tongue. I’ve asked you no questions, but I’ve
+eyes in my head, and it’s not without a purpose
+you’ve been made corporal. You’re the kind they
+give commissions to now and then—and your folks
+in the old country never raised you for a police trooper.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you tell me how to win one?” asked the
+corporal, and Stimson noticed the little gleam in his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s one road to advancement, and you know
+where to find the trooper’s duty laid down plain,”
+he said with a dry smile. “Now, you saw Lance
+Courthorne once or twice back there in Alberta?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir; but never close to.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you knew Farmer Witham?”</p>
+
+<p>Payne appeared thoughtful. “Of course I met
+him a few times on the prairie, always on horseback,
+with his big hat on; but Witham is dead—that is,
+I heard him break through the ice.”</p>
+
+<p>The men’s eyes met for a moment, and Stimson
+smiled curiously. “There is,” he said, “still a
+warrant out for him. Now, you know where I am
+going, and while I am away you will watch Courthorne
+and his homestead. If anything curious happens
+there you will let me know. The new man has
+instructions to find you any duty that will suit you.”</p>
+
+<p>The corporal looked at his officer steadily, and
+again there was comprehension in his eyes. Then
+he nodded. “Yes, sir. I have wondered whether,
+if Shannon could have spoken another word that
+night, it would have been Witham the warrant was
+issued for.”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson raised a restraining hand. “My lad,”
+he said dryly, “the police trooper who gets advancement
+is the one that carries out his orders and never
+questions them until he can show that they are wrong.
+Then he uses a good deal of discretion. Now you
+know your duty?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said Payne, and Stimson shaking his
+bridle cantered off across the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>Then, seeing no need to waste time, the corporal
+rode towards Courthorne’s homestead and found its
+owner stripping a binder. Pieces of the machine
+lay all around him, and from the fashion in which
+he handled them it was evident that he was capable
+of doing what the other men at Silverdale left to the
+mechanic at the settlement. Payne wondered, as
+he watched him, who had taught the gambler to use
+spanner and file.</p>
+
+<p>“I will not trouble you if you are busy, Mr.
+Courthorne; but if you would give me the returns
+the Bureau ask for, it would save me riding round
+again,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I can’t,” said Witham. “You see,
+I haven’t had the papers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Trooper Bacon told me he had given them to
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t seem to remember it,” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>Payne laughed. “One forgets things when he
+is busy. Still, you had them—because you signed
+for them.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked up suddenly, and in another
+moment smiled; but he was a trifle too late, for
+Payne had seen his astonishment, and that he was
+now on guard.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he said, “I haven’t got them now. Send
+me a duplicate. You have, no doubt, some extra
+forms at the outpost.”</p>
+
+<p>Payne decided that the man had never had the
+documents, but was too clever to ask any questions
+or offer explanations that might involve him. It was
+evident he knew that somebody had personated him,
+and the fact sent a little thrill through the corporal;
+he was at least on the trail.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll bring you one round the next time I’m in the
+neighbourhood,” he said; and Witham sat still with
+the spanner lying idle in his hand when he rode away.</p>
+
+<p>He realized that Courthorne had taken the papers,
+and his face grew anxious as well as grim. The harvest
+was almost ready now, and a little while would
+see it in. Then his work would be over; but he had
+of late felt a growing fear lest something, that
+would prevent its accomplishment, might happen
+in the meanwhile. Then almost fiercely he resumed
+the stripping of the machine.</p>
+
+<p>An hour or two later Dane rode up, and sat still
+in his saddle looking down on Witham with a curious
+smile in his face.</p>
+
+<p>“I was down at the settlement and found a curious
+story going round,” he said. “Of course, it had its
+humorous aspect, but I don’t know that the thing
+was quite discreet. You see, Barrington has once or
+twice had to put a stern check on the indulgence in
+playfulness of that kind by some of the younger men,
+and you are becoming an influence at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“You naturally believed what you heard. It
+was in keeping with what you have seen of me?”</p>
+
+<p>Dane’s eyes twinkled. “I didn’t want to, and I
+must admit that it isn’t. Still, a good many of you
+quiet men are addicted to occasionally astonishing
+our friends, and I can’t help a fancy that you
+could do that kind of thing as well as most folks,
+if it pleased you. It fact, there was an artistic finish
+to the climax that suggested your usual thoroughness.”</p>
+
+<p>“It did?” said Witham grimly, remembering
+his recent visitor and one or two of Courthorne’s
+Albertan escapades. “Still, as I’m afraid I haven’t
+the dramatic instinct, do you mind telling me how?”</p>
+
+<p>Dane laughed. “Well, it is probable there are
+other men who would have kissed the girl, but I don’t
+know that it would have occurred to them to smash
+a decanter on the irate lover’s head.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham felt his finger tingle for a grip on Courthorne’s
+throat. “And that’s what I’ve been doing
+lately? You, of course, concluded that after conducting
+myself in an exemplary fashion an astonishing
+time it was a trifling lapse?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Dane dryly. “As I admitted, it
+appeared somewhat out of your usual line; but when
+I heard that a man from the settlement had been
+ejected with violence from your homestead, what
+could one believe?”</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel Barrington told you that!”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Dane; “you know he didn’t. Still,
+he had a hired man riding a horse he’d bought, and
+I believe—though it is not my affair—Maud Barrington
+was there. Now, of course, one feels diffident
+about anything that may appear like preaching, but
+you see a good many of us are following you, and I
+wouldn’t like you to have many little lapses of that kind
+while I am backing you. You and I have done with
+these frivolities some time ago, but there are lads here
+they might appeal to. I should be pleased if you
+could deny the story.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s face was grim. “I’m afraid it would not
+suit me to do as much just now,” he said. “Still,
+between you and me, do you believe it likely that I
+would fly at that kind of game?”</p>
+
+<p>Dane laughed softly. “Well,” he said, “tastes
+differ, and the girl is pretty, while, you know, after
+all they’re very much the same. We have, however,
+got to look at the thing sensibly, and you admit you
+can’t deny it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I told you it wouldn’t suit me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then there is a difference?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “You must make the best of
+that, but the others may believe exactly what they
+please. It will be a favour to me if you remember
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane smiled curiously. “Then I think it is
+enough for me, and you will overlook my presumption.
+Courthorne, I wonder now and then when I
+shall altogether understand you!”</p>
+
+<p>“The time will come,” said Witham dryly, to hide
+what he felt; for his comrade’s simple avowal had
+been wonderfully eloquent. Then Dane touched
+his horse with his heel and rode away.</p>
+
+<p>It was two or three weeks later when Witham,
+being requested to do so, drove over to attend one
+of the assemblies at Silverdale Grange. It was dark
+when he reached the house, for the nights were drawing
+in; but because of the temperature, few of the
+great oil lamps were lighted, and the windows were
+open wide. Somebody had just finished singing
+when he walked into the big general room, and he
+would have preferred another moment to make his
+entrance, but disdained to wait. He, however, felt
+a momentary warmth in his face when Miss Barrington,
+stately as when he had first seen her in her rustling
+silk and ancient laces, came forward to greet him
+with her usual graciousness. He knew that every
+eye was upon them, and guessed why she had done
+so much.</p>
+
+<p>What she said was of no moment, but the fact that
+she had received him without sign of coldness was
+eloquent, and the man bent very respectfully over
+the little white hand. Then he stood straight and
+square for a moment and met her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Madam,” he said, “I shall know who to come
+to when I want a friend.”</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards he drifted towards a group of married
+farmers and their wives, who, except for that open
+warranty, might have been less cordial to him; and
+presently, though he was never quite sure how it
+came about, found himself standing beside Maud
+Barrington. She smiled at him and then glanced
+towards one of the open windows, outside which one
+or two of the older men were sitting.</p>
+
+<p>“The room is very hot,” said Witham tentatively.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, “I fancy it would be cooler
+in the hall.”</p>
+
+<p>They passed out together into the shadowy hall,
+but a little gleam of light from the doorway behind
+them rested on Maud Barrington as she sat down.
+She looked inquiringly at the man as though in wait
+for something.</p>
+
+<p>“It is distinctly cooler here,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed impatiently. “It is,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, with a little smile. “I will
+try again. Wheat has made another advance lately.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl turned towards him with a little sparkle
+in her eyes. Witham saw it, and the faint shimmer
+of the pearls upon the whiteness of her neck and then
+moved his head so that he looked out upon the dusky
+prairie.</p>
+
+<p>“Pshaw!” she said. “You know why you were
+brought here to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham admired her courage, but did not turn
+round, for there were times when he feared his will
+might fail him. “I fancy I know why your aunt
+was so gracious to me. Do you know that her confidence
+almost hurts me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then why don’t you vindicate it and yourself?
+Dane would be your mouthpiece, and two or three
+words would be sufficient.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham made no answer for a space. Somebody
+was singing in the room behind them, and through
+the open window he could see the stars in the soft
+indigo above the great sweep of prairie. He noticed
+them vacantly, and took a curious impersonal interest
+in the two dim figures standing close together outside
+the window. One was a young English lad, and the
+other a girl in a long white dress. What they were
+doing there was no concern of his, but any trifle that
+diverted his attention a moment was welcome in that
+time of strain, for he had felt of late that exposure
+was close at hand, and was fiercely anxious to finish
+his work before it came. Maud Barrington’s finances
+must be made secure before he left Silverdale,
+and he must remain at any cost until the wheat was
+sold.</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned slowly towards her. “It is not
+your aunt’s confidence that hurts me the most.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at him steadily, the colour a trifle
+plainer in her face, which she would not turn from the
+light, and a growing wonder in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Lance,” she said, “we both know that it is not
+misplaced. Still, your impassiveness does not please
+us.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham groaned inwardly, and the swollen veins
+showed on his forehead. His companion had leaned
+forward a little, so that she could see him, and one
+white shoulder almost touched his own. The perfume
+of her hair was in his nostrils, and when he remembered
+how cold she had once been to him, a longing
+that was stronger than the humiliation that came
+with it grew almost overwhelming. Still, because
+of her very trust in him, there was a wrong he could
+not do, and it dawned on him that a means of placing
+himself beyond further temptation was opening to him.
+Maud Barrington, he knew, would have scanty
+sympathy with an intrigue of the kind Courthorne’s
+recent adventure pointed to.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean, why do I not deny what you have no
+doubt heard?” he said. “What could one gain by
+that if you had heard the truth?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed softly. “Isn’t the
+question useless?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham, a trifle hoarsely now.</p>
+
+<p>The girl touched his arm almost imperiously as he
+turned his head again.</p>
+
+<p>“Lance,” she said, “men of your kind need not
+deal in subterfuge. The wheat and the bridge you
+built speak for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still——” persisted Witham, and the girl checked
+him with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy you are wasting time,” she said. “Now,
+I wonder whether, when you were in England, you
+ever saw a play founded on an incident in the life of
+a once famous actor. At the time it rather appealed to
+me. The hero, with a chivalric purpose, assumed
+various shortcomings he had really no sympathy
+with—but while there is, of course, no similarity
+beyond the generous impulse between the cases,
+he did not do it clumsily. It is, however, a trifle
+difficult to understand what purpose you could have,
+and one cannot help fancying that you owe a little to
+Silverdale and yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a somewhat daring parallel; for Witham,
+who dare not look at his companion and saw that
+he had failed, knew the play.</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t the subject a trifle difficult?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Maud Barrington, “we will end it.
+Still, you promised that I should understand—a
+good deal—when the time came.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded gravely. “You shall,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then, somewhat to his embarrassment, the two
+figures moved further across the window, and as they
+were silhouetted against the blue duskiness, he saw
+that there was an arm about the waist of the girl’s
+white dress. He became sensible that Maud Barrington
+saw it too, and then that, perhaps to save the
+situation, she was smiling. The two figures, however,
+vanished, and a minute later a young girl in a
+long white dress came in and stood still, apparently
+dismayed, when she saw Maud Barrington. She did
+not notice Witham, who sat further in the shadow.
+He, however, saw her face suddenly crimson.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you been here long?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Maud Barrington, with a significant
+glance towards the window. “At least ten minutes.
+I am sorry, but I really couldn’t help it. It was very
+hot in the other room, and Allender was singing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the girl, with a little tremor in her
+voice, “you will not tell?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Maud Barrington. “But you must
+not do it again.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl stooped swiftly and kissed her, then recoiled
+with a gasp when she saw the man, but Maud
+Barrington laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“I think,” she said, “I can answer for Mr.
+Courthorne’s silence. Still, when I have an opportunity,
+I am going to lecture you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned with a twinkle he could not quite
+repress in his eyes, and with a flutter of her dress the
+girl whisked away.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid this makes me an accessory, but I
+can only neglect my manifest duty, which would be
+to warn her mother,” said Maud Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Is it a duty?” asked Witham, feeling that the
+further he drifted away from the previous topic, the
+better it would be for him.</p>
+
+<p>“Some people would fancy so,” said his companion.
+“Lily will have a good deal of money by and by,
+and she is very young. Atterly has nothing but an
+unprofitable farm; but he is an honest lad, and I
+know she is very fond of him.”</p>
+
+<p>“And would that count against the dollars?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington laughed a little. “Yes,” she
+said quietly. “I think it would if the girl is wise.
+Even now such things do happen; but I fancy it is
+time I went back again.”</p>
+
+<p>She moved away, but Witham stayed where he
+was until the lad came in with a cigar in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Hallo, Courthorne!” he said. “Did you notice
+anybody pass the window a little while ago?”</p>
+
+<p>“You are the first come in through it,” said
+Witham dryly. “The kind of things you wear admit
+of climbing.”</p>
+
+<p>The lad glanced at him with a trace of embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t quite understand you; but I meant a man,”
+he said. “He was walking curiously, as if he was
+half asleep, but he slipped round the corner of the
+building, and I lost him.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “There’s a want of finish in
+the tale, but you needn’t worry about me. I didn’t
+see a man.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s rather less wisdom than usual in your
+remarks to-night; but I tell you I saw him,” said the
+lad.</p>
+
+<p>He passed on, and a minute later there was a cry
+from the inner room. “It’s there again! Can’t
+you see the face at the window?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham was in the larger room next moment, and
+saw, as a startled girl had evidently done, a face that
+showed distorted and white to ghastliness through
+the window. He also recognized it, and running back
+through the hall was outside in another few
+seconds. Courthorne was leaning against one of the
+casements as though faint with weakness or pain, and
+collapsed when Witham dragged him backwards into
+the shadow. He had scarcely laid him down when
+the window was opened and Colonel Barrington’s
+shoulders showed black against the light.</p>
+
+<p>“Come outside alone, sir,” said Witham. Barrington
+did so, and Witham stood so that no light
+fell on the pallid face in the grass. “It’s a man I
+have dealings with,” he said. “He has evidently
+ridden out from the settlement and fallen from his
+horse.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why should he fall?” asked the Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed. “There is a perfume about him
+that is tolerably conclusive. I was, however, on
+the point of going, and if you will tell your hired man
+to get my wagon out, I’ll take him away quietly.
+You can make light of the affair to the others.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Barrington. “Unless you think the
+man is hurt, that would be best, but we’ll keep him
+if you like.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir. I couldn’t trouble you,” said Witham
+hastily. “Men of his kind are also very hard to kill.”</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later he and the hired man hoisted
+Courthorne into the wagon and packed some hay
+about him, while, soon after the rattle of wheels sank
+into the silence of the prairie, the girl Maud Barrington
+had spoken to rejoined her companion.</p>
+
+<p>“Could Courthorne have seen you coming in?”
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the girl, blushing. “He did.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then it can’t be helped, and, after all, Courthorne
+wouldn’t talk, even if he wasn’t what he is,” said
+the lad. “You don’t know why, and I’m not going
+to tell you, but it wouldn’t become him.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean Maud Barrington?” asked his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the lad with a laugh. “Courthorne
+is not like me. He has no sense. It’s quite another
+kind of girl, you see.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink21'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XXI—COLONEL BARRINGTON IS CONVINCED</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was not until early morning that Courthorne
+awakened from the stupor he sank into, soon after
+Witham conveyed him into his homestead. First,
+however, he asked for a little food, and ate it with
+apparent difficulty. When Witham came in, he
+looked up from the bed where he lay, with the dust
+still white upon his clothing, and his face showed grey
+and haggard in the creeping light.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m feeling a trifle better now,” he said; “still,
+I scarcely fancy I could get up just yet. I gave you
+a little surprise last night?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “You did. Of course, I knew
+how much your promise was worth, but in view of
+the risks you ran, I had not expected you to turn
+up at the Grange.”</p>
+
+<p>“The risks!” said Courthorne with an unpleasant
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham wearily; “I have a good deal
+on hand I would like to finish here, and it will not take
+me long, but I am quite prepared to give myself up
+now, if it is necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “I don’t think you need,
+and it wouldn’t be wise. You see, even if you made
+out your innocence, which you couldn’t do, you rendered
+yourself an accessory by not denouncing me
+long ago. I fancy we can come to an understanding
+which would be pleasanter to both of us.”</p>
+
+<p>“The difficulty,” said Witham, “is that an
+understanding is useless when made with a man who never
+keeps his word.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne dryly, “we shall gain
+nothing by paying each other compliments, and
+whether you believe it or otherwise, it was not by
+intention I turned up at the Grange. I was coming
+here from a place west of the settlement and you can
+see that I have been ill if you look at me. I counted
+too much on my strength, couldn’t find a homestead
+where I could get anything to eat, and the rest may
+be accounted for by the execrable brandy I had with
+me. Anyway, the horse threw me and made off, and
+after lying under some willows a good deal of the day,
+I dragged myself along until I saw a house.”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Witham, “is beside the question.
+What do you want of me? Dollars, in all probability.
+Well, you will not get them.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I’m scarcely fit for a discussion now,”
+said Courthorne. “The fact is, it hurts me to talk,
+and there’s an aggressiveness about you which isn’t
+pleasant to a badly-shaken man. Wait until this
+evening, but there is no necessity for you to ride to
+the outpost before you have heard me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not sure it would be advisable to leave you
+here,” said Witham dryly.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne smiled ironically. “Use your eyes.
+Would any one expect me to get up and indulge in a
+fresh folly? Leave me a little brandy—I need it—and
+go about your work. You’ll certainly find me
+here when you want me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham, glancing at the man’s face, considered
+this very probable, and went out. He found his
+cook, who could be trusted, and said to him, “The
+man yonder is tolerably sick, and you’ll let him have a
+little brandy, and something to eat when he asks for
+it. Still, you’ll bring the decanter away with you,
+and lock him in whenever you go out.”</p>
+
+<p>The man nodded, and making a hasty breakfast,
+Witham, who had business at several outlying farms,
+mounted and rode away. It was evening before he
+returned, and found Courthorne lying in a big chair
+with a cigar in his hand, languidly <i>debonair</i> but apparently
+ill. His face was curiously pallid, and his eyes
+dimmer than they had been, but there was a sardonic
+twinkle in them.</p>
+
+<p>“You take a look at the decanter,” said the man,
+who went up with Witham, carrying a lamp. “He’s
+been wanting brandy all the time, but it doesn’t seem
+to have muddled him.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham dismissed the man and sat down in front
+of Courthorne.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “You ought to be a witty
+man, though one would scarcely charge you with that.
+You surmised correctly this morning. It is dollars I
+want.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had my answer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course. Still, I don’t want very many in the
+meanwhile, and you haven’t heard what led up to the
+demand, or why I came back to you. You are evidently
+not curious, but I’m going to tell you. Soon
+after I left you, I fell very sick, and lay in the saloon
+of a little desolate settlement for days. The place was
+suffocating, and the wind blew the alkali dust in. They
+had only horrible brandy, and bitter water to drink
+it with, and I lay there on my back, panting, with the
+flies crawling over me. I knew if I stayed any longer
+it would finish me, and when there came a merciful
+cool day I got myself into the saddle and started off
+to find you. I don’t quite know how I made the
+journey, and during a good deal of it I couldn’t see
+the prairie, but I knew you would feel there was an
+obligation on you to do something for me. Of course,
+I could put it differently.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham had as little liking for Courthorne as he
+had ever had, but he remembered the time when he had
+lain very sick in his lonely log hut. He also remembered
+that everything he now held belonged to this man.</p>
+
+<p>“You made the bargain,” he said, less decisively.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne nodded. “Still, I fancy one of the
+conditions could be modified. Now, if I wait for
+another three months I may be dead before the reckoning
+comes, and while that probably wouldn’t grieve
+you, I could, when it appeared advisable, send for a
+magistrate and make a deposition.”</p>
+
+<p>“You could,” said Witham. “I have, however,
+something of the same kind in contemplation.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne smiled curiously. “I don’t know that
+it will be necessary. Carry me on until you have sold
+your crop, and then make a reasonable offer, and
+it’s probable you may still keep what you have at
+Silverdale. To be quite frank, I’ve a notion that my
+time in this world is tolerably limited, and I want a
+last taste of all it has to offer a man of my capacities
+before I leave it. One is a long while dead, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded, for he understood. He had also
+during the grim cares of the lean years known the
+fierce longing for one deep draught of the wine of
+pleasure, whatever it afterwards cost him.</p>
+
+<p>“It was that which induced you to look for a little
+relaxation at the settlement at my expense,” he said.
+“A trifle paltry, wasn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed. “It seems you don’t know
+me yet. That was a frolic, indulged in out of humour,
+for your benefit. You see, your rĂ´le demanded a
+good deal more ability than you ever displayed in
+it, and it did not seem fitting that a very puritanical
+and priggish person should pose as me at Silverdale.
+The little affair was the one touch of verisimilitude
+about the thing. No doubt my worthy connexions
+are grieving over your lapse.”</p>
+
+<p>“My sense of humour had never much chance of
+developing,” said Witham grimly. “What is the
+matter with you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Pulmonary haemorrhage!” said Courthorne.
+“Perhaps it was born in me, but I never had much
+trouble until after that night in the snow at the river.
+Would you care to hear about it? We’re not fond
+of each other, but after the steer-drivers I’ve been herding
+with, it’s a relief to talk to a man of moderate
+intelligence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Go on,” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne, “when the trooper was
+close behind me, my horse went through the ice, but
+somehow I crawled out. We were almost across the
+river, and it was snowing fast, while I had a fancy
+that I might have saved the horse but, as the
+trooper would probably have seen a mounted man,
+I let him go. The stream sucked him under, and,
+though you may not believe it, I felt very mean when
+I saw nothing but the hole in the ice. Then, as the
+troopers didn’t seem inclined to cross, I went on
+through the snow, and, as it happened, blundered
+across Jardine’s old shanty. There was still a little
+prairie hay in the place, and I lay in it until morning,
+dragging fresh armfuls around me as I burnt it in
+the stove. Did you ever spend a night, wet through,
+in a place that was ten to twenty under freezing?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham dryly. “I have done it
+twice.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Courthorne, “I fancy that night
+narrowed in my life for me, but I made out across
+the prairie in the morning, and as we had a good many
+friends up and down the country, one of them took
+care of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat silent a while. The story had held
+his attention, and the frankness of the man who lay
+panting a little in his chair had its effect on him.
+There was no sound from the prairie, and the house
+was very still.</p>
+
+<p>“Why did you kill Shannon?” he asked at length.</p>
+
+<p>“Is any one quite sure of his motives?” said
+Courthorne. “The lad had done something which
+was difficult to forgive him, but I think I would have
+let him go if he hadn’t recognized me. The world
+is tolerably good to the man who has no scruples,
+you see, and I took all it offered me, while it did not
+seem fitting that a clod of a trooper without capacity
+for enjoyment, or much more sensibility than the
+beast he rode, should put an end to all my opportunities.
+Still, it was only when he tried to warn
+his comrades he threw his last chance away.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham shivered a little at the dispassionate
+brutality of the speech, and then checked the anger
+that came upon him.</p>
+
+<p>“Fate, or my own folly, has put it out of my power
+to denounce you without abandoning what I have set
+my heart upon, and after all it is not my business,”
+he said. “I will give you five hundred dollars and
+you can go to Chicago or Montreal, and consult
+a specialist. If the money is exhausted before I
+send for you, I will pay your hotel bills, but
+every dollar will be deducted when we come to the
+reckoning.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne laughed a little. “You had better
+make it seven-fifty. Five hundred dollars will not
+go very far with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you will have to husband them,” said
+Witham dryly. “I am paying you at a rate agreed
+upon for the use of your land and small bank balance
+handed me, and want all of it. The rent is a fair
+one in face of the fact that a good deal of the farm
+consisted of virgin prairie, which can be had from
+the Government for nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>He said nothing further, and soon after he went out
+Courthorne went to sleep, but Witham sat by an open
+window with a burned-out cigar in his hand, staring
+at the prairie while the night wore through, until he
+rose with a shiver in the chill of early morning to
+commence his task again.</p>
+
+<p>A few days later he saw Courthorne safely into a
+sleeping car with a ticket for Chicago in his pocket,
+and felt that a load had been lifted off his shoulders
+when the train rolled out of the little prairie station.
+Another week had passed, when, riding home one
+evening, he stopped at the Grange, and, as it happened,
+found Maud Barrington alone. She received
+him without any visible restraint, but he realized
+that all that had passed at their last meeting was to
+be tacitly ignored.</p>
+
+<p>“Has your visitor recovered yet?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“So far as to leave my place, and I was not anxious
+to keep him,” said Witham with a little laugh. “I
+am sorry he disturbed you.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington seemed thoughtful. “I can
+scarcely think the man was to blame.”</p>
+
+<p>“No?” said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at him curiously, and shook her
+head. “No,” she said. “I heard my uncle’s
+explanation, but it was not convincing. I saw the
+man’s face.”</p>
+
+<p>It was several seconds before Witham answered, and
+then he took the bold course.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington made a curious little gesture.
+“I knew I had seen it before at the bridge, but that
+was not all. It was vaguely familiar, and I felt I
+ought to know it. It reminded me of somebody.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of me?” and Witham laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“No. There was a resemblance, but it was very
+superficial. That man’s face had little in common
+with yours.”</p>
+
+<p>“These faint likenesses are not unusual,” said
+Witham, and once more Maud Barrington looked at
+him steadily.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said. “Of course not. Well, we will
+conclude that my fancies ran away with me, and
+be practical. What is wheat doing just now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Rising still,” said Witham, and regretted the
+alacrity with which he had seized the opportunity
+of changing the topic when he saw that it had not
+escaped the notice of his companion. “You and I
+and a few others will be rich this year.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but I am afraid some of the rest will find
+it has only further anxieties for them.”</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy,” said Witham, “you are thinking of
+one.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington nodded. “Yes; I am sorry
+for him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then it would please you if I tried to straighten
+out things for him? It would be difficult, but I
+believe it could be accomplished.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington’s eyes were grateful, but there
+was something that Witham could not fathom behind
+her smile.</p>
+
+<p>“If you undertook it. One could almost believe
+you had the wonderful lamp,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled somewhat dryly. “Then all its
+virtues will be tested to-night, and I had better make
+a commencement while I have the courage. Colonel
+Barrington is in?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington went with him to the door, and
+then laid her hand a moment on his arm. “Lance,”
+she said, with a little tremor in her voice, “if there
+was a time when our distrust hurt you, it has recoiled
+upon our heads. You have returned it with a splendid
+generosity.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham did not trust himself to answer, but walked
+straight to Barrington’s room, and finding the door
+open went quietly in. The head of the Silverdale
+settlement was sitting at a littered table in front of
+a shaded lamp, and the light that fell upon it showed
+the care in his face. It grew a trifle grimmer when
+he saw the younger man.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you sit down?” he said. “I have been
+looking for a visit from you for some little time. It
+would have been more fitting had you made it earlier.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded as he took a chair. “I fancy I
+understand you, but I have nothing that you expect
+to hear to tell you, sir.”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Barrington, “is unfortunate. Now,
+it is not my business to pose as a censor on the conduct
+of any man here, except when it affects the community,
+but their friends have sent out a good many young
+English lads, some of whom have not been too discreet
+in the old country, to me. They did not do so
+solely that I might teach them farming. A charge
+of that kind is no light responsibility, and I look
+for assistance from the men who have almost as
+large a stake as I have in the prosperity of Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you ever seen me do anything you could
+consider prejudicial to it?” asked Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“I have not,” said Colonel Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“And it was by her own wish Miss Barrington,
+who, I fancy, is seldom mistaken, asked me to the
+Grange?”</p>
+
+<p>“Is is a good plea,” said Barrington. “I cannot
+question anything my sister does.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then we will let it pass, though I am afraid you
+will consider what I am going to ask a further presumption.
+You have forward wheat to deliver, and
+find it difficult to obtain it?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington’s smile was somewhat grim. “In
+both cases you have surmised correctly.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “Still, it is not mere
+inquisitiveness, sir. I fancy I am the only man at Silverdale
+who can understand your difficulties, and, what
+is more to the point, suggest a means of obviating
+them. You still expect to buy at lower prices before
+the time to make delivery comes?”</p>
+
+<p>Again the care crept into Barrington’s face, and
+he sat silent for almost a minute. Then he said,
+very slowly, “I feel that I should resent the question,
+but I will answer. It is what I hope to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham, “I am afraid you will
+find prices higher still. There is very little wheat in
+Minnesota this year, and what there was in Dakota
+was cut down by hail. Millers in St. Paul and
+Minneapolis are anxious already, and there is talk
+of a big corner in Chicago. Nobody is offering again,
+while you know what land lies fallow in Manitoba,
+and the activity of their brokers shows the fears of
+Winnipeg millers with contracts on hand. This
+is not my opinion alone. I can convince you from the
+papers and market reports I see before you.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington could not controvert the unpleasant
+truth he was still endeavouring to shut his eyes to.
+“The demand from the East may slacken,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head. “Russia can give them
+nothing. There was a failure in the Indian monsoon,
+and South American crops were small. Now, I
+am going to take a further liberty. How much are
+you short?”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington was never sure why he told him, but
+he was hard pressed then, and there was a quiet
+forcefulness about the younger man that had its
+effect on him. “That,” he said, holding out a
+document, “is the one contract I have not covered.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham glanced at it. “The quantity is small.
+Still, money is very scarce, and bank interest almost
+extortionate just now.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington flushed a trifle, and there was anger
+in his face. He knew the fact that his loss on this
+sale should cause him anxiety was significant, and
+that Witham had surmised the condition of his
+finances tolerably correctly.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you not gone quite far enough?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “I fancy I need ask no more,
+sir. You can scarcely buy the wheat, and the banks
+will advance nothing further on what you have to
+offer at Silverdale. It would be perilous to put
+yourself in the hands of a mortgage-broker.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington stood up very grim and straight,
+and there were not many men at Silverdale who
+would have met his gaze.</p>
+
+<p>“Your content is a little too apparent, but I can
+still resent an impertinence,” he said. “Are my
+affairs your business?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down, sir,” said Witham. “I fancy they
+are, and had it not been necessary, I would not have
+ventured so far. You have done much for Silverdale,
+and it had cost you a good deal, while it seems to
+me that every man here has a duty to the head of
+the settlement. I am, however, not going to urge
+that point, but have, as you know, a propensity for
+taking risks. I can’t help it. It was probably
+born in me. Now, I will take that contract up for
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington gazed at him in bewildered astonishment.
+“But you would lose on it heavily. How
+could you overcome a difficulty that is too great for
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Witham with a little smile, “it
+seems I have some ability in dealing with these
+affairs.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington did not answer for a while, and when
+he spoke it was slowly. “You have a wonderful
+capacity for making any one believe in you.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is not the point,” said Witham. “If
+you will let me have the contract, or, and it comes to
+the same thing, buy the wheat it calls for, and if
+advisable sell as much again, exactly as I tell you,
+at my risk and expense, I shall get what I want out of
+it. My affairs are a trifle complicated, and it would
+take some little time to make you understand how
+this would suit me. In the meanwhile you can
+give me a mere I O U for the difference between what
+you sold at, and the price to-day, to be paid without
+interest and whenever it suits you. It isn’t very
+formal, but you will have to trust me.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington moved twice up and down the room
+before he turned to the younger man. “Lance,”
+he said, “when you first came here, any deal of this
+kind between us would have been out of the question.
+Now, it is only your due to tell you that I have
+been wrong from the beginning, and you have a good
+deal to forgive.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think we need not go into that,” said Witham,
+with a little smile. “This is a business deal, and if
+it hadn’t suited me I would not have made it.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out in another few minutes with a little
+strip of paper, and just before he left the Grange
+placed it in Maud Barrington’s hand.</p>
+
+<p>“You will not ask any questions, but if ever
+Colonel Barrington is not kind to you, you can show
+him that,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He had gone in another moment, but the girl,
+comprehending dimly what he had done, stood still,
+staring at the paper with a warmth in her cheeks
+and a mistiness in her eyes.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink22'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XXII—SERGEANT STIMSON CONFIRMS HIS SUSPICIONS</a></h2>
+
+<p>It was late in the afternoon when Colonel Barrington
+drove up to Witham’s homestead. He had his niece
+and sister with him, and when he pulled up his team,
+all three were glad of the little breeze that came
+down from the blueness of the north and rippled the
+whitened grass. It had blown over leagues of sun-bleached
+prairie, and the great desolation beyond
+the pines of the Saskatchewan, but had not wholly
+lost the faint wholesome chill it brought from the
+Pole.</p>
+
+<p>There was no cloud in the vault of ether, and
+slanting sunrays beat fiercely down upon the prairie,
+until the fibrous dust grew fiery, and the eyes ached
+from the glare of the vast stretch of silvery grey.
+The latter was, however, relieved by stronger colour
+in front of the party, for, blazing gold on the dazzling
+stubble, the oat sheaves rolled away in long rows that
+diminished and melted into each other, until they
+cut the blue of the sky in a delicate filigree. Oats
+had moved up in value in sympathy with wheat, and
+the good soil had most abundantly redeemed its
+promise that year. Colonel Barrington, however,
+sighed a little as he looked at them, and remembered
+that such a harvest might have been his.</p>
+
+<p>“We will get down and walk towards the wheat,”
+he said. “It is a good crop, and Lance is to be
+envied.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” said Miss Barrington, “he deserved
+it, and those sheaves stand for more than the toil that
+brought them there.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said the Colonel with a curious
+little smile. “For rashness, I fancied, when they
+showed the first blade above the clod, but I am less
+sure of it now. Well, the wheat is even finer.”</p>
+
+<p>A man who came up took charge of the horses,
+and the party walked in silence towards the wheat.
+It stretched before them in a vast parallelogram,
+and while the oats were the pale gold of the austral,
+there was the tint of the ruddier metal of their own
+North-West in this. It stood tall and stately, murmuring
+as the sea does, until it rolled before a stronger
+puff of breeze in waves of ochre, through which the
+warm bronze gleamed when its rhythmic patter swelled
+into deeper-toned harmonies. There was that in the
+elfin music and blaze of colour which appealed to
+sensual ear and eye, and something which struck deeper
+still, as it did in the days men poured libations on the
+fruitful soil, and white-robed priest blessed it, when
+the world was young.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington felt it vaguely, but she recognized
+more clearly, as her aunt had done, the faith and
+daring of the sower. The earth was very bountiful,
+but that wheat had not come there of itself; and
+she knew the man who had called it up had done
+more than bear his share of the primeval curse
+which, however, was apparently more or less evaded
+at Silverdale. Even when the issue appeared
+hopeless, the courage that held him resolute in face
+of other’s fears, and the greatness of his projects, had
+appealed to her, and it almost counted for less that
+he had achieved success. Then, glancing further across
+the billowing grain she saw him—still, as it seemed
+it had always been with him, amidst the stress and
+dust of strenuous endeavour.</p>
+
+<p>Once more, as she had seen them when the furrows
+were bare at seed time, and there was apparently
+only ruin in store for those who raised the Eastern
+people’s bread, lines of dusty teams came plodding
+down the rise. They advanced in echelon, keeping
+their time and distance with a military precision;
+but in place of the harrows the tossing arms of the
+binders flashed and swung. The wheat went down
+before them, their wake was strewn with gleaming
+sheaves, and one man came foremost, swaying in
+the driving-seat of a rattling machine. His face
+was the colour of a Blackfoot’s, and she could see the
+darkness of his neck above the loose-fronted shirt
+and a bare blackened arm that was raised to hold
+the tired beasts to their task. Their trampling and
+the crash and rattle that swelled in slow crescendo
+drowned the murmur of the wheat, until one of the
+machines stood still, and the leader, turning a moment
+in his saddle, held up a hand. Then those that came
+behind swung into changed formation, passed, and
+fell into indented line again, while Colonel Barrington
+nodded with grim approval.</p>
+
+<p>“It is very well done,” he said. “The best of
+harvesters! No newcomers yonder. They’re capable
+Manitoba men. I don’t know where he got them, and,
+in any other year, one would have wondered where
+he would find the means of paying them. We have
+never seen farming of this kind at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to sigh a little, while his hand closed on
+the bridle; and Maud Barrington fancied she understood
+his thoughts just then.</p>
+
+<p>“Nobody can be always right, and the good
+years do not come alone,” she said. “You will
+plough every acre next one.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington smiled dryly. “I’m afraid that will
+be a little late, my dear. Any one can follow, but
+since, when everybody’s crop is good, the price
+comes down, the man who gets the prize is the one
+who shows the way.”</p>
+
+<p>“He was content to face the risk,” said Miss
+Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” said the Colonel quietly. “I
+should be the last to make light of his foresight
+and courage. Indeed, I am glad I can acknowledge
+it, in more ways than one, for I have felt lately that I
+am getting an old man. Still, there is one with greater
+capacities ready to step into my shoes; and though it
+was long before I could overcome my prejudice against
+him, I think I should now be content to let him have
+them. Whatever Lance may have been, he was born a
+gentleman, and blood is bound to tell.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington, who was of a patrician parentage,
+and would not at one time have questioned this
+assertion, wondered why she felt less sure of it just
+then.</p>
+
+<p>“But if he had not been, would not what he has
+done be sufficient to vouch for him?” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Barrington smiled a little, and the girl felt that
+her question was useless as she glanced at him. He
+sat very straight in his saddle, immaculate in dress,
+with a gloved hand on his hip and a stamp which he
+had inherited, with the thinly-covered pride that
+usually accompanies it, from generations of a similar
+type, on his clean-cut face. It was evidently needless
+to look for any sympathy with that view from him.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear,” he said, “there are things at which
+the others can beat us; but, after all, I do not think
+they are worth the most; and while Lance has
+occasionally exhibited a few undesirable characteristics,
+no doubt acquired in this country, and has not
+been always blameless, the fact that he is a Courthorne
+at once covers and accounts for a good deal.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Witham recognized them, and made a
+sign to one of the men behind him as he hauled his
+binder clear of the wheat. He had dismounted in
+another minute and came towards them, with the
+jacket he had not wholly succeeded in struggling into
+loose about his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>“It is almost time I gave my team a rest,” he said.
+“Will you come with me to the house?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Colonel Barrington. “We only stopped
+in passing. The crop will harvest well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham, turning with a little smile
+to Miss Barrington. “Better than I expected, and
+prices are still moving up. You will remember,
+madam, who it was wished me good fortune. It
+has undeniably come!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the white-haired lady, “next
+year I will do as much again, though it will be a
+little unnecessary, because you have my good wishes
+all the time. Still, you are too prosaic to fancy
+they can have anything to do with—this.”</p>
+
+<p>She pointed to the wheat, but though Witham
+smiled again, there was a curious expression in his
+face as he glanced at her niece.</p>
+
+<p>“I certainly do, and your good-will has made
+a greater difference than you realize to me,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington looked at him steadily. “Lance,”
+she said, “there is something about you and your
+speeches that occasionally puzzles me. Now, of
+course, that was the only rejoinder you could make,
+but I fancied you meant it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I did,” said Witham, with a trace of grimness
+in his smile. “Still, isn’t it better to tell any one too
+little rather than too much?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Miss Barrington, “you are going
+to be franker with me by and by. Now, my brother
+has been endeavouring to convince us that you
+owe your success to qualities inherited from bygone
+Courthornes.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham did not answer for a moment and then he
+laughed. “I fancy Colonel Barrington is wrong,”
+he said. “Don’t you think there are latent capabilities
+in every man, though only one here and there gets
+an opportunity of using them? In any case, wouldn’t
+it be pleasanter for any one to feel that his virtues
+were his own and not those of his family?”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington’s eyes twinkled but she shook
+her head. “That,” she said, “would be distinctly
+wrong of him, but I fancy it is time we were getting
+on.”</p>
+
+<p>In another few minutes Colonel Barrington took
+up the reins, and as they drove slowly past the
+wheat his niece had another view of the toiling
+teams. They were moving on tirelessly with their
+leader in front of them, and the rasp of the knives,
+trample of hoofs, and clash of the binders’ wooden
+arms once more stirred her. She had heard those
+sounds often before, and attached no significance to
+them; but now she knew a little of the stress and
+effort that preceded them; she could hear through
+the turmoil the exultant note of victory.</p>
+
+<p>Then the wagon rolled more slowly up the rise
+and had passed from view behind it when a mounted
+man rode up to Witham with an envelope in his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Macdonald was in at the settlement, and
+the telegraph clerk gave it him,” he said. “He
+told me to come along with it.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham opened the message, and his face grew grim
+as he read, “Send me five hundred dollars. Urgent.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he thrust it into his pocket and went on
+with his harvesting, when he had thanked the man.
+He also worked until dusk was creeping up across
+the prairie before he concerned himself further
+about the affair; and then the note he wrote was
+laconic.</p>
+
+<p>“Enclosed you will find fifty dollars, sent only
+because you may be ill. In case of necessity, you
+can forward your doctor’s or hotel bills,” it ran.</p>
+
+<p>It was with a wry smile he watched the man ride
+off towards the settlement with it. “I shall not
+be sorry when the climax comes,” he said. “The
+strain is telling.”</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, Sergeant Stimson had been
+quietly renewing his acquaintance with certain
+ranchers and herders of sheep scattered across the
+Albertan prairie some six hundred miles away.
+They found him more communicative and cordial
+than he used to be, and with one or two he unbent
+so far as, in the face of regulations, to refresh himself
+with whisky which had contributed nothing to the
+Canadian revenue. Now, the lonely ranchers have,
+as a rule, few opportunities of friendly talk with
+anybody, and as they responded to the sergeant’s
+geniality, he became acquainted with a good many
+facts, some of which confirmed certain vague suspicions
+of his, though others astonished him. In consequence
+of this, he rode out one night with two or three
+troopers of a Western squadron.</p>
+
+<p>His apparent business was somewhat prosaic.
+Musquash, the Blackfoot, in place of remaining quietly
+on his reserve, had in a state of inebriation reverted
+to the primitive customs of his race, and taking the
+trail not only annexed some of his white neighbours’
+ponies and badly frightened their wives, but drove
+off a steer with which he feasted his people. The
+owner, following, came upon the hide, and Musquash,
+seeing it was too late to remove the brand from it,
+expressed his contrition, and pleaded in extenuation
+that he was rather worthy of sympathy than
+blame, because he would never have laid hands on
+what was not his had not a white man sold him
+deleterious liquor. As no white man is allowed
+to supply an Indian with alcohol in any form, the
+wardens of the prairie took a somewhat similar view
+of the case; and Stimson was, from motives which
+he did not mention, especially anxious to get his grip
+upon the other offender.</p>
+
+<p>The night when they rode out was very dark,
+and they spent half of it beneath a birch bluff,
+seeing nothing whatever, and only hearing a coyote
+howl. It almost appeared that there was something
+wrong with the information supplied them respecting
+the probable running of another load of prohibited
+whisky, and towards morning Stimson rode up to the
+young commissioned officer.</p>
+
+<p>“The man who brought us word has either played
+their usual trick and sent us here while his friends
+take the other trail, or somebody saw us ride out and
+went south to tell the boys,” he said. “Now, you
+might consider it advisable that I and one of the
+troopers should head for the ford at Willow Hollow,
+sir.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the young officer, who was quite
+aware that there was as yet many things connected
+with his duties he did not know. “Now I come to
+think of it, Sergeant, I do. We’ll give you two
+hours, and then, if you don’t turn up, ride over
+after you; it’s condemnably shivery waiting for
+nothing here.”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson saluted and shook his bridle, and rather
+less than an hour later faintly discerned a rattle of
+wheels that rose from a long way off across the
+prairie. Then he used the spur, and by and by it
+became evident that the drumming of their horses’
+feet had carried far, for though the rattle grew a
+little louder there was no doubt that whoever drove
+the wagon had no desire to be overtaken. Still,
+two horses cannot haul a vehicle over a rutted trail
+as fast as one can carry a man, and when the wardens
+of the prairie raced towards the black wall of birches
+that rose higher in front of them, the sound of wheels
+seemed very near. It, however, ceased suddenly,
+and was followed by a drumming that could only have
+been made by a galloping horse.</p>
+
+<p>“One beast!” said the Sergeant. “Well, they’d
+have two men, anyway, in that wagon. Get down
+and picket. We’ll find the other fellow somewhere
+in the bluff.”</p>
+
+<p>They came upon him within five minutes endeavouring
+to cut loose the remaining horse from the
+entangled harness in such desperate haste that
+he did not hear them until Stimson grasped his
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Hold out your hands,” he said. “You have
+your carbine ready, trooper?”</p>
+
+<p>The man made no resistance, and Stimson laughed
+when the handcuffs were on.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” he said, “where’s your partner?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know that I mind telling you,” said
+the prisoner. “It was a low down trick he played
+on me. We got down to take out the horses, when
+we saw we couldn’t get away from you, and I’d
+a blanket girthed round the best of them, when he
+said he’d hold him while I tried what I could do
+with the other. Well, I let him, and the first thing
+I knew he was off at a gallop, leaving me with the
+other kicking devil two men couldn’t handle. You’ll
+find him rustling south over the Montana trail.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mount and ride!” said Stimson, and when
+his companion galloped off turned once more to his
+prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll have a lantern somewhere, and I’d like
+a look at you,” he said. “If you’re the man I
+expect, I’m glad I found you.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s in the wagon,” said the other dejectedly.</p>
+
+<p>Stimson got a light, and when he had released
+and picketed the plunging horse, held it so that he
+could see his prisoner. Then he nodded with evident
+contentment.</p>
+
+<p>“You may as well sit down. We’ve got to have
+a talk,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the other, “I’d help you to catch
+Harmon if I could, but I can prove he hired me to
+drive him over to Kemp’s in the wagon, and you’d
+find it difficult to show I knew what there was in the
+packages he took along.”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson smiled dryly. “Still,” he said, “I
+think it could be done, and I’ve another count against
+you. You had one or two deals with the boys some
+little while ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not afraid of your fixing up against me
+anything I did then,” said the other man.</p>
+
+<p>“No?” said Stimson. “Now, I guess you’re
+wrong, and it might be a good deal more serious
+than whisky-running. One night a man crawled
+up to your homestead through the snow, and you
+took him in.”</p>
+
+<p>He saw the sudden fear in his companion’s face
+before he turned it from the lantern.</p>
+
+<p>“It has happened quite a few times,” said the
+latter. “We don’t turn any stranger out in this
+country.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course!” said the Sergeant gravely, though
+he felt a little thrill of content as he saw the shot,
+he had been by no means sure of, had told. “That
+man, however, had lost his horse in the river, and it
+was the one he got from you that took him out of the
+country. Now, if we could show you knew what
+he had done, it might go as far as hanging somebody.”</p>
+
+<p>The man was evidently not a confirmed law-breaker,
+but merely one of the small farmers who
+were willing to pick up a few dollars by assisting
+the whisky-runners now and then, and he abandoned
+all resistance.</p>
+
+<p>“Sergeant,” he said, “it was most a week before
+I knew, and if anybody had told me at the time
+I’d have turned him out to freeze before I’d have let
+him have a horse of mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“That wouldn’t go very far if we brought the
+charge against you,” said Stimson grimly. “If
+you’d sent us word when you did know, we’d have
+had him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the man, “he was across the frontier
+by that time, and I don’t know that most folks would
+have done it, if they’d had the warning the boys sent
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson appeared to consider for almost a minute,
+and then gravely rapped his companion’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to me that the sooner you and I have
+an understanding, the better it will be for you,”
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>They were some time arriving at it, and the Sergeant’s
+superiors might not have been pleased with all he
+promised during the discussion. Still, he was flying
+at higher game and had to sacrifice a little, while
+he knew his man.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll fix it up without you, as far as we can;
+but if we want you to give evidence that the man
+who lost his horse in the river was not Farmer Witham,
+we’ll know where to find you,” he said. “You’ll
+have to take your chance of being tried with him,
+if we find you trying to get out of the country.”</p>
+
+<p>It was half an hour later when the rest of the
+troopers arrived, and Stimson had some talk with
+their officer aside.</p>
+
+<p>“A little out of the usual course, isn’t it?” said
+the latter. “I don’t know that I’d have countenanced
+it, so to speak, off my own bat at all, but I had a
+tolerably plain hint that you were to use your discretion
+over this affair. After all, one has to stretch a
+point or two occasionally.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said Stimson; “a good many now
+and then.”</p>
+
+<p>The officer smiled a little and went back to the
+rest. “Two of you will ride after the other rascal,”
+he said. “Now look here, my man; the first time
+my troopers, who’ll call round quite frequently, don’t
+find you about your homestead, you’ll land yourself
+in a tolerably serious difficulty. In the meanwhile,
+I’m sorry we can’t bring a charge of whisky-running
+against you, but another time be careful who you
+hire your wagon to.”</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a rapid drumming of hoofs as
+two troopers went off at a gallop, while when the
+rest turned back towards the outpost, Stimson rode
+with them, quietly content.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink23'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XXIII—THE REVELATION</a></h2>
+
+<p>Witham’s harvesting prospered as his sowing had
+done, for day by day the bright sunshine shone down
+on standing wheat and lengthening rows of sheaves.
+It was in the bracing cold of sunrise the work began,
+and the first pale stars were out before the tired men
+and jaded horses dragged themselves home again.
+Not infrequently it happened that the men wore
+out the teams and machines, but there was no stoppage
+then, for fresh horses were led out from the corral
+or a new binder was ready. Every minute was worth
+a dollar, and Witham, who had apparently foreseen
+and provided for everything, wasted none.</p>
+
+<p>Then—for wheat is seldom stacked in that country—as
+the days grew shorter and the evenings cool,
+the smoke of the big thrasher streaked the harvest
+field, and the wagons went jolting between humming
+separator and granary, until the latter was gorged
+to repletion, and the wheat was stored within a
+willow framing beneath the chaff and straw that
+streamed from the shoot of the great machine.
+Witham had round him the best men that dollars
+could hire, and toiled tirelessly with the grimy host
+in the whirling dust of the thrasher and amidst the
+sheaves, wherever another pair of hands, or the
+quick decision that would save an hour’s delay, was
+needed most.</p>
+
+<p>As compared with the practice of insular Britain,
+there were not half enough of them; but wages
+are high in that country, and the crew of the thrasher
+paid by the bushel, while the rest had long worked for
+their own hand on the levels of Manitoba and in
+the bush of Ontario, and knew that the sooner their
+toil was over the sooner they would go home again
+with well-lined pockets. So, generously fed, splendid
+human muscle kept pace with clinking steel
+under a stress that is seldom borne outside the sun-bleached
+prairie at harvest time, and Witham forgot
+everything save the constant need for the utmost
+effort of body and brain. It was even of little
+import to him that prices moved steadily upwards
+as he toiled.</p>
+
+<p>At last it was finished, and only knee-high stubble
+covered his land and that of Maud Barrington;
+while—for he was one who could venture fearlessly
+and still know when he had risked enough—soon
+after it was thrashed out the wheat was sold. The
+harvesters went home with enough to maintain
+them through the winter; and Witham, who spent
+two days counting his gain, wrote asking Graham
+to send him an accountant from Winnipeg. With
+him he spent a couple more, and then, with an effort
+he was never to forget, prepared himself for the
+reckoning. It was time to fling off the mask before
+the eyes of all who had trusted him.</p>
+
+<p>He had thought over it carefully, and his first
+decision had been to make the revelation alone
+to Colonel Barrington. That, however, would, he
+felt be too simple, and his pride rebelled against
+anything that would stamp him as one who dare
+not face the men he had deceived. One by one
+they had tacitly offered him their friendship and
+then their esteem, until he knew that he was virtually
+leader at Silverdale; and it seemed fitting that he
+should admit the wrong he had done them, and
+bear the obloquy before them all. For a while
+the thought of Maud Barrington restrained him,
+and then he brushed that aside. He had fancied
+with masculine blindness that what he felt for her
+had been well concealed, and that her attitude to him
+could be no more than kindly sympathy with one
+who was endeavouring to atone for a discreditable
+past. Her anger and astonishment would be hard
+to bear, but once more his pride prompted him,
+and he decided that she should at least see he had
+the courage to face the results of his wrong-doing.
+As it happened, he was also given an opportunity
+when he was invited to the harvest celebration that
+was held each year at Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>It was a still, cool evening when every man of the
+community, and most of the women gathered in the
+big dining-room of the Grange. The windows were
+shut now, for the chill of the early frost was on the
+prairie, and the great lamps burned steadily above
+the long tables. Cut glass, dainty china and silver
+gleamed beneath them amidst the ears of wheat
+that stood in clusters for sole and appropriate ornamentation.
+They merited the place of honour, for
+wheat had brought prosperity to every man at
+Silverdale who had had the faith to sow that year.</p>
+
+<p>On either hand were rows of smiling faces: the
+men’s burned and bronzed, the women’s kissed into
+faintly warmer colour by the sun, and white shoulders
+shone amidst the sombrely covered ones, while
+here and there a diamond gleamed on a snowy neck.
+Barrington sat at the head of the longest table, with
+his niece and sister, Dane, and his oldest followers
+about him, and Witham at its foot, dressed very
+simply after the usual fashion of the prairie farmers.
+There were few in the company who had not noticed
+this, though they did not as yet understand its
+purport.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing happened during dinner, but Maud
+Barrington noticed that although some of his younger
+neighbours rallied him, Witham was grimly quiet.
+When it was over, Barrington rose, and the men
+who knew the care he had borne that year never
+paid him more willing homage than they did when
+he stood smiling down on them. As usual, he was
+immaculate in dress, erect, and quietly commanding;
+but, in spite of its smile, his face seemed worn, and
+there were thickening wrinkles, which told of anxiety,
+about his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Another year has gone, and we have met again
+to celebrate with gratefulness the fulfilment of the
+promise made when the world was young,” he
+said. “We do well to be thankful, but I think
+humility becomes us, too. While we doubted, the
+sun and the rain have been with us for a sign that,
+though men grow faint-hearted and spare their
+toil, seed time and harvest shall not fail.”</p>
+
+<p>It was the first time Colonel Barrington had spoken
+in quite that strain, and when he paused a moment
+there was a curious stillness, for those who heard
+him noticed an unusual tremor in his voice. There
+was also a gravity that was not far removed from
+sadness in his face when he went on again, but the
+intentness of his retainers would have been greater
+had they known that two separate detachments
+of police troopers were then riding toward Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>“The year has brought its changes and set its
+mark deeply on some of us,” he said. “We cannot
+recall it, or retrieve our blunders, but we can hope
+they will be forgiven us, and endeavour to avoid
+them again. This is not the fashion in which I had
+meant to speak to you to-night, but after the bounty
+showered upon us I feel my responsibility. The
+law is unchangeable. The man who would have
+bread to eat or sell must toil for it, and I, in disregard
+of it, bade you hold your hand. Well, we have had
+our lesson, and we will be wiser another time; but I
+have felt that my usefulness as your leader is slipping
+away from me. This year has shown me that I am
+getting an old man.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane kicked the foot of a lad beside him, and
+glanced at the piano as he stood up.</p>
+
+<p>“Sir,” he said simply, “although we have differed
+about trifles and may do again, we don’t want a
+better one—and if we did, we couldn’t find him.”</p>
+
+<p>A chord from the piano rang through the approving
+murmurs, and the company rose to their feet before
+the lad had beaten out the first bar of the jingling
+rhythm. Then the voices took it up, and the great
+hall shook to the rafters with the last “Nobody can
+deny.”</p>
+
+<p>Trite as it was, Barrington saw the darker flush
+in the bronzed faces, and there was a shade of warmer
+colour in his own as he went on again.</p>
+
+<p>“The things one feels the most are those one can
+least express, and I will not try to tell you how I
+value your confidence,” he said. “Still, the fact
+remains that sooner or later I must let the reins
+fall into younger hands, and there is a man here who
+will, I fancy, lead you farther than you would ever
+go with me. Times change, and he can teach
+you how those who would do the most for the Dominion
+need live to-day. He is also, and I am glad of it,
+one of us, for traditions do not wholly lose their
+force, and we know that blood will tell. That
+this year has not ended hi disaster irretrievable is
+due to our latest comrade, Lance Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>This time there were no musical honours or need
+of them, for a shout went up that called forth an
+answering rattle from the cedar panelling. It was flung
+back from table to table up and down the great room,
+and when the men sat down flushed and breathless,
+their eyes still shining, the one they admitted had
+saved Silverdale rose up quietly at the foot of the
+table. The hand he laid on the snowy cloth shook
+a little, and the bronze that generally suffused it
+was less noticeable in his face. All who saw it felt
+that something unusual was coming, and Maud
+Barrington leaned forward a trifle with a curious
+throbbing of her heart.</p>
+
+<p>“Comrades! It is, I think, the last time you
+will hear the term from me,” he said—“I am glad
+that we have made and won a good fight at Silverdale,
+because it may soften your most warranted resentment
+when you think of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Every eye was turned upon him, and an expression
+of bewilderment crept into the faces, while a lad
+who sat next to him touched his arm reassuringly.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll feel your feet in a moment, but that’s a
+curious fashion of putting it,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned to Barrington, and stood silent a
+moment. He saw Maud Barrington’s face showing
+strained and intent, but less bewildered than the
+others, and that of her aunt, which seemed curiously
+impassive, and a little thrill ran through him. It
+passed, and once more he only saw the leader of
+Silverdale.</p>
+
+<p>“Sir,” he said, “I did you a wrong when I came
+here, and with your convictions you would never
+tolerate me as your successor.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a rustle of fabric as some of the women
+moved, and a murmur of uncontrollable astonishment,
+while those who noticed it remembered Barrington’s
+gasp. It expressed absolute bewilderment,
+but in another moment he smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down, Lance,” he said. “You need make
+no speeches. We expect better things from you.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stood very still. “It was the simple
+truth I told you, sir,” he said. “Don’t make it
+too hard for me.”</p>
+
+<p>Just then there was a disturbance at the rear of
+the room, and a man, who shook off the grasp of one
+that followed him, came in. He moved forward
+with uneven steps, and then, resting his hand on a
+chair-back, faced about and looked at Witham.
+The dust was thick upon his clothes, but it was his
+face that seized and held attention. It was horribly
+pallid, save for the flush that showed in either
+cheek, and his half-closed eyes were dazed.</p>
+
+<p>“I heard them cheering,” he said. “Couldn’t
+find you at your homestead. You should have sent
+the five hundred dollars. They would have saved
+you this.”</p>
+
+<p>The defective utterance would alone have attracted
+attention, and, with the man’s attitude, was very
+significant, but it was equally evident to most of
+those who watched him that he was also struggling
+with some infirmity. Western hospitality has, however,
+no limit, and one of the younger men drew out
+a chair.</p>
+
+<p>“Hadn’t you better sit down, and if you want anything
+to eat we’ll get it you,” he said. “Then you
+can tell us what your errand is.”</p>
+
+<p>The man made a gesture of negation, and pointed
+to Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“I came to find a friend of mine. They told me
+at his homestead that he was here,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>There was an impressive silence, until Colonel Barrington
+glanced at Witham, who still stood, quietly
+impassive, at the foot of the table.</p>
+
+<p>“You know our visitor?” he said. “The Grange
+is large enough to give a stranger shelter.”</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed. “Of course, he does! It’s my
+place he’s living in!”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington turned again to Witham and his face
+seemed to have grown a trifle stern.</p>
+
+<p>“Who is this man?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham looked steadily in front of him, vacantly
+noticing the rows of faces turned towards him under
+the big lamps. “If he had waited a few minutes
+longer, you would have known,” he said. “He is
+Lance Courthorne!”</p>
+
+<p>This time the murmurs implied incredulity, but
+the man who stood swaying a little with his hand
+on the chair, and a smile in his half-closed eyes, made
+an ironical inclination.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s evident you don’t believe it, or wish to.
+Still, it’s true,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>One of the men nearest him rose and quietly pushed
+him into the chair.</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down in the meanwhile,” he said dryly. “By
+and by, Colonel Barrington will talk to you.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington thanked him with a gesture, and
+glanced at the rest. “One would have preferred to
+carry out this inquiry more privately,” he said, very
+slowly, but with hoarse distinctness. “Still, you
+have already heard so much.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane nodded. “I fancy you are right, sir. Because
+we have known and respected the man who
+has, at least, done a good deal for us, it would be
+better that we should hear the rest.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington made a little gesture of agreement, and
+once more fixed his eyes on Witham. “Then will
+you tell us who you are?”</p>
+
+<p>“A struggling prairie farmer,” said Witham quietly.
+“The son of an English country doctor, who died in
+penury, and one who, from your point of view, could
+never have been entitled to more than courteous
+toleration from any of you.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped, but—for the astonishment was passing—there
+was negation in the murmurs which followed,
+while somebody said, “Go on!”</p>
+
+<p>Dane stood up. “I fancy our comrade is mistaken,”
+he said. “Whatever he may have been,
+we recognize our debt to him. Still, I think he owes
+us a more complete explanation.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Maud Barrington, sitting where all could see
+her, signed imperiously to Alfreton, who was on his
+feet next moment, with Macdonald and more of the
+men following him.</p>
+
+<p>“I,” he said with a little ring in his voice and a
+flush in his young face, “owe him everything, and
+I’m not the only one. This, it seems to me, is the
+time to acknowledge it.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington checked him with a gesture. “Sit
+down, all of you. Painful and embarrassing as it is,
+now we have gone so far, this affair must be elucidated.
+It would be better if you told us more.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham drew back a chair, and when Courthorne
+moved, the man who sat next to him laid a grasp on
+his arm. “You will oblige me by not making any
+remarks just now,” he said dryly. “When Colonel
+Barrington wants to hear anything from you he’ll
+ask you.”</p>
+
+<p>“There is little more,” said Witham. “I could
+see no hope in the old country, and came out to this
+one with one hundred pounds, a distant connexion
+lent me. That sum will not go very far anywhere,
+as I found when, after working for other men, I bought
+stock and took up Government land. To hear how
+I tried to do three men’s work for six weary years,
+and at times went for months together half-fed,
+might not interest you, though it has its bearing on
+what came after. The seasons were against me, and
+I had not the dollars to tide me over the time of
+drought and blizzard until a good one came. Still,
+though my stock died, and I could scarcely haul in
+the little wheat the frost and hail left me, with
+my worn-out team, I held on, feeling that I could
+achieve prosperity if I once had the chances of other
+men.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped a moment, and Macdonald poured out
+a glass of wine and passed it across to him in a fashion
+that made the significance of what he did evident.</p>
+
+<p>“We know what kind of a struggle you made by
+what we have seen at Silverdale,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham put the glass aside, and turned once more
+to Colonel Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” he said, “until Courthorne crossed my
+path, I had done no wrong, and I was in dire need of
+the money that tempted me to take his offer. He
+made a bargain with me that I should ride his horse
+and personate him, that the police troopers might
+leave him unsuspected to lead his comrades running
+whisky, while they followed me. I kept my part
+of the bargain, and it cost me what I fancy I can never
+recover, unless the trial I shall shortly face will take
+the stain from me. While I passed for him your
+lawyer found me, and I had no choice between being
+condemned as a criminal for what Courthorne had
+in the meanwhile done, or continuing the deception.
+He had, as soon as I had left him, taken my horse
+and garments, so that if seen by the police they would
+charge me. I could not take your money, but, though
+Courthorne was apparently drowned I did wrong
+when I came to Silverdale. For a time the opportunities
+dazzled me; ambition drew me on, and I
+knew what I could do.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped again, and once more there was a soft
+rustle of dresses, and a murmur, as those who listened
+gave inarticulate expression to their feelings. Moving
+a little, he looked steadily at Maud Barrington,
+and her aunt, who sat close together.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” he said very slowly, “it was borne in
+upon me that I could not persist in deceiving you.
+Courthorne, I fancied, could not return to trouble
+me, but the confidence that little by little you placed
+in me rendered it out of the question. Still, I saw
+that I could save some at least at Silverdale from
+drifting to disaster, and there was work for me here
+which would go a little way in reparation, and now
+that it is done I was about to bid you good-bye and
+ask you not to think too hardly of me.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment’s intense silence until once
+more Dane rose up, and pointed to Courthorne sitting
+with half-closed eyes, dusty, partly dazed by indulgence,
+and with the stamp of dissolute living on him,
+in his chair. Then, he glanced at Witham’s bronzed
+face, which showed quietly resolute at the bottom
+of the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Whatever we would spare you and ourselves,
+sir, we must face the truth,” he said. “Which of
+these men was needed at Silverdale?”</p>
+
+<p>Again the murmurs rose up, but Witham sat silent,
+his pulses throbbing with a curious exultation. He
+had seen the colour creep into Maud Barrington’s
+face, and her aunt’s eyes, when he told her what had
+prompted him to leave Silverdale, and knew they
+understood him. Then, in the stillness that followed,
+the drumming of hoofs rose from the prairie. It grew
+louder, and when another sound became audible
+too, more than one of those who listened recognized
+the jingle of accoutrements. Courthorne rose unsteadily,
+and made for the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I think,” he said with a curious laugh, “I must
+be going. I don’t know whether the troopers want
+me or your comrade.”</p>
+
+<p>A lad sprang to his feet, and as he ran to the door
+called “Stop him!”</p>
+
+<p>In another moment Dane had caught his arm,
+and his voice rang through the confusion, as everybody
+turned or rose.</p>
+
+<p>“Keep back all of you,” he said. “Let him go!”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne was outside by this time, and only
+those who reached the door before Dane closed it
+heard a faint beat of hoofs as somebody rode quietly
+away beneath the bluff, while as the rest clustered
+together, wondering, a minute or two later, Corporal
+Payne, flecked with spume and covered with dust
+came in. He raised his hand in salutation to Colonel
+Barrington, who sat very grim in face in his chair at
+the head of the table.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry, sir, but it’s my duty to apprehend
+Lance Courthorne,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“You have a warrant?” asked Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir,” said the corporal.</p>
+
+<p>There was intense silence for a moment. Then
+the Colonel’s voice broke through it very quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“He is not here,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Payne made a little deprecatory gesture. “We
+knew he came here. It is my duty to warn you that
+proceedings will be taken against any one concealing or
+harbouring him.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington rose up very stiffly, with a little grey
+tinge in his face, but words seemed to fail him, and
+Dane laid his hand on the corporal’s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” he said grimly, “don’t exceed it. If
+you believe he’s here, we will give you every opportunity
+of finding him.”</p>
+
+<p>Payne called to a comrade outside, who was, as it
+happened, new to the force, and they spent at least
+ten minutes questioning the servants and going up
+and down the house. Then, as they glanced into
+the general room, the trooper looked deprecatingly
+at his officer.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancied I heard somebody riding by the bluff
+just before we reached the house,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Payne wheeled round with a flash in his eyes.
+“Then you have lost us our man. Out with you,
+and tell Jackson to try the bluff for a trail.”</p>
+
+<p>They had gone in another moment, and Witham
+still sat at the foot of the table and Barrington at the
+head, while the rest of the company were scattered,
+some wonderingly silent, though others talked in
+whispers, about the room. As yet they felt only
+consternation and astonishment.</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink24'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XXIV—COURTHORNE MAKES REPARATION</a></h2>
+
+<p>The silence in the big room had grown oppressive
+when Barrington raised his head and sat stiffly upright.</p>
+
+<p>“What has happened has been a blow to me, and
+I am afraid I am scarcely equal to entertaining you
+to-night,” he said. “I should, however, like Dane
+and Macdonald, and one or two of the older men,
+to stay a while. There is still, I fancy, a good deal
+for us to do.”</p>
+
+<p>The others turned towards the door, but as they
+passed Witham, Miss Barrington turned and touched
+his shoulder. The man, looking up suddenly, saw
+her and her niece standing close beside her.</p>
+
+<p>“Madam,” he said hoarsely, though it was Maud
+Barrington he glanced at, “the comedy is over.
+Well, I promised you an explanation, and now you
+have it you will try not to think too bitterly of me.
+I cannot ask you to forgive me.”</p>
+
+<p>The little white-haired lady pointed to the ears of
+wheat which stood gleaming ruddy-bronze in front
+of him.</p>
+
+<p>“That,” she said very quietly, “will make it easier.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington said nothing, but every one in the
+room saw her standing a moment beside the man
+with a little flush in her face and no blame in her eyes.
+Then she passed on, but, short as it was, the pause
+had been very significant, for it seemed that whatever
+the elders of the community might decide, the two
+women, whose influence was supreme at Silverdale,
+had given the impostor absolution.</p>
+
+<p>The girl could not analyse her feelings, but through
+them all a vague relief was uppermost; for whatever
+he had been, it was evident the man had done one
+wrong only, and daringly, and that was a good deal
+easier to forgive than several incidents in Courthorne’s
+past would have been. Then she was conscious
+that Miss Barrington’s eyes were upon her.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt,” she said with a little tremor in her voice,
+“it is almost bewildering. Still one seemed to feel
+that what that man has done could never have been
+the work of Lance Courthorne.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington made no answer, but her face was
+very grave; and just then those nearest it drew back
+a little from the door. A trooper stood outside it,
+his carbine glinting in the light, and another was
+silhouetted against the sky, sitting motionless in
+his saddle further back on the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>“The police are still there,” said somebody.</p>
+
+<p>One by one they passed out under the trooper’s
+gaze, but there was the usual delay in harnessing and
+saddling, and the first vehicle had scarcely rolled
+away when again the beat of hoofs and thin jingle
+of steel came portentously out of the silence. Maud
+Barrington shivered a little as she heard it.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, the few who remained had seated
+themselves about Colonel Barrington. When there
+was quietness again he glanced at Witham, who still
+sat at the foot of the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you anything more to tell us?” he asked.
+“These gentlemen are here to advise me if necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham quietly. “I shall probably
+leave Silverdale before morning, and have now to
+hand you a statement of my agreement with Courthorne
+and the result of my farming here, drawn up
+by a Winnipeg accountant. Here is also a document
+in which I have taken the liberty of making
+you and Dane my assigns. You will, as authorized
+by it, pay to Courthorne the sum due to him, and
+with your consent, which you have power to withhold,
+I propose taking one thousand dollars only of
+the balance that remains to me. I have it here now,
+and in the meanwhile surrender it to you. Of the
+rest, you will make whatever use that appears desirable
+for the general benefit of Silverdale. Courthorne
+has absolutely no claim upon it.”</p>
+
+<p>He laid a wallet on the table, and Dane glanced
+at Colonel Barrington, who nodded when he returned
+it unopened.</p>
+
+<p>“We will pass it without counting. You accept
+the charge, sir?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Barrington gravely. “It seems it
+is forced on me. Well, we will glance through the
+statement.”</p>
+
+<p>For at least ten minutes nobody spoke, and then
+Dane said, “There are prairie farmers who would
+consider what he is leaving behind him a competence.”</p>
+
+<p>“If this agreement, which was apparently verbal,
+is confirmed by Courthorne, the entire sum rightfully
+belongs to the man he made his tenant,” said Barrington;
+and Macdonald smiled gravely as he
+glanced at Witham.</p>
+
+<p>“I think we can accept the statement that it was
+made, without question, sir,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his head. “I claim one thousand
+dollars as the fee of my services, and they should be
+worth that much; but I will take no more.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are we not progressing a little too rapidly, sir?”
+said Dane. “It seems to me we have yet to decide
+whether it is necessary that the man who has done
+so much for us should leave Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham smiled a trifle grimly. “I think,” he said,
+“that question will very shortly be answered for you.”</p>
+
+<p>Macdonald held his hand up, and a rapid thud of
+hoofs came faintly through the silence.</p>
+
+<p>“Troopers! They are coming here,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham. “I fancy they will relieve
+you from any further difficulty.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane strode to one of the windows, and glanced
+at Colonel Barrington as he pulled back the catch.
+Witham, however, shook his head, and a little flush
+crept into Dane’s bronzed face.</p>
+
+<p>“Sorry. Of course, you are right,” he said. “It
+will be better that they should acquit you.”</p>
+
+<p>No one moved for a few more minutes, and then
+with a trooper behind him Sergeant Stimson came
+in, and laid his hand on Witham’s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“I have a warrant for your apprehension, Farmer
+Witham,” he said. “You probably know the charge
+against you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham, simply. “I hope to refute
+it. I will come with you.”</p>
+
+<p>He went out, and Barrington stared at the men
+about him. “I did not catch the name before.
+That was the man who shot the police trooper in
+Alberta?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, sir,” said Dane very quietly. “Nothing
+would induce me to believe it of him.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington looked at him in bewilderment. “But
+he must have done—unless,” he said, and ended with
+a little gasp. “Good Lord! There was the faint
+resemblance, and they changed horses—it is horrible.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane’s eyes were very compassionate as he laid
+his hand gently on his leader’s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Sir,” he said, “you have our sympathy, and I
+am sorry that to offer it is all we can do. Now, I
+think, we have stayed too long already.”</p>
+
+<p>They went out and left Colonel Barrington sitting
+alone with a grey face at the head of the table.</p>
+
+<p>It was a minute or two later when Witham swung
+himself into the saddle at the door of the Grange;
+All the vehicles had not left as yet, and there was a
+little murmur of sympathy—when the troopers
+closed in about him. Still before they rode away,
+one of the men wheeled his horse aside, and Witham
+saw Maud Barrington standing bareheaded by his
+stirrup. The moonlight showed that her face was
+impassive but curiously pale.</p>
+
+<p>“We could not let you go without a word; and
+you will come back to us with your innocence made
+clear,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Her voice had a little ring in it that carried far, and
+her companions heard her. What Witham said, they
+could not hear, and he did not remember it, but he
+swung his hat off, and those who saw the girl at his
+stirrup recognized with confusion that she alone had
+proclaimed her faith, while they had stood aside from
+him. Then the Sergeant raised his hand and the
+troopers rode forward with their prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, Courthorne was pressing south
+for the American frontier and daylight was just
+creeping across the prairie when the pursuers, who had
+found his trail and the ranch he obtained a fresh
+horse at, had sight of him. There were three of them,
+riding wearily, grimed with dust, when a lonely
+mounted figure showed for a moment on the crest of a
+rise. In another minute it dipped into a hollow, and
+Corporal Payne smiled grimly.</p>
+
+<p>“I think we have him now. The creek can’t be
+far away, and he’s west of the bridge,” he said.
+“While we try to head him off, you’ll follow
+behind him Hilton.”</p>
+
+<p>One trooper sent the spurs in and, while the others
+swung off, rode straight on. Courthorne was at
+least a mile from them, but they were nearer the bridge,
+and Payne surmised that his jaded horse would fail
+him if he essayed to ford the creek and climb the
+farther side of the deep ravine it flowed through.
+They saw nothing of him when they swept across the
+rise, for here and there a grove of willows stretched
+out across the prairie from the sinuous band of trees
+in front of them. These marked the river hollow,
+and Payne knowing that the chase might be ended
+in a few more minutes did not spare the spur. He
+also remembered, as he tightened his grip on the
+bridle, the white face of Trooper Shannon flecked
+with the drifting snow.</p>
+
+<p>The bluff that rose steadily higher came back to
+them, willow and straggling birch flashed by, and at
+last Payne drew bridle where a rutted trail wound
+down between the trees to the bridge in the hollow.
+A swift glance showed him that a mounted man could
+scarcely make his way between them and he smiled
+dryly as he signed to his companion.</p>
+
+<p>“Back your horse clear of the trail,” he said; and
+there was a rattle as he flung his carbine across the
+saddle. “With Hilton behind him, he’ll ride straight
+into our hands.”</p>
+
+<p>He wheeled his horse in among the birches, and
+then sat still, with fingers that quivered a little on
+the carbine stock, until a faint drumming rose from
+the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s coming!” said the trooper. “Hilton’s
+hanging on to him!”</p>
+
+<p>Payne made no answer, and the sound that rang
+more loudly every moment through the greyness of
+the early daylight was not pleasant to hear. Man’s
+vitality is near its lowest about that hour, and the
+troopers had ridden furiously the long night through,
+while one of them, who knew Lance Courthorne,
+surmised that there was grim work before him.
+Still, though he shivered as a little chilly wind shook
+the birch twigs, he set his lips, and once more remembered
+the comrade who had ridden far and kept many
+a lonely vigil with him.</p>
+
+<p>Then a mounted man appeared in the space
+between the trees. His horse was jaded, and he rode
+loosely, swaying once or twice in his saddle; but he
+came straight on, and there was a jingle and rattle
+as the troopers swung out into the trail. The man
+saw them, for he glanced over his shoulder, as if at
+the rider who appeared behind, and then sent the
+spurs in again.</p>
+
+<p>“Pull him up,” cried Corporal Payne, and his voice
+was a little strained. “Stop right where you are
+before we fire on you!”</p>
+
+<p>The man must have seen the carbines, for he raised
+himself a trifle, and Payne saw his face under the
+flapping hat. It was drawn and grey, but there was
+no sign of yielding or consternation in the half-closed
+eyes. Then he lurched in his saddle, as from exhaustion
+or weariness, and straightened himself
+again with both hands on the bridle. Payne saw
+his heels move and the spurs drip red, and slid his
+left hand further along the carbine stock. The trail
+was steep and narrow. A horseman could scarcely
+turn in it, and the stranger was coming on at a gallop.</p>
+
+<p>“He will have it,” said the trooper hoarsely.
+“If he rides one of us down he may get away.”</p>
+
+<p>“We have got to stop him,” said Corporal Payne.</p>
+
+<p>Once more the swaying man straightened himself,
+flung his head back, and with a little breathless laugh
+drove his horse furiously at Payne. He was very
+close now, and his face showed livid under the smearing
+dust; but his lips were drawn up in a little bitter
+smile as he rode straight upon the levelled carbines.
+Payne at least understood it, and the absence of flung-up
+hand or cry. Courthorne’s inborn instincts were
+strong to the end.</p>
+
+<p>There was a hoarse shout from the trooper, and no
+answer, and a carbine flashed. Then Courthorne
+loosed the bridle, reeled sideways from the saddle,
+rolled half round with one foot in the stirrup and his
+head upon the ground, and was left behind, while the
+riderless horse and pursuer swept past the two men
+who, avoiding them by a hairsbreadth, sat motionless
+a moment in the thin drifting smoke.</p>
+
+<p>Then Corporal Payne swung himself down, and,
+while the trooper followed, stooped over the man who
+lay, a limp huddled object, in the trail. He blinked
+up at them out of eyes that were almost closed.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you have done for me,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Payne glanced at his comrade. “Push on to the
+settlement,” he said. “They’ve a doctor there.
+Bring him and Harland the magistrate out.”</p>
+
+<p>The trooper seemed glad to mount and ride away,
+and Payne once more bent over the wounded man.</p>
+
+<p>“Very sorry,” he said. “Still, you see, you left
+me no other means of stopping you. Now, is there
+anything I can do for you?”</p>
+
+<p>A little wry smile crept into Courthorne’s face.
+“Don’t worry,” he said. “I had no wish to wait
+for the jury, and you can’t get at an injury that’s
+inside me.”</p>
+
+<p>He said nothing more, and it seemed a very long
+while to Corporal Payne and Trooper Hilton, who
+rejoined him, before a wagon with two men in it
+beside the trooper came jolting up the trail. They
+got out, and one of them, who was busy with Courthorne
+for some minutes, nodded to Payne.</p>
+
+<p>“Any time in the next twelve hours. He may
+last that long,” he said. “Nobody’s going to
+worry him now, but I’ll see if I can revive him
+a little when we get to Adamson’s. It can’t be
+more than a league away.”</p>
+
+<p>They lifted Courthorne, who appeared insensible,
+into the wagon, and Payne signed to Trooper Hilton.
+“Take my horse and tell Colonel Barrington. Let
+him understand there’s no time to lose. Then you
+can bring Stimson.”</p>
+
+<p>The tired lad hoisted himself into his saddle and
+groaned a little as he rode away, but he did his
+errand, and late that night Barrington and Dane drove
+up to a lonely homestead. A man led them into a
+room where a limp figure was lying on a bed.</p>
+
+<p>“Been kind of sleeping most of the day, but the
+doctor has given him something that has wakened
+him,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Barrington returned Payne’s greeting and sat down
+with Dane close beside him, while, when the wounded
+man raised his head, the doctor spoke softly to the
+magistrate from the settlement a league or two away.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy he can talk to you, but you had better
+be quick if you wish to ask him anything,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne seemed to have heard him, for he
+smiled a little as he glanced at Barrington. “I’m
+afraid it will hurt you to hear what I have to tell this
+gentleman,” he said. “Now, I want you to listen
+carefully, and every word put down. Doctor, a
+little more brandy.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington apparently would have spoken, but
+while the doctor held a glass to the bloodless lips the
+magistrate, who took up a strip of paper, signed to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll have it in due form. Give him that book,
+doctor,” he said. “Now, repeat after me, and then
+we’ll take your testimony.”</p>
+
+<p>It was done, and a flicker of irony showed in Courthorne’s
+half-closed eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“You feel more sure of me after that?” he said,
+in a voice that was very faint and strained. “Still,
+you see, I could gain nothing by deviating from the
+truth now. Well, I shot Trooper Shannon. You’ll
+have the date in the warrant. Don’t know if it will
+seem strange to you, but I forget it. I borrowed
+Farmer Witham’s horse and rifle without his knowledge,
+though I had paid him a trifle to personate
+me and draw the troopers off the whisky-runners.
+That was Witham’s only complicity. The troopers,
+who fancied they were chasing him, followed me until
+his horse which I was riding went through the ice;
+but Witham was in Montana at the time, and did
+not know that I was alive until a very little while
+ago. Now, you can straighten that up and read it
+out to me.”</p>
+
+<p>The magistrate’s pen scratched noisily in the stillness
+of the room, but before he had finished, Sergeant
+Stimson, hot and dusty, came in. Then he raised
+his hand, and for a while his voice rose and fell
+monotonously until Courthorne nodded.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right,” he said. “I’ll sign.”</p>
+
+<p>The doctor raised him a trifle, and moistened his
+lips with brandy as he gave him the pen. It scratched
+for a moment or two, and then fell from his relaxing
+fingers, while the man who took the paper wrote across
+the foot of it, and then would have handed it to
+Colonel Barrington, but that Dane quietly laid his
+hand upon it.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he said. “If you want another witness,
+take me.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington thanked him with a gesture; and Courthorne,
+looking round, saw Stimson.</p>
+
+<p>“You have been very patient, Sergeant, and it’s
+rough on you that the one man you can lay your
+hands upon is slipping away from you,” he said.
+“You’ll see by my deposition that Witham thought
+me as dead as the rest of you did.”</p>
+
+<p>Stimson nodded to the magistrate. “I heard what
+was read, and it is confirmed by the facts I have
+picked up,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then Courthorne turned to Barrington. “I sympathize
+with you, sir,” he said, “This must be
+horribly mortifying; but, you see, Witham once
+stopped my horse backing over a bridge into a gully
+when just to hold his hand would have rid him of me.
+You will not grudge me the one good turn I have
+probably done any man, when I shall assuredly not
+have the chance of doing another.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington winced a little, for he recognized the
+irony in the failing voice; but he rose and moved
+towards the bed.</p>
+
+<p>“Lance,” he said, a trifle hoarsely, “it is not that
+which makes what has happened horrible to me, and
+I am only glad that you have righted this man. Your
+father had many claims on me, and things might
+have gone differently if, when you came out to
+Canada, I had done my duty by his son.”</p>
+
+<p>Courthorne smiled a little, but without bitterness.
+“It would have made no difference, sir; and, after
+all, I led the life that suited me. By and by you will
+be grateful to me. I sent you a man who will bring
+prosperity to Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned to Stimson, and his voice sank
+almost beyond hearing as he said, “Sergeant, remember
+Witham fancied I was dead.”</p>
+
+<p>He moved his head a trifle, and the doctor, stooping
+over him, signed to the rest, who went out
+except Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>It was some hours later, and very cold, when Barrington
+came softly into the room where Dane lay
+half asleep in a big chair. The latter glanced at him
+with a question in his eyes, and the Colonel nodded
+very gravely.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. “He has slipped out of the
+troopers’ hands and beyond our reproaches—but I
+think the last thing he did will count for a little.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink25'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XXV—WITHAM RIDES AWAY</a></h2>
+
+<p>The first of the snow was driving across the prairie
+before a bitter wind when Maud Barrington stood by a
+window of the Grange looking out into the night. The
+double casements rattled, the curtains behind her
+moved with the icy draughts, until, growing weary
+of watching the white flakes whirl past, she drew
+them to and walked slowly towards a mirror. Then
+a faint tinge of pink crept into her cheeks, and a
+softness that became her into her eyes. They, however,
+grew critical as she smoothed back a tress of
+lustrous hair a trifle from her forehead, straightened
+the laces at neck and wrist, and shook into more
+flowing lines the long black dress. Maud Barrington
+was not unduly vain, but it was some time before
+she seemed contented, and one would have surmised
+that she desired to appear her best that night.</p>
+
+<p>The result was beyond cavil in its artistic simplicity,
+for the girl, knowing the significance that
+trifles have at times, had laid aside every adornment
+that might hint at wealth, and the sombre draperies
+alone emphasized the polished whiteness of her face
+and neck. Still, and she did not know whether she
+was pleased or otherwise at this, the mirror had
+shown the stamp which revealed itself even in passive
+pose and poise of head. It was her birthright,
+and would not be disguised.</p>
+
+<p>Then she drew a low chair towards the stove, and
+once more the faint colour crept into her face as she
+took up a note. It was laconic, and requested permission
+to call at the Grange, but Maud Barrington
+was not deceived, and recognized the consideration
+each word had cost the man who wrote it. Afterwards
+she glanced at her watch, raised it with a little
+gesture of impatience to make sure it had not stopped,
+and sat still, listening to the moaning of the wind,
+until the door opened, and Miss Barrington came in.
+She glanced at her niece, who felt that her eyes had
+noticed each detail of her somewhat unusual dress,
+but said nothing until the younger woman turned
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>“They would scarcely come to-night, aunt,” she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington, listening a moment, heard the
+wind that whirled the snow about the lonely building,
+but smiled incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>“I fancy you are wrong, and I wish my brother
+were here,” she said. “We could not refuse Mr.
+Witham permission to call, but whatever passes between
+us will have more than its individual significance.
+Anything we tacitly promise the others will
+agree to, and I feel the responsibility of deciding for
+Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington went out; but her niece, who
+understood her smile and that she had received a
+warning, sat with a strained expression in her eyes.
+The prosperity of Silverdale had been dear to her,
+but she knew she must let something that was dearer
+still slip away from her, or, since they must come from
+her, trample on her pride as she made the first advances.
+It seemed a very long while before there
+was a knocking at the outer door, and she rose with
+a little quiver when light steps came up the stairway.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile, two men stood beside the stove
+in the hall until an English maid returned to them.</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel Barrington is away, but Miss Barrington
+and Miss Maud are at home,” she said. “Will you
+go forward into the morning-room when you have
+taken off your furs?”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you know Barrington was not here?” asked
+Witham, when the maid moved away.</p>
+
+<p>Dane appeared embarrassed. “The fact is, I did.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham dryly, “I am a little astonished
+you did not think fit to tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane’s face flushed, but he laid his hand on his
+comrade’s arm. “No,” he said. “I didn’t. Now,
+listen to me for the last time, Witham. I’ve not
+been blind, you see; and, as I told you, your comrades
+have decided that they wish you to stay. Can’t
+you sink your confounded pride and take what is
+offered you?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham shook his grasp off, and there was weariness
+in his face. “You need not go through it all
+again. I made my decision a long while ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Dane, with a gesture of hopelessness,
+“I’ve done all I could and, since you are going on,
+I’ll look at that trace clip while you tell Miss Barrington.
+I mean the younger one.”</p>
+
+<p>“The harness can wait,” said Witham. “You are
+coming with me.”</p>
+
+<p>A little grim smile crept into Dane’s eyes. “I am
+not. I wouldn’t raise a finger to help you now,” he
+said, and retreated hastily.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>It was five minutes later when Witham walked
+quietly into Maud Barrington’s presence, and sat
+down when the girl signed to him. He wondered if
+she guessed how his heart was beating.</p>
+
+<p>“It is very good of you to receive me, but I felt I
+could not slip away without acknowledging the
+kindness you and Miss Barrington have shown me,”
+he said. “I did not know Colonel Barrington was
+away.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled a little. “Or you would not have
+come? Then we should have had no opportunity of
+congratulating you on your triumphant acquittal.
+You see it must be mentioned.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid there was a miscarriage of justice,”
+said Witham quietly. “Still, though it is a difficult
+subject, the deposition of the man I supplanted went
+a long way, and the police did not seem desirous of
+pressing a charge against me. Perhaps I should have
+insisted on implicating myself, but you would scarcely
+have looked for that after what you now know of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington braced herself for an effort, though
+she was outwardly very calm. “No,” she said, “no
+one would have looked for it from any man placed as
+you were, and you are purposing to do more than is
+required of you. Why will you go away?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am a poor man,” said Witham. “One must
+have means to live at Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the girl with a soft laugh which cost
+her a good deal, “it is because you prefer poverty,
+and you have at least one opportunity at Silverdale.
+Courthorne’s land was mine to all intents and purposes
+before it was his, and now it reverts to me. I owe him
+nothing, and he did not give it me. Will you stay and
+farm it on whatever arrangement Dane and Macdonald
+may consider equitable? My uncle’s hands are too
+full for him to attempt it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham, and his voice trembled a little.
+“Your friends would resent it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said the girl, “why have they urged you
+to stay?”</p>
+
+<p>“A generous impulse. They would repent of it
+by and by. I am not one of them, and they know it
+now, as I did at the beginning. No doubt they
+would be courteous, but you see a half-contemptuous
+toleration would gall me.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a little smile on Maud Barrington’s lips,
+but it was not in keeping with the tinge in her cheek
+and the flash in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“I once told you that you were poor at subterfuge,
+and you know you are wronging them,” she said.
+“You also know that even if they were hostile to you,
+you could stay and compel them to acknowledge you.
+I fancy you once admitted as much to me. What has become
+of this pride of the democracy you showed me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham made a deprecatory gesture. “You must
+have laughed at me. I had not been long at Silverdale
+then,” he said dryly. “I should feel very lonely
+now. One man against long generations. Wouldn’t
+it be a trifle unequal?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington smiled again. “I did not laugh,
+and this is not England, though what you consider
+prejudices do not count for so much as they used to
+there, while there is, one is told quite frequently, no
+limit to what a man may attain to here, if he dares
+sufficiently.”</p>
+
+<p>A little quiver ran through Witham, and he rose
+and stood looking down on her, with one brown hand
+clenched on the table and the veins showing on his
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>“You would have me stay?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington met his eyes, for the spirit that
+was in her was the equal of his. “I would have you
+be yourself—what you were when you came here in
+defiance of Colonel Barrington, and again when you
+sowed the last acre of Courthorne’s land, while my
+friends, who are yours too, looked on wondering. Then
+you would stay—if it pleased you. Where has your
+splendid audacity gone?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham slowly straightened himself and the girl
+noticed the damp the struggle had brought there on
+his forehead, for he understood that if he would
+stretch out his hand and take it what he longed for
+might be his.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know, any more than I know where it
+came from, for until I met Courthorne I had never
+made a big venture in my life,” he said. “It seems
+it has served its turn and left me—for now there are
+things I am afraid to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“So you will go away and forget us?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham stood very still a moment, and the girl, who
+felt her heart beating noticed that his face was drawn.
+Still, she could go no further. Then he said very slowly,
+“I should be under the shadow always if I stay, and
+my friends would feel it even more deeply than I
+would do. I may win the right to come back again
+if I go away.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington made no answer, but both knew
+no further word could be spoken on that subject until,
+if fate ever willed it, the man returned again, and it
+was a relief when Miss Barrington came in with Dane.
+He glanced at his comrade keenly, and then, seeing
+the grimness in his face, quietly declined the white-haired
+lady’s offer of hospitality. Five minutes later the
+farewells were said and Maud Barrington stood with
+the stinging flakes whirling about her in the doorway,
+while the sleigh slid out into the filmy whiteness that
+drove across the prairie. When it vanished she turned
+back into the warmth and brightness with a little
+shiver and one hand tightly closed.</p>
+
+<p>The great room seemed very lonely when, while the
+wind moaned outside, she and her aunt sat down to
+dinner. Neither of them appeared communicative,
+and both felt it a relief when the meal was over.
+Then Maud Barrington smiled curiously as she rose
+and stood with hands stretched out towards the stove.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt,” she said, “Twoinette has twice asked me
+to go back to Montreal, and I think I will. The
+prairie is very dreary in the winter.”</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time when, as the whitened horses
+floundered through the lee of a bluff where there was
+shelter from the wind, the men in the sleigh found
+opportunity for speech.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” said Dane quietly, “I know that we have
+lost you, for a while at least. Will you ever come
+back, Witham?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham nodded. “Yes,” he said. “When time
+has done its work and Colonel Barrington asks me,
+if I can buy land enough to give me a standing at
+Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Dane, “will need a good many
+dollars, and you insisted on flinging those you had
+away. How are you going to make them?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” said Witham simply. “Still,
+by some means it will be done.”</p>
+
+<p>It was next day when he walked into Graham’s
+office at Winnipeg, and laughed when the broker
+who shook hands, passed the cigar box across to him.</p>
+
+<p>“We had better understand each other first,” he
+said. “You have heard what has happened to me,
+and will not find me a profitable customer to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“These cigars are the best in the city, or I wouldn’t
+ask you to take one,” said Graham dryly. “You
+understand me, anyway. Wait until I tell my clerk
+that if anybody comes round I’m busy.”</p>
+
+<p>A bell rang, a little window opened and shut again,
+and Witham smiled over his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to make thirty thousand dollars as soon
+as I can, and it seems to me there are going to be
+opportunities in this business. Do you know anybody
+who would take me as clerk or salesman?”</p>
+
+<p>Graham did not appear astonished.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll scarcely make them that way if I find you
+a berth at fifty a month,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham. “Still, I wouldn’t purpose
+keeping it for more than six months or so. By that
+time I should know a little about the business.”</p>
+
+<p>“Got any dollars now?”</p>
+
+<p>“One thousand,” said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Graham nodded. “Smoke that cigar out, and
+don’t worry me. I’ve got some thinking to do.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham took up a journal, and laid it down again
+twenty minutes later. “Well,” he said, “you think
+it’s too big a thing?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Graham. “It depends upon the man,
+and it might be done. Knowing the business goes a
+good way, and so does having dollars in hand, but
+there’s something that’s born in one man in a thousand
+that goes a long way further still. I can’t tell you
+what it is, but I know it when I see it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham, “you have seen this thing
+in me?”</p>
+
+<p>Graham nodded gravely. “Yes, sir, but you don’t
+want to get proud. You had nothing to do with the
+getting of it. It was given you. Now, we’re going to
+have a year that will not be forgotten by those who
+handle wheat and flour, and the men with the long
+heads will roll the dollars in. Well, I’ve no use for
+another clerk, and my salesman’s good enough for me,
+but if we can agree on the items I’ll take you for a
+partner.”</p>
+
+<p>The offer was made and accepted quietly, and when
+a rough draft of the arrangement had been agreed upon,
+Graham nodded as he lighted another cigar.</p>
+
+<p>“You may as well take hold at once, and there’s
+work ready now,” he said. “You’ve heard of the old
+St. Louis mills back on the edge of the bush country.
+Never did any good. Folks who had them were short
+of dollars, and didn’t know how they should be run.
+Well, I and two other men have bought them for a
+song, and while the place is tumbling in, the plant
+seems good. Now, I can get hold of orders for flour
+when I want them, and everybody with dollars to
+spare will plank them right into any concern handling
+food-stuffs this year. You go down to-morrow with
+an engineer, and, when you’ve got the mills running
+and orders coming in, we’ll sell out to a company if
+we don’t want them.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham sat silent a space, turning over a big bundle
+of plans and estimates. Then he said, “You’ll have
+to lay out a pile of dollars.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham laughed. “That’s going to be your affair.
+When you want them the dollars will be ready, and
+there’s only one condition. Every dollar we put down
+has got to bring another in.”</p>
+
+<p>“But,” said Witham, “I don’t know anything
+about milling.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Graham dryly, “you have got to
+learn. A good many men have got quite rich in this
+country running things they didn’t know much
+about when they took hold of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s one more point,” said Witham. “I must
+make those thirty thousand dollars soon, or they’ll
+be no great use to me, and when I have them I may
+want to leave you.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right,” said Graham. “By the time
+you’ve done it, you’ll have made sixty for me. We’ll
+go out and have some lunch to clinch the deal if you’re
+ready.”</p>
+
+<p>It might have appeared unusual in England, but it
+was much less so in a country where the specialization
+of professions is still almost unknown, and the man who
+can adapt himself attains ascendency, and on the
+morrow Witham arrived at a big wooden building
+beside a pine-shrouded river. It appeared falling to
+pieces, and the engineer looked disdainfully at some
+of the machinery, but, somewhat against his wishes,
+he sat up with his companion most of the night in a
+little log hotel, and orders that occasioned one of
+Graham’s associates consternation were mailed to the
+city next morning. Then machines came out by the
+carload, and men with tools in droves. Some of them
+murmured mutinously when they found they were
+expected to do as much as their leader who was not a
+tradesman, but these were forthwith sent back again,
+and the rest were willing to stay and earn the premium
+he promised them for rapid work.</p>
+
+<p>Before the frost grew Arctic, the building stood
+firm and the hammers rang inside it night and day
+until when the ice had bound the dam and lead the
+fires were lighted and the trials under steam again.
+It cost more than water, but buyers with orders
+from the East were clamouring for flour just then.
+For a fortnight Witham snatched his food in mouthfuls,
+and scarcely closed his eyes, when Graham
+found him pale and almost haggard when he came
+down with several men from the cities in response to
+a telegram. For an hour they moved up and down,
+watching whirring belt and humming roller, and then,
+whitened with the dust, stood very intent and quiet
+while one of them dipped up a little flour from the
+delivery hopper. His opinions on, and dealings in
+that product were famous in the land. He said nothing
+for several minutes, and then, brushing the white
+dust from his hands, turned with a little smile to
+Graham.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll have some baked, but I don’t know that
+there’s much use for it. This will grade a very good
+first,” he said. “You can book me the thousand
+two eighties for a beginning now.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham’s fingers trembled, but there was a twinkle
+in Graham’s eyes as he brought his hand down on his
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Gentlemen,” he said, “I was figuring right on
+this when I brought the champagne along. It was
+all I could do, but Imperial Tokay wouldn’t be good
+enough to rinse this dust down with, when every
+speck of it that’s on you means dollars by the handful
+rolling in.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a very contented and slightly hilarious party
+that went back to the city, but Witham sat down
+before a shaded lamp with a wet rag round his head
+when they left him, and bent over a sheaf of drawings
+until his eyes grew dim. Then he once more took up
+a little strip of paper that Graham had given him,
+and leaned forward with his arms upon the table.
+The mill was very silent at last, for of all who toiled
+in it that day one weary man alone sat awake, staring,
+with aching eyes, in front of him. There was, however,
+a little smile in them, for roseate visions floated
+before them. If the promise that strip of paper held
+out was redeemed, they might be materialized, for
+those who had toiled and wasted their substance that
+the eastern peoples might be fed would that year, at
+least, not go without their reward. Then he stretched
+out his arms wearily above his head.</p>
+
+<p>“It almost seems that what I have hoped for may
+be mine,” he said. “Still, there is a good deal to be
+done first, and not two hours left before I begin it
+to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<h2 class='chapter' id='clink26'><a href='#toc'>CHAPTER XXVI—REINSTATION</a></h2>
+
+<p>A year of tireless effort and some anxiety had passed
+since Witham had seen the first load of flour sent to
+the east, when he and Graham sat talking in their
+Winnipeg office. The products of the St. Louis mills
+were already in growing demand, and Graham appeared
+quietly contented as he turned over the letters before
+him. When he laid down the last one, however, he
+glanced at his companion somewhat anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>“We have got to fix up something soon,” he said.
+“I have booked all the St. Louis can turn out for
+six months ahead, and the syndicate is ready to take
+the business over, though I don’t know quite whether
+it would be wise to let them. It seems to me that
+milling is going to pay tolerably well for another year,
+and if I knew what you were wanting, it would suit me
+better.”</p>
+
+<p>“I told you I wanted thirty thousand dollars,”
+said Witham quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve got them,” said Graham. “When the
+next balance comes out you’ll have a good many
+more. The question is, what you’re going to do with
+them now they’re yours?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham took out a letter from Dane and passed it
+across to Graham. “I’m sorry to tell you the Colonel is
+getting no better,” it ran. “The specialist we brought
+in seems to think he will never be quite himself again,
+and now he has let the reins go, things are falling to
+pieces at Silverdale. Somebody left Atterly a pile of
+money, and he is going back to the old country,
+Carshalton is going, too; and, as they can’t sell out
+to any one we don’t approve of, the rest insisted on
+my seeing you. I purpose starting to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“What happened to Colonel Barrington?” asked
+Graham.</p>
+
+<p>“His sleigh turned over,” said Witham. “Horse
+trampled on him, and it was an hour or two before
+his hired man could get him under shelter.”</p>
+
+<p>“You would be content to turn farmer again?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think I would,” said Witham. “At least, at
+Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>Graham made a little grimace. “Well,” he said
+resignedly, “I guess it’s human nature; but I’m
+thankful now and then there’s nothing about me but
+my dollars that would take the eye of any young
+woman. I figure they’re kind of useful to wake up a
+man so he’ll stir round looking for something to offer
+one of them, but he is apt to find his business must go
+second when she has got it and him, and he has to
+waste on house fixings what would give a man a fair
+start in life. Still, it’s no use talking. What have
+you told him?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham laughed a little. “Nothing,” he said.
+“I will let him come, and you shall have my decision
+when I’ve been to Silverdale.”</p>
+
+<p>It was next day when Dane arrived at Winnipeg,
+and Witham listened gravely to all he had to tell him.</p>
+
+<p>“I have two questions to ask,” he said. “Would
+the others be unanimous in receiving me, and does
+Colonel Barrington know of your mission?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes to both,” said Dane. “We haven’t a man
+there who would not hold out his hand to you, and
+Barrington has been worrying and talking a good
+deal about you lately. He seems to fancy nothing
+has gone right at Silverdale since you left it, and
+others share his opinion. The fact is, the old man
+is losing his grip tolerably rapidly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham quietly, “I’ll go down with
+you, but I can make no promise until I have heard
+the others.”</p>
+
+<p>Dane smiled a little. “That is all I want. I don’t
+know whether I told you that Maud Barrington is
+there. Would to-morrow suit you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham. “I will come to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>It was early next morning when they stepped out
+of the stove-warmed car into the stinging cold of the
+prairie. Fur-clad figures, showing shapeless in the
+creeping light, clustered about them, and Witham
+felt himself thumped on the shoulders by mittened
+hands, while Alfreton’s young voice broke through
+the murmurs of welcome.</p>
+
+<p>“Let him alone while he’s hungry,” he said.
+“It’s the first time in its history they’ve had breakfast
+ready at this hour in the hotel, and it would not have
+been accomplished if I hadn’t spent most of yesterday
+playing cards with the man who keeps it and making
+love to the young women!”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s quite right,” said another lad. “When
+he takes his cap off you’ll see how one of them rewarded
+him. But come along, Witham. It—is—ready.”</p>
+
+<p>The greetings might, of course, have been expressed
+differently, but Witham also was not addicted to
+displaying all he felt, and the little ring in the lads’
+voices was enough for him. As they moved towards
+the hotel he saw that Dane was looking at him.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” said the latter, “you see, they want you.”</p>
+
+<p>That was probably the most hilarious breakfast that
+had ever been held in the wooden hotel; and before
+it was over, three of his companions had said to
+Witham, “Of course, you’ll drive in with me!”</p>
+
+<p>“Boys,” he said, as they put their furs on, and his
+voice shook a trifle, “I can’t ride in with everybody
+who has asked me unless you dismember me.”</p>
+
+<p>Finally, Alfreton, who was a trifle too quick for the
+others, got him into his sleigh, and they swept out
+behind a splendid team into the frozen stillness of
+the prairie. The white leagues rolled behind them,
+the cold grew intense; but while Witham was for the
+most part silent and apparently preoccupied, Alfreton
+talked almost incessantly, and only once looked
+grave. That happened when Witham asked about
+Colonel Barrington.</p>
+
+<p>The lad shook his head. “I scarcely think he will
+ever take hold again,” he said. “You will understand
+me better when you see him.”</p>
+
+<p>They stopped awhile at mid-day at an outlying
+farm, but Witham glanced inquiringly at Alfreton
+when one of the sleighs went on. The lad smiled at
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. “He is going on to tell them we
+have got you.”</p>
+
+<p>“They would have found it out in a few more hours,”
+said Witham.</p>
+
+<p>Alfreton’s eyes twinkled. “No doubt they would,”
+he said dryly. “Still, you see, somebody was
+offering two to one that Dane couldn’t bring you,
+and you know we’re generally keen about any kind of
+wager.”</p>
+
+<p>The explanation, which was not quite out of keeping
+with the customs of the younger men at Silverdale
+did not content Witham, but he said nothing. So
+far his return had resembled a triumph, and while
+the sincerity of the welcome had its effect on him,
+he shrank a little from what he fancied might be
+waiting him.</p>
+
+<p>The creeping darkness found them still upon the
+waste, and the cold grew keener when the stars peeped
+out. Even sound seemed frozen, and the faint muffled
+beat of hoofs unreal and out of place in the icy stillness
+of the wilderness. Still, the horses knew they were
+nearing home, and swung into faster pace, while the
+men drew fur caps down and the robes closer round
+them as the draught their passage made stung them
+with a cold that seemed to sear the skin where there
+was an inch left uncovered on the face. Now and then
+a clump of willows or a birch bluff flitted out of the
+dimness, grew a trifle blacker, and was left behind;
+but there was still no sign of habitation, and Alfreton,
+too chilled at last to speak, passed the reins to Witham
+and beat his mittened hands. Witham could scarcely
+grasp them, for he had lived of late in the cities, and
+the cold he had been sheltered from was numbing.</p>
+
+<p>For another hour they slid onwards, and then a
+dim blur crept out of the white waste. It rose higher,
+cutting more blackly against the sky; and Witham
+recognized with a curious little quiver the birch bluff
+that sheltered Silverdale Grange. Then, as they
+swept through the gloom of it, a row of ruddy lights
+blinked across the snow; and Witham felt his heart
+beat as he watched the homestead grow into form.
+He had first come there an impostor, and had left it
+an outcast; while now it was amidst the acclamations
+of those who had once looked on him with suspicion
+he was coming back again.</p>
+
+<p>Still, he was almost too cold for any definite feeling
+but the sting of the frost, and it was very stiffly he stood
+up, shaken by vague emotions, when at last the horses
+stopped. A great door swung open, somebody grasped
+his hand, there was a murmur of voices, and partly
+dazed by the change of temperature he blundered
+into the warmth of the hall. The blaze of light
+bewildered him, and he was but dimly sensible that
+the men who greeted him were helping him to shake
+off his furs; while the next thing he was sure of was
+that a little white-haired lady was holding out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>“We are all very glad to see you back,” she said,
+with a simplicity that yet suggested stateliness.
+“Your friends insisted on coming over to welcome you,
+and Dane will not let you keep them waiting too long.
+Dinner is almost ready.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham could not remember what he answered, but
+Miss Barrington smiled at him as she moved away, for
+the flush in his face was very eloquent. The man was
+very grateful for that greeting, and what it implied.
+It was a few minutes later when he found himself
+alone with Dane, who laughed softly as he nodded
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>“You are convinced at last?” he said. “Still
+there is a little more of the same thing to be faced;
+and, if it would relieve you, I will send for Alfreton,
+who has some taste in that direction, to fix that tie
+for you. You have been five minutes over it, and it
+evidently does not please you. It’s the first time
+I’ve ever seen you worry about your dress.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham turned, and a curious smile crept into his
+face as he laid a lean hand that shook a little on the
+toilet table.</p>
+
+<p>“I also think it’s the first time these fingers wouldn’t
+do what I wanted them. You can deduce what you
+please from that,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Dane only nodded, and when they went down
+together laid a kindly grasp upon his comrade’s arm
+as he led him into the great dining-room. Every
+man at Silverdale was apparently there, as were most
+of the women; and Witham stood still a moment, very
+erect, with shoulders square, because the posture
+enabled him to conceal the tremor that ran through
+him when he saw the smiling faces turned upon him.
+Then he moved slowly down the room towards Maud
+Barrington, and felt her hand rest for a second between
+his fingers, which he feared were too responsive.
+After that, everybody seemed to speak to him, and
+he was glad when he found himself sitting next to
+Miss Barrington at the head of the long table, with
+her niece opposite him.</p>
+
+<p>He could not remember what he or the others talked
+about during the meal, but he had a vague notion that
+there was now and then a silence of attention when
+he answered a question, and that the little lady’s face
+grew momentarily grave when, as the voice sank a
+trifle, he turned to her.</p>
+
+<p>“I would have paid my respects to Colonel Barrington,
+but Dane did not consider it advisable,” he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Miss Barrington. “He has talked a
+good deal about you during the last two days, but he
+is sleeping now, and we did not care to disturb him.
+I am afraid you will find a great change in him when
+you see him.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham asked no more questions on that topic until
+later in the evening, when he found a place apart from
+the rest by Miss Barrington’s side. He fancied this
+would not have happened without her connivance and
+she seemed graver than usual when he stood by her
+chair.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t wish to pain you, but I surmise that Colonel
+Barrington is scarcely well enough to be consulted
+about anything of importance just now,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington made a little gesture of assent.
+“We usually pay him the compliment, but I am
+almost afraid he will never make a decision of moment
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham slowly, “you stand in his
+place, and I fancy you know why I have come back
+to Silverdale. Will you listen for a very few minutes
+while I tell you about my parents and what my upbringing
+has been? I must return to Winnipeg,
+for a time, at least, to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington signed her willingness, and the
+man spoke rapidly with a faint trace of hoarseness.
+Then he looked down on her.</p>
+
+<p>“Madam,” he said, “I have told you everything,
+partly from respect for those who only by a grim
+sacrifice did what they could for me, and that you
+may realize the difference between myself and the
+rest at Silverdale. I want to be honest now at least,
+and I discovered, not without bitterness at the time,
+that the barriers between our castes are strong in the
+old country.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barrington smiled a little. “Have I ever
+made you feel it here?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Witham gravely. “Still, I am going to
+put your forbearance to a strenuous test. I want your
+approval. I have a question to ask your niece to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I withheld it?”</p>
+
+<p>“It would hurt me,” said Witham. “Still, I
+would not be astonished, and I could not blame you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it would make no difference?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Witham gravely. “It would, but
+it would not cause me to desist. Nothing would do
+that, if Miss Barrington can overlook the past.”</p>
+
+<p>The little white-haired lady smiled at him.
+“Then,” she said, “if it is any comfort to you, you
+have my good wishes. I do not know what Maud’s
+decision will be, but that is the spirit which would
+have induced me to listen in times long gone by!”</p>
+
+<p>She rose and left him, and it may have been by her
+arranging that shortly afterwards Witham found
+Maud Barrington passing through the dimly-lighted
+hall. He opened the door she moved towards a trifle,
+and then stood facing her, with it in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you wait a moment, and then you may pass
+if you wish,” he said. “I had one great inducement
+for coming here to-night. I wonder if you know what
+it is?”</p>
+
+<p>The girl stood still and met his gaze, though, dim
+as the light was, the man could see the crimson in her
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she said, very quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” said Witham with a little smile, though
+the fingers on the door quivered visibly, “I think
+the audacity you once mentioned must have returned
+to me, for I am going to make a very great venture.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Maud Barrington turned her eyes
+away. “It is the daring venture that most frequently
+succeeds.”</p>
+
+<p>Then she felt the man’s hand on her shoulder, and
+that he was compelling her to look up at him.</p>
+
+<p>“It is you I came for,” he said quietly. “Still,
+for you know the wrong I have done, I dare not urge
+you, and have little to offer. It is you who must
+give everything, if you can come down from your
+station and be content with mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“One thing,” said Maud Barrington, very softly,
+“is, however, necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>“That,” said Witham, “was yours ever since we
+spent the night in the snow.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl felt his grip upon her shoulder grow almost
+painful, but her eyes shone softly when she lifted her
+head again.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” she said, “what I can give is yours—and
+it seems you have already taken possession.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham drew her towards him, and it may have
+been by Miss Barrington’s arranging that nobody
+entered the hall, but at last the girl glanced up at
+the man half-shyly as she said, “Why did you wait
+so long?”</p>
+
+<p>“It was well worth while,” said Witham. “Still,
+I think you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Maud Barrington softly. “Now, at
+least, I can tell you I am glad you went away—but if
+you had asked me I would have gone with you.”</p>
+
+<p>It was some little time later when Miss Barrington
+came in and, after a glance at Witham, kissed her
+niece. Then she turned to the man. “My brother
+is asking for you,” she said. “Will you come up
+with me?”</p>
+
+<p>Witham followed her, and hid his astonishment
+when he found Colonel Barrington lying in a big chair.
+His face was haggard and pale, his form seemed to
+have grown limp and fragile, and the hand he held out
+trembled.</p>
+
+<p>“Lance,” he said, “I am very pleased to have
+you home again. I hear you have done wonders in
+the city, but you are, I think, the first of your family
+who could ever make money. I have, as you will see,
+not been well lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am relieved to find you better than I expected,
+sir,” Witham said quietly. “Still, I fancy you are
+forgetting what I told you the night I went away.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington nodded, and then made a little impatient
+gesture. “There was something unpleasant, but my
+memory seems to be going, and my sister has forgiven
+you. I know you did a good deal for us at Silverdale,
+and showed yourself a match for the best of them in
+the city. That pleases me. By and by, you will
+take hold here after me.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham glanced at Miss Barrington, who smiled
+somewhat sadly.</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad you mentioned that, sir, because I
+purpose staying at Silverdale now,” he said. “It
+leads up to what I have to ask you.”</p>
+
+<p>Barrington’s perceptions seemed to grow clearer,
+and he asked a few pertinent questions before he
+nodded approbation.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said, “she is a good girl—a very good
+girl, and it would be a suitable match. I should like
+somebody to send for her.”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington came in softly, with a little glow
+in her eyes and a flush in her face, and Barrington
+smiled at her.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, I am very pleased, and I wish you every
+happiness,” he said. “Once I would scarcely have
+trusted you to Lance, but he will forgive me, and has
+shown me that I was wrong. You and he will make
+Silverdale famous, and it is comforting to know, now
+my rest is very near, that you have chosen a man of
+your own station to follow me. With all our faults
+and blunders, blood is bound to tell.”</p>
+
+<p>Witham saw that Miss Barrington’s eyes were a
+trifle misty, and he felt his face grow hot, but the
+girl’s fingers touched his arm, and he followed, when,
+while her aunt signed approbation, she led him away.
+Then, when they stood outside she laid her hands upon
+his face and drew it down to her.</p>
+
+<p>“You will forget it, dear, and he is still wrong.
+If you had been Lance Courthorne, I should never have
+done this,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the man gravely. “I think there are
+many ways in which he is right, but you can be content
+with Witham the prairie farmer?”</p>
+
+<p>Maud Barrington drew closer to him with a little
+smile in her eyes. “Yes,” she said simply. “There
+never was a Courthorne who could stand beside
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class='center tight' style=''><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>London: Ward, Lock &amp; Co., Ltd.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Impostor, by Harold Bindloss, Illustrated
+by Victor Prout
+
+
+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 Impostor
+
+
+Author: Harold Bindloss
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2012 [eBook #39698]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IMPOSTOR***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the online Distributed Proofreaders
+Canada team (http://www.pgdpcanada.net) from images of public domain
+material generously made available by the University of Toronto Libraries
+(http://onesearch.library.utoronto.ca)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 39698-h.htm or 39698-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39698/39698-h/39698-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39698/39698-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPOSTOR.
+
+
+[Illustration: "In the meanwhile, Maud Barrington sat by the open window
+in her room." (Chapter XVI.)]
+
+
+THE IMPOSTOR
+
+by
+
+HAROLD BINDLOSS
+
+Author of "Hawtrey's Deputy," "The Liberationist,"
+"A Sower of Wheat," "The Pioneer," etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Ward, Lock & Co., Limited
+London, Melbourne and Toronto
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I Rancher Witham
+ II Lance Courthorne
+ III Trooper Shannon's Quarrel
+ IV In the Bluff
+ V Miss Barrington Comes Home
+ VI Anticipations
+ VII Witham's Decision
+ VIII Witham Comes to Silverdale
+ IX An Armistice
+ X Maud Barrington's Promise
+ XI Speed the Plough
+ XII Mastery Recognized
+ XIII A Fair Advocate
+ XIV The Unexpected
+ XV Facing the Flame
+ XVI Maud Barrington is Merciless
+ XVII With the Stream
+ XVIII Under Test
+ XIX Courthorne Blunders
+ XX The Face at the Window
+ XXI Colonel Barrington is Convinced
+ XXII Sergeant Stimson Confirms his Suspicions
+ XXIII The Revelation
+ XXIV Courthorne makes Reparation
+ XXV Witham Rides Away
+ XXVI Reinstation
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPOSTOR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+RANCHER WITHAM
+
+
+It was a bitter night, for although there was no snow as yet, the
+frost had bound the prairie in its iron grip, when Rancher Witham
+stood shivering in a little Canadian settlement in the great, lonely
+land which runs north from the American frontier to Athabasca. There
+was no blink of starlight in the murky sky, and a stinging wind that
+came up out of the great waste of grass moaned about the frame houses
+clustering beside the trail that led south over the limited levels to
+the railroad and civilization. It chilled Witham through his somewhat
+tattered furs, and he strode up and down, glancing expectantly into
+the darkness, and then across the unpaved street, where the ruts were
+ploughed a foot deep in the prairie sod, towards the warm, red glow
+from the windows of the wooden hotel. He knew that the rest of the
+outlying farmers and ranchers who had ridden in for their letters were
+sitting snug about the stove, but it was customary for all who sought
+shelter there to pay for their share of the six o'clock supper, and
+the half-dollar Witham had then in his pocket was required for other
+purposes.
+
+He had also retained through all his struggles a measure of his pride,
+and because of it strode up and down buffeted by the blasts until a
+beat of horse-hoofs came out of the darkness and was followed by a
+rattle of wheels. It grew steadily louder, a blinking ray of
+brightness flickered across the frame houses, and presently dark
+figures were silhouetted against the light on the hotel veranda as a
+lurching wagon drew up beneath it. Two dusky objects, shapeless in
+their furs, sprang down, and one stumbled into the post office close
+by with a bag while the other man answered the questions hurled at him
+as he fumbled with stiffened fingers at the harness.
+
+"Late? Well, you might be thankful you've got your mail at all," he
+said. "We had to go round by Willow Bluff, and didn't think we'd get
+through the ford. Ice an inch thick, anyway, and Charley talked that
+much he's not said anything since, even when the near horse put his
+foot into a badger hole."
+
+Rude banter followed this, but Witham took no part in it. Hastening
+into the post office, he stood betraying his impatience by his very
+impassiveness while a sallow-faced woman tossed the letters out upon
+the counter. At last she took up two of them, and the man's fingers
+trembled a little as he stretched out his hand, when she said--
+
+"That's all there are for you."
+
+Witham recognized the writing on the envelopes, and it was with
+difficulty he held his eagerness in check, but other men were waiting
+for his place, and he went out and crossed the street to the hotel
+where there was light to read by. As he entered it a girl, bustling
+about a long table in the big stove-warmed room, turned with a little
+smile.
+
+"It's only you!" she said. "Now I was figuring it was Lance
+Courthorne."
+
+Witham, impatient as he was, stopped and laughed, for the
+hotel-keeper's daughter was tolerably well-favoured and a friend of
+his.
+
+"And you're disappointed?" he said. "I haven't Lance's good looks, or
+his ready tongue."
+
+The room was empty, for the guests were thronging about the post
+office then, and the girl's eyes twinkled as she drew back a pace and
+surveyed the man. There was nothing in his appearance that would have
+aroused a stranger's interest, or attracted more than a passing
+glance, and he stood before her in a very old fur coat, with a fur cap
+that was in keeping with it in his hand. His face had been bronzed
+almost to the colour of a Blackfoot Indian's by frost and wind and
+sun, and it was of English type from the crisp fair hair above the
+broad forehead to the somewhat solid chin. The mouth was hidden by the
+bronze-tinted moustache, and the eyes alone, were noticeable. They
+were grey, and there was a steadiness in them which was almost unusual
+even in that country, where men look into long distances. For the
+rest, he was of average stature, and stood impassively straight,
+looking down upon the girl without either grace or awkwardness, while
+his hard brown hands, suggested, as his attire did, strenuous labour
+for a very small reward.
+
+"Well," said the girl with Western frankness, "there's a kind of stamp
+on Lance that you haven't got. I figure he brought it with him from
+the old country. Still, one might take you for him if you stood with
+the light behind you, and you're not quite a bad-looking man. It's a
+kind of pity you're so solemn."
+
+Witham smiled. "I don't fancy that's astonishing after losing two
+harvests in succession," he said. "You see, there's nobody back there
+in the old country to send remittances to me."
+
+The girl nodded with quick sympathy. "Oh, yes. The times are bad," she
+said. "Well, you read your letters; I'm not going to worry you."
+
+Witham sat down and opened the first envelope under the big lamp. It
+was from a land agent and mortgage-broker, and his face grew a trifle
+grimmer as he read, "In the present condition of the money market your
+request that we should carry you over is unreasonable, and we regret
+that unless you can extinguish at least half the loan we will be
+compelled to foreclose upon your holding."
+
+There was a little more of it, but that was sufficient for Witham, who
+knew it meant disaster, and it was with the feeling of one clinging
+desperately to the last shred of hope he tore open the second
+envelope. The letter it held was from a friend he had made in a
+Western city, and once entertained for a month at his ranch, but the
+man had evidently sufficient difficulties of his own to contend with.
+
+"Very sorry, but it can't be done," he wrote. "I'm loaded up with
+wheat nobody will buy, and couldn't raise five hundred dollars to lend
+any one just now,"
+
+Witham sighed a little, but when he rose and slowly straightened
+himself nobody would have suspected he was looking ruin in the face.
+He had fought a slow, losing battle for six weary years, holding on
+doggedly though defeat appeared inevitable, and now when it had come
+he bore it impassively, for the struggle which, though he was scarcely
+twenty-six, had crushed all mirth and brightness out of his life, had
+given him endurance in place of them. Just then a man came bustling
+towards him, with the girl who bore a tray close behind.
+
+"What are you doing with that coat on?" he said. "Get it off and sit
+down right there. The boys are about through with the mail and
+supper's ready,"
+
+Witham glanced at the steaming dishes hungrily, for he had passed most
+of the day in the bitter frost, eating very little, and there was
+still a drive of twenty miles before him.
+
+"It is time I was taking the trail," he said.
+
+He was sensible of a pain in his left side, which, as other men have
+discovered, not infrequently follows enforced abstinence from food,
+but he remembered what he wanted the half-dollar in his pocket for.
+The hotel-keeper had possibly some notion of the state of affairs, for
+he laughed a little.
+
+"You've got to sit down," he said. "Now, after the way you fixed me up
+when I stopped at your ranch, you don't figure I'd let you go before
+you had some supper with me."
+
+Witham may have been unduly sensitive, but he shook his head. "You're
+very good, but it's a long ride, and I'm going now," he said.
+"Good-night, Nettie."
+
+He turned as he spoke, with the swift decision that was habitual with
+him, and when he went out the girl glanced at her father
+reproachfully.
+
+"You always get spoiling things when you put your hand in," she said.
+"Now that man's hungry, and I'd have fixed it so he'd have got his
+supper if you had left it to me."
+
+The hotel-keeper laughed a little. "I'm kind of sorry for Witham
+because there's grit in him, and he's never had a show," he said.
+"Still, I figure he's not worth your going out gunning after, Nettie."
+
+The girl said nothing, but there was a little flush in her face which
+had not been there before, when she busied herself with the dishes.
+
+In the meanwhile Witham was harnessing two bronco horses to a very
+dilapidated wagon. They were vicious beasts, but he had bought them
+cheap from a man who had some difficulty in driving them, while the
+wagon had been given him, when it was apparently useless, by a
+neighbour. The team had, however, already covered thirty miles that
+day, and started homewards at a steady trot without the playful
+kicking they usually indulged in. Here and there a man sprang clear of
+the rutted road, but Witham did not notice him or return his greeting.
+He was abstractedly watching the rude frame houses flit by, and
+wondering, while the pain in his side grew keener, when he would get
+his supper, for it happens not infrequently that the susceptibilities
+are dulled by a heavy blow, and the victim finds a distraction that is
+almost welcome in the endurance of a petty trouble.
+
+Witham was very hungry, and weary alike in body and mind. The sun had
+not risen when he left his homestead, and he had passed the day under
+a nervous strain, hoping, although it seemed improbable, that the mail
+would bring him relief from his anxieties. Now he knew the worst he
+could bear it as he had borne the loss of two harvests, and the
+disaster which followed in the wake of the blizzard that killed off
+his stock; but it seemed unfair that he should endure cold and hunger
+too, and when one wheel sank in a rut and the jolt shook him in every
+stiffened limb, he broke out with a hoarse expletive. It was his first
+protest against the fate that was too strong for him, and almost as he
+made it he laughed.
+
+"Pshaw! There's no use kicking against what has to be, and I've got to
+keep my head just now," he said.
+
+There was no great comfort in the reflection, but it had sustained him
+before, and Witham's head was a somewhat exceptional one, though there
+was as a rule nothing in any way remarkable about his conversation,
+and he was apparently merely one of the many quietly-spoken,
+bronze-faced men who are even by their blunders building up a great
+future for the Canadian dominion. He accordingly drew his old rug
+tighter round him, and instinctively pulled his fur cap lower down
+when the lights of the settlement faded behind him and the creaking
+wagon swung out into the blackness of the prairie. It ran back league
+beyond league across three broad provinces, and the wind that came up
+out of the great emptiness emphasized its solitude. A man from the
+cities would have heard nothing but the creaking of the wagon and the
+drumming fall of hoofs, but Witham heard the grasses patter as they
+swayed beneath the bitter blasts stiff with frost, and the moan of
+swinging boughs in a far-off willow bluff. It was these things that
+guided him, for he had left the rutted trail, and here and there the
+swishen beneath the wheels told of taller grass, while the bluff ran
+black athwart the horizon when that had gone. Then twigs crackled
+beneath them as the horses picked their way amidst the shadowy trees
+stunted by a ceaseless struggle with the wind, and Witham shook the
+creeping drowsiness from him when they came out into the open again,
+for he knew it is not advisable for any man with work still to do to
+fall asleep under the frost of that country.
+
+Still, he grew a trifle dazed as the miles went by, and because of it
+indulged in memories he had shaken off at other times. They were
+blurred recollections of the land he had left eight years ago,
+pictures of sheltered England, half-forgotten music, the voices of
+friends who no longer remembered him, and the smiles in a girl's
+bright eyes. Then he settled himself more firmly in the driving-seat,
+and with numbed fingers sought a tighter grip of the reins as the
+memory of the girl's soft answer to a question he had asked brought
+his callow ambitions back.
+
+He was to hew his way to fortune in the West, and then come back for
+her, but the girl who had clung to him with wet cheeks when he left
+her had apparently grown tired of waiting, and Witham sent back her
+letters in return for a silver-printed card. That was six years ago,
+and now none of the dollars he had brought into the country remained
+to him. He realized, dispassionately and without egotism, that this
+was through no fault of his, for he knew that better men had been
+crushed and beaten.
+
+It was, however, time he had done with these reflections, for while he
+sat half-dazed and more than half-frozen the miles had been flitting
+by, and now the team knew they were not very far from home. Little by
+little their pace increased, and Witham was almost astonished to see
+another bluff black against the night ahead of him. As usual in that
+country, the willows and birches crawled up the sides and just showed
+their heads above the sinuous crest of a river hollow. It was very
+dark when the wagon lurched in among them, and it cost the man an
+effort to discern the winding trail which led down into the blackness
+of the hollow. In places the slope was almost precipitous, and it
+behoved him to be careful of the horses, which could not be replaced.
+Without them he could not plough in spring, and his life did not
+appear of any especial value in comparison with theirs just then.
+
+The team, however, were evidently bent on getting home as soon as
+possible, and Witham's fingers were too stiff to effectively grasp the
+reins. A swinging bough also struck one of the horses, and when it
+plunged and flung up its head the man reeled a little in his seat.
+Before he recovered the team were going down-hill at a gallop. Witham
+flung himself bodily backwards with tense muscles, and the reins
+slipping a trifle in his hands, knowing that though he bore against
+them with all his strength the team were leaving the trail. Then the
+wagon jolted against a tree, one horse stumbled, picked up its stride,
+and went on at a headlong gallop. The man felt the wind rush past him
+and saw the dim trees whirl by, but he could only hold on and wonder
+what would take place when they came to the bottom. The bridge the
+trail went round by was some distance to the right and because the
+frost had just set in he knew the ice on the river would not bear the
+load, even if the horses could keep their footing.
+
+He had not, however, long to wonder. Once more a horse stumbled, there
+was a crash, and a branch hurled Witham backwards into the wagon,
+which came to a standstill suddenly. When he rose something warm was
+running down his face, and there was a red smear on the hand he
+lighted the lantern with. When that was done he flung himself down
+from the wagon, dreading what he would find. The flickering radiance
+showed him that the pole had snapped, and while one bronco still stood
+trembling on its feet the other lay inert amidst a tangle of harness.
+The man's face grew a trifle grimmer as he threw the light upon it,
+and then, stooping, glanced at one doubled leg. It was evident that
+fate, which did nothing by halves, had dealt him a crushing blow. The
+last faint hope he clung to had vanished now.
+
+He was, however, a humane man, and considerate of the beasts that
+worked for him, and accordingly thrust his hand inside the old fur
+coat, when he had loosed the uninjured horse, and drew out a
+long-bladed knife. Then he knelt and, setting down the lantern, felt
+for the place to strike. When he found it his courage almost deserted
+him, and meeting the eyes that seemed to look up at him with dumb
+appeal, turned his head away. Still, he was a man who would not shirk
+a painful duty, and shaking off the sense of revulsion turned again
+and stroked the beast's head.
+
+"It's all I can do for you," he said.
+
+Then his arm came down, and a tremor ran through the quivering frame,
+while Witham set his lips tightly as his hand grew warm. The thing was
+horrible to him, but the life he led had taught him the folly of
+weakness, and he was too pitiful to let his squeamishness overcome
+him.
+
+Still, he shivered when it was done, and rubbing the knife in the
+withered leaves, rose and made shift to gird a rug about the uninjured
+horse. Then he cut the reins and tied them, and mounting without
+stirrups rode towards the bridge. The horse went quietly enough now,
+and the man allowed it to choose its way. He was going home to find
+shelter from the cold, because his animal instincts prompted him, but
+otherwise, almost without volition, in a state of dispassionate
+indifference. Nothing more he fancied, could well befall him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+LANCE COURTHORNE
+
+
+It was late when Witham reached his log-built house, but he set out
+once more with his remaining horse before the lingering daylight crept
+out of the east, to haul the wagon home. He also spent most of the day
+in repairing it, because occupation of any kind that would keep him
+from unpleasant reflections appeared advisable, and to allow anything
+to fall out of use was distasteful to him, although as the wagon had
+been built for two horses he had little hope of driving it again. It
+was a bitter, grey day, with a low, smoky sky, and seemed very long to
+Witham; but evening came at last, and he was left with nothing between
+him and his thoughts.
+
+He lay in a dilapidated chair beside the stove, and the little bare
+room through which its pipe ran was permeated with the smell of fresh
+shavings, hot iron, and the fumes of indifferent tobacco. A
+carpenter's bench ran along one end of it, and was now occupied by a
+new wagon pole the man had fashioned out of a slender birch. A Marlin
+rifle, an axe, and a big saw hung beneath the head of an antelope on
+the wall above the bench, and all of them showed signs of use and
+glistened with oil. Opposite to them a few shelves were filled with
+simple crockery and cooking utensils, and these also shone spotlessly.
+There was a pair of knee boots in one corner with a patch partly sewn
+on to one of them, and the harness in another showed traces of careful
+repair. A bookcase hung above them, and its somewhat tattered contents
+indicated that the man who had chosen and evidently handled them
+frequently possessed tastes any one who did not know that country
+would scarcely have expected to find in a prairie farmer. A table and
+one or two rude chairs made by their owner's hands completed the
+furniture; but while all hinted at poverty, it also suggested
+neatness, industry, and care, for the room bore the impress of its
+occupier's individuality, as rooms not infrequently do.
+
+It was not difficult to see that he was frugal, though possibly from
+necessity rather than taste, not sparing of effort, and had a keen eye
+for utility, and if that suggested the question why, with such
+capacities, he had not attained to greater comfort, the answer was
+simple. Witham had no money, and the seasons had fought against him.
+He had done his uttermost with the means at his disposal, and now he
+knew he was beaten.
+
+A doleful wind moaned about the lonely building and set the roof
+shingles rattling overhead. Now and then the stove crackled, or the
+lamp flickered, and any one unused to the prairie would have felt the
+little loghouse very desolate and lonely. There was no other human
+habitation within a league, only a great waste of whitened grass
+relieved about the homestead by the raw clods of the fall ploughing;
+for, while his scattered neighbours, for the most part, put their
+trust in horses and cattle, Witham had been among the first to realize
+the capacities of that land as a wheat-growing country.
+
+Now, clad in well-worn jean trousers and an old deerskin jacket, he
+looked down at the bundle of documents on his knee, accounts unpaid, a
+banker's intimation that no more cheques would be honoured and a
+mortgage deed. They were not pleasant reading, and the man's face
+clouded as he pencilled notes on some of them, but there was no
+weakness or futile protest in it. Defeat was plain between the lines
+of all he read, but he was going on stubbornly until the struggle was
+ended, as others of his kind had done, there at the western limit of
+the furrows of the plough and in the great province further east which
+is one of the world's granaries. They went under and were forgotten,
+but they showed the way, and while their guerdon was usually six feet
+of prairie soil, the wheat-fields, mills, and railroads came, for it
+is written plainly on the new North-West that no man may live and
+labour for himself alone, and there are many who, realizing it,
+instinctively ask very little, and freely give their best for the land
+that but indifferently shelters them.
+
+Presently, however, there was a knocking at the door, and though this
+was most unusual, Witham only quietly moved his head when a bitter
+blast came in, and a man wrapped in furs stood in the opening.
+
+"I'll put my horse in the stable while I've got my furs on. It's a
+bitter night," he said.
+
+Witham nodded. "You know where the lantern is," he said. "There's some
+chop in the manger, and you needn't spare the oats in the bin. At
+present prices it doesn't pay to haul them in."
+
+The man closed the door silently, and it was ten minutes before he
+returned, and sloughing off his furs dropped into a chair beside the
+stove. "I got supper at Broughton's, and don't want anything but
+shelter to-night," he said. "Shake that pipe out and try one of these
+instead."
+
+He laid a cigar case on the table, and though well worn it was of
+costly make, with a good deal of silver about it, while Witham, who
+lighted one, knew that the cigars were good. He had no esteem for his
+visitor, but men are not censorious upon the prairie, and Western
+hospitality is always free.
+
+"Where have you come from, Courthorne?" he said quietly.
+
+The other man laughed a little. "The long trail," he said. "The
+Dakotas, Colorado, Montana. Cleaned up one thousand dollars at Regent,
+and might have got more, but some folks down there seemed tired of me.
+The play was quite regular, but they have apparently been getting
+virtuous lately."
+
+"And now?" said Witham, with polite indifference.
+
+Courthorne made a little gesture of deprecation.
+
+"I'm back again with the rustlers."
+
+Witham's nod signified comprehension, for the struggle between the
+great range-holders across the frontier and the smaller settlers who
+with legal right invaded their cattle runs was just over. It had been
+fought out bitterly with dynamite and rifles, and when at last, with
+the aid of the United States cavalry, peace was made, sundry broken
+men and mercenaries who had taken the pay of both parties, seeing
+their occupation gone, had found a fresh scope for their energies in
+smuggling liquor, and on opportunity transferring cattle, without
+their owners' sanction, across the frontier. That was then a
+prohibition country, and the profits and risks attached to supplying
+it and the Blackfeet on the reserves with liquor were heavy.
+
+"Business this way?" said Witham.
+
+Courthorne appeared to consider a moment, and there was a curious
+little glint which did not escape his companion's attention in his
+eyes, but he laughed.
+
+"Yes, we're making a big run," he said, then stopped and looked
+straight at the rancher. "Did it ever strike you, Witham, that you
+were not unlike me?"
+
+Witham smiled, but made a little gesture of dissent as he returned the
+other's gaze. They were about the same height and had the same English
+type of face, while Witham's eyes were grey and his companion's an
+indefinite blue that approached the former colour, but there the
+resemblance, which was not more than discernible, ended. Witham was
+quietly-spoken and somewhat grim, a plain prairie farmer in
+appearance, while a vague but recognizable stamp of breeding and
+distinction still clung to Courthorne. He would have appeared more in
+place in the States upon the southern Atlantic seaboard, where the
+characteristics the Cavalier settlers brought with them are not
+extinct, than he did upon the Canadian prairie. His voice had even in
+his merriment a little imperious ring, his face was refined as well as
+sensual, and there was a languid gracefulness in his movements and a
+hint of pride in his eyes. They, however, lacked the steadiness of
+Witham's, and there were men who had seen the wild devil that was born
+in Courthorne look out of them. Witham knew him as a pleasant
+companion, but surmised from stories he had heard that there were men,
+and more women, who bitterly rued the trust they had placed in him.
+
+"No," he said dryly. "I scarcely think I am like you, although only
+last night Nettie at the settlement took me for you. You see, the kind
+of life I've led out here has set its mark on me, and my folks in the
+old country were distinctly middle-class people. There is something in
+heredity."
+
+Courthorne did not parry the unexpressed question. "Oh, yes," he said,
+with a little sardonic smile. "I know. The backbone of the
+nation--solemn, virtuous, and slow. You're like them, but my folks
+were different, as you surmise. I don't think they had many estimable
+qualities from your point of view, but if they all didn't go quite
+straight they never went slow, and they had a few prejudices, which is
+why I found it advisable to leave the old country. Still, I've had my
+fill of all that life can offer most folks out here, while you
+scarcely seem to have found virtue pay you. They told me at the
+settlement things were bad with you."
+
+Witham, who was usually correct in his deductions, surmised that his
+companion had an object, and expected something in return for this
+confidence. There was also no need for reticence when every farmer in
+the district knew all about his affairs, while something urged him to
+follow Courthorne's lead.
+
+"Yes," he said quietly. "They are. You see, when I lost my cattle in
+the blizzard, I had to sell out or mortgage the place to the hilt, and
+during the last two years I haven't made the interest. The loan falls
+due in August, and they're going to foreclose on me."
+
+"Then," said Courthorne, "what is keeping you here when the result of
+every hour's work you put in will go straight into another's man's
+pocket?"
+
+Witham smiled a little. "In the first place, I've nowhere else to go,
+and there's something in the feeling that one has held on to the end.
+Besides, until a few days ago I had a vague hope that by working
+double tides, I might get another crop in. Somebody might have
+advanced me a little on it because the mortgage only claims the house
+and land."
+
+Courthorne looked at him curiously. "No. We are not alike," he said.
+"There's a slow stubborn devil in you, Witham, and I think I'd be
+afraid of you if I ever did you an injury. But go on."
+
+"There's very little more. My team ran away down the ravine, and I had
+to put one beast out of its misery. I can't do my ploughing with one
+horse, and that leaves me stranded for the want of the dollars to buy
+another with. It's usually a very little thing that turns the scale,
+but now the end has come, I don't know that I'm sorry. I've never had
+a good time, you see, and the struggle was slowly crushing the life
+out of me."
+
+Witham spoke quietly, without bitterness, but Courthorne, who had
+never striven at all but stretched out his hand and taken what was
+offered, the more willingly when it was banned alike by judicial and
+moral law, dimly understood him. He was a fearless man, but he knew
+his courage would not have been equal to the strain of that six years'
+struggle against loneliness, physical fatigue, and adverse seasons,
+during which disaster followed disaster. He looked at the bronzed
+farmer as he said, "Still, you would do a little in return for a
+hundred dollars that would help you to go on with the fight?"
+
+A faint sparkle crept into Witham's eyes. It was not hope, but rather
+the grim anticipation of the man offered a better weapon when standing
+with his back to the wall.
+
+"Yes," he said slowly. "I would do almost anything."
+
+"Even if it was against the law?"
+
+Witham sat silent for almost a minute, but there was no indecision in
+his face, which slightly perplexed Courthorne. "Yes," he said. "Though
+I kept it while I could, the law was made for the safe-guarding of
+prosperous men, but with such as I am it is every man for his own hand
+and the devil to care for the vanquished. Still, there is a
+reservation."
+
+Courthorne nodded. "It's unlawful, but not against the unwritten
+code."
+
+"Well," said Witham quietly, "when you tell me what you want I should
+have a better opinion."
+
+Courthorne laughed a little, though there was something unpleasant in
+his eyes. "When I first came out to this country I should have
+resented that," he said. "Now, it seems to me that I'm putting too
+much in your hands if I make the whole thing clear before you commit
+yourself in any way."
+
+Witham nodded. "In fact, you have got to trust me. You can do so
+safely."
+
+"The assurance of the guileless is astonishing and occasionally hard
+to bear," said Courthorne. "Why not reverse the position?"
+
+Witham's gaze was steady, and free from embarrassment. "I am," he
+said, "waiting for your offer."
+
+"Then," said Courthorne dryly, "here it is. We are running a big load
+through to the northern settlements and the reserves to-morrow, and
+while there's a good deal of profit attached to the venture, I have a
+notion that Sergeant Stimson has had word of it. Now, the Sergeant
+knows just how I stand with the rustlers, though he can fasten no
+charge on me, and he will have several of his troopers looking out for
+me. Well, I want one of them to see and follow me south along the
+Montana trail. There's no horse in the Government service can keep
+pace with that black of mine, but it would not be difficult to pull
+him and just keep the trooper out of carbine shot behind. When he
+finds he can't overtake the black he'll go off for his comrades, and
+the boys will run our goods across the river while they're picking up
+the trail."
+
+"You mentioned the horse, but not yourself," said Witham quietly.
+
+Courthorne laughed. "Yes," he said; "I will not be there. I'm offering
+you one hundred dollars to ride the black for me. You can put my furs
+on, and anybody who saw you and knew the horse would certify it was
+me."
+
+"And where will you be?"
+
+"Here," said Courthorne dryly. "The boys will have no use for me until
+they want a guide, but they'll leave an unloaded packhorse handy, and,
+as it wouldn't suit any of us to make my connexion with them too
+plain, it will be a night or two later when I join them. In the
+meanwhile your part's quite easy. No trooper could ride you down
+unless you wanted him to, and you'll ride straight on to Montana--I've
+a route marked out for you. You'll stop at the places I tell you, and
+the testimony of anybody who saw you on the black would be quite
+enough to clear me if Stimson's men are too clever for the boys."
+
+Witham sat still a moment, and it was not avarice which prompted him
+when he said, "Considering the risk, one hundred dollars is very
+little."
+
+"Of course," said Courthorne. "Still, it isn't worth any more to me,
+and there will be your expenses. If it doesn't suit you, I will do the
+thing myself and find the boys another guide."
+
+He spoke indifferently, but Witham was not a fool, and knew that he
+was lying.
+
+"Turn your face to the light," he said sharply.
+
+A little ominous glint became visible in Courthorne's eyes, and there
+was just a trace of darker colour in his forehead, but Witham saw it
+and was not astonished. Still Courthorne did not move.
+
+"What made you ask me that?" he said.
+
+Witham watched him closely, but his voice betrayed no special interest
+as he said, "I fancied I saw a mark across your cheek. It seemed to me
+that it had been made by a whip."
+
+The deeper tint was more visible on Courthorne's forehead, where the
+swollen veins showed a trifle, and he appeared to swallow something
+before he spoke. "Aren't you asking too many questions? What has a
+mark on my face to do with you?"
+
+"Nothing," said Witham quietly. "Will you go through the conditions
+again?"
+
+Courthorne nodded. "I pay you one hundred dollars--now," he said. "You
+ride south to-morrow along the Montana trail and take the risk of the
+troopers overtaking you. You will remain away a fortnight at my
+expense, and pass in the meanwhile for me. Then you will return at
+night as rancher Witham, and keep the whole thing a secret from
+everybody."
+
+Witham sat silent and very still again for more than a minute. He
+surmised that the man who made the offer had not told him all and
+there was more behind, but that was, after all, of no great
+importance. He was prepared to do a good deal for one hundred dollars,
+and his bare life of effort and self-denial had grown almost
+unendurable. He had now nothing to lose, and while some impulse urged
+him to the venture, he felt that it was possible fate had in store for
+him something better than he had known in the past. In the meanwhile
+the cigar he held went out, and the striking of a match as Courthorne
+lighted another roused him suddenly from the retrospect he was sinking
+into. The bitter wind still moaned about the ranch, emphasizing its
+loneliness, and the cedar shingles rattled dolefully overhead, while
+it chanced that as Witham glanced towards the roof his eyes rested on
+the suspended piece of rancid pork which with a little flour and a few
+potatoes had during the last few months provided him with a
+sustenance. It was of course a trifle, but it tipped the beam, as
+trifles often do, and the man who was tired of all it symbolized
+straightened himself with a little mirthless laugh.
+
+"On your word of honour there is nothing beyond the risk of a few
+days' detention which can affect me?" he said.
+
+"No," said Courthorne solemnly, knowing that he lied. "On my honour.
+The troopers could only question you. Is it a deal?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham simply, stretching out his hand for the roll of
+bills the other flung down on the table, and, while one of the
+contracting parties knew that the other would regret it bitterly, the
+bargain was made.
+
+Then Courthorne laughed in his usual indolent fashion as he said,
+"Well, it's all decided, and I don't even ask your word. To-morrow
+will see the husk sloughed off and for a fortnight you'll be Lance
+Courthorne. I hope you feel equal to playing the role with credit,
+because I wouldn't entrust my good fame to everybody."
+
+Witham smiled dryly. "I fancy I shall," he said, and long afterwards
+recalled the words. "You see, I had ambitions in my callow days, and
+it's not my fault that hitherto I've never had a part to play."
+
+Rancher Witham was, however, wrong in this. He had played the part of
+an honest man with a courage which had brought him to ruin, but there
+was now to be a difference.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+TROOPER SHANNON'S QUARREL
+
+
+There was bitter frost in the darkness outside when two young men
+stood talking in the stables of a little outpost lying a long ride
+back from the settlement in the lonely prairie. One leaned against a
+manger with a pipe in his hand, while the spotless, softly-gleaming
+harness hung up behind him showed what his occupation had been. The
+other stood bolt upright with lips set, and a faint greyness which
+betokened strong emotion showing through his tan. The lantern above
+them flickered in the icy draughts, and from out of the shadows beyond
+its light came the stamping of restless horses and the smell of
+prairie hay, which is pungent with the odours of wild peppermint.
+
+The two lads, and they were very little more, were friends, in spite
+of the difference in their upbringing, for there are few distinctions
+between caste and caste in that country where manhood is still
+esteemed the greatest thing, and the primitive virtues count for more
+than wealth or intellect. Courage and endurance still command respect
+in the new North-West, and that both the lads possessed them was made
+evident by the fact that they were troopers of the North-West police,
+a force of splendid cavalry whose duty it is to patrol the wilderness
+at all seasons and in all weathers, under scorching sun and in
+blinding snow.
+
+The men who keep the peace of the prairie are taught what heat and
+thirst are, when they ride in couples through a desolate waste wherein
+there is only bitter water, parched by pitiless sunrays and whitened
+by the intolerable dust of alkali. They also discover just how much
+cold the human frame can endure, when they lie down with only the
+stars above them, long leagues from the nearest outpost, in a trench,
+scooped in the snow, and they know how near one may come to
+suffocation and yet live through the grassfire's blinding smoke. It
+happens now and then that two who have answered to the last roster in
+the icy darkness do not awaken when the lingering dawn breaks across
+the great white waste, and only the coyote knows their resting-place,
+but the watch and ward is kept, and the lonely settler dwells as safe
+in the wilderness as he would in an English town.
+
+Trooper Shannon was an Irishman from the bush of Ontario, Trooper
+Payne, English, and a scion of a somewhat distinguished family in the
+old country, but while he told nobody why he left it suddenly, nobody
+thought of asking him. He was known to be a bold rider and careful of
+his beast, and that was sufficient for his comrades and the keen-eyed
+Sergeant Stimson. He glanced at his companion thoughtfully as he said,
+"She was a pretty girl. You knew her in Ontario?"
+
+Shannon's hands trembled a little. "Sure," he said, "Larry's place was
+just a mile beyont our clearing, an' there was never a bonnier thing
+than Ailly Blake came out from the old country--but is it need there
+is for talking when ye've seen her? There was once I watched her smile
+at ye with the black eyes that would have melted the heart out of any
+man. Waking and sleeping they're with me still."
+
+Three generations of the Shannons had hewn the lonely clearing further
+into the bush of Ontario and married the daughters of the soil, but
+the Celtic strain, it was evident, had not run out yet. Payne,
+however, came of English stock, and expressed himself differently.
+
+"It was a--shame," he said. "Of course he flung her over. I think you
+saw him, Pat?"
+
+Shannon's face grew greyer, and he quivered visibly as his passion
+shook him, while Payne felt his own blood pulse faster as he
+remembered the graceful dark-eyed girl who had given him and his
+comrade many a welcome meal when their duty took them near her
+brother's homestead. That was, however, before one black day for Ailly
+and Larry Blake when Lance Courthorne also rode that way.
+
+"Yes," said the lad from Ontario, "I was driving in for the stores
+when I met him in the willow bluff, an' Courthorne pulls his divil of
+a black horse up with a little ugly smile on the lips of him when I
+swung the wagon right across the trail.
+
+"'That's not civil, trooper,' says he.
+
+"'I'm wanting a word,' says I, with the black hate choking me at the
+sight of him. 'What have ye done with Ailly?'
+
+"'Is it anything to you?' says he.
+
+"'It's everything,' says I. 'And if ye will not tell me I'll tear it
+out of ye.'
+
+"Courthorne laughs a little, but I saw the divil in his eyes. 'I don't
+think you're quite man enough,' says he, sitting very quiet on the big
+black horse. 'Anyway, I can't tell you where she is just now, because
+she left the dancing saloon she was in down in Montana when I last saw
+her.'
+
+"I had the big whip that day, and I forgot everything as I heard the
+hiss of it round my shoulder. It came home across the ugly face of
+him, and then I flung it down and grabbed the carbine as he swung the
+black round with one hand fumbling in his jacket. It came out empty,
+an' we sat there a moment, the two of us, Courthorne white as death,
+his eyes like burning coals, and the fingers of me trembling on the
+carbine. Sorrow on the man that he hadn't a pistol, or I'd have sent
+the black soul of him to the divil it came from."
+
+The lad panted, and Payne, who had guessed at his hopeless devotion to
+the girl who had listened to Courthorne, made a gesture of disapproval
+that was tempered by sympathy. It was for her sake, he fancied,
+Shannon had left the Ontario clearing and followed Larry Blake to the
+West.
+
+"I'm glad he hadn't, Pat," said Payne. "What was the end of it?"
+
+"I remembered," said the other with a groan, "remembered I was Trooper
+Shannon, an' dropped the carbine into the wagon. Courthorne wheels the
+black horse round, an' I saw the red line across the face of him.
+
+"'You'll be sorry for this, my lad,' says he."
+
+"He's a dangerous man," Payne said thoughtfully. "Pat, you came near
+being a----ass that day. Anyway, it's time we went in, and as Larry's
+here I shouldn't wonder if we saw Courthorne again before the
+morning."
+
+The icy cold went through them to the bone as they left the stables,
+and it was a relief to enter the loghouse, which was heated to
+fustiness by the glowing stove. A lamp hung from a rough birch beam,
+and its uncertain radiance showed motionless figures wrapped in
+blankets in the bunks round the walls. Two men were, however,
+dressing, and one already in uniform sat at a table talking to another
+swathed in furs, who was from his appearance a prairie farmer. The man
+at the table was lean and weather-bronzed, with grizzled hair and
+observant eyes. They were fixed steadily upon the farmer, who knew
+that very little which happened upon the prairie escaped the vigilance
+of Sergeant Stimson.
+
+"It's straight talk you're giving me, Larry? What do you figure on
+making by it?" he said.
+
+The farmer laughed mirthlessly. "Not much, anyway, beyond the chance
+of getting a bullet in me back or me best steer lifted one dark night.
+'Tis not forgiving the rustlers are, and Courthorne's the divil," he
+said. "But listen now, Sergeant; I've told ye where he is, and if
+ye're not fit to corral him I'll ride him down meself."
+
+Sergeant Stimson wrinkled his forehead. "If anybody knows what they're
+after, it should be you," he said, watching the man out of the corner
+of his eyes. "Still, I'm a little worried as to why, when you'll get
+nothing for it, you're anxious to serve the State."
+
+The farmer clenched a big hand. "Sergeant, you that knows everything,
+will ye drive me mad, an' to ---- with the State!" he said. "Sure,
+it's gospel I'm telling ye, an' as you're knowing well, it's me could
+tell where the boys who ride at midnight drop many a keg. Well, if ye
+will have your reason, it was Courthorne who put the black shame on me
+an' mine."
+
+Sergeant Stimson nodded, for he had already suspected this.
+
+"Then," he said dryly, "we'll give you a chance of helping us to put
+the handcuffs on him. Now, because they wouldn't risk the bridge, and
+the ice is not thick yet everywhere, there are just two ways they
+could bring the stuff across, and I figure we'd be near the thing if
+we fixed on Graham's Pool. Still, Courthorne's no kind of fool, and
+just because that crossing seems the likeliest he might try the other
+one. You're ready for duty, Trooper Payne?"
+
+The lad stood straight. "I can turn out in ten minutes, sir," he said.
+
+"Then," and Sergeant Stimson raised his voice a trifle, "you will ride
+at once to the rise a league outside the settlement, and watch the
+Montana trail. Courthorne will probably be coming over from Witham's
+soon after you get there, riding the big black, and you'll keep out of
+sight and follow him. If he heads for Carson's Crossing ride for
+Graham's at a gallop, where you'll find me with the rest. If he makes
+for the bridge, you will overtake him if you can and find out what
+he's after. It's quite likely he'll tell you nothing, and you will not
+arrest him, but bearing in mind that every minute he spends there will
+be a loss to the rustlers you'll keep him so long as you can. Trooper
+Shannon, you'll ride at once to the bluff above Graham's Pool, and
+watch the trail. Stop any man who rides that way, and if it's
+Courthorne keep him until the rest of the boys come up with me. You've
+got your duty quite straight, both of you?"
+
+The lads saluted, and went out, while the Sergeant smiled a little as
+he glanced at the farmer, and the men who were dressing.
+
+"It's steep chances we'll have Mr. Courthorne's company to-morrow,
+boys," he said. "Fill up the kettle, Tom, and serve out a pint of
+coffee. There are reasons why we shouldn't turn out too soon. We'll
+saddle in an hour or so."
+
+Two of the men went out, and the stinging blast that swept in through
+the open door smote a smoky smear across the blinking lamp and roused
+a sharper crackling from the stove. Then one returned with the kettle
+and there was silence, when the fusty heat resumed its sway. Now and
+then a tired trooper murmured in his sleep, or there was a snapping in
+the stove, while the icy wind moaned about the building and the kettle
+commenced a soft sibilation, but nobody moved or spoke. Three shadowy
+figures in uniform sat just outside the light soaking in the grateful
+warmth while they could, for they knew that they might spend the next
+night unsheltered from the Arctic cold of the wilderness. The Sergeant
+sat with thoughtful eyes and wrinkled forehead where the flickering
+radiance forced up his lean face and silhouetted his spare outline on
+the rough boarding behind him, and close by the farmer sucked silently
+at his pipe, waiting, with a stony calm that sprang from fierce
+impatience, the reckoning with the man who had brought back shame upon
+him.
+
+It was about this time when Witham stood shivering a little with the
+bridle of a big black horse in his hand just outside the door of his
+homestead. A valise and two thick blankets were strapped to the
+saddle, and he had donned the fur cap and coat Courthorne usually
+wore. Courthorne himself stood close by, smiling at him sardonically.
+
+"If you keep the cap down and ride with your stirrups long, as I've
+fixed them, anybody would take you for me," said he. "Go straight
+through the settlement, and let any man you come across see you. His
+testimony would come in useful if Stimson tries to fix a charge on me.
+You know your part of the bargain. You're to be Lance Courthorne for a
+fortnight from to-day."
+
+"Yes," said Witham dryly. "I wish I was equally sure of yours."
+
+Courthorne laughed. "I'm to be Rancher Witham until to-morrow night,
+anyway. Don't worry about me. I'll borrow those books of yours and
+improve my mind. Possible starvation is the only thing that threatens
+me, and it's unfortunate you've left nothing fit to eat behind you."
+
+Witham swung himself into the saddle, a trifle awkwardly, for
+Courthorne rode with longer stirrup leathers than he was accustomed
+to, then he raised one hand, and the other man laughed a little as he
+watched him sink into the darkness of the shadowy prairie. When the
+drumming of hoofs was lost in the moaning of the wind he strode
+towards the stable, and taking up the lantern surveyed Witham's horse
+thoughtfully.
+
+"The thing cuts with both edges, and the farmer only sees one of
+them," he said. "That beast's about as difficult to mistake as my
+black is."
+
+Then he returned to the loghouse, and presently put on Witham's old
+fur coat and tattered fur cap. Had Witham seen his unpleasant smile as
+he did it, he would probably have wheeled the black horse and returned
+at a gallop, but the farmer was sweeping across the waste of whitened
+grass at least a league away by this time. Now and then a half-moon
+blinked down between wisps of smoky cloud, but for the most part grey
+dimness hung over the prairie, and the drumming of hoofs rang
+stridently through the silence. Witham knew a good horse, and had bred
+several of them--before a blizzard which swept the prairie killed off
+his finest yearlings as well as their pedigree sire--and his spirits
+rose as the splendid beast swung into faster stride beneath him.
+
+For two weeks at least he would be free from anxiety, and the monotony
+of his life at the lonely homestead had grown horribly irksome. Witham
+was young, and, now when for a brief space he had left his cares
+behind, the old love of adventure which had driven him out from
+England once more awakened and set his blood stirring. For the first
+time in six years of struggle he did not know what lay before him, and
+he had a curious, half-instinctive feeling that the trail he was
+travelling would lead him farther than Montana. It was borne in upon
+him that he had left the old hopeless life behind, and, stirred by
+some impulse, he broke into a little song he had sung in England, long
+and forgotten. He had a clear voice, and the words, which were filled
+with the hope of youth, rang bravely through the stillness of the
+frozen wilderness until the horse blundered, and Witham stopped with a
+little smile.
+
+"It's four long years since I felt as I do to-night," he said.
+
+Then he drew bridle and checked the horse as the lights of the
+settlement commenced to blink ahead, for the trail was rutted deep and
+frozen into the likeness of adamant, but when the first frame houses
+flung tracks of yellow radiance across the whitened grass he dropped
+his left arm a trifle and rode in at a canter as he had seen
+Courthorne do. Witham did not like Courthorne, but he meant to keep
+his bargain.
+
+As he passed the hotel more slowly a man who came out called to him.
+"Hello, Lance! Taking the trail?" he said. "Well, it kind of strikes
+me it's time you did. One of Stimson's boys was down here, and he
+seemed quite anxious about you."
+
+Witham knew the man, and was about to urge the horse forward, but in
+place of it drew bridle, and laughed with a feeling that was wholly
+new to him as he remembered that his neighbours now and then bantered
+him about his English and that Courthorne only used the Western
+colloquialism when it suited him.
+
+"Sergeant Stimson is an enterprising officer, but there are as keen
+men as he is," he said. "You will, in case he questions you, remember
+when you met me."
+
+"Oh, yes," said the other. "Still, I wouldn't fool too much with
+him--and where did you get those mittens from? That's the kind of
+outfit that would suit Witham."
+
+Witham nodded, for though he had turned his face from the light the
+hand he held the bridle with was visible, and his big fur gloves were
+very old.
+
+"They are his. The fact is, I've just come from his place," he said.
+"Well, you can tell Stimson you saw me starting out on the Montana
+trail."
+
+He shook the bridle, laughed softly as the frame houses flitted by,
+and then grew intent when the darkness of the prairie once more closed
+down. It was, he knew probable that some of Stimson's, men would be
+looking out for him, and he had not sufficient faith in Courthorne's
+assurances to court an encounter with them.
+
+The lights had faded, and the harsh grass was, crackling under the
+drumming hoofs when the blurred outline of a mounted man showed up on
+the crest of a rise, and a shout came down.
+
+"Hallo! Pull up there a moment, stranger."
+
+There was nothing alarming in the greeting, but Witham recognized the
+ring of command, as well as the faint jingle of steel which had
+preceded it, and pressed his heels home. The black swung forward
+faster, and Witham glancing over his shoulder, saw, the dusky shape
+was now moving down the incline, Then the voice rose again more
+commandingly.
+
+"Pull up; I want a talk with you."
+
+Witham turned his head a moment, and remembering Courthorne's English,
+flung back the answer, "Sorry, I haven't time."
+
+The faint musical jingle grew plainer, there was a thud of hoofs
+behind, and the curious, exhilaration returned to Witham as the big
+black horse stretched out at a gallop. The soil was hard as granite,
+but the matted grasses formed a covering that rendered fast riding
+possible to a man who took the risks and Witham knew there were few
+horses in the Government service to match the one he rode. Still, it
+was evident that the trooper meant to overtake him, and recollecting
+his compact he tightened his grip on the bridle. It was a long way to
+the ranch where he was to spend the night, and he knew that the
+further he drew the trooper on the better it would suit Courthorne.
+
+So they swept on through the darkness over the empty waste, the
+trooper who was riding hard slowly creeping up behind. Still, Witham
+held the horse in until a glance over his shoulder showed him that
+there was less than a hundred yards between them, and he fancied he
+heard a portentous rattle as well as the thud of hoofs. It was not
+unlike that made by a carbine flung across the saddle. This suggested
+unpleasant possibilities, and he slackened his grip on the bridle.
+Then a breathless shout rang out, "Pull up or I'll fire."
+
+Witham wondered if the threat was genuine or what is termed "bluff" in
+that country, but as he had decided objections to being shot in the
+back to please Courthorne, sent his heels home. The horse shot forward
+beneath him, and though no carbine flashed, the next backward glance
+showed him that the distance between him and the pursuer was drawing
+out, while when he stared ahead again the dark shape of willows or
+birches cut the skyline. As they came back to him the drumming of
+hoofs swelled into a staccato roar, while presently the trail grew
+steep, and dark boughs swayed above him. In another few minutes
+something smooth and level flung back a blink of light, and the
+timbers of a wooden bridge rattled under his passage. Then he was
+racing upwards through the gloom of wind-dwarfed birches on the
+opposite side, listening for the rattle behind him on the bridge, and
+after a struggle with the horse pulled him up smoking when he did not
+hear it.
+
+There was a beat of hoofs across the river, but it was slower than
+when he had last heard it and grew momentarily less audible, and
+Witham laughed as he watched the steam of the horse and his own breath
+rise in a thin white cloud.
+
+"The trooper has given it up, and now for Montana," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IN THE BLUFF
+
+
+It was very dark amidst the birches where Trooper Shannon sat
+motionless in his saddle, gazing down into the denser blackness of the
+river hollow. The stream ran deep below the level of the prairie, as
+the rivers of that country usually do, and the trees, which there
+alone found shelter from the winds, straggled, gnarled and stunted, up
+either side of the steep declivity. Close behind the trooper a sinuous
+trail seamed by ruts and the print of hoofs stretched away across the
+empty prairie. It forked on the outskirts of the bluff, and one arm
+dipped steeply to the river where, because the stream ran slow just
+there and the bottom was firm, a horseman might cross when the water
+was low, and heavy sledges make the passage on the ice in winter time.
+The other arm twisted in and out among the birches towards the bridge,
+but that detour increased the distance to any one travelling north or
+south by two leagues or so.
+
+The ice, however was not very thick as yet, and Shannon, who had heard
+it ring hollowly under him, surmised that while it might be possible
+to lead a laden horse across, there would be some risk attached to the
+operation. For that very reason, and although his opinion had not been
+asked, he agreed with Sergeant Stimson that the whisky-runners would
+attempt the passage. They were men who took the risks as they came,
+and that route would considerably shorten the journey it was
+especially desirable for them to make at night, while it would,
+Shannon fancied, appear probable to them that if the police had word
+of their intentions they would watch the bridge. Between it and the
+frozen ford the stream ran faster, and the trooper decided that no
+mounted man could cross the thinner ice.
+
+It was very cold as well as dark, for although the snow, which usually
+precedes the frost in that country, had not come as yet, it was
+evidently not far away, and the trooper shivered in the blasts from
+the pole which cut through fur and leather with the keenness of steel.
+The temperature had fallen steadily since morning, and now there was a
+presage of a blizzard in the moaning wind and murky sky. If it broke
+and scattered its blinking whiteness upon the roaring blast there
+would be but little hope for any man or beast caught shelterless in
+the empty wilderness, for it is beyond the power of anything made of
+flesh and blood to withstand that cold.
+
+Already a fine haze of snow swirled between the birch twigs every now
+and then, and stung the few patches of the trooper's unprotected skin
+as though they had been pricked with red-hot needles. It, however,
+seldom lasted more than a minute, and when it whirled away, a
+half-moon shone down for a moment between smoky clouds. The uncertain
+radiance showed the thrashing birches rising from the hollow, row on
+row, struck a faint sparkle from the ice beneath them, and then went
+out, leaving the gloom intensified. It was evident to Shannon that his
+eyes would not be much use to him that night, for which reason he kept
+his ears uncovered at the risk of losing them, but though he had been
+born in the bush and all the sounds of the wilderness had for him a
+meaning, hearing did not promise to be of much assistance. The dim
+trees roared about him with a great thrashing of twigs, and when the
+wilder gusts had passed there was an eery moaning, through which came
+the murmur of leagues of tormented grasses. The wind was rising
+rapidly, and it would, he fancied, drown the beat of approaching hoofs
+as well as any cry from his comrades.
+
+Four of them were hidden amidst the birches where the trail wound
+steeply upwards through the bluff across the river, two on the nearer
+side not far below, and Trooper Shannon's watch would serve two
+purposes. He was to let the rustlers pass him it they rode for the
+ford, and then help to cut off the retreat of any who escaped the
+sergeant, while if they found the ice too thin for loaded beasts or
+rode towards the bridge, a flash from his carbine would bring his
+comrades across in time to join the others who were watching that
+trail. It had, as usual with Stimson's schemes, all been carefully
+thought out and the plan was eminently workable, but unfortunately for
+the grizzled sergeant a better brain than his had foreseen the
+combination.
+
+In the meanwhile the lad felt his limbs grow stiff and almost useless,
+and a lethargic numbness blunt the keenness of his faculties as the
+heat went out of him. He had more than usual endurance, and utter
+cold, thirst, and the hunger that most ably helps the frost, are not
+infrequently the portion of the wardens of the prairie; but there is a
+limit to what man can bear, and the troopers who watched by the frozen
+river that night had almost reached it. Shannon could not feel the
+stirrups with his feet. One of his ears was tingling horribly as the
+blood that had almost left it resumed its efforts to penetrate the
+congealing flesh, while the mittened hands he beat upon his breast
+fell solidly on his wrappings without separate motion of the fingers.
+Once or twice the horse stamped fretfully, but a touch of hand and
+heel quieted him, for though the frozen flesh may shrink, unwavering
+obedience is demanded equally from man and beast enrolled in the
+service of the North-West police.
+
+"Stiddy now," said the lad, partly to discover if he still retained
+the power of speech. "Sure ye know the order that was given me, and if
+it's a funeral that comes of it the Government will bury ye."
+
+He sighed as he beat his hands upon his breast again, and when a
+flicker of moonlight smote a passing track of brightness athwart the
+tossing birches his young face was very grim. Like many another
+trooper of the North-West police, Shannon had his story, and he
+remembered the one trace of romance that had brightened his hard, bare
+life that night as he waited for the man who had dissipated it.
+
+When Larry Blake moved West from Ontario, Shannon, drawn by his
+sister's dark eyes, followed him, and took up a Government grant of
+prairie sod. His dollars were few, but he had a stout heart and two
+working oxen, and nothing seemed impossible while Ailly Blake smiled
+on him, and she smiled tolerably frequently, for Shannon was a
+well-favoured lad. He had worked harder than most grown men could do,
+won one good harvest, and had a few dollars in the bank when
+Courthorne rode up to Blake's homestead on his big black horse. After
+that, all Shannon's hopes and ambitions came down with a crash; and
+the day he found Blake grey in face with shame and rage he offered
+Sergeant Stimson his services. Now he was filled with an unholy
+content that he had done so, for he came of a race that does not
+forget an injury, and had sufficient cause for a jealous pride in the
+virtue of its women. He and Larry might have forgiven a pistol shot,
+but they could not forget the shame.
+
+Suddenly he stiffened to attention, for though a man of the cities
+would probably have heard nothing but the wailing of the wind, he
+caught a faint rhythmic drumming which might have been made by a
+galloping horse. It ceased, and he surmised, probably correctly, that
+it was Trooper Payne returning. It was, however, his business to watch
+the forking of the trail, and when he could only hear the thrashing of
+the birches, he moved his mittened hand from the bridle, and patted
+the restive horse. Just then the bluff was filled with sound as a
+blast that drove a haze of snow before it roared down. It was followed
+by a sudden stillness that was almost bewildering, and when a blink of
+moonlight came streaming down, Trooper Shannon grabbed at his carbine,
+for a man stood close beside him in the trail. The lad, who had
+neither seen nor heard him come, looked down on the glinting barrel of
+a Marlin rifle and saw a set white face behind it.
+
+"Hands up!" said a hoarse voice. "Throw that thing down,"
+
+Trooper Shannon recognized it, and all the fierce hate he was capable
+of flamed up. It shook him with a gust of passion, and it was not fear
+that caused his stiffened fingers to slip upon the carbine. It fell
+with a rattle, and while he sat still, almost breathless and livid in
+face, the man laughed a little.
+
+"That's better; get down," he said.
+
+Trooper Shannon swung himself from the saddle, and alighted heavily as
+a flung-off sack would have done, for his limbs refused to bend. Still
+it was not from lack of courage that he obeyed, and during one moment
+he had clutched the bridle with the purpose of riding over his enemy.
+He had, however, been taught to think for himself swiftly and shrewdly
+from his boyhood up, and realized instinctively that if he escaped
+scathless the ringing of the rifle would warn the rustlers who, he
+surmised, were close behind. He was also a police trooper broken to
+the iron bond of discipline, and if a bullet from the Marlin was to
+end his career, he determined it should, if possible, also terminate
+his enemy's liberty. The gust of rage had gone, and left him with the
+cold vindictive cunning the Celt who has a grievous injury to remember
+is also capable of, and there was contempt in his voice as he turned
+to Courthorne quietly.
+
+"Sure it's your turn now," he said. "The last time I put my mark on
+the divil's face of ye."
+
+Courthorne laughed wickedly. "It was a bad day's work for you; I
+haven't forgotten yet," he said. "I'm only sorry you're not a trifle
+older, but it will teach Sergeant Stimson the folly of sending a lad
+to deal with me. Well, walk straight into the bush, and remember that
+the muzzle of the rifle is scarcely three feet behind you!"
+
+Trooper Shannon did so with black rage in his heart, and his empty
+hands at his sides. He was a police trooper and a bushman born, and
+knew that the rustlers' laden horses would find some difficulty in
+remounting the steep trail and could not escape to left or right once
+they were entangled amidst the trees. Then it would be time to give
+the alarm, and go down with a bullet in his body, or by some
+contrivance evade the deadly rifle and come to grips with his enemy.
+He also knew Lance Courthorne, and, remembering how the lash had
+seamed his face, expected no pity. One of them it was tolerably
+certain would have set out on the long trail before the morning, but
+they breed grim men in the bush of Ontario, and no other kind ride
+very long with the wardens of the prairie.
+
+"Stop where you are," said Courthorne presently. "Now then, turn
+round. Move a finger or open your lips, and I'll have great pleasure
+in shooting you. In the meanwhile you can endeavour to make favour
+with whatever saint is honoured by the charge of you."
+
+Shannon smiled in a fashion that resembled a snarl as once more a
+blink of moonlight shone down upon them, and in place of showing
+apprehension, his young white face, from which the bronze had faded,
+was venomous.
+
+"And my folks were Orange, but what does that matter now?" said he.
+"There'll be one of us in----to-morrow, but for the shame ye put on
+Larry ye'll carry my mark there with ye."
+
+Courthorne looked at him with a little glow in his eyes. "You haven't
+felt mine yet," he said. "You will probably talk differently when you
+do."
+
+It may have been youthful bravado, but Trooper Shannon laughed. "In
+the meanwhile," he said, "I'm wondering why you're wearing an honest
+man's coat and cap. Faith, if he saw them on ye, Witham would burn
+them."
+
+Courthorne returned no answer and the moonlight went out, but they
+stood scarcely three feet apart, and one of them knew that any move he
+made would be followed by the pressure of the other's finger on the
+trigger. He, however, did not move at all, and while the birches
+roared about them they stood silently face to face, the man of birth
+and pedigree with a past behind him and blood already upon his head,
+and the raw lad from the bush, his equal before the tribunal that
+would presently judge their quarrel.
+
+In the meanwhile Trooper Shannon heard a drumming of hoofs that grew
+steadily louder before Courthorne apparently noticed the sound, and
+his trained ears told him that the rustlers' horses were coming down
+the trail. Now they had passed the forking, and when the branches
+ceased roaring again he knew they had floundered down the first of the
+declivity, and it would be well to wait a little until they had
+straggled out where the trail was narrow and deeply rutted. No one
+could turn them hastily there, and the men who drove them could
+scarcely escape the troopers who waited them, if they blundered on
+through the darkness of the bush. So five breathless minutes passed,
+Trooper Shannon standing tense and straight with every nerve tingling
+as he braced himself for an effort, Courthorne stooping a little with
+forefinger on the trigger, and the Marlin rifle at his hip. Then
+through a lull there rose a clearer thud of hoofs. It was lost in the
+thrashing of the twigs as a gust roared down again, and Trooper
+Shannon launched himself like a panther upon his enemy.
+
+He might have succeeded, and the effort was gallantly made, but
+Courthorne had never moved his eyes from the shadowy object before
+him, and even as it sprang, his finger contracted further on the
+trigger. There was a red flash and because he fired from the hip the
+trigger guard gashed his mitten. He sprang sideways, scarcely feeling
+the bite of the steel, for the lad's hand brushed his shoulder. Then
+there was a crash as something went down heavily amidst the crackling
+twigs. Courthorne stooped a little, panting in the smoke that blew
+into his eyes, jerked the Marlin lever, and, as the moon came through
+again, had a blurred vision of a white, drawn face that stared up at
+him still with defiance in its eyes. He looked down into it as he drew
+the trigger once more.
+
+Shannon quivered a moment, and then lay very still, and it was high
+time for Courthorne to look to himself, for there was a shouting in
+the bluff, and something came crashing through the undergrowth. Even
+then his cunning did not desert him, and flinging the Marlin down
+beside the trooper, he slipped almost silently in and out among the
+birches and swung himself into the saddle of a tethered horse.
+Unlooping the bridle from a branch, he pressed his heels home,
+realizing as he did it that there was no time to lose, for it was
+evident that one of the troopers was somewhat close behind him, and
+others were coming across the river. He knew the bluff well, and
+having no desire to be entangled in it was heading for the prairie,
+when a blink of moonlight showed him a lad in uniform riding at a
+gallop between him and the crest of the slope. It was Trooper Payne,
+and Courthorne knew him for a very bold horseman.
+
+Now, it is possible that had one of the rustlers, who were simple men
+with primitive virtues as well as primitive passions, been similarly
+placed, he would have joined his comrades and taken his chance with
+them, but Courthorne kept faith with nobody unless it suited him, and
+was equally dangerous to his friends and enemies. Trooper Shannon had
+also been silenced for ever, and if he could cross the frontier
+unrecognized, nobody would believe the story of the man he would leave
+to bear the brunt in place of him. Accordingly he headed at a gallop
+down the winding trail, while sharp orders and a drumming of hoofs
+grew louder behind him, and hoarse cries rose in front. Trooper Payne
+was, it seemed, at least keeping pace with him, and he glanced over
+his shoulder as he saw something dark and shadowy across the trail. It
+was apparently a horse from which two men were struggling to loose its
+burden.
+
+Courthorne guessed that the trail was blocked in front of it by other
+loaded beasts, and he could not get past in time, for the half-seen
+trooper was closing with him fast, and another still rode between him
+and the edge of the bluff cutting off his road to the prairie. It was
+evident he could not go on, while the crackle of twigs, roar of hoofs,
+and jingle of steel behind him, made it plain that to turn was to ride
+back upon the carbines of men who would be quite willing to use them.
+There alone remained the river. It ran fast below him, and the ice was
+thin, and for just a moment he tightened his grip on the bridle.
+
+"We've got you!" a hoarse voice reached him. "You're taking steep
+chances if you go on."
+
+Courthorne swung off from the trail. There was a flash above him,
+something whirred through the twigs above his head, and the horse
+plunged as he drove his heels in.
+
+"One of them gone for the river," another shout rang out, and
+Courthorne was crashing through the undergrowth straight down the
+declivity, while thin snow whirled about him, and now and then he
+caught the faint glimmer flung back by the ice beneath.
+
+Swaying boughs lashed him, his fur cap was whipped away, and he felt
+that his face was bleeding, but there was another crackle close behind
+him, for Trooper Payne was riding as daringly, and he carried a
+carbine. Had he desired it Courthorne could not turn. The bronco he
+bestrode was madly excited and less than half broken, and it is
+probable no man could have pulled him up just then. It may also have
+been borne in upon Courthorne, that he owed a little to those he had
+left behind him in the old country, and he had not lost his pride.
+There was, it seemed, no escape, but he had at least a choice of
+endings, and with a little breathless laugh he rode straight for the
+river.
+
+It was with difficulty Trooper Payne pulled his horse up on the steep
+bank a minute later. A white haze was now sliding down the hollow
+between the two dark walls of trees, and something seemed to move in
+the midst of it while the ice rang about it. Then, as the trooper
+pitched up his carbine, there was a crash that was followed by a
+horrible floundering and silence again. Payne sat still, shivering a
+little in his saddle until the snow that whirled about him blotted out
+all the birches, and a roaring blast came down.
+
+He knew there was now nothing that he could do. The current had
+evidently sucked the fugitive under, and, dismounting, he groped his
+way up the slope, leading the horse by the bridle, and only swung
+himself into the saddle when he found the trail again. A carbine
+flashed in front of him, two dim figures went by at a gallop, and a
+third one flung an order over his shoulder as he passed.
+
+"Go back. The Sergeant's hurt and Shannon has got a bullet in him."
+
+Trooper Payne had surmised as much already, and went back as fast as
+he could ride, while the beat of hoofs grew fainter down the trail.
+Ten minutes later he drew bridle close by a man who held a lantern,
+and saw Sergeant Stimson sitting very grim in face on the ground. It
+transpired later that his horse had fallen and thrown him, and it was
+several weeks before he rode again.
+
+"You lost your man?" he said. "Get down."
+
+Payne dismounted. "Yes, sir, I fancy he is dead," he said. "He tried
+the river, and the ice wouldn't carry him. I saw him ride away from
+here just after the first shot, and fancied he fired at Shannon. Have
+you seen him, sir?"
+
+The other trooper moved his lantern, and Payne gasped as he saw a
+third man stooping, with the white face of his comrade close by his
+feet. Shannon appeared to recognize him, for his eyes moved a little
+and the grey lips fell apart. Then Payne turned his head aside while
+the other trooper nodded compassionately in answer to his questioning
+glance.
+
+"I've sent one of the boys to Graham's for a wagon," said the
+Sergeant. "You saw the man who fired at him?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said Trooper Payne.
+
+"You knew him?" and there was a ring in the Sergeant's voice.
+
+"Yes, sir," said the trooper. "At least he was riding Witham's horse,
+and had on the old, long coat of his."
+
+Sergeant Stimson nodded, and pointed to the weapon lying with
+blackened muzzle at his feet. "And I think you could recognize that
+rifle? There's F. Witham cut on the stock of it."
+
+Payne said nothing, for the trooper signed to him.
+
+"I fancy Shannon wants to talk to you," he said.
+
+The lad knelt down, slipped one arm about his comrade's neck, and took
+the mittened hand in his own. Shannon smiled up at him feebly.
+
+"Witham's horse and his cap," he said, and then stopped, gasping
+horribly.
+
+"You will remember that, boys," said the Sergeant.
+
+Payne could say nothing. Trooper Shannon and he had ridden through icy
+blizzard and scorching heat together, and he felt his manhood melting
+as he looked down into his dimming eyes. There was a curious look in
+them which suggested a strenuous endeavour and an appeal, and the lips
+moved again.
+
+"It was," said Shannon, and moved his head a little on Payne's arm,
+apparently in an agony of effort.
+
+Then the birches roared about them, and drowned the feeble utterance,
+while, when the gust passed, all three, who had not heard what
+preceded it, caught only one word--"Witham."
+
+Trooper Shannon's eyes closed, and his head fell back, while the snow
+beat softly in to his upturned face, and there was a very impressive
+silence, intensified by the moaning of the wind, until the rattle of
+wheels came faintly down the trail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MISS BARRINGTON COMES HOME
+
+
+The long train was slackening speed and two whistles rang shrilly
+through the roar of wheels when Miss Barrington laid down the book
+with which she had beguiled her journey of fifteen hundred miles, and
+rose from her seat in a corner of the big first-class car. The car was
+sumptuously upholstered, and its decorations tasteful as well as
+lavish, but just then it held no other passenger, and Miss Barrington
+smiled curiously as she stood, swaying a little, in front of the
+mirror at one end of it, wrapping her furs about her. There was,
+however, a faint suggestion of regret in the smile, and the girl's
+eyes grew grave again, for the soft cushions, dainty curtains,
+gleaming gold and nickel, and equable temperature formed a part of the
+sheltered life she was about to leave behind her, and there would, she
+knew, be a difference in the future. Still, she laughed again as,
+drawing a little fur cap well down upon her broad, white forehead, she
+nodded at her own reflection.
+
+"One cannot have everything, and you might have stayed there and
+revelled in civilization if you had liked," she said.
+
+Crossing to the door of the portico she stood a moment with fingers on
+its handle, and once more looked about her. The car was very cosy, and
+Maud Barrington had all the average young woman's appreciation of the
+smoother side of life, although she had also the capacity, which is by
+no means so common, for extracting the most it had to give from the
+opposite one. Still, it was with a faint regret she prepared to
+complete what had been a deed of renunciation. Montreal, with its
+gaieties and luxuries, had not seemed so very far away while she was
+carried West amid all the comforts artizans who were also artists
+could provide for the traveller, but once that door closed behind her
+she would be cut adrift from it all, and left face to face with the
+simple, strenuous life of the prairie.
+
+Maud Barrington had, however, made her mind up some weeks ago; and
+when the lock closed with a little clack that seemed to emphasize the
+fact that the door was shut, she had shaken the memories from her, and
+was quietly prepared to look forward instead of back. It also needed
+some little courage, for, as she stood with the furs fluttering about
+her on the lurching platform, the cold went through her like a knife,
+and the roofs of the little prairie town rose up above the willows the
+train was now crawling through. The odours that greeted her nostrils
+were the reverse of pleasant, and glancing down with the faintest
+shiver of disgust, her eyes rested on the litter of empty cans,
+discarded garments, and other even more unsightly things which are
+usually dumped in the handiest bluff by the citizens of a springing
+Western town. They have, for the most part, but little appreciation of
+the picturesque, and it would take a good deal to affect their health.
+
+Then the dwarfed trees opened out, and flanked by two huge wheat
+elevators and a great water tank, the prairie city stood revealed. It
+was crude and repellent, devoid of anything that could please the most
+lenient eye, for the bare frame houses rose with their rough boarding
+weathered and cracked by frost and sun, hideous almost in their
+simplicity, from the white prairie. Paint was apparently an unknown
+luxury, and pavement there was none, though a rude plank platform
+straggled some distance above the ground down either side of the
+street, so that the citizens might not sink knee-deep in the mire of
+the spring thawing. Here and there a dilapidated wagon was drawn up in
+front of a store, but with a clanging of the big bell the locomotive
+rolled into the little station, and Maud Barrington looked down upon a
+group of silent men who had sauntered there to enjoy the one
+relaxation the desolate place afforded them.
+
+There was very little in their appearance to attract the attention of
+a young woman of Miss Barrington's upbringing. They had grave, bronzed
+faces, and wore, for the most part, old fur coats stained here and
+there with soil. Nor were their mittens and moccasins in good repair,
+but there was a curious steadiness in their gaze which vaguely
+suggested the slow, stubborn courage that upheld them through the
+strenuous effort and grim self-denial of their toilsome lives. They
+were small wheat-growers who had driven in to purchase provisions or
+inquire the price of grain, and here and there a mittened hand was
+raised to a well-worn cap, for most of them recognized Miss Barrington
+of Silverdale Grange. She returned their greetings graciously, and
+then swung herself from the platform, with a smile in her eyes as a
+man came hastily and yet, as it were, with a certain deliberation in
+her direction.
+
+He was elderly, but held himself erect, while his furs, which were
+good, fitted him in a fashion which suggested a uniform. He also wore
+boots which reached half-way to the knee, and were presumably lined to
+resist the prairie cold, which few men at that season would do, and
+scarcely a speck of dust marred their lustrous exterior, while as much
+of his face as was visible beneath the great fur cap was lean and
+commanding. Its salient features were the keen and somewhat imperious
+grey eyes and long, straight nose, while something in the squareness
+of the man's shoulders and his pose set him apart from the prairie
+farmers and suggested the cavalry officer. He was, in fact, Colonel
+Barrington, founder and autocratic ruler of the English community of
+Silverdale, and had been awaiting his niece somewhat impatiently.
+Colonel Barrington was invariably punctual, and resented the fact that
+the train had come in an hour later than it should have done.
+
+"So you have come back to us. We have been longing for you, my dear,"
+he said. "I don't know what we should have done had they kept you in
+Montreal altogether."
+
+Maud Barrington smiled, though there was a brightness in her eyes and
+a faint warmth in her cheek, for the sincerity of her uncle's welcome
+was evident.
+
+"Yes," she said, "I have come back. It was very pleasant in the city,
+and they were all kind to me; but I think, henceforward, I would
+sooner stay with you on the prairie."
+
+Colonel Barrington patted the hand he drew through his arm, and there
+was a very kindly smile in his eyes as they left the station and
+crossed the tract towards a little, and by no means very comfortable,
+wooden hotel. He stopped outside it.
+
+"I want to see the horses put in and get our mail," he said. "Mrs.
+Jasper expects you, and will have tea ready."
+
+He disappeared behind the wooden building, and his niece standing a
+moment on the veranda watched the long train roll away down the faint
+blur of track that ran west to the farthest verge of the great white
+wilderness. Then with a little impatient gesture she went into the
+hotel.
+
+"That is another leaf turned down, and there is no use in looking
+back; but I wonder what is written on the rest," she said.
+
+Twenty minutes later she watched Colonel Barrington cross the street
+with a bundle of letters in his hand. She fancied that his step was
+slower than it had been, and that he seemed a trifle preoccupied and
+embarrassed; but he spoke with quiet kindliness when he handed her
+into the waiting sleigh, and the girl's spirits rose as they swung
+smoothly northwards behind two fast horses across the prairie. It
+stretched away before her, ridged here and there with a dusky birch
+bluff or willow grove under a vault of crystalline blue. The sun that
+had no heat in it struck a silvery glitter from the snow, and the
+trail swept back to the horizon a sinuous blue-grey smear, while the
+keen, dry cold and sense of swift motion set the girl's blood
+stirring. After all, it seemed to her, there were worse lives than
+those the Western farmers led on the great levels under the frost and
+sun.
+
+Colonel Barrington watched her with a little gleam of approval in his
+eyes. "You are not sorry to come back to this and Silverdale?" he
+said, sweeping his mittened hand vaguely round the horizon.
+
+"No," said the girl, with a little laugh. "At least, I shall not be
+sorry to return to Silverdale. It has a charm of its own, for while
+one is occasionally glad to get away from it, one is even more pleased
+to come home again. It is a somewhat purposeless life our friends are
+leading yonder in the cities. I, of course, mean the women."
+
+Barrington nodded. "And some of the men! Well, we have room here for
+the many who are going to the devil in the old country for the lack of
+something worth while to do; though I am afraid there is considerably
+less prospect than I once fancied there would be of their making
+money."
+
+His niece noticed the gravity in his face, and sat thoughtfully silent
+for several minutes, while, with the snow hissing beneath it, the
+sleigh nipped into and swung out of a hollow.
+
+Colonel Barrington had founded the Silverdale settlement ten years
+earlier, and gathered about him other men with a grievance who had
+once served their nation, and the younger sons of English gentlemen
+who had no inclination for commerce, and found that lack of brains and
+capital debarred them from either a political or military career. He
+had settled them on the land, and taught them to farm, while, for the
+community had prospered at first when Western wheat was dear, it had
+taken ten years to bring home to him the fact that men who dined
+ceremoniously each evening and spent at least a third of their time in
+games and sport, could not well compete with the grim bushmen from
+Ontario, or the lean Dakota ploughmen, who ate their meals in ten
+minutes and toiled at least twelve hours every day.
+
+Colonel Barrington was slow to believe that the race he sprang from
+could be equalled and much less beaten at anything, while his respect
+for and scrupulous observance of insular traditions had cost him a
+good deal, and left him a poorer man than he had been when he founded
+Silverdale. Maud Barrington had been his ward, and he still directed
+the farming of a good many acres of wheat land which she now held in
+her own right. The soil was excellent, and would in all probability
+have provided one of the Ontario men with a very desirable revenue,
+but Colonel Barrington had no taste for small economies.
+
+"I want to hear all the news," said the girl. "You can begin at the
+beginning--the price of wheat. I fancied, when I saw you, it had been
+declining."
+
+Barrington sighed a little. "Hard wheat is five cents down, and I am
+sorry I persuaded you to hold your crop. I am very much afraid we
+shall see the balance the wrong side again next half-year."
+
+Maud Barrington smiled curiously. There was no great cause for
+merriment in the information given her, but it emphasized the contrast
+between the present and the careless life she had lately led when her
+one thought had been how to extract the greatest pleasure from the
+day. One had frequently to grapple with the problems arising from
+scanty finances at Silverdale.
+
+"It will go up again," she said. "Is there anything else?"
+
+Barrington's face grew a trifle grim as he nodded. "There is; and
+while I have not much expectation of an advance in prices, I have been
+worrying over another affair lately."
+
+His niece regarded him steadily. "You mean, Lance Courthorne?"
+
+"Yes," said Barrington, who flicked the near horse somewhat viciously
+with the whip. "He is also sufficient to cause any man with my
+responsibilities anxiety."
+
+Maud Barrington looked thoughtful. "You fancy he will come to
+Silverdale?"
+
+Barrington appeared to be repressing an inclination towards vigorous
+speech with some difficulty, and a little glint crept into his eyes.
+"If I could by any means prevent it, the answer would be, No. As it
+is, you know that, while I founded it, Silverdale was one of Geoffrey
+Courthorne's imperialistic schemes, and a good deal of the land was
+recorded in his name. That being so, he had every right to leave the
+best farm on it to the man he had disinherited, especially as Lance
+will not get a penny of the English property. Still, I do not know why
+he did so, because he never spoke of him without bitterness."
+
+"Yes," said the girl, while a little flush crept into her face. "I was
+sorry for the old man. It was a painful story."
+
+Colonel Barrington nodded. "It is one that is best forgotten--and you
+do not know it all. Still, the fact that the man may settle among us
+is not the worst. As you know, there was every reason to believe that
+Geoffrey intended all his property at Silverdale for you."
+
+"I have much less right to it than his own son, and the colonial cure
+is not infrequently efficacious," said Miss Barrington. "Lance may,
+after all, quieten down, and he must have some good qualities."
+
+The Colonel's smile was very grim. "It is fifteen years since I saw
+him at Westham, and they were not much in evidence then. I can
+remember two little episodes, in which he figured, with painful
+distinctness, and one was the hanging of a terrier which had in some
+way displeased him. The beast was past assistance when I arrived on
+the scene, but the devilish pleasure in the lad's face sent a chill
+through me. In the other, the gardener's lad flung a stone at a
+blackbird on the wall above the vinery, and Master Lance, who, I
+fancy, did not like the gardener's lad, flung one through the glass.
+Geoffrey, who was angry, but had not seen what I did, haled the boy
+before him, and Lance looked him in the face and lied with the
+assurance of an ambassador. The end was that the gardener, who was
+admonished, cuffed the innocent lad. These, my dear, are somewhat
+instructive memories."
+
+"I wonder," said Maud Barrington, glancing out across the prairie
+which was growing dusky now, "why you took the trouble to call them up
+for me?"
+
+The Colonel smiled dryly. "I never saw a Courthorne who could not
+catch a woman's eye, or had any undue diffidence about making the most
+of the fact; and that is partly why they have brought so much trouble
+on everybody connected with them. Further, it is unfortunate that
+women are not infrequently more inclined to be gracious to the sinner
+who repents, when it is worth his while, than they are to the honest
+man who has done no wrong. Nor do I know that it is only pity which
+influences them. Some of you take an exasperating delight in
+picturesque rascality."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed, and fearlessly met her uncle's glance. "Then
+you don't believe in penitence?"
+
+"Well," said the Colonel dryly, "I am, I hope, a Christian man, but it
+would be difficult to convince me that the gambler, cattle-thief, and
+whisky-runner who ruined every man and woman who trusted him will be
+admitted to the same place as clean-lived English gentlemen. There
+are, my dear, plenty of them still."
+
+Barrington spoke almost fiercely, and then flushed through his tan,
+when the girl, looking into his eyes, smiled a little. "Yes," she
+said, "I can believe it, because I owe a good deal to one of them."
+
+The ring in the girl's voice belied the smile, and the speech was
+warranted; for, dogmatic, domineering, and vindictive as he was apt to
+be occasionally, the words he had used applied most fitly to Colonel
+Barrington. His word at least had never been broken, and had he not
+adhered steadfastly to his own rigid code, he would have been a good
+deal richer man than he was then. Nor did his little shortcomings,
+which were burlesqued virtues, and ludicrous now and then, greatly
+detract from the stamp of dignity which, for speech was his worst
+point, sat well upon him. He was innately conservative to the
+backbone, though since an ungrateful Government had slighted him, he
+had become an ardent Canadian, and in all political questions
+aggressively democratic.
+
+"My dear, I sometimes fancy I am a hypercritical old fogey!" he said,
+and sighed a little, while once more the anxious look crept into his
+face. "Just now I wish devoutly I was a better business man."
+
+Nothing more was said for a little, and Miss Barrington watched the
+crimson sunset burn out low down on the prairie's western rim. Then
+the pale stars blinked out through the creeping dusk, and a great
+silence and an utter cold settled down upon the waste. The muffled
+thud of hoofs, and the crunching beneath the sliding steel, seemed to
+intensify it, and there was a suggestion of frozen brilliancy in the
+sparkle flung back by the snow. Then a coyote howled dolefully in a
+distant bluff, and the girl shivered as she shrank down further amidst
+the furs.
+
+"Forty degrees of frost," said the Colonel. "Perhaps more. This is
+very different from the cold of Montreal. Still, you'll see the lights
+of Silverdale from the crest of the next rise."
+
+It was, however, an hour before they reached them, and Miss Barrington
+was almost frozen when the first square loghouse rose out of the
+prairie. It and others that followed it flitted by, and then, flanked
+by a great birch bluff, with outlying barns, granaries and stables,
+looming black about it against a crystalline sky, Silverdale Grange
+grew into shape across their way. Its rows of ruddy windows cast
+streaks of flickering orange down the trail, the baying of dogs
+changed into a joyous clamour when the Colonel reined in his team,
+half-seen men in furs waved a greeting, and one who risked frost-bite,
+with his cap at his knee, handed Miss Barrington from the sleigh and
+up the veranda stairway.
+
+She had need of the assistance, for her limbs were stiff and almost
+powerless, and she gasped a little when she passed into the drowsy
+warmth and brightness of the great log-walled hall. The chilled blood
+surged back tingling to her skin, and swaying with a creeping
+faintness she found refuge in the arms of a grey-haired lady who
+stooped and kissed her gently. Then the door swung to, and she was
+home again in the wooden grange of Silverdale, which stood far remote
+from any civilization but its own on the frozen levels of the great
+white plain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ANTICIPATIONS
+
+
+It was late at night, and outside the prairie lay white and utterly
+silent under the Arctic cold, when Maud Barrington, who glanced at it
+through the double windows, flung back the curtains with a little
+shiver, and turning towards the fire, sat down on a little velvet
+footstool beside her aunt's knee. She had shaken out the coils of
+lustrous brown hair which flowed about her shoulders glinting in the
+light of the shaded lamp, and it was with a little gesture of physical
+content she stretched her hands towards the hearth. A crumbling birch
+log still gleamed redly amidst the feathery ashes, but its effect was
+chiefly artistic, for no open fire could have dissipated the cold of
+the prairie, and a big tiled stove brought from Teutonic Minnesota
+furnished the needful warmth.
+
+The girl's face was partly in shadow, and her figure foreshortened by
+her pose, which accentuated its rounded outline and concealed its
+willowy slenderness; but the broad white forehead and straight nose
+became visible when she moved her head a trifle, and a faintly
+humorous sparkle crept into the clear brown eyes. Possibly Maud
+Barrington looked her best just then, for the lower part of the
+pale-tinted face was a trifle too firm in its modelling.
+
+"No, I am not tired, aunt, and I could not sleep just now," she said.
+"You see, after leaving all that behind one, one feels, as it were,
+adrift, and it is necessary to realize one's self again."
+
+The little silver-haired lady who sat in the big basket chair smiled
+down upon her and laid a thin white hand that was still beautiful upon
+the gleaming hair.
+
+"I can understand, my dear, and am glad you enjoyed your stay in the
+city, because sometimes when I count your birthdays, I can't help a
+fancy that you are not young enough," she said. "You have lived out
+here with two old people who belong to the past too much."
+
+The girl moved a little, and swept her glance slowly round the room.
+It was small and scantily furnished, though great curtains shrouded
+door and window, and here and there a picture relieved the bareness of
+the walls, which were panelled with roughly-dressed British-Columbian
+cedar. The floor was of redwood, diligently polished and adorned, not
+covered, by one or two skins brought by some of Colonel Barrington's
+younger neighbours from the Rockies. There were two basket-chairs and
+a plain, redwood table; but in contrast to them a cabinet of old
+French workmanship stood in one corner bearing books in dainty
+bindings, and two great silver candlesticks. The shaded lamp was also
+of the same metal, and the whole room with its faint resinous smell
+conveyed, in a fashion not uncommon on the prairie, a suggestion of
+taste and refinement held in check by the least comparative poverty.
+Colonel Barrington was a widower who had been esteemed a man of
+wealth, but the founding of Silverdale had made a serious inroad on
+his finances. Even yet, though he occasionally practised it, he did
+not take kindly to economy.
+
+"Yes," said the girl, "I enjoyed it all--and it was so different from
+the prairie."
+
+There was comprehension, and a trace of sympathy, in Miss Barrington's
+nod. "Tell me a little, my dear," she said. "There was not a great
+deal in your letters."
+
+Her niece glanced dreamily into the sinking fire as though she would
+call up the pictures there. "But you know it all--the life I have only
+had glimpses of. Well, for the first few months I almost lost my head,
+and was swung right off my feet by the whirl of it. It was then I was,
+perhaps, just a trifle thoughtless."
+
+The while-haired lady laughed softly. "It is difficult to believe it,
+Maud."
+
+The girl shook her head reproachfully. "I know what you mean, and
+perhaps you are right, for that was what Twoinette insinuated," she
+said. "She actually told me that I should be thankful I had a brain
+since I had no heart. Still, at first I let myself go, and it was
+delightful--the opera, the dances, and the covered skating rink with
+the music and the black ice flashing beneath the lights. The whirr of
+the toboggans down the great slide was finer still, and the torchlight
+meets of the snowshoe clubs on the mountain. Yes, I think I was really
+young while it lasted."
+
+"For a month," said the elder. "And after?"
+
+"Then," said the girl slowly, "it all seemed to grow a trifle
+purposeless, and there was something that spoiled it. Twoinette was
+quite angry, and I know her mother wrote you--but it was not my fault,
+aunt. How was I, a guileless girl from the prairie, to guess that such
+a man would fling the handkerchief to me?"
+
+The evenness of tone and entire absence of embarrassment was
+significant. It also pointed to the fact that there was a closer
+confidence between Maud Barrington and her aunt than often exists
+between mother and daughter, and the elder lady stroked the lustrous
+head that rested against her knee with a little affectionate pride.
+
+"My dear, you know you are beautiful, and you have the cachet that all
+the Courthornes wear. Still, you could not like him. Tell me about
+him."
+
+Maud Barrington curled herself up further. "I think I could have liked
+him, but that was all," she said. "He was nice to look at and did all
+the little things gracefully; but he had never done anything else,
+never would, and, I fancy, had never wanted to. Now, a man of that
+kind would very soon pall on me, and I should have lost my temper
+trying to waken him to his responsibilities."
+
+"And what kind of man would please you?"
+
+Maud Barrington's eyes twinkled, but the fact that she answered at all
+was a proof of the sympathy between herself and the questioner. "I do
+not know that I am anxious any of them should," she said. "But, since
+you ask, he would have to be a man first: a toiling, striving animal,
+who could hold his own amidst his fellows wherever he was placed.
+Secondly, one would naturally prefer a gentleman, though I do not like
+the word, and one would fancy the combination a trifle rare, because
+brains and birth do not necessarily tally, and the man educated by the
+struggle for existence is apt to be taught more than he ever would be
+at Oxford or in the army. Still, men of that stamp forget a good deal,
+and learn so much that is undesirable, you see. In fact, I only know
+one man who would have suited me, and he is debarred by age and
+affinity--but, because we are so much alike, I can't help fancying
+that you once knew another."
+
+The smile in Miss Barrington's face, which was still almost beautiful
+as well as patient, became a trifle wistful.
+
+"There are few better men than my brother, though he is not clever,"
+she said and dropped her voice a little. "As to the other, he died in
+India--beside his mountain gun--long ago."
+
+"And you have never forgotten? He must have been worth it--I wonder if
+loyalty and chivalric faith belong only to the past," said the girl,
+reaching up a rounded arm and patting her aunt's thin hand. "And now
+we will be practical. I fancied the head of the settlement looked
+worried when he met me, and he is not very proficient at hiding his
+feelings."
+
+Miss Barrington sighed. "I am afraid that is nothing very new, and
+with wheat steadily falling and our granaries full, he has cause for
+anxiety. Then the fact that Lance Courthorne has divided your
+inheritance and is going to settle here has been troubling him."
+
+"The first is the lesser evil," said the girl, with a little laugh. "I
+wore very short frocks when I last saw Lance in England, and so far as
+I can remember he had the face of an angel and the temper of a devil.
+But did not my uncle endeavour to buy him off, and--for I know you
+have been finding out things--I want you to tell me all about him."
+
+"He would not take the money," said Miss Barrington, and sat in
+thoughtful silence a space. Then, and perhaps she had a reason, she
+quietly recounted Courthorne's Canadian history so far as her
+brother's agents had been able to trace it, not omitting, dainty in
+thought and speech as she was, one or two incidents which a mother
+might have kept back from her daughter's ears. Still, it was very
+seldom that Miss Barrington made a blunder. There was a faint pinkness
+in her face when she concluded, but she was not surprised when, with a
+slow, sinuous movement, the girl rose to her feet. Her cheeks were
+very slightly flushed, but there was a significant sparkle in her
+eyes.
+
+"Oh," she said, with utter contempt. "How sickening! Are there men
+like that?"
+
+There was a little silence, emphasized by the snapping in the stove,
+and if Miss Barrington had spoken with an object she should have been
+contented. The girl was imperious in her anger, which was caused by
+something deeper than startled prudery.
+
+"It is," said the little white-haired lady, "all quite true. Still, I
+must confess that my brother and myself were a trifle astonished at
+the report of the lawyer he sent to confer with Lance in Montana, One
+would almost have imagined that he had of late been trying to make
+amends."
+
+The girl's face was very scornful. "Could a man with a past like that
+ever live it down."
+
+"We have a warrant for believing it," said Miss Barrington quietly, as
+she laid her hand on her companion's arm. "My dear, I have told you
+what Lance was, because I felt it was right that you should know; but
+none of us can tell what he may be, and if the man is honestly trying
+to lead a different life, all I ask is that you should not wound him
+by any manifest suspicion. Those who have never been tempted can
+afford to be merciful."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed somewhat curiously. "You are a very wise
+woman, aunt, but you are a little transparent now and then," she said.
+"At least, he shall have a fair trial without prejudice or favour--and
+if he fails, as fail he will, we shall find the means of punishing
+him."
+
+"We?" said the elder lady a trifle maliciously.
+
+The girl nodded as she moved towards the doorway, and then turned a
+moment with the folds of the big red curtain flung behind her. It
+forced up the sweeping lines of a figure so delicately moulded that
+its slenderness was scarcely apparent, for Maud Barrington still wore
+a long, sombre dress that had assisted in her triumphs in the city. It
+emphasized the clear pallor of her skin and the brightness of her
+eyes, as she held herself very erect in a pose which, while assumed in
+mockery, had yet in it something that was almost imperial.
+
+"Yes," she said. "We. You know who is the power behind the throne at
+Silverdale, and what the boys call me. And now, good night. Sleep
+well, dear."
+
+She went out, and Miss Barrington sat very still gazing, with eyes
+that were curiously thoughtful, into the fire. "Princess of the
+Prairie--and it fits her well," she said, and then sighed a little.
+"And if there is a trace of hardness in the girl it may be fortunate.
+We all have our troubles--and wheat is going down."
+
+In the meanwhile, late as it was, Colonel Barrington and his chief
+lieutenant, Gordon Dane, sat in his log-walled smoking-room talking
+with a man he sold his wheat through in Winnipeg. The room was big and
+bare. There were a few fine heads of antelope upon the walls, and
+beneath them an armoury of English-made shot guns and rifles, while a
+row of riding crops, silver-mounted, and some handled with ivory,
+stood in a corner. All these represented amusement, while two or three
+treatises on veterinary surgery and agriculture lying amidst English
+stud-books and racing records, presumably stood for industry. The
+comparison was significant, and Graham, the Winnipeg wheat-broker,
+noticed it as he listened patiently to the views of Colonel
+Barrington, who nevertheless worked hard enough in his own fashion.
+Unfortunately, it was rather the fashion of the English gentleman than
+that common on the prairie.
+
+"And now," he said, with a trace of the anxiety he had concealed in
+his eyes, "I am open to hear what you can do for me."
+
+Graham smiled a little. "It isn't very much, Colonel. I'll take all
+your wheat off you at three cents down."
+
+Now Barrington did not like the broker's smile. It savoured too much
+of equality; and, though he had already unbent as far as he was
+capable of doing, he had no great esteem for men of business. Nor did
+it please him to be addressed as "Colonel."
+
+"That," he said coldly, "is out of the question, I would not sell at
+the last market price. Besides, you have hitherto acted as my broker."
+
+Graham nodded. "The market price will be less than what I offered you
+in a week, and I could scarcely sell your wheat at it to-day. I was
+going to hold it myself, because I can occasionally get a little more
+from one or two millers who like that special grade. Usual sorts I'm
+selling for a fall. Quite sure the deal wouldn't suit you?"
+
+Barrington lighted a fresh cigar, though Graham, noticed that he had
+smoked very little of the one he flung away. This was, of course, a
+trifle, but it is the trifles that count in the aggregate upon the
+prairie, as they not infrequently do elsewhere.
+
+"I fancy I told you so," he said.
+
+The broker glanced at Dane, who was a big, bronzed man, and, since
+Barrington could not see him, shook his head deprecatingly.
+
+"You can consider that decided, Graham," he said. "Still, can you as a
+friendly deed give us any notion of what to do? As you know, farming,
+especially at Silverdale, costs money, and the banks are demanding an
+iniquitous interest just now, while we are carrying over a good deal
+of wheat."
+
+Graham nodded. He understood why farming was unusually expensive at
+Silverdale, and was, in recollection of past favours, inclined to be
+disinterestedly friendly.
+
+"If I were you I would sell right along for forward delivery at a few
+cents under the market."
+
+"It is a trifle difficult to see how that would help us," said
+Barrington, with a little gesture of irritation, for it almost seemed
+that the broker was deriding him.
+
+"No!" said the man from Winnipeg, "on the contrary, it's quite easy.
+Now I can predict that wheat will touch lower prices still before you
+have to make delivery, and it isn't very difficult to figure out the
+profit on selling a thing for a dollar and then buying it, when you
+have to produce it at ninety cents. Of course, there is a risk of the
+market going against you, but you could buy at the first rise, and
+you've your stock to dole out in case anybody cornered you."
+
+"That," said Dane thoughtfully, "appears quite sensible. Of course,
+it's a speculation, but presumably we couldn't be much worse off than
+we are. Have you any objections to the scheme, sir."
+
+Barrington laid down his cigar, and glanced with astonished severity
+at the speaker. "Unfortunately, I have. We are wheat growers, and not
+wheat stock jugglers. Our purpose is to farm, and not swindle and lie
+in the wheat pits for decimal differences. I have a distinct antipathy
+to anything of the kind."
+
+"But, sir," said Dane, and Barrington stopped with a gesture.
+
+"I would," he said, "as soon turn gambler. Still, while it has always
+been a tradition at Silverdale that the head of the settlement's lead
+is to be followed, that need not prevent you putting on the gloves
+with the wheat-ring blacklegs in Winnipeg."
+
+Dane blushed a little under his tan, and then smiled as he remembered
+the one speculative venture his leader had indulged in, for Colonel
+Barrington was a somewhat hot-tempered and vindictive man. He made a
+little gesture of deprecation as he glanced at Graham, who
+straightened himself suddenly in his chair.
+
+"I should not think of doing so in face of your opinion, sir," he
+said. "There is an end to the thing, Graham!"
+
+The broker's face was a trifle grim. "I gave you good advice out of
+friendship, Colonel, and there are men with dollars to spare who would
+value a hint from me," he said. "Still, as it doesn't seem to strike
+you the right way, I've no use for arguing. Keep your wheat--and pay
+bank interest if you want any help to carry over."
+
+"Thanks," said Dane quietly. "They charge tolerably high, but I've
+seen what happens to the man who meddles with the mortgage-broker."
+
+Graham nodded. "Well, as I'm starting out at six o'clock, it's time I
+was asleep," he said. "Good-night to you, Colonel."
+
+Barrington shook hands with Graham, and then sighed a little when he
+went out. "I believe the man is honest, and he is a guest of mine, or
+I should have dressed him down," he said. "I don't like the way things
+are going, Dane; and the fact is we must find accommodation somewhere,
+because now I have to pay out so much on my ward's account to that
+confounded Courthorne, it is necessary to raise more dollars than the
+banks will give me. Now, there was a broker fellow wrote me a very
+civil letter."
+
+Dane, who was a thoughtful man, ventured to lay his hand upon his
+leader's arm. "Keep yourself and Miss Barrington out of those fellows'
+clutches, at any cost," he said.
+
+Barrington shook off his hand and looked at him sternly. "Are you not
+a trifle young to adopt that tone?" he asked.
+
+Dane nodded. "No doubt I am, but I've seen a little of mortgage
+jobbing. You must try to overlook it. I did not mean to offend."
+
+He went out, and, while Colonel Barrington sat down before a sheaf of
+accounts, sprang into a waiting sleigh. "It's no use; we've got to go
+through," he said to the lad who shook the reins, "Graham made a very
+sensible suggestion, but our respected leader came down on him, as he
+did on me. You see, one simply can't talk to the Colonel; and it's
+unfortunate Miss Barrington didn't marry that man in Montreal."
+
+"I don't know," said the lad. "Of course, there are not many girls
+like Maud Barrington, but is it necessary she should go outside
+Silverdale?"
+
+Dane laughed. "None of us would be old enough for Miss Barrington when
+we were fifty. The trouble is, that we spend half our time in play,
+and I've a notion it's a man, and not a gentleman dilettante, she's
+looking for."
+
+"Isn't that a curious way of putting it?" asked his companion.
+
+Dane nodded. "It may be the right one. Woman is as she was made, and
+I've had more than a suspicion lately that a little less refinement
+would not come amiss at Silverdale. Anyway, I hope she'll find him,
+for it's a man with grit and energy, who could put a little desirable
+pressure on the Colonel occasionally, we're all wanting. Of course,
+I'm backing my leader, though it's going to cost me a good deal, but
+it's time he had somebody to help him."
+
+"He would never accept assistance," said the lad thoughtfully. "That
+is, unless the man who offered it was, or became by marriage, one of
+the dynasty."
+
+"Of course," said Dane. "That's why I'm inclined to take a fatherly
+interest in Miss Barrington's affairs. It's a misfortune we've heard
+nothing very reassuring about Courthorne."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+WITHAM'S DECISION
+
+
+Farmer Witham crossed the frontier without molestation and spent one
+night in a little wooden town, where several people he did not speak
+to apparently recognized him. Then he pushed on southwards, and passed
+a week in the especially desolate settlement he had been directed to.
+A few dilapidated frame houses rose out of the white wilderness beside
+the broad, beaten trail, and, for here the prairie rolled south in
+long rises like the wakes of a frozen sea, a low wooden building on
+the crest of one cut the skyline a league away. It served as outpost
+for a squadron of United States cavalry, and the troopers daily
+maligned the Government which had sent them into that desolation on
+police duty.
+
+There was nothing else visible but a few dusky groves of willows and
+dazzling snow. The ramshackle wooden hotel was rather more than
+usually badly kept and comfortless, and Witham, who had managed to
+conciliate his host, felt relieved one afternoon when the latter flung
+down the cards disgustedly.
+
+"I guess I've had enough," he said. "Playing for stakes of this kind
+isn't good enough for you!"
+
+Witham laughed a little to hide his resentment, as he said, "I don't
+quite understand."
+
+"Pshaw!" said the American with a contemptuous gesture. "Three times
+out of four I've spoiled your hand, and if I didn't know that black
+horse I'd take you for some blamed Canadian rancher. You didn't handle
+the pictures that way when you stripped the boys to the hide at
+Regent, Mr. Courthorne?"
+
+"Regent?" said Witham.
+
+The hotel-keeper laughed. "Oh yes," he said. "I wouldn't go back there
+too soon, anyway. The boys seem quite contented, and I don't figure
+they would be very nice to you. Well, now, I've no use for fooling
+with a man who's too proud to take my dollars, and I've a pair of
+horses just stuffed with wickedness in the stable. There's not much
+you don't know about a beast, anyway, and you can take them out a
+league or two if you feel like it."
+
+Witham, who had grown very tired of his host, was glad of any
+distraction, especially as he surmised that while the man had never
+seen Courthorne, he knew rather more than he did himself about his
+doings. Accordingly, he got into the sleigh that was brought out by
+and by, and enjoyed the struggle with the half-tamed team which stood
+with ears laid back, prepared for conflict. Oats had been very
+plentiful, and prices low that season. Witham, who knew at least as
+much about a horse as Lance Courthorne, however, bent them to his will
+and the team were trotting quietly through the shadow of a big birch
+bluff a league from town, when he heard a faint clip-clop coming down
+the trail behind him. It led straight beneath the leafless branches,
+and was beaten smooth and firm; while Witham, who had noticed already
+that whenever he strayed any distance from the hotel there was a
+mounted cavalryman somewhere, in the vicinity, shook the reins.
+
+The team swung into faster stride, the cold wind whistled past him,
+and the snow whirled up from beneath the runners; but while he
+listened the rhythmic drumming behind him also quickened a little.
+Then a faintly musical jingle of steel accompanied the beat of hoofs,
+and Witham glanced about him with a little laugh of annoyance. The
+dusk was creeping across the prairie, and a pale star or two growing
+into brilliancy in the cloudless sweep of indigo.
+
+"It's getting a trifle tiresome. I'll find out what the fellow wants,"
+he said.
+
+Wheeling the team, he drove back the way he came, and, when a dusky
+object materialized out of the shadows beneath the birches, swung the
+horses right across the trail. The snow lay deep on either side of it
+just there, with a sharp crust upon its surface, which rendered it
+inadvisable to take a horse round the sleigh. The mounted man
+accordingly drew bridle, and the jingle and rattle betokened his
+profession, though it was already too dark to see him clearly.
+
+"Hallo!" he said. "Been buying this trail up, stranger?"
+
+"No," said Witham quietly, though he still held his team across the
+way. "Still, I've got the same right as any other citizen to walk or
+drive along it without anybody prowling after me, and just now I want
+to know if there is a reason I should be favoured with your company."
+
+The trooper laughed a little. "I guess there is. It's down in the
+orders that whoever's on patrol near the settlement should keep his
+eye on you. You see, if you lit out of here we would want to know just
+where you were going to."
+
+"I am," said Witham, "a Canadian citizen, and I came out here for
+quietness."
+
+"Well," said the other, "you're an American too. Anyway, when you were
+in a tight place down in Regent there, you told the boys so. Now, no
+sensible man would boast of being a Britisher unless it was helping
+him to play out his hand."
+
+Witham kept his temper. "I want a straight answer. Can you tell me
+what you and the boys are trailing me for?"
+
+"No," said the trooper. "Still, I guess our commander could. If you
+don't know of any reason, you might ask him."
+
+Witham tightened his grip on the reins. "I'll ride back with you to
+the outpost now."
+
+The trooper shook his bridle, and trotted behind the sleigh, while, as
+it swung up and down over the billowy rises of the prairie, Witham
+became sensible of a curious expectancy. The bare, hopeless life he
+had led seemed to have slipped behind him, and though he suspected
+that there was no great difference between his escort and a prisoner's
+guard, the old love of excitement he once fancied he had outgrown for
+ever awoke again within him. Anything that was different from the past
+would be a relief, and the man who had for eight long years of
+strenuous toil practised the grimmest self-denial wondered with a
+quickening of all his faculties what the future, that could not be
+more colourless, might have in store for him.
+
+It was dark, and very cold, when they reached the wooden building, but
+Witham's step was lighter, and his spirits more buoyant than they had
+been for some months when, handing the sleigh over to an orderly, he
+walked into the guard-room, where bronzed men in uniform glanced at
+him curiously. Then he was shown into a bare, log-walled hall, where a
+young man in blue uniform with a weather-darkened face was writing at
+a table.
+
+"I've been partly expecting a visit," he said. "I'm glad to see you,
+Mr. Courthorne."
+
+Witham laughed with a very good imitation of the outlaw's
+recklessness, and wondered the while because it cost him no effort. He
+who had, throughout the last two adverse seasons, seldom smiled at
+all, and then but grimly, experienced the same delight in an adventure
+that he had done when he came out to Canada.
+
+"I don't know that I can return the compliment just yet," he said. "I
+have one or two things to ask you."
+
+The young soldier smiled good-humouredly, as he flung a cigar case on
+the table. "Oh, sit down and shake those furs off," he said. "I'm not
+a worrying policeman, and we're white men, anyway. If you'd been
+twelve months in this forsaken place you'd know what I'm feeling. Take
+a smoke, and start in with your questions when you feel like it."
+
+Witham lighted a cigar, flung himself down in a hide chair, and
+stretched out his feet towards the stove. "In the first place, I want
+to know why your boys are shadowing me. You see, you couldn't arrest
+me unless our folks in the Dominion had got their papers through."
+
+The officer nodded. "No. We couldn't lay hands on you, and we only had
+orders to see where you went to when you left this place, so the folks
+there could corral you if they got the papers. That's about the size
+of it at present, but, as I've sent a trooper over to Regent, I'll
+know more to-morrow."
+
+Witham laughed. "It may appear a little astonishing, but I haven't the
+faintest notion why the police in Canada should worry about me. Is
+there any reason you shouldn't tell me?"
+
+The officer looked at him thoughtfully. "Bluff? I'm quite smart at it
+myself," he said.
+
+"No," and Witham shook his head. "It's a straight question. I want to
+know."
+
+"Well," said the other, "it couldn't do much harm if I told you. You
+were running whisky a little while ago, and, though the folks didn't
+seem to suspect it, you had a farmer or a rancher for a partner--it
+appears he has mixed up things for you."
+
+"Witham?" and the farmer turned to roll the cigar which did not need
+it between his fingers.
+
+"That's the man," said his companion. "Well, though I guess it's
+no news to you, the police came down upon your friends at a
+river-crossing, and farmer Witham put a bullet into a young trooper,
+Shannon, I fancy."
+
+Witham sat upright, and the blood that surged to his forehead sank
+from it suddenly, and left his face grey with anger.
+
+"Good Lord!" he said hoarsely. "He killed him?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said the officer, "Killing's not quite the word, because
+one shot would have been enough to free him of the lad, and the
+rancher fired twice into him. They figured, from the way the trooper
+was lying and the footprints, that he meant to finish him."
+
+The farmer's face was very grim as he said, "They were sure it was
+Witham?"
+
+"Yes," and the soldier watched him curiously. "Anyway, they were sure
+of his horse, and it was Witham's rifle. Another trooper nearly got
+him, and he left it behind him. It wasn't killing, for the trooper
+don't seem to have had a show at all, and I'm glad to see it makes you
+kind of sick. Only that one of the troopers allows he was trailing you
+at a time which shows you had no hand in the thing, you wouldn't be
+sitting there smoking that cigar."
+
+It was almost a minute before Witham could trust his voice. Then he
+said slowly, "And what do they want me for?"
+
+"I guess they don't quite know whether they do or not," said the
+officer. "They crawl slow in Canada. In the meanwhile they wanted to
+know where you were, so they could take out papers if anything turned
+up against you."
+
+"And Witham?" said the farmer.
+
+"Got away with a trooper close behind him. The rest of them had headed
+him off from the prairie, and he took to the river. Went through the
+ice and drowned himself, though as there was a blizzard nobody quite
+saw the end of him, and in case there was any doubt they've got a
+warrant out. Farmer Witham's dead, and if he isn't he soon will be,
+for the troopers have got their net right across the prairie, and the
+Canadians don't fool time away as we do when it comes to hanging
+anybody. The tale seems to have worried you."
+
+Witham sat rigidly still and silent for almost a minute. Then he rose
+up with a curious little shake of his shoulders.
+
+"And farmer Witham's dead. Well he had a hard life. I knew him rather
+well," he said. "Thank you for the story. On my word this is the first
+time I've heard it, and now it's time I was going."
+
+The officer laughed a little. "Sit right down again. Now, there's
+something about you that makes me like you, and as I can't talk to the
+boys, I'll give you the best supper we can raise in the whole forsaken
+country, and you can camp here until to-morrow. It's an arrangement
+that will meet the views of everybody, because I'll know whether the
+Canadians want you or not in the morning."
+
+Witham did not know what prompted him to agree, but it all seemed part
+of a purpose that impelled him against his reasoning will, and he sat
+still beside the stove while his host went out to give orders
+respecting supper and the return of the sleigh. He was also glad to be
+alone for a while, for now and then a fit of anger shook him as he saw
+how he had been duped by Courthorne. He had heard Shannon's story,
+and, remembering it, could fancy that Courthorne had planned the
+trooper's destruction with a devilish cunning that recognized by what
+means the blame could be laid upon a guiltless man. Witham's face
+became mottled with grey again as he realized that if he revealed his
+identity he had nothing but his word to offer in proof of his
+innocence.
+
+Still, it was anger and not fear that stirred him, for nobody could
+arrest a man who was dead, and there was no reason that would render
+it undesirable for him to remain so. His farm would, when sold,
+realize the money borrowed upon it, and the holder of the mortgage had
+received a profitable interest already. Had the unforeseen not
+happened, Witham would have held out to the end of the struggle, but
+now he had no regret that this was out of the question. Fate had been
+too strong for him as farmer Witham, but it might deal more kindly
+with him as the outlaw Courthorne. He could also make a quick
+decision, and when the officer returned to say that supper was ready,
+he rose with a smile.
+
+They sat down to a meal that was barbaric in its simplicity and
+abundance, for men live and eat in Homeric fashion in the North-West,
+while when the green tea was finished and the officer pushed the
+whisky across, his guest laughed as he filled his glass.
+
+"Here's better fortune to farmer Witham!" he said.
+
+The officer stared at him. "No, sir," he said "If the old folks taught
+me aright, Witham's in----"
+
+A curious smile flickered in the farmer's eyes. "No," he said slowly.
+"He was tolerably near it once or twice when he was alive, and,
+because of what he went through then, there may be something better in
+store for him."
+
+His companion appeared astonished, but said nothing further until he
+brought out the cards. They played for an hour beside the snapping
+stove, and then, when Witham flung a trump away, the officer groaned.
+
+"I guess," he said disgustedly, "you're not well to-night, or
+something is worrying you."
+
+Witham looked up with a little twinkle in his eyes. "I don't know that
+there's very much wrong with me."
+
+"Then," said the officer decisively, "if the boys down at Regent know
+enough to remember what trumps are, you're not Lance Courthorne. Now
+after what I'd heard of you, I'd have put up fifty dollars for the
+pleasure of watching your game--and it's not worth ten cents when I've
+seen it."
+
+Witham laughed. "Sit down and talk," he said. "One isn't always in his
+usual form, and there are folks who get famous too easily."
+
+They talked until nearly midnight, sitting close to the stove, while a
+doleful wind that moaned without drove the dust of snow pattering
+against the windows, and the shadows grew darker in the corners of the
+great log-walled room each time the icy draughts set the lamp
+flickering. Then the officer, rising, expressed the feelings of his
+guest as he said, "It's a forsaken country, and I'm thankful one can
+sleep and forget it."
+
+He had, however, an honourable calling, and a welcome from friend and
+kinsman awaiting him when he went East again, to revel in the life of
+the cities, but the man who followed him silently to the sleeping-room
+had nothing but a half-instinctive assurance that the future could not
+well be harder or more lonely than the past had been. Still, farmer
+Witham was a man of courage with a quiet belief in himself, and in ten
+minutes he was fast asleep.
+
+When he came down to breakfast his host was already seated with a
+bundle of letters before him, and one addressed to Courthorne lay
+unopened by Witham's plate. The officer nodded when he saw him.
+
+"The trooper has come in with the mail, and your friends in Canada are
+not going to worry you," he said. "Now, if you feel like staying here
+a few days, it would be a favour to me."
+
+Witham had in the meanwhile opened the envelope. He knew that when
+once the decision was made there could only be peril in half-measures,
+and his eyes grew thoughtful as he read. The letter had been written
+by a Winnipeg lawyer from a little town not very far away, and
+requested Courthorne to meet and confer with him respecting certain
+suggestions made by a Colonel Barrington. Witham decided to take the
+risk.
+
+"I'm sorry, but I have got to go into Annerly at once," he said.
+
+"Then," said the officer, "I'll drive you. I've some stores to get
+down there."
+
+They started after breakfast, but it was dusk next day when they
+reached the little town, and Witham walked quietly into a private room
+of the wooden hotel, where a middle-aged man with a shrewd face sat
+waiting him. The big nickelled lamp flickered in the draughts that
+found their way in, and Witham was glad of it, though he was outwardly
+very collected. The stubborn patience and self-control with which he
+had faced the loss of his wheat crops and frozen stock stood him in
+good stead now. He fancied the lawyer seemed a trifle astonished at
+his appearance, and sat down wondering whether he had previously
+spoken to Courthorne, until the question was answered for him.
+
+"Although I have never had the pleasure of meeting you before, I have
+acted as Colonel Barrington's legal adviser ever since he settled at
+Silverdale, and am, therefore, well posted as to his affairs, which
+are, of course, connected with those of your own family," said the
+lawyer. "We can accordingly talk with greater freedom, and I hope
+without the acerbity which in your recent communications somewhat
+annoyed the Colonel!"
+
+"Well," said Courthorne, who had never heard of Colonel Barrington, "I
+am ready to listen."
+
+The lawyer drummed on the table. "It might be best to come to the
+point at once," he said. "Colonel Barrington does not deem it
+convenient that you should settle at Silverdale, and would be prepared
+to offer you a reasonable sum to relinquish your claim."
+
+"My claim?" said Witham, who remembered having heard of the Silverdale
+Colony, which lay several hundred miles away.
+
+"Of course," said the lawyer. "The legacy lately left you by Roger
+Courthorne. I have brought you a schedule of the wheat in store, and
+amounts due to you on various sales made. You will also find the
+acreage, stock, and implements detailed at a well-known appraiser's
+valuation, which you could, of course, confirm, and Colonel Barrington
+would hand you a cheque for half the total now. He however, asks four
+years to pay the balance, which would carry bank interest in the
+meanwhile, in."
+
+Witham, who was glad of the excuse, spent at least ten minutes
+studying the paper, and realized that it referred to a large and
+well-appointed farm, though it occurred to him that the crop was a
+good deal smaller than it should have been. He noticed this, as it
+were, instinctively, for his brain was otherwise very busy.
+
+"Colonel Barrington seems somewhat anxious to get rid of me," he said.
+"You see, this land is mine by right."
+
+"Yes," said the lawyer. "Colonel Barrington does not dispute it,
+though I am of opinion that he might have done so under one clause of
+the will. I do not think we need discuss his motives."
+
+Witham moistened his lips with his tongue, and his lips quivered a
+little. He had hitherto been an honest man, and now it was impossible
+for him to take the money. It, however, appeared equally impossible to
+reveal his identity and escape the halter, and he felt that the dead
+man had wronged him horribly. He was entitled at least to safety by
+way of compensation, for by passing as Courthorne he would avoid
+recognition as Witham.
+
+"Still, I do not know how I have offended Colonel Barrington," he
+said.
+
+"I would sooner," said the lawyer, "not go into that. It is, I fancy,
+fifteen years since Colonel Barrington saw you, but he desired me to
+find means of tracing your Canadian record, and did not seem pleased
+with it. Nor, at the risk of offending you, could I deem him unduly
+prejudiced."
+
+"In fact," said Witham dryly, "this man who has not seen me for
+fifteen years is desirous of withholding what is mine from me at
+almost any cost."
+
+The lawyer nodded. "There is nothing to be gained by endeavouring to
+controvert it. Colonel Barrington is also, as you know, a somewhat
+determined gentleman."
+
+Witham laughed, for he was essentially a stubborn man, and felt little
+kindliness towards any one connected with Courthorne, as the Colonel
+evidently was.
+
+"I fancy I am not entirely unlike him in that respect," he said. "What
+you have told me makes me the more determined to follow my own
+inclinations. Is there any one else at Silverdale prejudiced against
+me?"
+
+The lawyer fell into the trap. "Miss Barrington, of course, takes her
+brother's view, and her niece would scarcely go counter to them. She
+must have been a very young girl when she last saw you, but from what
+I know of her character I should expect her to support the Colonel."
+
+"Well," said Witham. "I want to think over the thing. We will talk
+again to-morrow. You would require me to establish my identity,
+anyway?"
+
+"The fact that a famous inquiry agent has traced your movements down
+to a week or two ago, and told me where to find you, will render that
+simple," said the lawyer dryly.
+
+Witham sat up late that night turning over the papers the lawyer left
+him, and thinking hard. It was evident that in the meanwhile he must
+pass as Courthorne, but as the thought of taking the money revolted
+him, the next step led to the occupation of the dead man's property.
+The assumption of it would apparently do nobody a wrong, while he felt
+that Courthorne had taken so much from him that the farm at Silverdale
+would be a very small reparation. It was not, he saw, a great
+inheritance, but one that in the right hands could be made profitable,
+and Witham, who had fought a plucky fight with obsolete and worthless
+implements and indifferent teams, felt that he could do a great deal
+with what was, as it were, thrust upon him at Silverdale. It was not
+avarice that tempted him, though he knew he was tempted now, but a
+longing to find a fair outlet for his energies, and show what, once
+given the chance that most men had, he could do. He had stinted
+himself and toiled almost as a beast of burden, but now he could use
+his brains in place of wringing the last effort out of overtaxed
+muscle. He had also during the long struggle lost, to some extent, his
+clearness of vision, and only saw himself as a lonely man fighting for
+his own hand with fate against him. Now, when prosperity was offered
+him, it seemed but folly to stand aside when he could stretch out a
+strong hand and take it.
+
+During the last hour he sat almost motionless, the issue hung in the
+balance, and he laid himself down still undecided. Still, he had lived
+long in primitive fashion in close touch with the soil, and sank, as
+most men would have done, into restful sleep. The sun hung red above
+the rim of the prairie when he awakened, and going down to breakfast
+found the lawyer waiting for him.
+
+"You can tell Colonel Barrington I'm coming to Silverdale," he said.
+
+The lawyer looked at him curiously. "Would there be any use in asking
+you to consider?"
+
+Witham laughed. "No," he said. "Now, I rather like the way you talked
+to me, and if it wouldn't be disloyalty to the Colonel, I should be
+pleased if you would undertake to put me in due possession of my
+property."
+
+He said nothing further, and the lawyer sat down to write Colonel
+Barrington.
+
+"Mr. Courthorne proves obdurate," he said. "He is, however, by no
+means the type of man I expected to find, and I venture to surmise
+that you will eventually discover him to be a less undesirable
+addition to Silverdale than you are at present inclined to fancy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WITHAM COMES TO SILVERDALE
+
+
+There were warmth and brightness in the cedar-boarded general room of
+Silverdale Grange, and most of the company gathered there basked in it
+contentedly after their drive through the bitter night. Those who came
+from the homesteads lying farthest out had risked frost-nipped hands
+and feet, for when Colonel Barrington held a levee at the Grange
+nobody felt equal to refusing his invitation. Neither scorching heat
+nor utter cold might excuse compliance with the wishes of the founder
+of Silverdale, and it was not until Dane, the big middle-aged
+bachelor, had spoken very plainly, that he consented to receive his
+guests in time of biting frost dressed otherwise than as they would
+have appeared in England.
+
+Dane was the one man in the settlement who dare remonstrate with its
+ruler, but it was a painful astonishment to the latter when he said,
+in answer to one invitation, "I have never been frost-bitten, sir, and
+I stand the cold well, but one or two of the lads are weak in the
+chest, and this climate was never intended for bare-shouldered women.
+Hence, if I come, I shall dress myself to suit it."
+
+Colonel Barrington stared at him for almost a minute, and then shook
+his head. "Have it your own way," he said, "Understand that in itself
+I care very little for dress, but it is only by holding fast to every
+traditional nicety we can prevent ourselves sinking into Western
+barbarism, and I am horribly afraid of the thin end of the wedge."
+
+Dane having gained his point, said nothing further, for he was one of
+the wise and silent men who know when to stop, and that evening he sat
+in a corner watching his leader thoughtfully, for there was anxiety in
+the Colonel's face. Barrington sat silent near the ample hearth whose
+heat would scarcely have kept water from freezing but for the big
+stove, and disdaining the dispensation made his guests, he was clad
+conventionally, though the smooth black fabric clung about him more
+tightly than it had once been intended to do. His sister stood, with
+the stamp of a not wholly vanished beauty still clinging to her gentle
+face, talking to one or two matrons from outlying farms, and his niece
+by a little table turning over Eastern photographs with a few young
+girls. She, too, wore black in deference to the Colonel's taste, which
+was sombre, and the garment she had laughed at as a compromise, left
+uncovered a narrow strip of ivory shoulder and enhanced the polished
+whiteness of her neck. A slender string of pearls gleamed softly on
+the satiny skin, but Maud Barrington wore no other adornment and did
+not need it. She had inherited the Courthorne comeliness, and the
+Barringtons she sprang from on her father's side had always borne the
+stamp of distinction.
+
+A young girl sat at the piano singing in a thin, reedy voice, while an
+English lad waited with ill-concealed jealousy of a too officious
+companion to turn over the music by her side. Other men, mostly young,
+with weather-bronzed faces, picturesque in embroidered deerskin or
+velvet lounge jackets, were scattered about the room, and all were
+waiting for the eight-o'clock dinner, which replaced the usual prairie
+supper at Silverdale. They were growers of wheat who combined a good
+deal of amusement with a little not very profitable farming, and most
+of them possessed a large share of insular English pride and a
+somewhat depleted exchequer.
+
+Presently Dane crossed over, and sat down by Colonel Barrington. "You
+are silent, sir, and not looking very well to-night," he said.
+
+Barrington nodded gravely, for he had a respect for the one man who
+occasionally spoke plain truth to him. "The fact is, I am growing
+old," he said, and then added, with what was only an apparent lack of
+connexion, "Wheat is down three cents, and money tighter than ever."
+
+Dane looked thoughtful, and noticed the older man's glance in his
+niece's direction, as he said, "I am afraid there are difficult times
+before us."
+
+"I have no doubt we shall weather them as we have done before," said
+the Colonel. "Still, I can't help admitting that just now I feel--a
+little tired--and am commencing to think we should have been better
+prepared for the struggle had we worked a trifle harder during the
+recent era of prosperity. I could wish there were older heads on the
+shoulders of those who will come after me."
+
+Just then Maud Barrington glanced at them, and Dane, who could not
+remember having heard his leader talk in that fashion before, and
+could guess his anxieties, was a little touched as he noticed his
+attempt at sprightliness. As it happened, one of the lads at the piano
+commenced a song of dogs and horses that had little to recommend it
+but the brave young voice.
+
+"They have the right spirit, sir," he said.
+
+"Of course!" said Barrington. "They are English lads, but I think a
+little more is required. Thank God we have not rated the dollar too
+high, but it is possible we have undervalued its utility, and I fear I
+have only taught them to be gentlemen."
+
+"That is a good deal, sir," Dane said quietly.
+
+"It is. Still, a gentleman, in the restricted sense, is somewhat of an
+anachronism on the prairie, and it is too late to begin again. In the
+usual course of nature I must lay down my charge presently, and that
+is why I feel the want of a more capable successor, whom they would
+follow because of his connexion with mine and me."
+
+Dane looked thoughtful. "If I am not taking a liberty--you still
+consider the one apparently born to fill the place quite unsuitable?"
+
+"Yes," said Barrington quietly. "I fear there is not a redeeming
+feature in Courthorne's character."
+
+Neither said anything further, until there was a tapping at the door,
+and, though this was a most unusual spectacle on the prairie, a trim
+English maid in white-banded dress stood in the opening.
+
+"Mr. Courthorne, Miss Barrington," she said.
+
+Now Silverdale had adopted one Western custom in that no chance guest
+was ever kept waiting, and the music ceased suddenly, while the
+stillness was very suggestive, when a man appeared in the doorway. He
+wore one of the Scandinavian leather jackets which are not uncommon in
+that country, and when his eyes had become accustomed to the light,
+moved forward with a quiet deliberation that was characterized neither
+by graceful ease nor the restraint of embarrassment. His face was
+almost the colour of a Blackfoot's, his eyes steady and grey, but
+those of the men who watched him were next moment turned upon the
+Colonel's sister, who rose to receive him, slight, silver-haired, and
+faded, but still stamped with a simple dignity that her ancient silks
+and lace curiously enhanced. Then there was a silence that could be
+felt, for all realized that a good deal depended on the stranger's
+first words and the fashion of his reception.
+
+Witham, as it happened, felt this too, and something more. It was
+eight years since he had stood before an English lady, and he surmised
+that there could not be many to compare with this one, while after his
+grim, lonely life an intangible something that seemed to emanate from
+her gracious serenity compelled his homage. Then as she smiled at him
+and held out her hand, he was for a moment sensible of an almost
+overwhelming confusion. It passed as suddenly, for this was a man of
+quick perceptions, and remembering that Courthorne had now and then
+displayed some of the grace of bygone days he yielded to a curious
+impulse, and, stooping, kissed the little withered fingers.
+
+"I have," he said, "to thank you for a welcome that does not match my
+poor deserts, madam."
+
+Then Dane, standing beside his leader, saw the grimness grow a trifle
+less marked in his eyes. "It is in the blood," he said half aloud, but
+Dane heard him and afterwards remembered it.
+
+In the meanwhile Miss Barrington had turned from the stranger to her
+niece. "It is a very long time since you have seen Lance, Maud, and,
+though I knew his mother well, I am less fortunate, because this is
+our first meeting," she said. "I wonder if you still remember my
+niece."
+
+Now, Witham had been gratified by his first success, and was about to
+venture on the answer that it was impossible to forget; but when he
+turned towards the very stately young woman in the long black dress,
+whose eyes had a sardonic gleam, and wondered whether he had ever seen
+anybody so comely or less inclined to be companionable, it was borne
+in upon him that any speech of the kind would be distinctly out of
+place. Accordingly, and because there was no hand held out in this
+case, he contented himself with a little bend of his head. Then he was
+presented to the Colonel, who was distantly cordial, and Witham was
+thankful when the maid appeared in the doorway again, to announce that
+dinner was ready. Miss Barrington laid her hand upon his arm.
+
+"You will put up with an old woman's company to-night?" she said.
+
+Witham glanced down deprecatingly at his attire. "I must explain that
+I had no intention of trespassing on your hospitality," he said. "I
+purposed going on to my own homestead, and only called to acquaint
+Colonel Barrington with my arrival."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed pleasantly. "That," she said, "was neither
+dutiful nor friendly. I should have fancied you would also have
+desired to pay your respects to my niece and me."
+
+Witham was not quite sure what he answered, but he drew in a deep
+breath, for he had made the plunge and felt that the worst was over.
+His companion, evidently noticed the gasp of relief.
+
+"It was somewhat of an ordeal?" she said.
+
+Witham looked down upon her gravely, and Miss Barrington noticed a
+steadiness in his eyes she had not expected to see. "It was, and I
+feel guilty because I was horribly afraid," he said. "Now I only
+wonder if you will always be equally kind to me."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled a little, but the man fancied there was just a
+perceptible tightening of the hand upon his arm. "I would like to be,
+for your mother's sake," she said.
+
+Witham understood that while Courthorne's iniquities were not to be
+brought up against him, the little gentle-voiced lady had but taken
+him on trial; but, perhaps because it was so long since any woman had
+spoken kindly words to him, his heart went out towards her, and he
+felt a curious desire to compel her good opinion. Then he found
+himself seated near the head of the long table, with Maud Barrington
+on his other hand, and had an uncomfortable feeling that most of the
+faces were turned somewhat frequently in his direction. It is also
+possible that he would have betrayed himself, had he been burdened
+with self-consciousness, but the long, bitter struggle he had fought
+alone had purged him of petty weaknesses and left him the closer grasp
+of essential things, with the strength of character which is one and
+the same in all men who possess it, whatever may be their upbringing.
+
+During a lull in the voices, Maud Barrington, who may have felt it
+incumbent on her to show him some scant civility, turned towards him
+as she said, "I am afraid our conversation will not appeal to you.
+Partly because there is so little else to interest us, we talk wheat
+throughout the year at Silverdale."
+
+"Well," said Witham with a curious little smile, "wheat as a topic is
+not quite new to me. In fact, I know almost more about cereals than
+some folks would care to do."
+
+"In the shape of elevator warrants or Winnipeg market margins,
+presumably?"
+
+Witham's eyes twinkled, though he understood the implication. "No," he
+said. "The wheat I handled was in 250-pound bags, and I occasionally
+grew somewhat tired of pitching them into a wagon, while my
+speculations usually consisted in committing it to the prairie soil,
+in the hope of reaping forty bushels to the acre, and then
+endeavouring to be content with ten. It is conceivable that operations
+on the Winnipeg market are less laborious as well as more profitable,
+but I have no opportunity of trying them."
+
+Miss Barrington looked at him steadily, and Witham felt the blood
+surge to his forehead as he remembered having heard of a certain
+venture made by Courthorne, which brought discredit on one or two men,
+connected with the affairs of a grain elevator. It was evident that
+Miss Barrington had also heard of it, and no man cares to stand
+convicted of falsification in the eyes of a very pretty girl. Still,
+he roused himself with an effort.
+
+"It is neither wise nor charitable to believe all one hears," he said.
+
+The girl smiled a little, but the man still winced inwardly under her
+clear brown eyes that would, he fancied, have been very scornful had
+they been less indifferent.
+
+"I do not remember mentioning having heard anything," she said. "Were
+you not a trifle premature in face of the proverb?"
+
+Witham's face was a trifle grim, though he laughed. "I'm afraid I was;
+but I am warned," he said. "Excuses are, after all, not worth much,
+and when I make my defence it will be before a more merciful judge."
+
+Maud Barrington's curiosity was piqued. Lance Courthorne, outcast and
+gambler, was at least a different stamp of man from the type she had
+been used to, and, being a woman, the romance that was interwoven with
+his somewhat iniquitous career was not without its attractions for
+her.
+
+"I did not know that you included farming among your talents, and
+should have fancied you would have found it--monotonous," she said.
+
+"I did," and the provoking smile still flickered in Witham's eyes.
+"Are not all strictly virtuous occupations usually so?"
+
+"It is probably a question of temperament. I have, of course, heard
+sardonic speeches of the kind before, and felt inclined to wonder
+whether those who made them were qualified to form an opinion."
+
+Witham nodded, but there was a little ring in his voice. "Perhaps I
+laid myself open to the thrust; but have you any right to assume I
+have never followed a commendable profession?"
+
+No answer was immediately forthcoming, but Witham did wisely when, in
+place of waiting, he turned to Miss Barrington. He had left her niece
+irritated, but the trace of anger she felt was likely to enhance her
+interest. The meal, however, was a trial to him, for he had during
+eight long years lived for the most part apart from all his kind, a
+lonely toiler, and now was constrained to personate a man known to be
+almost dangerously skilful with his tongue. At first sight the task
+appeared almost insuperably difficult, but Witham was a clever man,
+and felt all the thrill of one playing a risky game just then. Perhaps
+it was due to excitement that a readiness he had never fancied himself
+capable of came to him in his need, and, when at last the ladies rose,
+he felt that he had not slipped perilously. Still, he found how dry
+his lips had grown when somebody poured him a glass of wine. Then he
+became sensible that Colonel Barrington, who had apparently been
+delivering a lengthy monologue, was addressing him.
+
+"The outlook is sufficient to cause us some anxiety," he said. "We are
+holding large stocks, and I can see no prospect of anything but a
+steady fall in wheat. It is, however, presumably a little too soon to
+ask your opinion."
+
+"Well," said Witham, "while I am prepared to act upon it, I would
+recommend it to others with some diffidence. No money can be made at
+present by farming, but I see no reason why we should not endeavour to
+cut our losses by selling forward down. If caught by a sudden rally,
+we could fall back on the grain we hold."
+
+There was a sudden silence, until Dane said softly, "That is exactly
+what one of the cleverest brokers in Winnipeg recommended."
+
+"I think," said Colonel Barrington, "you heard my answer. I am
+inclined to fancy that such a measure would not be advisable or
+fitting, Mr. Courthorne. You, however, presumably know very little
+about the practical aspect of the wheat question?"
+
+Witham smiled. "On the contrary, I know a great deal."
+
+"You do?" said Barrington sharply, and while a blunderer would have
+endeavoured to qualify his statement, Witham stood by it.
+
+"You are evidently not aware, sir, that I have tried my hand at
+farming, though not very successfully."
+
+"That, at least," said Barrington dryly, as he rose, "is quite
+credible."
+
+When they went into the smaller room, Witham crossed over to where
+Maud Barrington sat alone, and looked down upon her gravely. "One
+discovers that frankness is usually best," he said. "Now, I would not
+like to feel that you had determined to be unfriendly with me."
+
+Maud Barrington fixed a pair of clear brown eyes upon his face, and
+the faintest trace of astonishment crept into them. She was a woman
+with high principles, but neither a fool nor a prude, and she saw no
+sign of dissolute living there. The man's gaze was curiously steady,
+his skin clear and brown, and his sinewy form suggested a capacity
+for, and she almost fancied an acquaintance with, physical toil. Yet
+he had already denied the truth to her. Witham, on his part, saw a
+very fair face with wholesome pride in it, and felt that the eyes
+which were coldly contemptuous now could, if there was a warrant for
+it, grow very gentle.
+
+"Would it be of any moment if I were?" she said.
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly. "There are two people here it is desirable
+for me to stand well with, and the first of them, your aunt, has, I
+fancy, already decided to give me a fair trial. She told me it was for
+my mother's sake. Now, I can deal with your uncle."
+
+The girl smiled a little. "Are you quite sure? Everybody does not find
+it easy to get on with Colonel Barrington. His code is somewhat
+draconic."
+
+Witham nodded. "He is a man, and I hope to convince him I have at
+least a right to toleration. That leaves only you. The rest don't
+count. They will come round by and by, you see."
+
+The little forceful gesture with which he concluded pleased Maud
+Barrington. It was free from vanity, but conveyed an assurance that he
+knew his own value.
+
+"No friendship that is lightly given is worth very much," she said. "I
+could decide better in another six months. Now it is perhaps fortunate
+that Colonel Barrington is waiting for us to make up his four at
+whist."
+
+Witham allowed a faint gesture of dismay to escape him. "Must I play?"
+
+"Yes," said the girl, smiling. "Whist is my uncle's hobby, and he is
+enthusiastic over a clever game."
+
+Witham groaned inwardly. "And I am a fool at whist."
+
+"Then it was poker you played?" and again a faint trace of anger crept
+into the girl's eyes.
+
+Witham shook his head. "No," he said. "I had few opportunities of
+indulging in expensive luxuries."
+
+"I think we had better take our places," said Maud Barrington, with
+unveiled contempt.
+
+Witham's forehead grew a trifle hot, and when he sat down Barrington
+glanced at him. "I should explain that we never allow stakes of any
+kind at Silverdale," he said. "Some of the lads sent out to me have
+been a trifle extravagant in the old country."
+
+He dealt out the cards, but a trace of bewildered irritation crept
+into his eyes as the game proceeded, and once or twice he appeared to
+check an exclamation of astonishment, while at last he glanced
+reproachfully at Witham.
+
+"My dear sir! Still, you have ridden a long way," he said, laying his
+finger on a king.
+
+Witham laughed to hide his dismay. "I am sorry, sir. It was scarcely
+fair to my partner. You would, however, have beaten us, anyway."
+
+Barrington gravely gathered up the cards. "We will," he said, "have
+some music. I do not play poker."
+
+Then, for the first time, Witham lost his head in his anger. "Nor do
+I, sir."
+
+Barrington only looked at him, but the farmer felt as though somebody
+had struck him in the face, and as soon as he conveniently could, bade
+Miss Barrington good night.
+
+"But we expected you would stay here a day or two. Your place is not
+ready," she said.
+
+Witham smiled at her. "I think I am wise. I must feel my way."
+
+Miss Barrington was won, and, making no further protest, signed to
+Dane. "You will take Mr. Courthorne home with you," she said. "I would
+have kept him here, but he is evidently anxious to talk over affairs
+with some one more of his age than my brother is."
+
+Dane appeared quite willing, and an hour later, Witham sat, cigar in
+hand, in a room of his outlying farm. It was furnished simply, but
+there were signs of taste, and the farmer who occupied it had already
+formed a good opinion of the man whose knowledge of his own profession
+astonished him.
+
+"So you are actually going to sell wheat in face of the Colonel's
+views?" he said.
+
+"Of course," said Witham simply. "I don't like unpleasantness, but I
+can allow no man to dictate my affairs to me."
+
+Dane grinned. "Well," he said, "the Colonel can be nasty, and he has
+no great reason for being fond of you already."
+
+"No?" said Witham. "Now, of course, my accession will make a
+difference at Silverdale, but I would consider it a friendly act if
+you will let me know the views of the colony."
+
+Dane looked thoughtful. "The trouble is that your taking up the land
+leaves less for Maud Barrington than there would have been.
+Barrington, who is fond of the girl, was trustee for the property, and
+after your--estrangement--from your father everybody expected she
+would get it all."
+
+"So I have deprived Miss Barrington of part of her income?"
+
+"Of course," said Dane. "Didn't you know?"
+
+Witham found it difficult to answer. "I never quite realized it
+before. Are there more accounts against me?"
+
+"That," said Dane slowly, "is rather a facer. We are all more or less
+friends of the dominant family, you see."
+
+Witham laid down his cigar and stood up, "Now," he said, "I generally
+talk straight, and you have held out a hand to me. Can you believe in
+the apparent improbability of such a man as I am in the opinion of the
+folks at Silverdale getting tired of a wasted life and trying to walk
+straight again? I want your answer, yes or no, before I head across
+the prairie for my own place."
+
+"Sit down," said Dane with a little smile. "Do you think I would have
+brought you here if I hadn't believed it? And, if I have my way, the
+first man who flings a stone will be sorry for it. Still, I don't
+think any of them will--or could afford it. If we had all been saints,
+some of us would never have come out from the old country."
+
+He stopped and poured out two glasses of wine. "It's a long while
+since I've talked so much," he said. "Here's to our better
+acquaintance, Courthorne."
+
+After that they talked wheat-growing and horses, and when his guest
+retired Dane still sat smoking thoughtfully beside the stove. "We want
+a man with nerve and brains," he said. "I fancy the one who has been
+sent us will make a difference at Silverdale."
+
+It was about the same time when Colonel Barrington stood talking with
+his niece and sister in Silverdale Grange. "And the man threw that
+trick away when it was absolutely clear who had the ace--and wished me
+to believe that he forgot!" he said.
+
+His face was flushed with indignation, but Miss Barrington smiled at
+her niece. "What is your opinion, Maud?"
+
+The girl moved one white shoulder with a gesture of disdain. "Can you
+ask--after that! Besides, he twice wilfully perverted facts while he
+talked to me, though it was not in the least necessary."
+
+Miss Barrington looked thoughtful. "And yet, because I was watching
+him, I do not think he plays cards well."
+
+"But he was a professional gambler," said the girl.
+
+The elder lady shook her head. "So we--heard," she said. "My dear,
+give him a little time. I have seen many men and women--and can't help
+a fancy that there is good in him."
+
+"Can the leopard change his spots?" asked Colonel Barrington, with a
+grim smile.
+
+The little white-haired lady glanced at him as she said quietly, "When
+the wicked man----"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+AN ARMISTICE
+
+
+The dismal afternoon was drawing in when Witham, driving home from the
+railroad, came into sight of a lonely farm. It lifted itself out of
+the prairie, a blur of huddled buildings on the crest of a long rise,
+but at first sight Witham scarcely noticed it. He was gazing
+abstractedly down the sinuous smear of trail which unrolled itself
+like an endless riband across the great white desolation, and his
+brain was busy. Four months had passed since he came to Silverdale,
+and they had left their mark on him.
+
+At first there had been the constant fear of detection, and when that
+had lessened and he was accepted as Lance Courthorne, the latter's
+unfortunate record had met him at every turn. It accounted for the
+suspicions of Colonel Barrington, the reserve of his niece, and the
+aloofness of some of his neighbours, while there had been times when
+Witham found Silverdale almost unendurable. He was, however, an
+obstinate man, and there was on the opposite side the gracious
+kindliness of the little grey-haired lady, who had from the beginning
+been his champion, and the friendship of Dane and one or two of the
+older men. Witham had also proved his right to be listened to, and
+treated, outwardly at least, with due civility, while something in his
+resolute quietness rendered an impertinence impossible. He knew by
+this time that he could hold his own at Silverdale, and based his
+conduct on the fact, but that was only one aspect of the question, and
+he speculated as to the consummation.
+
+It was, however, evident that in the meanwhile he must continue to
+pose as Courthorne, and he felt, rightly or wrongly, that the
+possession of his estate, was, after all, a small reparation for the
+injury the outlaw had done him, but the affair was complicated by the
+fact that, in taking Courthorne's inheritance, he had deprived Maud
+Barrington of part of hers. The girl's coldness stung him, but her
+unquestionable beauty and strength of character had not been without
+their effect, and the man winced as he remembered that she had no pity
+for anything false or mean. He had decided only upon two things, first
+that he would vindicate himself in her eyes, and, since nobody else
+could apparently do it, pull the property that should have been hers
+out of the ruin it had been drifting into under her uncle's
+guardianship. When this had been done, and the killing of Trooper
+Shannon forgotten, it would be time for him to slip back into the
+obscurity he came from.
+
+Then the fact that the homestead was growing nearer forced itself upon
+his perceptions, and he glanced doubtfully across the prairie as he
+approached the forking of the trail. A grey dimness was creeping
+across the wilderness and the smoky sky seemed to hang lower above the
+dully gleaming snow, while the moaning wind flung little clouds of icy
+dust about him. It was evident that the snow was not far away, and it
+was still two leagues to Silverdale, but Witham, who had been to
+Winnipeg, had business with the farmer, and had faced a prairie storm
+before. Accordingly he swung the team into the forking trail and shook
+the reins. There was, he knew, little time to lose, and in another
+five minutes he stood, still wearing his white-sprinkled furs, in a
+room of the birch-log building.
+
+"Here are your accounts, Macdonald, and while we've pulled up our
+losses, I can't help thinking we have just got out in time," he said.
+"The market is but little stiffer yet, but there is less selling, and
+before a few months are over we're going to see a sharp recovery."
+
+The farmer glanced at the documents, and smiled with contentment as he
+took the cheque. "I'm glad I listened to you," he said. "It's
+unfortunate for him and his niece that Barrington wouldn't--at least,
+not until he had lost the opportunity."
+
+"I don't understand," said Witham.
+
+"No," said the farmer, "you've been away. Well, you know it takes a
+long while to get an idea into the Colonel's head, but once it's in
+it's even harder to get it out again. Now Barrington looked down on
+wheat jobbing, but money's tight at Silverdale, and when he saw what
+you were making, he commenced to think. Accordingly he's going to
+sell, and, as he seems convinced that wheat will not go up again, let
+half the acreage lie fallow this season. The worst of it is, the
+others will follow him up, and he controls Maud Barrington's property
+as well as his own."
+
+Witham's face was grave. "I heard in Winnipeg that most of the smaller
+men who had lost courage were doing the same thing. That means a very
+small crop of western hard, and millers paying our own prices.
+Somebody must stop the Colonel."
+
+"Well," said Macdonald dryly, "I wouldn't like to be the man, and,
+after all, it's only your opinion. As you have seen, the small men
+here and in Minnesota are afraid to plough."
+
+Witham laughed softly. "The man who makes the dollars is the one who
+sees farther than the crowd. Anyway, I found the views of one or two
+men who make big deals were much the same as mine, and I'll speak to
+Miss Barrington."
+
+"Then if you will wait a little, you will have an opportunity. She is
+here, you see."
+
+Witham looked disconcerted. "She should not have been. Why didn't you
+send her home? There'll be snow before she reaches Silverdale."
+
+Macdonald laughed. "I hadn't noticed the weather, and, though my wife
+wished her to stay, there is no use in attempting to persuade Miss
+Barrington to do anything when she does not want to. In some respects
+she is very like the Colonel."
+
+The farmer led the way into another room, and Witham flushed a little
+when the girl returned his greeting in a fashion which he fancied the
+presence of Mrs. Macdonald alone rendered distantly cordial. Still, a
+glance through the windows showed him that delay was inadvisable.
+
+"I think you had better stay here all night, Miss Barrington," he
+said. "There is snow coming."
+
+"I am sorry our views do not coincide," said the girl. "I have several
+things to attend to at the Grange."
+
+"Then Macdonald will keep your team, and I will drive you home," said
+Witham. "Mine are the best horses at Silverdale, and I fancy we will
+need all their strength."
+
+Miss Barrington looked up sharply. There had been a little ring in
+Witham's voice, but there was also a solicitude in his face which
+almost astonished her, and when Macdonald urged her to comply she rose
+leisurely.
+
+"I will be ready in ten minutes," she said.
+
+Witham waited at least twenty, very impatiently, but when at last the
+girl appeared, handed her with quiet deference into the sleigh, and
+then took his place, as far as the dimensions of the vehicle
+permitted, apart from her. Once he fancied she noticed it with faint
+amusement, but the horses knew what was coming, and it was only when
+he pulled them up to a trot again on the slope of a rise that he found
+speech convenient.
+
+"I am glad we are alone, though I feel a little diffidence in asking a
+favour of you, because unfortunately when I venture to recommend
+anything you usually set yourself against it," he said. "This is, in
+the language of this country, tolerably straight."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed. "I could find no fault with it on the score
+of ambiguity."
+
+"Well," said Witham, "I believe your uncle is going to sell wheat for
+you, and let a good deal of your land go out of cultivation. Now, as
+you perhaps do not know, the laws which govern the markets are very
+simple and almost immutable, but the trouble is that a good many
+people do not understand their application."
+
+"You apparently consider yourself an exception," said the girl.
+
+Witham nodded. "I do just now. Still, I do not wish to talk about
+myself. You see, the people back there in Europe must be fed, and the
+latest news from wheat-growing countries does not promise more than an
+average crop, while half the faint-hearted farmers here are not going
+to sow much this year. Therefore when the demand comes for Western
+wheat there will be little to sell."
+
+"But how is it that you alone see this? Isn't it a trifle
+egotistical?"
+
+Witham laughed. "Can't we leave my virtues, or the reverse, out of the
+question? I feel that I am right, and want you to dissuade your uncle.
+It would be even better if, when I return to Winnipeg, you would
+empower me to buy wheat for you."
+
+Maud Barrington looked at him curiously. "I am a little perplexed as
+to why you should wish me to."
+
+"No doubt," said Witham. "Still, is there any reason why I should be
+debarred the usual privilege of taking an interest in my neighbour's
+affairs?"
+
+"No," said the girl slowly. "But can you not see that it is out of the
+question that I should entrust you with this commission?"
+
+Witham's hands closed on the reins, and his face grew a trifle grim as
+he said, "From the point of view you evidently take, I presume it is."
+
+A flush of crimson suffused the girl's cheeks. "I never meant that,
+and I can scarcely forgive you for fancying I did. Of course I could
+trust you with--you have made me use the word--the dollars, but you
+must realize that I could not do anything in public opposition to my
+uncle's opinion."
+
+Witham was sensible of a great relief, but it did not appear advisable
+to show it. "There are so many things you apparently find it difficult
+to forgive me--and we will let this one pass," he said. "Still, I
+cannot help thinking that Colonel Barrington will have a good deal to
+answer for."
+
+Maud Barrington made no answer, but she was sensible of a respect
+which appeared quite unwarranted for the dryly-spoken man who, though
+she guessed her words stung him now and then, bore them without
+wincing. While she sat silent, shivering under her furs, darkness
+crept down. The smoky cloud dropped lower, the horizon closed in as
+the grey obscurity rolled up to meet them across a rapidly-narrowing
+strip of snow. Then she could scarcely see the horses, and the muffled
+drumming of their hoofs was lost in a doleful wail of wind. It also
+seemed to her that the cold, which was already almost insupportable,
+suddenly increased, as it not infrequently does in that country before
+the snow. Then a white powder was whirled into her face, filling her
+eyes and searing the skin, while, when she could see anything again,
+the horses were plunging at a gallop through a filmy haze, and Witham,
+whitened all over, leaned forward with lowered head hurling hoarse
+encouragement at them. His voice reached her fitfully through the roar
+of wind, until sight and hearing were lost alike as the white haze
+closed about them, and it was not until the wild gust had passed she
+heard him again.
+
+He was apparently shouting, "Come nearer."
+
+Maud Barrington was not sure whether she obeyed him or he seized and
+drew her towards him. She, however, felt the furs piled high about her
+neck and that there was an arm round her shoulder, and for a moment
+was sensible of an almost overwhelming revulsion from the contact. She
+was proud and very dainty, and fancied she knew what this man had
+been, while now she was drawn in to his side, and felt her chilled
+blood respond to the warmth of his body. Indeed, she grew suddenly hot
+to the neck, and felt that henceforward she could never forgive him or
+herself, but the mood passed almost as swiftly, for again the awful
+blast shrieked about them and she only remembered her companion's
+humanity as the differences of sex and character vanished under that
+destroying cold. They were no longer man and woman, but only beings of
+flesh and blood, clinging desperately to the life that was in them,
+for the first rush of the Western snowstorm has more than a physical
+effect, and man exposed to its fury loses all but his animal instincts
+in the primitive struggle with the elements.
+
+Then, while the snow folded them closely in its white embrace during a
+lull, the girl recovered herself, and her strained voice was faintly
+audible.
+
+"This is my fault; why don't you tell me so?" she said.
+
+A hoarse laugh seemed to issue from the whitened object beside her,
+and she was drawn closer to it again. "We needn't go into that just
+now. You have one thing to do, and that is to keep warm."
+
+One of the horses stumbled, the grasp that was around her became
+relaxed and she heard the swish of the whip followed by hoarse
+expletives, and did not resent it. The man, it seemed, was fighting
+for her life as well as his own, and even brutal virility was
+necessary. After that there was a space of oblivion, while the storm
+raged about them, until, when the wind fell a trifle, it became
+evident that the horses had left the trail.
+
+"You are off the track, and will never make the Grange unless you find
+it!" she said.
+
+Witham seemed to nod. "We are not going there," he said, and if he
+added anything, it was lost in the scream of a returning gust.
+
+Again Maud Barrington's reason reasserted itself, and remembering the
+man's history she became sensible of a curious dismay, but it also
+passed, and left her with the vague realization that he and she were
+actuated alike only by the desire to escape extinction. Presently she
+became sensible that the sleigh had stopped beside a formless mound of
+white and the man was shaking her.
+
+"Hold those furs about you while I lift you down," he said.
+
+She did his bidding, and did not shrink when she felt his arms about
+her, while next moment she was standing knee-deep in the snow and the
+man shouting something she did not catch. Team and sleigh seemed to
+vanish, and she saw her companion dimly for a moment before he was
+lost in the sliding whiteness too. Then a horrible fear came upon her.
+
+It seemed a very long while before he reappeared, and thrust her in
+through what seemed to be a door. Then there was another waiting
+before the light of a lamp blinked out, and she saw that she was
+standing in a little log-walled room with bare floor and a few trusses
+of straw in a corner. There was also a rusty stove, and a very small
+pile of billets beside it. Witham, who had closed the door, stood
+looking at them with a curious expression.
+
+"Where is the team?" she gasped.
+
+"Heading for a birch bluff or Silverdale, though I scarcely think they
+will get there," said the man. "I have never stopped here, and it
+wasn't astonishing they fancied the place a pile of snow. While I was
+getting the furs out they slipped away from me."
+
+Miss Barrington now knew where they were. The shanty was used by the
+remoter settlers as a half-way house where they slept occasionally on
+their long journey to the railroad, and as there was a birch bluff not
+far away, it was the rule that whoever occupied it should replace the
+fuel he had consumed. The last man had, however, not been liberal.
+
+"But what are we to do?" she asked, with a little gasp of dismay.
+
+"Stay here until the morning," said Witham quietly. "Unfortunately I
+can't even spare you my company. The stable has fallen in, and it
+would be death to stand outside, you see. In the meanwhile, pull out
+some of the straw and put it in the stove."
+
+"Can you not do that?" asked Miss Barrington, feeling that she must
+commence at once, if she was to keep this man at a befitting distance.
+
+Witham laughed. "Oh, yes, but you will freeze if you stand still, and
+these billets require splitting. Still, if you have special objections
+to doing what I ask you, you can walk up and down rapidly."
+
+The girl glanced at him a moment, and then lowered her eyes. "Of
+course I was wrong! Do you wish to hear that I am sorry?"
+
+Witham, answering nothing, swung an axe round his head, and the girl,
+kneeling beside the stove, noticed the sinewy suppleness of his frame
+and the precision with which the heavy blade cleft the billets. The
+axe, she knew, is by no means an easy tool to handle. At last the red
+flame crackled, and though she had not intended the question to be
+malicious, there was a faint trace of irony in her voice as she asked,
+"Is there any other thing you wish me to do?"
+
+Witham flung two bundles of straw down beside the stove, and stood
+looking at her gravely. "Yes," he said. "I want you to sit down and
+let me wrap this sleigh robe about you."
+
+The girl submitted, and did not shrink from his touch visibly when he
+drew the fur robe about her shoulders and packed the end of it round
+her feet. Still, there was a faint warmth in her face, and she was
+grateful for his unconcernedness.
+
+"Fate or fortune has placed me in charge of you until to-morrow, and
+if the position is distasteful to you it is not my fault," he said.
+"Still, I feel the responsibility, and it would be a little less
+difficult if you could accept the fact tacitly."
+
+Maud Barrington would not have shivered if she could have avoided it,
+but the cold was too great for her, and she did not know whether she
+was vexed or pleased at the gleam of compassion in the man's grey
+eyes. It was more eloquent than anything of the kind she had ever
+seen, but it had gone and he was only quietly deferent when she
+glanced at him again.
+
+"I will endeavour to be good," she said, and then flushed with
+annoyance at the adjective. Half-dazed by the cold as she was, she
+could not think of a more suitable one. Witham, however, retained his
+gravity.
+
+"Now, Macdonald gave you no supper, and he has dinner at noon," he
+said. "I brought some eatables along, and you must make the best meal
+you can."
+
+He opened a packet, and laid it, with a little silver flask, upon her
+knee.
+
+"I cannot eat all this--and it is raw spirit," said Maud Barrington.
+
+Witham laughed. "Are you not forgetting your promise? Still, we will
+melt a little snow into the cup."
+
+An icy gust swept in when he opened the door, and it was only by a
+strenuous effort he closed it again, while, when he came back panting
+with the top of the flask a little colour crept into Maud Barrington's
+face. "I am sorry," she said. "That at least is your due."
+
+"I really don't want my due," said Witham with a deprecatory gesture
+as he laid the silver cup upon the stove. "Can't we forget we are not
+exactly friends, just for to-night? If so, you will drink this and
+commence at once on the provisions--to please me!"
+
+Maud Barrington was glad of the reviving draught, for she was very
+cold, but presently she held out the packet.
+
+"One really cannot eat many crackers at once; will you help me?"
+
+Witham laughed as he took one of the biscuits. "If I had expected any
+one would share my meal, I would have provided a better one. Still, I
+have been glad to feast upon more unappetizing things occasionally!"
+
+"When were you unfortunate?" said the girl.
+
+Witham smiled somewhat dryly. "I was unfortunate for six years on
+end."
+
+He was aware of the blunder when he had spoken, but Maud Barrington
+appeared to be looking at the flask thoughtfully.
+
+"The design is very pretty," she said. "You got it in England?"
+
+The man knew that it was the name F. Witham his companion's eyes
+rested on, but his face was expressionless. "Yes," he said. "It is one
+of the things they make for presentation in the old country."
+
+Maud Barrington noticed the absence of any attempt at explanation, and
+having considerable pride of her own, was sensible of a faint
+approval. "You are making slow progress," she said, with a slight but
+perceptible difference in her tone. "Now, you can have eaten nothing
+since breakfast."
+
+Witham said nothing, but by and by poured a little of the spirit into
+a rusty can, and the girl, who understood why he did so, felt that it
+covered several of his offences. "Now," she said graciously, "you may
+smoke if you wish to."
+
+Witham pointed to the few billets left and shook his head. "I'm afraid
+I must get more wood."
+
+The roar of the wind almost drowned his voice, and the birch logs
+seemed to tremble under the impact of the blast, while Maud Barrington
+shivered as she asked, "Is it safe?"
+
+"It is necessary," said Witham, with the little laugh she had already
+found reassuring.
+
+He had gone out in another minute, and the girl felt curiously lonely
+as she remembered stories of men who had left their homesteads during
+a blizzard to see to the safety of the horses in a neighbouring
+stable, and were found afterwards as still as the snow that covered
+them. Maud Barrington was not unduly timorous, but the roar of that
+awful icy gale would have stricken dismay into the hearts of most men,
+and she found herself glancing with feverish impatience at a
+diminutive gold watch and wondering whether the cold had retarded its
+progress. Ten minutes passed very slowly, lengthened to twenty more
+slowly still, and then it flashed upon her that there was at least
+something she could do; and, scraping up a little of the snow that
+sifted in, she melted it in the can. Then she set the flask-top upon
+the stove, and once more listened for the man's footsteps very
+eagerly.
+
+She did not hear them, but at last the door swung open, and carrying a
+load of birch branches Witham staggered in. He dropped them, strove to
+close the door, and failed, then leaned against it, gasping, with a
+livid face, for there are few men who can withstand the cold of a
+snow-laden gale at forty degrees below.
+
+How Maud Barrington closed the door she did not know; but it was with
+a little imperious gesture she turned to the man.
+
+"Shake those furs at once," she said; and drawing him towards the
+stove held up the steaming cup. "Now sit there and drink it."
+
+Witham stooped and reached out for the can, but the girl swept it off
+the stove. "Oh, I know the silver was for me," she said. "Still, is
+this a time for trifles such as that?"
+
+Worn out by a very grim struggle, Witham did as he was bidden, and
+looked up with a twinkle in his eyes, when with the faintest trace of
+colour in her cheeks the girl sat down close to him and drew part of
+the fur robe about him.
+
+"I really believe you were a little pleased to see me come back just
+now," he said.
+
+"Was that quite necessary?" asked Maud Barrington. "Still, I was."
+
+Witham made a little deprecatory gesture. "Of course," he said. "Now
+we can resume our former footing to-morrow, but in the meanwhile I
+would like to know why you are so hard upon me, Miss Barrington,
+because I really have not done much harm to any one at Silverdale.
+Your aunt"--and he made a little respectful inclination of his head
+which pleased the girl--"is at least giving me a fair trial."
+
+"It is difficult to tell you--but it was your own doing," said Maud
+Barrington. "At the beginning you prejudiced us when you told us you
+could only play cards indifferently. It was so unnecessary, and we
+knew a good deal about you!"
+
+"Well," said Witham quietly, "I have only my word to offer, and I
+wonder if you will believe me now, but I don't think I ever won five
+dollars at cards in my life."
+
+Maud Barrington watched him closely, but his tone carried conviction,
+and again she was glad that he attempted no explanation. "I am quite
+willing to take it," she said. "Still, you can understand----"
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "It puts a strain upon your faith, but some day I
+may be able to make a good deal that puzzles you quite clear."
+
+Maud Barrington glanced at the flask. "I wonder if that is connected
+with the explanation, but I will wait. Now, you have not lighted your
+cigar."
+
+Witham understood that the topic was dismissed, and sat thoughtfully
+still while the girl nestled against the birch logs close beside him
+under the same furs; for the wind went through the building and the
+cold was unbearable a few feet from the stove. The birch rafters shook
+above their heads, and every now and then it seemed that a roaring
+gust would lift the roof from them. Still the stove glowed and
+snapped, and close in about it there was a drowsy heat, while
+presently the girl's eyes grew heavy. Finally--for there are few who
+can resist the desire for sleep in the cold of the North-West--her
+head sank back, and Witham, rising very slowly, held his breath as he
+piled the furs about her. That done, he stooped and looked down upon
+her while the blood crept to his face. Maud Barrington lay very still,
+the long, dark lashes resting on her cold-tinted cheeks, and the
+patrician serenity of her face was even more marked in her sleep. Then
+he turned away, feeling like one who had committed a desecration,
+knowing that he had looked too long already upon the sleeping girl who
+believed he had been an outcast and yet had taken his word; for it was
+borne in upon him that a time would come when he would try her faith
+even more severely. Moving softly, he paced up and down the room.
+
+Witham afterwards wondered how many miles he walked that night, for
+though the loghouse was not longer than thirty feet, the cold bit
+deep; but at last he heard a sigh as he glanced towards the stove, and
+immediately swung round again. When he next turned, Miss Barrington
+stood upright, a little flushed in face, but otherwise very calm; and
+the man stood still, shivering in spite of his efforts, and blue with
+cold. The wind had fallen, but the sting of the frost that followed it
+made itself felt beside the stove.
+
+"You had only your deerskin jacket--and you let me sleep under all the
+furs," she said.
+
+Witham shook his head, and hoped he did not look as guilty as he felt,
+when he remembered that it must have been evident to his companion
+that the furs did not get into the position they had occupied
+themselves.
+
+"I only fancied you were a trifle drowsy and not inclined to talk," he
+said, with an absence of concern, for which Miss Barrington, who did
+not believe him, felt grateful. "You see"--and the inspiration was a
+trifle too evident--"I was too sleepy to notice anything myself.
+Still, I am glad you are awake now, because I must make my way to the
+Grange."
+
+"But the snow will be ever so deep, and I could not come," said Maud
+Barrington.
+
+Witham shook his head. "I'm afraid you must stay here; but I will be
+back with Colonel Barrington in a few hours at latest."
+
+The girl deemed it advisable to hide her consternation. "But you might
+not find the trail," she said. "The ravine would lead you to Graham's
+homestead."
+
+"Still," said Witham slowly, "I am going to the Grange."
+
+Then Maud Barrington remembered, and glanced aside from him. It was
+evident this man thought of everything; and she made no answer when
+Witham, who thrust more billets into the stove, turned to her with a
+little smile.
+
+"I think we need remember nothing when we meet again, beyond the fact
+that you will give me a chance of showing that the Lance Courthorne,
+whose fame you know, has ceased to exist."
+
+Then he went out, and the girl stood with flushed cheeks looking down
+at the furs he had left behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MAUD HARRINGTON'S PROMISE
+
+
+Daylight had not broken across the prairie, when, floundering through
+a foot of dusty snow, Witham reached the Grange. He was aching from
+fatigue and cold, and the deerskin jacket stood out from his numbed
+body, stiff with frost, when, leaning heavily on a table, he awaited
+Colonel Barrington. The latter, on entering, stared at him and then
+flung open a cupboard and poured out a glass of wine.
+
+"Drink that before you talk. You look half dead," he said.
+
+Witham shook his head. "Perhaps you had better hear me first."
+
+Barrington thrust the glass upon him. "I could make nothing of what
+you told me while you speak like that. Drink it, and then sit until
+you get used to the different temperature."
+
+Witham drained the glass and sank limply into a chair. As yet his face
+was colourless, though his chilled flesh tingled horribly as the blood
+once more crept into the surface tissues. Then he fixed his eyes upon
+his host as he told his story. Barrington stood very straight watching
+his visitor, but his face was drawn, for the resolution which
+supported him through the day was less noticeable in the early
+morning, and it was evident now at least that he was an old man
+carrying a heavy load of anxiety. Still, as the story proceeded, a
+little blood crept into his cheeks, while Witham guessed that he found
+it difficult to retain his grim immobility.
+
+"I am to understand that an attempt to reach the Grange through the
+snow would have been perilous?" he said.
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly.
+
+The older man stood very still regarding him intently, until he said,
+"I don't mind admitting that it was distinctly regrettable!"
+
+Witham stopped him with a gesture. "It was at least unavoidable, sir.
+The team would not face the snow, and no one could have reached the
+Grange alive."
+
+"No doubt you did your best--and, as a connexion of the family, I am
+glad it was you. Still--and there are cases in which it is desirable
+to speak plainly--the affair, which you will, of course, dismiss from
+your recollection, is to be considered as closed now."
+
+Witham smiled, and a trace of irony he could not quite repress was
+just discernible in his voice. "I scarcely think that was necessary,
+sir. It is, of course, sufficient for me to have rendered a small
+service to the distinguished family which has given me an opportunity
+of proving my right to recognition, and neither you, nor Miss
+Barrington, need have any apprehension that I will presume upon it!"
+
+Barrington wheeled round. "You have the Courthorne temper, at least,
+and perhaps I deserved this display of it. You acted with commendable
+discretion in coming straight to me--and the astonishment I got drove
+the other aspect of the question out of my head. If it hadn't been for
+you, my niece would have frozen."
+
+"I'm afraid I spoke unguardedly, sir; but I am very tired. Still, if
+you will wait a few minutes, I will get the horses out without
+troubling the hired man."
+
+Barrington made a little gesture of comprehension, and then shook his
+head. "You are fit for nothing further, and need rest and sleep."
+
+"You will want somebody, sir," said Witham. "The snow is very loose
+and deep."
+
+He went out, and Barrington, who looked after him with a curious
+expression in his face, nodded twice as if in approval. Twenty minutes
+later he took his place in the sleigh that slid away from the Grange,
+which lay a league behind it when the sunrise flamed across the
+prairie. The wind had gone, and there was only a pitiless brightness
+and a devastating cold, while the snow lay blown in wisps, dried dusty
+and fine as flour by the frost. It had no cohesion, the runners sank
+in it, and Witham was almost waist deep when he dragged the
+floundering team through the drifts. A day had passed since he had
+eaten anything worth mention, but he held on with an endurance which
+his companion, who was incapable of rendering him assistance, wondered
+at. There were belts of deep snow the almost buried sleigh must be
+dragged through, and tracts from which the wind had swept the dusty
+covering, leaving bare the grasses the runners would not slide over,
+where the team came to a standstill, and could scarcely be urged to
+continue the struggle.
+
+At last, however, the loghouse rose, a lonely mound of whiteness, out
+of the prairie, and Witham drew in a deep breath of contentment when a
+dusky figure appeared for a moment in the doorway. His weariness
+seemed to fall from him, and once more his companion wondered at the
+tirelessness of the man, as, floundering on foot beside them, he urged
+the team through the powdery drifts beneath the big birch bluff.
+Witham did not go in, however, when they reached the house; and when,
+five minutes later, Maud Barrington came out, she saw him leaning with
+a drawn face against the sleigh. He straightened himself suddenly at
+the sight of her, but she had seen sufficient, and her heart softened
+towards him. Whatever the man's history had been he had borne a good
+deal for her.
+
+The return journey was even more arduous, and now and then Maud
+Barrington felt a curious throb of pity for the worn-out man, who
+during most of it walked beside the team; but it was accomplished at
+last, and she contrived to find means of thanking him alone when they
+reached the Grange.
+
+Witham shook his head, and then smiled a little. "It isn't nice to
+make a bargain," he said. "Still, it is less pleasant now and then to
+feel under an obligation, though there is no reason why you should."
+
+Maud Barrington was not altogether pleased, but she could not blind
+herself to facts, and it was plain that there was an obligation. "I am
+afraid I cannot quite believe that, but I do not see what you are
+leading to."
+
+Witham's eyes twinkled. "Well," he said reflectively, "I don't want
+you to fancy that last night commits you to any line of conduct in
+regard to me. I only asked for a truce, you see."
+
+Maud Barrington was a trifle nettled. "Yes?" she said.
+
+"Then, I want to show you how you can discharge any trifling
+obligation you may fancy you may owe me, which of course would be more
+pleasant to you. Do not allow your uncle to sell any wheat forward for
+you, and persuade him to sow every acre that belongs to you this
+spring."
+
+"But however would this benefit you," asked the girl.
+
+Witham laughed. "I have a fancy that I can straighten up things at
+Silverdale, if I can get my way. It would please me, and I believe
+they want it. Of course, a desire to improve anything appears curious
+in me!"
+
+Maud Barrington was relieved of the necessity of answering, for the
+Colonel came up just then; but, moved by some sudden impulse, she
+nodded as if in agreement.
+
+It was afternoon when she awakened from a refreshing sleep, and
+descending to the room set apart for herself and her aunt, sat
+thoughtfully still awhile in a chair beside the stove. Then,
+stretching out her hand, she took up a little case of photographs and
+slipped out one of them. It was a portrait of a boy and pony, but
+there was a significance in the fact that she knew just where to find
+it. The picture was a good one, and once more Maud Barrington noticed
+the arrogance, which did not, however, seem out of place there, in the
+lad's face. It was also a comely face, but there was a hint of
+sensuality in it that marred its beauty. Then with a growing
+perplexity she compared it with that of the weary man who had plodded
+beside the team. Witham was not arrogant but resolute, and there was
+no stamp of indulgence in his face. Indeed, the girl had from the
+beginning recognized the virility in it that was tinged with
+asceticism and sprang from a simple, strenuous life of toil in the
+wind and sun.
+
+Just then there was a rustle of fabric, and she laid down the
+photograph a moment too late, as her aunt came in. As it happened, the
+elder lady's eyes rested on the picture, and a faint flush of
+annoyance crept into the face of the girl. It was scarcely
+perceptible, but Miss Barrington saw it, and though she felt tempted,
+did not smile.
+
+"I did not know you were down," she said. "Lance is still asleep. He
+seemed very tired."
+
+"Yes," said the girl. "That is very probable. He left the railroad
+before daylight, and had driven round to several farms before he came
+to Macdonald's, and he was very considerate. He had made me take all
+the furs, and, I fancy, walked up and down with nothing but his indoor
+clothing on all night long, though the wind went through the building,
+and one could scarcely keep alive a few feet from the stove."
+
+Again the flicker of colour crept into the girl's cheeks, and the eyes
+that were keen, as well as gentle, noticed it.
+
+"I think you owe him a good deal," said Miss Barrington.
+
+"Yes," said her niece, with a little laugh which appeared to imply a
+trace of resentment. "I believe I do, but he seemed unusually anxious
+to relieve me of that impression. He was also good enough to hint that
+nothing he might have done need prevent me being--the right word is a
+trifle difficult to find--but I fancy he meant unpleasant to him if I
+wished it."
+
+There was a little twinkle in Miss Barrington's eyes. "Are you not a
+trifle hard to please, my dear? Now, if he had attempted to insist on
+a claim to your gratitude, you would have resented it."
+
+"Of course," said the girl reflectively. "Still, it is annoying to be
+debarred from offering it. There are times, aunt, when I can't help
+wishing that Lance Courthorne had never come to Silverdale. There are
+men who leave nothing just as they found it, and whom one can't
+ignore."
+
+Miss Barrington shook her head. "I fancy you are wrong. He has
+offended after all?"
+
+She was pleased to see her niece's face relax into a smile that
+expressed unconcern. "We are all exacting now and then," said the
+girl. "Still, he made me promise to give him a fair trial, which was
+not flattering, because it suggested that I had been unnecessarily
+harsh, and then hinted this morning that he had no intention of
+holding me to it. It really was not gratifying to find he held the
+concession he asked for of so small account. You are, however, as
+easily swayed by trifles as I am, because Lance can do no wrong since
+he kissed your hand."
+
+"I really think I liked him the better for it," said the little
+silver-haired lady. "The respect was not assumed, but wholly genuine,
+you see; and whether I was entitled to it or not, it was a good deal
+in Lance's favour that he should offer it to me. There must be some
+good in the man who can be moved to reverence anything, even if he is
+mistaken."
+
+"No man with any sense could help adoring you," said Maud Barrington.
+"Still, I wonder why you believe I was wrong in wishing he had not
+come to Silverdale."
+
+Miss Barrington looked thoughtful. "I will tell you, my dear. There
+are few better men than my brother; but his thoughts, and the
+traditions he is bound by, are those of fifty years ago, while the
+restless life of the prairie is a thing of to-day. We have fallen too
+far behind it at Silverdale, and a crisis is coming that none of us
+are prepared for. Even Dane is scarcely fitted to help my brother to
+face it, and the rest are either over-fond of their pleasure or
+untrained boys. Brave lads they are, but none of them have been taught
+that it is only by mental strain, or the ceaseless toil of his body,
+the man without an inheritance can win himself a competence now. This
+is why they want a leader who has known hardship and hunger, instead
+of ease, and won what he holds with his own hand in place of having it
+given him."
+
+"You fancy we could find one in such a man as Lance has been?"
+
+Miss Barrington looked grave. "I believe the prodigal was afterwards a
+better, as well as a wiser, man than the one who stayed at home, and I
+am not quite sure that Lance's history is so nearly like that of the
+son in the parable as we have believed it to be. A residence in the
+sty is apt to leave a stain, which I have not, though I have looked
+for it, found on him."
+
+The eyes of the two women met, and, though nothing more was said, each
+realized that the other was perplexed by the same question, while the
+girl was astonished to find her vague suspicions shared. While they
+sat silent, Colonel Barrington came in.
+
+"I am glad to see you looking so much better, Maud," he said, with a
+trace of embarrassment. "Courthorne is resting still. Now, I can't
+help feeling that we have been a trifle more distant than was needful
+with him. The man has really behaved very discreetly. I mean in
+everything."
+
+This was a great admission, and Miss Barrington smiled. "Did it hurt
+you very much to tell us that?" she asked.
+
+The Colonel laughed. "I know what you mean, and if you put me on my
+mettle I'll retract. After all, it was no great credit to him, because
+blood will tell, and he is, of course, a Courthorne."
+
+Almost without her intention, Maud Barrington's eyes wandered towards
+the photograph, and then looking up she met those of her aunt, and
+once more saw the thought that troubled her in them.
+
+"The Courthorne blood is responsible for a good deal more than
+discretion," said Miss Barrington, who went out quietly.
+
+Her brother appeared a trifle perplexed. "Now, I fancied your aunt had
+taken him under her wing, and when I was about to suggest that,
+considering the connexion between the families, we might ask him over
+to dinner occasionally, she goes away," he said.
+
+The girl looked down a moment, for, realizing that her uncle
+recognized the obligation he was under to the man he did not like, she
+remembered that she herself owed him considerably more and he had
+asked for something in return. It was not altogether easy to grant,
+but she had tacitly pledged herself, and turning suddenly she laid a
+hand on Barrington's arm.
+
+"Of course; but I want to talk of something else just now," she said.
+"You know I have very seldom asked you questions about my affairs, but
+I wish to take a little practical interest in them this year."
+
+"Yes?" said Barrington, with a smile. "Well, I am at your service, my
+dear, and quite ready to account for my stewardship. You are no longer
+my ward, except by your own wishes."
+
+"I am still your niece," said the girl, patting his arm. "Now, there
+is, of course, nobody who could manage the farming better than you do,
+but I would like to raise a large crop of wheat this season."
+
+"It wouldn't pay," and the Colonel grew suddenly grave. "Very few men
+in the district are going to sow all their holding. Wheat is steadily
+going down."
+
+"Then if nobody sows there will be very little, and shouldn't that put
+up the prices?"
+
+Barrington's eyes twinkled. "Who has been teaching you commercial
+economy? You are too pretty to understand such things, and the
+argument is fallacious, because the wheat is consumed in Europe--and
+even if we have not much to offer, they can get plenty from
+California, Chile, India, and Australia."
+
+"Oh, yes--and Russia," said the girl. "Still, you see, the big mills
+in Winnipeg and Minneapolis depend upon the prairie. They couldn't
+very well bring wheat in from Australia."
+
+Barrington was still smiling with his eyes, but his lips were set. "A
+little knowledge is dangerous, my dear, and if you could understand me
+better, I could show you where you were wrong. As it is, I can only
+tell you that I have decided to sell wheat forward and plough very
+little."
+
+"But that was a policy you condemned with your usual vigour. You
+really know you did."
+
+"My dear," said the Colonel, with a little impatient gesture, "one can
+never argue with a lady. You see--circumstances alter cases
+considerably."
+
+He nodded with an air of wisdom as though that decided it; but the
+girl persisted. "Uncle," she said, drawing closer to him with lithe
+gracefulness, "I want you to let me have my own way just for once, and
+if I am wrong I will never do anything you do not approve of again.
+After all, it is a very little thing, and you would like to please
+me."
+
+"It is a trifle that is likely to cost you a good deal of money," said
+the Colonel dryly.
+
+"I think I could afford it, and you could not refuse me."
+
+"As I am only your uncle, and no longer a trustee, I could not," said
+Barrington. "Still, you would not act against my wishes?"
+
+His eyes were gentle, unusually so, for he was not as a rule very
+patient when any one questioned his will; but there was a reproach in
+them that hurt the girl. Still, because she had promised, she
+persisted.
+
+"No," she said. "That is why it would be ever so much nicer if you
+would just think as I did."
+
+Barrington looked at her steadily. "If you insist, I can at least hope
+for the best," he said, with a gravity that brought a faint colour to
+the listener's cheek.
+
+It was next day when Witham took his leave, and Maud Barrington stood
+beside him as he put on his driving furs.
+
+"You told me there was something you wished me to do, and, though it
+was difficult, it is done," she said. "My holding will be sown with
+wheat this spring."
+
+Witham turned his head aside a moment and apparently found it needful
+to fumble at the fastenings of the furs, while there was a curious
+expression in his eyes when he looked round again.
+
+"Then," he said with a little smile, "we are quits. That cancels any
+little obligation which may have existed."
+
+He had gone in another minute, and Maud Barrington turned back into
+the stove-warmed room very quietly. Her lips were, however, somewhat
+closely set.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+SPEED THE PLOUGH
+
+
+Winter had fled back beyond the barrens to the lonely North at last,
+and though here and there a little slushy snow still lay soaking the
+black loam in a hollow, a warm wind swept the vast levels when one
+morning Colonel Barrington rode with his niece and sister across the
+prairie. Spring comes suddenly in that region, and the frost-bleached
+sod was steaming under an effulgent sun, while in places a hardy
+flower peeped through. It was six hundred miles to the forests of the
+Rockies' eastern slope, and as far to the Athabascan pines, but it
+seemed to Maud Barrington that their resinous sweetness was in the
+glorious western wind, which awoke a musical sighing from the sea of
+rippling grass. It rolled away before her in billows of lustrous
+silver-grey, and had for sole boundary the first upward spring of the
+arch of cloudless blue, across which the vanguard of the feathered
+host pressed on, company by company towards the Pole.
+
+The freshness of it all stirred her blood like wine, and the
+brightness that flooded the prairie had crept into her eyes; for those
+who bear the iron winter of that lonely land realize the wonder of the
+reawakening, which in a little space of day, dresses the waste which
+has lain for long months white and silent as the dead, in living
+green. It also has its subtle significance that the grimmest toiler
+feels, and the essence of it is hope eternal and triumphant life. The
+girl felt the thrill of it, and gave thanks by an answering
+brightness, as the murmuring grasses and peeping flowerets did; but
+there was behind her instinctive gladness a vague wonder and
+expectancy. She had read widely, and seen the life of the cities with
+understanding eyes, and now she was to be provided with the edifying
+spectacle of the gambler and outcast turned farmer.
+
+Had she been asked a few months earlier whether the man who had, as
+Courthorne had done, cast away his honour and wallowed in the mire,
+could come forth again and purge himself from the stain, her answer
+would have been coldly sceptical; but now, with the old familiar
+miracle and what it symbolized before her eyes, the thing looked less
+improbable. Why this should give pleasure she did not know, or would
+not admit that she did, but the fact remained that it was so.
+
+Trotting down the slope of the next rise, they came upon him, and he
+stood with very little sign of dissolute living upon him by a great
+breaker plough. In front of him, the quarter-mile furrow led on beyond
+the tall sighting poles on the crest of the next rise, and four
+splendid horses, of a kind not very usual on the prairie, were
+stamping the steaming clods at his side. Bronzed by frost and sun,
+with his brick-red neck and arch of chest revealed by the coarse blue
+shirt that, belted at the waist, enhanced his slenderness of flank,
+the repentant prodigal was at least a passable specimen of the animal
+man, but it was the strength and patience in his face that struck the
+girl, as he turned towards her, bareheaded, with a little smile in his
+eyes. She also noticed the difference he presented with his ingrained
+hands and the stain of the soil upon him to her uncle, who sat his
+horse, immaculate as usual with gloved hand on the bridle, for the
+Englishmen at Silverdale usually hired other men to do their coarser
+work for them.
+
+"So you are commencing in earnest in face of my opinion?" said
+Barrington. "Of course, I wish you success, but that consummation
+appears distinctly doubtful."
+
+Witham laughed as he pointed to a great machine which, hauled by four
+horses, rolled towards them, scattering the black clods in its wake.
+"I'm doing what I can to achieve it, sir," he said. "In fact, I'm
+staking somewhat heavily. That team with the gang ploughs and
+cultivators cost me more dollars than I care to remember."
+
+"No doubt," said Barrington dryly. "Still, we have always considered
+oxen good enough for breaking prairie at Silverdale."
+
+Witham nodded. "I used to do so, sir, when I could get nothing better,
+but after driving oxen for eight years one finds out their
+disadvantages."
+
+Barrington's face grew a trifle stern. "There are times when you tax
+our patience, Lance," he said. "Still, there is nothing to be gained
+by questioning your assertion. What I fail to see is where your reward
+for all this will come from, because I am still convinced that the
+soil will, so to speak, give you back eighty cents for every dollar
+you put into it. I would, however, like to look at those implements. I
+have never seen better ones."
+
+He dismounted and helped his companion down, for Witham made no
+answer. The farmer was never sure what actuated him, but, save in an
+occasional fit of irony, he had not attempted by any reference to make
+his past fall into line with Courthorne's since he had first been
+accepted as the latter at Silverdale. He had taken the dead man's
+inheritance, for a while, but he would stoop no further, and to speak
+the truth, which he saw was not credited, brought him a grim amusement
+as well as flung a sop to his pride. Presently, however, Miss
+Barrington turned to him, and there was a kindly gleam in her eyes as
+she glanced at the splendid horses and widening strip of ploughing.
+
+"You have the hope of youth, Lance, to make this venture when all
+looks black--and it pleases me," she said. "Sometimes I fancy that men
+had braver hearts than they have now when I was young."
+
+Witham flushed a trifle, and stretching out an arm swept his hand
+round the horizon. "All that looked dead a very little while ago, and
+now you can see the creeping greenness in the sod," he said. "The lean
+years cannot last for ever, and, even if one is beaten again, there is
+a consolation in knowing that one has made a struggle. Now, I am quite
+aware that you are fancying a speech of this kind does not come well
+from me."
+
+Maud Barrington had seen his gesture, and something in the thought
+that impelled it, as well as the almost statuesque pose of his
+thinly-clad figure, appealed to her. Courthorne as farmer, with the
+damp of clean effort on his forehead and the stain of the good soil
+that would faithfully repay it on his garments, had very little in
+common with the profligate and gambler. Vaguely she wondered whether
+he was not working out his own redemption by every wheat furrow torn
+from the virgin prairie, and then again the doubt crept in. Could this
+man have ever found pleasure in the mire?
+
+"You will plough all your holding, Lance?" asked the elder lady, who
+had not answered his last speech yet, but meant to do.
+
+"Yes," said the man. "All I can. It's a big venture, and if it fails
+will cripple me; but I seem to feel, apart from any reason I can
+discern, that wheat is going up again, and I must go through with this
+ploughing. Of course, it does not sound very sensible."
+
+Miss Barrington looked at him gravely, for there was a curious and
+steadily-tightening bond between the two. "It depends upon what you
+mean by sense. Can we reason out all we feel, and is there nothing
+intangible but real behind the impulses which may be sent to us?"
+
+"Well," said Witham, with a little smile, "that is a trifle too deep
+for me, and it's difficult to think of anything but the work I have to
+do. But you were the first at Silverdale to hold out a hand to me--and
+I have a feeling that your good wishes would go a long way now. Is it
+altogether fantastic to believe that the good-will of my first friend
+would help to bring me prosperity?"
+
+The white-haired lady's eyes grew momentarily soft, and, with a
+gravity that did not seem out of place, she moved forward and laid her
+hand on a big horse's neck, and smiled when the dumb beast responded
+to her gentle touch.
+
+"It is a good work," she said. "Lance, there is more than dollars, or
+the bread that somebody is needing, behind what you are doing, and
+because I loved your mother I know how her approval would have
+followed you. And now sow in hope, and God speed your plough!"
+
+She turned away almost abruptly, and Witham stood still, with one hand
+closed tightly and a little deeper tint in the bronze of his face,
+sensible at once of an unchanged resolution and a horrible
+degradation. Then he saw that the Colonel had helped Miss Barrington
+into the saddle and her niece was speaking.
+
+"I have something to ask Mr. Courthorne, and will overtake you," she
+said.
+
+The others rode on, and the girl turned to Witham, "I made you a
+promise and did my best to keep it but I find it harder than I fancied
+it would be," she said. "I want you to release me."
+
+"I should like to hear your reasons," said Witham.
+
+The girl made a faint gesture of impatience. "Of course, if you
+insist!"
+
+"I do," said Witham quietly.
+
+"Then I promised you to have all my holding sown this year, and I am
+still willing to do so; but, though my uncle makes no protests I know
+he feels my opposition very keenly, and it hurts me horribly. Unspoken
+reproaches are the worst to bear, you know, and now Dane and some of
+the others are following your lead, it is painful to feel that I am
+taking part with them against the man who has always been kind to me."
+
+"And you would prefer to be loyal to Colonel Barrington even if it
+cost you a good deal?"
+
+"Of course!" said Maud Barrington. "Can you ask me?"
+
+Witham saw the sparkle in her eyes and the half-contemptuous pride in
+the poise of the shapely head. Loyalty, it was evident, was not a
+figure of speech with her, but he felt that he had seen enough and
+turned his face aside.
+
+"I knew it would be difficult when I asked," he said. "Still, I cannot
+give you back that promise. We are going to see a great change this
+year, and I have set my heart on making all I can for you."
+
+"But why should you?" asked Maud Barrington, somewhat astonished that
+she did not feel more angry.
+
+"Well," said Witham gravely, "I may tell you by and by, and in the
+meanwhile you can set it down to vanity. This may be my last venture
+at Silverdale, and I want to make it a big success."
+
+The girl glanced at him sharply, and it was because the news caused
+her an unreasonable concern that there was a trace of irony in her
+voice.
+
+"Your last venture! Have we been unkind to you or does it imply that,
+as you once insinuated, an exemplary life becomes monotonous?"
+
+Witham laughed. "No. I should like to stay here--a very long while,"
+he said; and the girl saw he spoke the truth as she watched him glance
+wistfully at the splendid teams, great ploughs, and rich, black soil.
+"In fact, strange as it may appear, it will be virtue, given the rein
+for once, that drives me out when I go away."
+
+"But where are you going to?"
+
+Witham glanced vaguely across the prairie, and the girl was puzzled by
+the look in his eyes. "Back to my own station," he said softly, as
+though to himself, and then turned with a little shrug of his
+shoulders. "In the meanwhile there is a good deal to do, and once more
+I am sorry I cannot release you."
+
+"Then, there is an end of it. You could not expect me to beg you to,
+so we will discuss the practical difficulty. I cannot under the
+circumstances borrow my uncle's teams, and I am told I have not
+sufficient men or horses to put a large crop in."
+
+"Of course!" said Witham quietly. "Well, I have now the best teams and
+machines on this part of the prairie, and am bringing Ontario men in.
+I will do the ploughing--and, if it will make it easier for you, you
+can pay me for the services."
+
+There was a little flush on the girl's face. "It is all distasteful,
+but as you will not give me back my word, I will keep it to the
+letter. Still, it almost makes me reluctant to ask you a further
+favour."
+
+"This one is promised before you ask it," said Witham quietly.
+
+It cost Maud Barrington some trouble to make her wishes clear, and
+Witham's smile was not wholly one of pleasure as he listened. One of
+the young English lads, who was, it appeared, a distant connexion of
+the girl's, had been losing large sums of money at a gaming table, and
+seeking other equally undesirable relaxations at the railroad
+settlement. For the sake of his mother in England, Miss Barrington
+desired him brought to his senses, but was afraid to appeal to the
+Colonel, whose measures were occasionally more draconic than wise.
+
+"I will do what I can," said Witham. "Still, I am not sure that a lad
+of the kind is worth your worrying over, and I am a trifle curious as
+to what induced you to entrust the mission to me?"
+
+The girl felt embarrassed, but she saw that an answer was expected.
+"Since you ask, it occurred to me that you could do it better than
+anybody else," she said. "Please don't misunderstand me; but I fancy
+it is the other man who is leading him away."
+
+Witham smiled somewhat grimly. "Your meaning is quite plain, and I am
+already looking forward to the encounter with my fellow-gambler. You
+believe that I will prove a match for him?"
+
+Maud Barrington, to her annoyance, felt the blood creep to her
+forehead, but she looked at the man steadily, noticing the quiet
+forcefulness beneath his somewhat caustic amusement.
+
+"Yes," she said simply; "and I shall be grateful."
+
+In another few minutes she was galloping across the prairie, and when
+she rejoined her aunt and Barrington, endeavoured to draw out the
+latter's opinion respecting Courthorne's venture by a few discreet
+questions.
+
+"Heaven knows where he was taught it, but there is no doubt that the
+man is an excellent farmer," he said. "It is a pity that he is also,
+to all intents and purposes, mad."
+
+Miss Barrington glanced at her niece, and both of them smiled, for the
+Colonel usually took for granted the insanity of any one who
+questioned his opinions.
+
+In the meanwhile, Witham sat swaying on the driving-seat, mechanically
+guiding the horses and noticing how the prairie sod rolled away in
+black waves beneath the great plough. He heard the crackle of fibres
+beneath the triple shares, and the swish of greasy loam along the
+mouldboard's side; but his thoughts were far away, and when he raised
+his head, he looked into the dim future beyond the long furrow that
+cut the skyline on the rise.
+
+It was shadowy and uncertain, but one thing was clear to him, and that
+was that he could not stay in Silverdale. At first he had almost hoped
+he might do this, for the good land, and the means of efficiently
+working it, had been a horrible temptation. That was before he
+reckoned on Maud Barrington's attractions; but of late he had seen
+what these were leading him to, and all that was good in him recoiled
+from an attempt to win her. Once he had dared to wonder whether it
+could be done, for his grim life had left him self-centred and bitter,
+but that mood had passed, and it was with disgust he looked back upon
+it. Now he knew that the sooner he left Silverdale, the less difficult
+it would be to forget her; but he was still determined to vindicate
+himself by the work he did, and make her affairs secure. Then, with or
+without a confession, he would slip back into the obscurity he came
+from.
+
+While he worked the soft wind rioted about him, and the harbingers of
+summer passed north in battalions overhead--crane, brent goose, and
+mallard--in crescents, skeins, and wedges, after the fashion of their
+kind. Little long-tailed gophers whisked across the whitened sod, and
+when the great plough rolled through the shadows of a bluff, jack
+rabbits, pied white and grey, scurried amidst the rustling leaves.
+Even the birches were fragrant in that vivifying air, and seemed to
+rejoice as all animate creatures did; but the man's face grew more
+sombre as the day of toil wore on. Still, he did his work with the
+grim, unwavering diligence that had already carried him, dismayed but
+unyielding, through years of drought and harvest hail, and the stars
+shone down on the prairie when at last he loosed his second team.
+
+Then, standing in the door of his lonely homestead, he glanced at the
+great shadowy granaries and barns, and clenched his hand as he saw
+what he could do if the things that had been forced upon him were
+rightfully his. He knew his own mettle, and that he could hold them if
+he would; but the pale, cold face of a woman rose up in judgment
+against him, and he also knew that because of the love of her, that
+was casting its toils about him, he must give them up.
+
+Far back on the prairie a lonely coyote howled, and a faint wind, that
+was now like snow-cooled wine, brought the sighing of limitless
+grasses out of the silence. There was no cloud in the crystalline
+ether, and something in the vastness and stillness that spoke of
+infinity brought a curious sense of peace to him. Impostor though he
+was, he would leave Silverdale better than he found it, and afterwards
+it would be of no great moment what became of him. Countless
+generations of toiling men had borne their petty sorrows before him,
+and gone back to the dust they sprang from; but still, in due
+succession, harvest followed seed-time, and the world whirled on.
+Then, remembering that, in the meanwhile, he had much to do which
+would commence with the sun on the morrow, he went back into the house
+and shook the fancies from him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+MASTERY RECOGNIZED
+
+
+There was, considering the latest price of wheat, a somewhat
+astonishing attendance in the long room of the hotel at the railroad
+settlement one Saturday evening. A big stove in the midst of it
+diffused a stuffy and almost unnecessary heat, gaudy nickelled lamps
+an uncertain brilliancy, and the place was filled with the drifting
+smoke of indifferent tobacco. Oleographs, barbaric in colour and
+drawing, hung about the roughly-boarded walls, and any critical
+stranger would have found the saloon comfortless and tawdry.
+
+It was, however, filled that night with bronzed-faced men who expected
+nothing better. Most of them wore jackets of soft black leather or
+embroidered deerskin, and the jean trousers and long boots of not a
+few apparently stood in need of repairing, though the sprinkling of
+more conventional apparel and paler faces showed that the storekeepers
+of the settlement had been drawn together, as well as the prairie
+farmers who had driven in to buy provisions or take up their mail.
+There was, however, but little laughter, and their voices were low,
+for boisterousness and assertion are not generally met with on the
+silent prairie. Indeed, the attitude of some of the men was mildly
+deprecatory, as though they felt that in assisting in what was going
+forward they were doing an unusual thing. Still, the eyes of all were
+turned toward the table where a man, who differed widely in appearance
+from most of them, dealt out the cards.
+
+He wore city clothes, and a white shirt with a fine diamond in the
+front of it, while there was a keen intentness behind the
+half-ironical smile in his somewhat colourless face. The whiteness of
+his long, nervous fingers and the quickness of his gestures would also
+have stamped him as a being of different order from the slowly-spoken
+prairie farmers, while the slenderness of the little pile of coins in
+front of him testified that his endeavours to tempt them to
+speculation on games of chance had met with no very marked success as
+yet. Gambling for stakes of moment is not a popular amusement in that
+country, where the soil demands his best from every man in return for
+the scanty dollars it yields him, but the gamester had chosen his time
+well, and the men who had borne the dreary solitude of winter in
+outlying farms, and now only saw another adverse season opening before
+them, were for once in the mood to clutch at any excitement that would
+relieve the monotony of their toilsome lives.
+
+A few were betting small sums with an apparent lack of interest which
+did not in the least deceive the dealer, and when he handed a few
+dollars out he laughed a little as he turned to the bar-keeper.
+
+"Set them up again. I want a drink to pass the time," he said. "I'll
+play you at anything you like to put a name to, boys, if this game
+don't suit you, but you'll have to give me the chance of making my
+hotel bill. In my country I've seen folks livelier at a funeral."
+
+The glasses were handed round, but when the gambler reached out
+towards the silver at his side, a big bronzed-skinned rancher stopped
+him.
+
+"No," he drawled. "We're not sticking you for a locomotive tank, and
+this comes out of my treasury. I'll call you three dollars and take my
+chances on the draw."
+
+"Well," said the dealer, "that's a little more encouraging. Anybody
+wanting to make it better?"
+
+A young lad in elaborately-embroidered deerskin with a flushed face
+leaned upon the table. "Show you how we play cards in the old
+country," he said. "I'll make it thirty--for a beginning."
+
+There was a momentary silence, for the lad had staked heavily and lost
+of late, but one or two more bets were made. Then the cards were
+turned up, and the lad smiled fatuously as he took up his winnings.
+
+"Now, I'll let you see," he said. "This time we'll make it fifty."
+
+He won twice more in succession, and the men closed in about the
+table, while, for the dealer knew when to strike, the glasses went
+round again, and in the growing interest nobody quite noticed who paid
+for the refreshment. Then, while the dollars began to trickle in, the
+lad flung a bill for a hundred down.
+
+"Go on," he said a trifle huskily. "To-night you can't beat me!"
+
+Once more he won, and just then two men came quietly into the room.
+One of them signed to the hotel-keeper.
+
+"What's going on? The boys seem kind of keen," he said.
+
+The other man laughed a little. "Ferris has struck a streak of luck,
+but I wouldn't be very sorry if you got him away, Mr. Courthorne. He
+has had as much as he can carry already, and I don't want anybody
+broke up in my house. The boys can look out for themselves, but the
+Silverdale kid has been losing a good deal lately, and he doesn't know
+when to stop."
+
+Witham glanced at his companion, who nodded. "The young fool," he
+said.
+
+They crossed towards the table in time to see the lad take up his
+winnings again, and Witham laid his hand quietly upon his shoulder.
+
+"Come along and have a drink while you give the rest a show," he said.
+"You seem to have done tolerably well, and it's usually wise to stop
+while the chances are going with you."
+
+The lad turned and stared at him with languid insolence in his
+half-closed eyes, and, though he came of a lineage that had been
+famous in the old country, there was nothing very prepossessing in his
+appearance. His mouth was loose, his face weak in spite of its
+inherited pride, and there was little need to tell either of the men,
+who noticed his nervous fingers and muddiness of skin, that he was one
+who in the strenuous early days would have worn the woolly crown.
+
+"Were you addressing me?" he asked.
+
+"I was," said Witham quietly. "I was, in fact, inviting you to share
+our refreshment. You see we have just come in."
+
+"Then," said the lad, "it was condemnable impertinence. Since you have
+taken this fellow up, couldn't you teach him that it's bad taste to
+thrust his company upon people who don't want it, Dane?"
+
+Witham said nothing, but drew Dane, who flushed a trifle, aside, and
+when they sat down the latter smiled dryly.
+
+"You have taken on a big contract, Courthorne. How are you going to
+get the young ass out?" he said.
+
+"Well," said Witham, "it would gratify me to take him by the neck, but
+as I don't know that it would please the Colonel if I made a public
+spectacle of one of his retainers, I fancy I'll have to tackle the
+gambler. I don't know him, but as he comes from across the frontier
+it's more than likely he has heard of me. There are advantages in
+having a record like mine, you see."
+
+"It would, of course, be a kindness to the lad's people--but the young
+fool is scarcely worth it, and it's not your affair," said Dane
+reflectively.
+
+Witham guessed the drift of the speech, but he could respect a
+confidence, and laughed a little. "It's not often I have done any one
+a good turn, and the novelty has its attractions."
+
+Dane did not appear contented with this explanation, but he asked
+nothing further, and the two sat watching the men about the table, who
+were evidently growing eager.
+
+"That's two hundred the kid has let go," said somebody.
+
+There was a murmur of excited voices, and one rose hoarse and a trifle
+shaky in the consonants above the rest.
+
+"Show you how a gentleman can stand up, boys. Throw them out again.
+Two hundred this time on the game!"
+
+There was silence and the rustle of shuffled cards; then once more the
+voices went up. "Against him! Better let up before he takes your farm.
+Oh, let him face it and show his grit--the man who slings round his
+hundreds can afford to lose!"
+
+The lad's face showed a trifle paler through the drifting smoke,
+though a good many of the cigars had gone out now, and once more there
+was the stillness of expectancy through which a strained voice rose.
+
+"Going to get it all back. I'll stake you four hundred."
+
+Witham rose and moved forward quietly, with Dane behind him, and then
+stood still where he could see the table. He had also very observant
+eyes, and was free from the excitement of those who had a risk on the
+game. Still, when the cards were dealt, it was the gambler's face he
+watched. For a brief space nobody moved, and then the lad flung down
+his cards and stood up with a greyness in his cheeks and his hands
+shaking.
+
+"You've got all my dollars now," he said. "Still, I'll play you for
+doubles if you'll take my paper."
+
+The gambler nodded, and flung down a big pile of bills. "I guess I'll
+trust you. Mine are here."
+
+The bystanders waited motionless, and none of them made a bet, for any
+stakes they could offer would be trifles now; but they glanced at the
+lad who stood tensely still, while Witham watched the face of the man
+at the table in front of him. For a moment he saw a flicker of triumph
+in his eyes, and that decided him. Again, one by one, the cards went
+down, and then, when everybody waited in strained expectancy, the lad
+seemed to grow limp suddenly and groaned.
+
+"You can let up," he said hoarsely. "I've gone down!"
+
+Then a hard brown hand was laid upon the table, and while the rest
+stared in astonishment, a voice which had a little stern ring in it
+said, "Turn the whole pack up, and hand over the other one."
+
+In an instant the gambler's hand swept beneath his jacket, but it was
+a mistaken move, for as swiftly the other hard, brown fingers closed
+upon the pile of bills, and the men, too astonished to murmur, saw
+Witham leaning very grim in face across the table. Then it tilted over
+beneath him, and the cards were on the gambler's knees, while, as the
+two men rose and faced each other, something glinted in the hands of
+one of them.
+
+It is more than probable that the man did not intend to use it, and
+trusted to its moral effect, for the display of pistols is not
+regarded with much toleration on the Canadian prairie. In any case, he
+had not the opportunity, for in another moment Witham's right hand
+closed upon his wrist, and the gambler was struggling fruitlessly to
+extricate it. He was a muscular man, with doubtless a sufficiency of
+nerve, but he had not toiled with his arms and led a Spartan life for
+eight long years. Before another few seconds had passed he was
+wondering whether he would ever use that wrist again, while Dane
+picked up the fallen pistol and put it in his pocket with the bundle
+of bills Witham handed him.
+
+"Now," said the latter, "I want to do the square thing. If you'll let
+us strip you and turn out your pockets, we'll see you get any winnings
+you're entitled to when we've straightened up the cards."
+
+The gambler was apparently not willing, for, though it is possible he
+would have found it advisable to play an honest game across the
+frontier, he had evidently surmised that there was less risk of
+detection among the Canadian farmers. He probably knew they would not
+wait long for his consent, but in the first stages of the altercation
+it is not as a rule insuperably difficult for a fearless man to hold
+his own against an indignant company who have no definite notion of
+what they mean to do, and it was to cover his retreat he turned to
+Witham.
+
+"And who the ---- are you?" he asked.
+
+Witham smiled grimly. "I guess you have heard of me. Anyway, there are
+a good many places in Montana where they know Lance Courthorne. Quite
+sure I know a straight game when I see it!"
+
+The man's resistance vanished, but he had evidently been taught the
+necessity of making the best of defeat in his profession, and he
+laughed as he swept his glance round at the angry faces turned upon
+him.
+
+"If you don't there's nobody does," he said. "Still, as you've got my
+pistol and 'most dislocated my wrist, the least you can do is to get a
+partner out of this."
+
+There was an ominous murmur, and the lad's face showed livid with fury
+and humiliation, but Witham turned quietly to the hotel-keeper.
+
+"You will take this man with you into your side room and stop with him
+there," he said. "Dane, give him the bills. The rest of you had better
+sit down here and make a list of your losses, and you'll get whatever
+the fellow has upon him divided amongst you. Then, because I ask you,
+and you'd have had nothing but for me, you'll put him in his wagon
+and turn him out quietly upon the prairie."
+
+"That's sense, and we don't want no circus here," said somebody.
+
+A few voices were raised in protest, but when it became evident that
+one or two of the company were inclined to adopt more draconic
+measures, Dane spoke quietly and forcibly, and was listened to. Then
+Witham reached out and grasped the shoulder of the English lad, who
+made the last attempt to rouse his companions.
+
+"Let them alone, Ferris, and come along. You'll get most of what you
+lost back to-morrow, and we're going to take you home," he said.
+
+Ferris turned upon him, hoarse with passion, flushed in face, and
+swaying a trifle on his feet, while Witham noticed that he drew one
+arm back.
+
+"Who are you to lay hands on a gentleman?" he asked. "Keep your
+distance. I'm going to stay here, and, if I'd have had my way, we'd
+have kicked you out of Silverdale."
+
+Witham dropped his hand, but next moment the ornament of a
+distinguished family was seized by the neck, and the farmer glanced at
+Dane.
+
+"We've had enough of this fooling, and he'll be grateful to me
+to-morrow," he said.
+
+Then his captive was thrust, resisting strenuously, out of the room,
+and with Dane's assistance conveyed to the waiting wagon, into which
+he was flung, almost speechless with indignation.
+
+"Now," said Dane quietly, "you've given us a good deal more trouble
+than you're worth, Ferris, and if you attempt to get out again, I'll
+break your head for you. Tell Courthorne how much that fellow got from
+you."
+
+In another ten minutes they had jolted across the railroad track, and
+were speeding through the silence of the lonely prairie. Above them
+the clear stars flung their cold radiance down through vast distances
+of liquid indigo, and the soft beat of hoofs was the only sound that
+disturbed the solemn stillness of the wilderness. Dane drew in a great
+breath of the cool night air and laughed quietly.
+
+"It's a good deal more wholesome here in several ways," said he. "If
+you're wise, you'll let up on card-playing and hanging round the
+settlement, Ferris, and stick to farming. Even if you lose almost as
+many dollars over it, it will pay you considerably better. Now that's
+all I'm going to tell you, but I know what I'm speaking of, because
+I've had my fling--and it's costing me more than I care to figure out
+still. You, however, can pull up, because by this time you have no
+doubt found out a good deal, if you're not all a fool. Curiosity's at
+the bottom of half our youthful follies, isn't it, Courthorne? We want
+to know what the things forbidden actually taste like."
+
+"Well," said Witham dryly, "I don't quite know. You see, I had very
+little money in the old country, and still less leisure here to spend
+either on that kind of experimenting. Where to get enough to eat was
+the one problem that worried me."
+
+Dane turned a trifle sharply. "We are, I fancy, tolerably good
+friends. Isn't it a little unnecessary for you to adopt that tone with
+me?"
+
+Witham laughed, but made no answer, and their companion said nothing
+at all. Either the night wind had a drowsy effect on him or he was
+moodily resentful, for it was not until Witham pulled up before the
+homestead whose lands he farmed indifferently under Barrington's
+supervision that he opened his mouth.
+
+"You have got off very cheaply to-night, and if you're wise you'll let
+that kind of thing alone in future," said Witham quietly.
+
+The lad stepped down from the wagon and then stood still. "I resent
+advice from you as much as I do your uncalled-for insolence an hour or
+two ago," he said. "To lie low until honest men got used to him would
+be considerably more becoming to a man like you."
+
+"Well," said Witham, stung into forgetfulness, "I'm not going to
+offend in that fashion again, and you can go to the devil in the way
+that most pleases you. In fact, I only pulled you out of the pit
+to-night because a lady, who apparently takes a quite unwarranted
+interest in you, asked me to."
+
+Ferris stared up at him, and his face showed almost livid through the
+luminous night.
+
+"She asked you to!" he said. "By the Lord, I'll make you sorry for
+this."
+
+Witham said nothing, but shook the reins, and when the wagon lurched
+forward Dane looked at him.
+
+"I didn't know that before," he said.
+
+"Well," said Witham dryly, "if I hadn't lost my temper with the lad
+you wouldn't have done now."
+
+Dane smiled. "You miss the point of it. Our engaging friend made
+himself the laughing-stock of the colony by favouring Maud Barrington
+with his attentions when he came out. In fact, I fancy the lady, in
+desperation, had to turn her uncle loose on him before he could be
+made to understand that they were not appreciated. I'd keep your eye
+on him, Courthorne, for the little beast has shown himself abominably
+vindictive occasionally, though I have a notion he's scarcely to be
+held accountable. It's a case of too pure a strain and consanguinity.
+Two branches of the family--marriage between land and money, you see."
+
+"It will be my heel if he gets in my way," said Witham grimly.
+
+It was late when they reached his homestead where Dane was to stay the
+night, and when they went in a youthful figure in uniform rose up in
+the big log-walled hall. For a moment Witham's heart almost stood
+still, and then, holding himself in hand by a strenuous effort, he
+moved forward and stood where the light of a lamp did not shine quite
+fully upon him. He knew that uniform, and he had also seen the lad who
+wore it once or twice before, at an outpost six hundred miles away
+across the prairie. He knew the risk he took was great, but it was
+evident to him that if his identity escaped detection at first sight,
+use would do the rest, and while he had worn a short pointed beard on
+the Western prairie, he was cleanly-shaven now.
+
+The lad stood quite still a moment staring at him, and Witham
+returning his gaze steadily felt his pulses throb.
+
+"Well, trooper, what has brought you here?" he said.
+
+"Homestead visitation, sir," said the lad, who had a pleasant English
+voice. "Mr. Courthorne, I presume--accept my regrets if I stared too
+hard at you--but for a moment you reminded me of a man I knew. They've
+changed us round lately, and I'm from the Alberta Squadron just sent
+in to this district. It was late when I rode in, and your people were
+kind enough to put me up."
+
+Witham laughed. "I have been taken for another man before. Would you
+like anything to drink, or a smoke before you turn in, trooper?"
+
+"No, sir," said the lad. "If you'll sign my docket to show I've been
+here, I'll get some sleep. I've sixty miles to ride to-morrow."
+
+Witham did as he was asked, and the trooper withdrew, while when they
+sat down to a last cigar it seemed to Dane that his companion's face
+was graver than usual.
+
+"Did you notice the lad's astonishment when you came in?" he asked.
+"He looked very much as if he had seen a ghost."
+
+Witham smiled. "I believe he fancied he had. There was a man in the
+district he came from whom some folks considered resembled me. In
+reality, I was by no means like him, and he's dead now."
+
+"Likenesses are curious things, and it's stranger still how folks
+alter," said Dane. "Now, they've a photograph at Barrington's of you
+as a boy, and while there is a resemblance in the face, nobody with
+any discernment would have fancied that lad would grow into a man like
+you. Still, that's of no great moment, and I want to know just how you
+spotted the gambler. I had a tolerably expensive tuition in most games
+of chance in my callow days, and haven't forgotten completely what I
+was taught then, but though I watched the game I saw nothing that led
+me to suspect crooked play."
+
+Witham laughed. "I watched his face, and what I saw there decided me
+to try a bluff, but it was not until he turned the table over I knew I
+was right."
+
+"Well," said Dane dryly, "you don't need your nerves toning up. With
+only a suspicion to go upon, it was a tolerably risky game. Still, of
+course, you had advantages."
+
+"I have played a more risky one, but I don't know that I have cause to
+be very grateful for anything I acquired in the past," said Witham
+with a curious smile.
+
+Dane stood up and flung his cigar away. "It's time I was asleep," he
+said. "Still, since our talk has turned in this direction, I want to
+tell you that, as you have doubtless seen, there is something about
+you that puzzles me occasionally. I don't ask your confidence until
+you are ready to give it me--but if ever you want anybody to stand
+behind you in a difficulty, you'll find me rather more than willing."
+
+He went out, and Witham sat still very grave in face for at least
+another hour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A FAIR ADVOCATE
+
+
+Thanks to the fashion in which the hotel-keeper managed the affair,
+the gambler left the settlement without personal injury, but very
+little richer than when he entered it. The rest of those who were
+present at his meeting with Witham were also not desirous that their
+friends should know they had been victimized, and because Dane was
+discreet, news of what had happened might never have reached
+Silverdale, had not one of the younger men ridden in to the railroad a
+few days later. Odd scraps of conversation overheard led him to
+suspect that something unusual had taken place, but as nobody seemed
+willing to supply details, he returned to Silverdale with his
+curiosity unsatisfied. As it happened, he was shortly afterwards
+present at a gathering of his neighbours at Macdonald's farm and came
+across Ferris there.
+
+"I heard fragments of a curious story at the settlement," he said.
+"There was trouble of some kind in which a professional gambler
+figured last Saturday night, and though nobody seemed to want to talk
+about it, I surmised that somebody from Silverdale was concerned in
+it."
+
+He had perhaps spoken a trifle more loudly than he had intended, and
+there were a good many of the Silverdale farmers with a few of their
+wives and daughters whose attention was not wholly confined to the
+efforts of Mrs. Macdonald at the piano in the long room just then. In
+any case a voice broke through the silence that followed the final
+chords.
+
+"Ferris could tell us if he liked. He was there that night."
+
+Ferris, who had cause for doing so, looked uncomfortable, and
+endeavoured to sign to the first speaker that it was not desirable to
+pursue the topic.
+
+"I have been in tolerably often of late. Had things to attend to," he
+said.
+
+The other man was, however, possessed by a mischievous spirit, or did
+not understand him. "You may just as well tell us now as later,
+because you never kept a secret in your life," he said.
+
+In the meantime, several of the others had gathered about them, and
+Mrs. Macdonald, who had joined the group, smiled as she said, "There
+is evidently something interesting going on. Mayn't I know, Gordon?"
+
+"Of course," said the man, who had visited the settlement. "You shall
+know as much as I do, though that is little, and if it excites your
+curiosity you can ask Ferris for the rest. He is only anxious to
+enhance the value of his story by being mysterious. Well, there was a
+more or less dramatic happening, of the kind our friends in the old
+country unwarrantably fancy is typical of the West, in the saloon at
+the settlement not long ago. Cards, pistols, a professional gambler,
+and the unmasking of foul play, don't you know. Somebody from
+Silverdale played the leading role."
+
+"How interesting!" said a young English girl. "Now, I used to fancy
+something of that kind happened here every day before I came out to
+the prairie. Please tell us, Mr. Ferris! One would like to find there
+was just a trace of reality in our picturesque fancies of debonair
+desperadoes and big-hatted cavaliers."
+
+There was a curious expression in Ferris' face, but as he glanced
+round at the rest, who were regarding him expectantly, he did not
+observe that Maud Barrington and her aunt had just come in and stood
+close behind him.
+
+"Can't you see there's no getting out of it, Ferris?" said somebody.
+
+"Well," said the lad in desperation, "I can only admit that Gordon is
+right. There was foul play and a pistol drawn, but I'm sorry that I
+can't add anything further. In fact, it wouldn't be quite fair of me."
+
+"But the man from Silverdale?" asked Mrs. Macdonald.
+
+"I'm afraid," said Ferris, with the air of one shielding a friend, "I
+can't tell you anything about him."
+
+"I know Mr. Courthorne drove in that night," said the young English
+girl, who was not endued with very much discretion.
+
+"Courthorne!" said one of the bystanders, and there was a momentary
+silence that was very expressive. "Was he concerned in what took
+place, Ferris?"
+
+"Yes," said the lad with apparent reluctance. "Mrs. Macdonald, you
+will remember that they dragged it out of me, but I will tell you
+nothing more whatever."
+
+"It seems to me you have told us quite sufficient and perhaps a trifle
+too much," said somebody.
+
+There was a curious silence. All of those present were more or less
+acquainted with Courthorne's past history, and the suggestion of foul
+play coupled with the mention of a professional gambler had been
+significant. Ferris, while committing himself in no way, had certainly
+said sufficient. Then there was a sudden turning of heads as a young
+woman moved quietly into the midst of the group. She was ominously
+calm, but she stood very straight, and there was a little hard glitter
+in her eyes, which reminded one or two of them who noticed it of those
+of Colonel Barrington. The fingers of one hand were also closed at her
+side.
+
+"I overheard you telling a story, Ferris, but you have a bad memory
+and left rather too much out," she said.
+
+"They compelled me to tell them what I did, Miss Barrington," said the
+lad, who winced beneath her gaze. "Now, there is really nothing to be
+gained by going any further into the affair. Shall I play something
+for you, Mrs. Macdonald?"
+
+He turned as he spoke, and would have edged away but that one of the
+men, at a glance from the girl, laid a hand on his shoulder.
+
+"Don't be in a hurry, Ferris. I fancy Miss Barrington has something
+more to tell you," he said dryly.
+
+The girl thanked him with a gesture. "I want you to supply the most
+important part," she said, and the lad, saying nothing, changed colour
+under the glance she cast upon him. "You do not seem willing. Then
+perhaps I had better do it for you. There were two men from Silverdale
+directly concerned in the affair, and one of them at no slight risk to
+himself did a very generous thing. That one was Mr. Courthorne. Did
+you see him lay a single stake upon a card, or do anything that led
+you to suppose he was there for the purpose of gambling that evening?"
+
+"No," said the lad, seeing she knew the truth, and his hoarse voice
+was scarcely audible.
+
+"Then," said Maud Barrington, "I want you to tell us what you did see
+him do."
+
+Ferris said nothing, and though the girl laughed a little as she
+glanced at the wondering group, her voice was icily disdainful.
+
+"Well," she said, "I will tell you. You saw him question a
+professional gambler's play to save a man who had no claim on him from
+ruin, and, with only one comrade to back him, drive the swindler, who
+had a pistol, from the field. He had, you admit, no interest of any
+kind in the game?"
+
+Ferris had grown crimson again, and the veins on his forehead showed
+swollen high. "No," he said, almost abjectly.
+
+Maud Barrington turned from him to her hostess as she answered, "That
+will suffice, in the meanwhile, until I can decide whether it is
+desirable to make known the rest of the tale. I brought the new song
+Evelyn wanted, Mrs. Macdonald, and I will play it for her if she would
+care to try it."
+
+She moved away with the elder lady, and left the rest astonished to
+wonder what had become of Ferris, who was seen no more that evening,
+while presently Witham came in.
+
+His face was a trifle weary, for he had toiled since the sun rose
+above the rim of the prairie, and when the arduous day was over, and
+those who worked for him were glad to rest their aching limbs, had
+driven two leagues to Macdonald's. Why he had done so he was not
+willing to admit, but he glanced round the long room anxiously as he
+came in, and his eyes brightened as they rested on Maud Barrington.
+They were, however, observant eyes, and he noticed that there was a
+trifle more colour than usual in the girl's pale-tinted face, and
+signs of suppressed curiosity about some of the rest. When he had
+greeted his hostess, he turned to one of the men.
+
+"It seems to me you are either trying not to see something, Gordon, or
+to forget it as soon as you can," he said.
+
+Gordon laughed a little. "You are not often mistaken, Courthorne? That
+is precisely what we are doing. I presume you haven't heard what
+occurred here an hour ago?"
+
+"No!" said Witham. "I'm not very curious if it does not concern me."
+
+Gordon looked at him steadily. "I fancy it does. You see, that young
+fool Ferris was suggesting that you had been mixed up in something not
+very creditable at the settlement lately. As it happened, Maud
+Barrington overheard him and made him retract before the company. She
+did it effectively, and if it had been any one else, the scene would
+have been almost theatrical. Still, you know nothing seems out of
+place when it comes from the Colonel's niece. Nor if you had heard her
+would you have wanted a better advocate."
+
+For a moment the bronze deepened in Witham's forehead, and there was a
+gleam in his eyes, but though it passed as rapidly as it came, Gordon
+had seen it, and smiled when the farmer moved away.
+
+"That's a probability I never counted on," he thought. "Still, I fancy
+if it came about, it would suit everybody but the Colonel."
+
+Then he turned as Mrs. Macdonald came up to him. "What are you doing
+here alone when I see there is nobody talking to the girl from
+Winnipeg?" she said.
+
+The man laughed a little. "I was wondering whether it is a good sign,
+or otherwise, when a young woman is, so far as she can decently be,
+uncivil to a man who desires her good-will."
+
+Mrs. Macdonald glanced at him sharply, and then shook her head. "The
+question is too deep for you--and it is not your affair. Besides,
+haven't you seen that indiscreet freedom of speech is not encouraged
+at Silverdale?"
+
+In the meanwhile Witham, crossing the room, took a vacant place at
+Maud Barrington's side. She turned her head a moment and looked at
+him.
+
+Witham nodded. "Yes, I heard," he said. "Why did you do it?"
+
+Maud Barrington made a little gesture of impatience. "That is quite
+unnecessary. You know I sent you."
+
+"Yes," said Witham a trifle dryly, "I see. You would have felt mean if
+you hadn't defended me."
+
+"No," said the girl, with a curious smile. "That was not exactly the
+reason, but we cannot talk too long here. Dane is anxious to take us
+home in his new buggy, but it would apparently be a very tight fit for
+three. Will you drive me over?"
+
+Witham only nodded, for Mrs. Macdonald approached in pursuit of him,
+but he spent the rest of the evening in a state of expectancy, and
+Maud Barrington fancied that his hard hands were suspiciously
+unresponsive as she took them when he helped her into the Silverdale
+wagon--a vehicle a strong man could have lifted, and in no way
+resembling its English prototype. The team was mettlesome, the lights
+of Macdonald's homestead soon faded behind them, and they were racing
+with many a lurch and jolt straight as the crow flies across the
+prairie.
+
+There was no moon, but the stars shone far up in the soft indigo, and
+the grasses whirled back in endless ripples to the humming wheels,
+dimmed to the dusky blue that suffused the whole intermerging sweep of
+earth and sky. The sweetness of wild peppermint rose through the
+coolness of the dew, and the voices of the wilderness were part of the
+silence that was but the perfect balance of the nocturnal harmonies.
+The two who knew and loved the prairie could pick out each one of
+them. Nor did it seem that there was any need of speech on such a
+night, but at last Witham turned with a little smile to his companion,
+as he checked the horses on the slope of a billowy rise.
+
+"One feels diffident about intruding on this great quietness," he
+said. "Still, I fancy you had a purpose in asking me to drive you
+home."
+
+"Yes," said the girl, with a curious gentleness. "In the first place,
+though I know it isn't necessary with you, I want to thank you. I made
+Dane tell me, and you have done all I wished--splendidly."
+
+Witham laughed. "Well, you see, it naturally came easy to me."
+
+Maud Barrington noticed the trace of grimness in his voice. "Please
+try to overlook our unkindness," she said. "Is it really needful to
+keep reminding me? And how was I to know what you were, when I had
+only heard that wicked story?"
+
+Witham felt a little thrill run through him, for which reason he
+looked straight in front of him and shifted his grasp on the reins.
+Disdainful and imperious as she was at times, he knew there was a
+wealth of softer qualities in his companion now. Her daintiness in
+thought and person, and honesty of purpose, appealed to him, while
+that night her mere physical presence had an effect that was almost
+bewildering. For a moment he wondered vaguely how far a man with what
+fate had thrust upon him might dare to go, and then with a little
+shiver saw once more the barrier of deceit and imposture.
+
+"You believe it was not a true one?" he asked.
+
+"Of course," said Maud Barrington. "How could it be? And you have been
+very patient under our suspicions. Now, if you still value the
+good-will you once asked for, it is yours absolutely."
+
+"But you may still hear unpleasant stories about me," said Witham,
+with a note the girl had not heard before in his voice.
+
+"I should not believe them," she said.
+
+"Still," persisted Witham, "if the tales were true?"
+
+Maud Barrington did nothing by halves. "Then I should remember that
+there is always so much we do not know which would put a different
+colour on any story, and I believe they could never be true again."
+
+Witham checked a little gasp of wonder and delight and Maud Barrington
+looked away across the prairie. She was not usually impulsive and
+seldom lightly bestowed gifts that were worth the having, and the man
+knew that the faith in him she had confessed to was the result of a
+conviction that would last until he himself shattered it. Then, in the
+midst of his elation, he shivered again and drew the lash across the
+near horse's back. The wonder and delight he felt had suddenly gone.
+
+"Few would venture to predict as much. Now and then I feel that our
+deeds are scarcely contrived by our own will, and one could fancy our
+parts had been thrust upon us in a grim joke," he said. "For instance,
+isn't it strange that I should have a share in the rousing of
+Silverdale to a sense of its responsibilities? Lord, what I could make
+of it if fate had but given me a fair opportunity!"
+
+He spoke almost fiercely, but the words did not displease the girl.
+The forceful ring in his voice set something thrilling within her, and
+she knew by this time that his assertions seldom went beyond the fact.
+
+"But you will have the opportunity, and we need you here," she said.
+
+"No," said Witham slowly. "I am afraid not. Still, I will finish the
+work I see in front of me. That at least--one cannot hope for the
+unattainable."
+
+Maud Barrington was sensible of a sudden chill. "Still, if one has
+strength and patience, is anything quite unattainable?"
+
+Witham looked out across the prairie, and for a moment the demons of
+pride and ambition rioted within him. He knew there were in him the
+qualities that compel success, and the temptation to stretch out a
+daring hand and take all he longed for grew almost overmastering.
+Still, he also knew how strong the innate prejudices of caste and
+tradition are in most women of his companion's station, and she had
+never hidden one aspect of her character from him. It was with a
+smothered groan he realized that if he flung the last shred of honour
+aside and grasped the forbidden fruit it would turn to bitterness in
+his mouth.
+
+"Yes," he said very slowly. "There is a limit, which only fools would
+pass."
+
+Then there was silence for a while, until, as they swept across the
+rise, Maud Barrington laughed as she pointed to the lights that
+blinked in the hollow, and Witham realized that the barrier between
+them stood firm again.
+
+"Our views seldom coincide for very long, but there is something else
+to mention before we reach the Grange," she said. "You must have paid
+out a good many dollars for the ploughing of your land and mine, and
+nobody's exchequer is inexhaustible at Silverdale. Now I want you to
+take a cheque from me."
+
+"Is it necessary, that I should?"
+
+"Of course," said the girl, with a trace of displeasure.
+
+Witham laughed. "Then I shall be prepared to hand you my account
+whenever you demand it."
+
+He did not look at his companion again, but with a tighter grip than
+there was any need for on the reins, sent the light wagon jolting down
+the slope to Silverdale Grange.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+The sun beat down on the prairie, which was already losing its flush
+of green, but it was cool where Maud Barrington and her aunt stood in
+the shadow of the bluff by Silverdale Grange. The birches, tasselled
+now with whispering foliage, divided the homestead from the waste
+which would lie white and desolate under the parching heat, and that
+afternoon it seemed to the girl that the wall of green shut out more
+than the driving dust and sun-glare from the Grange, for where the
+trees were thinner she could see moving specks of men and horses
+athwart the skyline.
+
+They had toiled in the sun-baked furrow since the first flush of
+crimson streaked the prairie's rim, and the chill of dusk would fall
+upon the grasses before their work was done. Those men who bore the
+burden and heat of the day were, the girl knew, helots now, but there
+was in them the silent vigour and something of the sombreness of the
+land of rock and forest they came from, and a time would come when
+others would work for them. Winning slowly, holding grimly, they were
+moving on, while secure in its patrician tranquility Silverdale stood
+still, and Maud Barrington smiled curiously as she glanced down at the
+long white robe that clung very daintily about her and then towards
+her companions in the tennis field. Her apparel had cost many dollars
+in Montreal, and there was a joyous irresponsibility in the faces of
+those she watched.
+
+"It is a little unequal, isn't it, aunt?" she said. "One feels
+inclined to wonder what we have done that we should have exemption
+from the charge laid upon the first tiller of the soil we and the men
+who are plodding through the dust there are descended from."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed a little as she glanced with a nod of
+comprehension at the distant toilers, and more gravely towards the
+net. Merry voices came up to her through the shadows of the trees as
+English lad and English maiden, lissom and picturesque in many-hued
+jackets and light dresses, flitted across the little square of velvet
+green. The men had followed the harrow and seeder a while that
+morning. Some of them, indeed, had for a few hours driven a team, and
+then left the rest to the hired hands, for the stress and sweat of
+effort that was to turn the wilderness into a granary was not for such
+as them.
+
+"Don't you think it is all made up to those others?" she asked.
+
+"In one sense--yes," said the girl. "Of course, one can see that all
+effort must have its idealistic aspect, and there may be men who find
+their compensation in the thrill of the fight, and the knowledge of
+work well done when they rest at night. Still, I fancy most of them
+only toil to eat, and their views are not revealed to us. We are, you
+see, women--and we live at Silverdale."
+
+Her aunt smiled again. "How long is it since the plough crossed the
+Red River, and what is Manitoba now? How did those mile furrows come
+there, and who drove the road that takes the wheat out through the
+granite of the Superior shore? It is more than their appetites that
+impelled those men, my dear. Still, it is scarcely wise to expect too
+much when one meets them, for though one could feel it is presumptuous
+to forgive its deficiencies, the Berserk type of manhood is not
+conspicuous for its refinement."
+
+For no apparent reason Maud Barrington evaded her aunt's gaze. "You,"
+she said dryly, "have forgiven one of that type a good deal already,
+but, at least, we have never seen him when the fit was upon him."
+
+Miss Barrington laughed. "Still, I have no doubt that, sooner or
+later, you will enjoy the spectacle."
+
+Just then a light wagon came up behind them, and when one of the hired
+men helped them in they swept out of the cool shade into the dust and
+glare of the prairie, and when, some little time later, with the thud
+of hoofs and rattle of wheels softened by the bleaching sod, they
+rolled down a rise, there was spread out before them evidence of man's
+activity.
+
+Acre by acre, gleaming chocolate brown against the grey and green of
+the prairie, the wheat loam rolled away, back to the ridge, over it,
+and on again. It was such a breadth of sowing as had but once, when
+wheat was dear, been seen at Silverdale, but still across the
+foreground, advancing in echelon, came lines of dusty teams, and there
+was a meaning in the furrows they left behind them, for they were not
+ploughing where the wheat had been. Each wave of lustrous clods that
+rolled from the gleaming shares was so much rent from the virgin
+prairie, and a promise of what would come when man had fulfilled his
+mission and the wilderness would blossom. There was a wealth of food
+stored, little by little during ages past counting, in every yard of
+the crackling sod to await the time when the toiler with the sweat of
+the primeval curse upon his forehead should unseal it with the plough.
+It was also borne in upon Maud Barrington that the man who directed
+those energies was either altogether without discernment, or one who
+saw further than his fellows and had an excellent courage, when he
+flung his substance into the furrows while wheat was going down. Then,
+as the hired man pulled up the wagon, she saw him.
+
+A great plough with triple shares had stopped at the end of the
+furrow, and the leading horses were apparently at variance with the
+man who, while he gave of his own strength to the uttermost, was
+asking too much from them. Young and indifferently broken, tortured by
+swarming insects, and galled by the strain of the collar, they had
+laid back their ears, and the wickedness of the bronco strain shone in
+their eyes. One rose almost upright amidst a clatter of harness, its
+mate squealed savagely, and the man who loosed one hand from the
+headstall flung out an arm. Then he and the pair whirled round
+together amidst the trampled clods in a blurred medley of
+spume-flecked bodies, soil-stained jean, flung-up hoofs, and an arm
+that swung and smote again. Miss Barrington grew a trifle pale as she
+watched, but a little glow crept into her niece's eyes.
+
+The struggle, however, ended suddenly, and hailing a man who plodded
+behind another team, Witham picked up his broad hat, which was
+trampled into shapelessness, and turned towards the wagon. There was
+dust and spume upon him, a rent in the blue shirt, and the knuckles of
+one hand dripped red, but he laughed as he said, "I did not know we
+had an audience, but this, you see, is necessary."
+
+"Is it?" asked Miss Barrington, who glanced at the ploughing. "When
+wheat is going down?"
+
+Witham nodded. "Yes," he said. "I mean, to me; and the price of wheat
+is only part of the question."
+
+Miss Barrington stretched out her hand, though her niece said nothing
+at all. "Of course, but I want you to help us down. Maud has an
+account you have not sent in, to ask you for."
+
+Witham first turned to the two men who now stood by the idle machine.
+"You'll have to drive those beasts of mine as best you can, Tom, and
+Jake will take your team. Get them off again now. This piece of
+breaking has to be put through before we loose again."
+
+Then he handed his visitors down, and Maud Barrington fancied as he
+walked with them to the house that the fashion in which the damaged
+hat hung down over his eyes would have rendered most other men
+ludicrous. He left them a space in his bare sitting-room, which
+suggested only grim utility, and Miss Barrington smiled when her niece
+glanced at her.
+
+"And this is how Lance, the profligate, lives!" said she.
+
+Maud Barrington shook her head. "No," she said. "Can you believe that
+this man was ever a prodigal?"
+
+Her aunt was a trifle less astonished than she would once have been,
+but before she could answer Witham, who had made a trifling change in
+his clothing, came in.
+
+"I can give you some green tea, though I am afraid it might be a good
+deal better than it is, and our crockery is not all you have been used
+to," he said. "You see, we have only time to think of one thing until
+the sowing is through."
+
+Miss Barrington's eyes twinkled. "And then?"
+
+"Then," said Witham, with a little laugh, "there will be prairie hay
+to cut, and after that the harvest coming on."
+
+"In the meanwhile, it was business that brought me here, and I have a
+cheque with me," said Maud Barrington. "Please let us get it over
+first of all."
+
+Witham sat down at a table and scribbled on a strip of paper. "That,"
+he said gravely, "is what you owe me for the ploughing."
+
+There was a little flush in his face as he took the cheque the girl
+filled in, and both felt somewhat grateful for the entrance of a man
+in blue jean with the tea. It was of very indifferent quality, and he
+had sprinkled a good deal on the tray, but Witham felt a curious
+thrill as he watched the girl pour it out at the head of the bare
+table. Her white dress gleamed in the light of a dusty window, and the
+shadowy cedar boarding behind her forced up each line of the shapely
+figure. Again the maddening temptation took hold of him and he
+wondered whether he had betrayed too much, when he felt the elder
+lady's eyes upon him. There was a tremor in his brown fingers as he
+took the cup held out to him, but his voice was steady.
+
+"You can scarcely fancy how pleasant this is," he said. "For eight
+years, in fact, ever since I left England, no woman has ever done any
+of these graceful little offices for me."
+
+Miss Barrington glanced at her niece, and both of them knew that, if
+the lawyer had traced Courthorne's past correctly, this could not be
+true. Still, there was no disbelief in the elder lady's eyes, and the
+girl's faith remained unshaken.
+
+"Eight years," she said, with a little smile, "is a very long while."
+
+"Yes," said Witham, "horribly long, and one year at Silverdale is
+worth them all--that is, a year like this one, which is going to be
+remembered by all who have sown wheat on the prairie; and that leads
+up to something. When I have ploughed all my own holding I shall not
+be content, and I want to make another bargain. Give me the use of
+your unbroken land, and I will find horses, seed, and men, while we
+will share what it yields us when the harvest is in."
+
+The girl was astonished. This, she knew, was splendid audacity, for
+the man had already staken very heavily on the crop he had sown, and
+while the daring of it stirred her she sat silent a moment.
+
+"I could lose nothing, but you will have to bring out a host of men
+and have risked so much," she said. "Nobody but you, and I, and three
+or four others in all the province, are ploughing more than half their
+holdings."
+
+The suggestion of comradeship set Witham's blood tingling, but it was
+with a little laugh he turned over the pile of papers on the table,
+and then took them up in turn.
+
+"'Very little ploughing has been done in the tracts of Minnesota
+previously alluded to. Farmers find wheat cannot be grown at present
+prices, and there is apparently no prospect of a rise,'" he said.
+
+"'The Dakota wheat-growers are mostly following. They can't quite
+figure how they would get eighty cents for the dollar's worth of
+seeding this year.'
+
+"'Milling very quiet in Winnipeg. No inquiries from Europe coming in,
+and Manitoba dealers generally find little demand for harrows or
+seeders this year. Reports from Assiniboia seem to show that the one
+hope this season will be mixed farming and the neglect of cereals.'"
+
+"There is only one inference," he said. "When the demand comes there
+will be nothing to meet it with."
+
+"When it comes," said Maud Barrington quietly. "But you who believe it
+will stand alone."
+
+"Almost," said Witham. "Still there are a few much cleverer men who
+feel as I do. I can't give you all my reasons, or read you the sheaf
+of papers from the Pacific slope, London, New York, Australia; but,
+while men lose hope, and little by little the stocks run down, the
+world must be fed. Just as sure as the harvest follows the sowing, it
+will wake up suddenly to the fact that it is hungry. They are buying
+cotton and scattering their money in other nations' bonds in the old
+country now, for they and the rest of Europe forget their necessities
+at times, but it is impossible to picture them finding their granaries
+empty and clamouring for bread?"
+
+It was a crucial test of faith, and the man knew it, as the woman did.
+He stood alone, with the opinions of the multitude against him; but
+there was, Maud Barrington felt, a great if undefinable difference
+between his quiet resolution and the gambler's recklessness. Once more
+the boldness of his venture stirred her, and this time there was a
+little flash in her eyes as she bore witness to her perfect
+confidence.
+
+"You shall have the land, every acre of it, to do what you like with,
+and I will ask no questions whether you win or lose," she said.
+
+Then Miss Barrington glanced at him in turn. "Lance, I have a thousand
+dollars I want you to turn into wheat for me."
+
+Witham's fingers trembled, and a darker hue crept into his tan.
+"Madam," he said, "I can take no money from you."
+
+"You must," said the little white-haired lady. "For your mother's
+sake, Lance. It is a brave thing you are doing, and you are the son of
+one who was my dearest friend."
+
+Witham turned his head away, and both women wondered when he looked
+round again. His face seemed a trifle drawn, and his voice was
+strained.
+
+"I hope," he said slowly, "it will in some degree make amends for
+others I have done. In the meanwhile, there are reasons why your
+confidence humiliates me."
+
+Miss Barrington rose and her niece after her. "Still I believe it is
+warranted, and you will remember there are two women who have trusted
+you, hoping for your success. And now, I fancy, we have kept you too
+long."
+
+Witham stood holding the door open a moment, with his head bent, and
+then suddenly straightened himself.
+
+"I can at least be honest with you in this venture," he said, with a
+curious quietness.
+
+Nothing further was said, but when his guests drove away Witham sat
+still awhile, and then went back very grim in face to his ploughing.
+He had passed other unpleasant moments of that kind since he came to
+Silverdale, and long afterwards the memory of them brought a flush to
+his face. The excuses he had made seemed worthless when he strove to
+view what he had done, and was doing, through those women's eyes.
+
+It was dusk when he returned to the homestead worn out in body but
+more tranquil in mind, and stopped a moment in the doorway to look
+back on the darkening sweep of the ploughing. He felt with no
+misgivings that his time of triumph would come, and in the meanwhile
+the handling of this great farm with all the aids that money could buy
+him was a keen joy to him; but each time he met Maud Barrington's eyes
+he realized the more surely that the hour of his success must also see
+accomplished an act of abnegation, which he wondered with a growing
+fear whether he could find the strength for. Then as he went in a man
+who cooked for his hired assistants came to meet him.
+
+"There's a stranger inside waiting for you," he said. "Wouldn't tell
+me what he wanted, but sat right down as if the place was his and
+helped himself without asking to your cigars. Wanted something to
+drink, too, and smiled at me kind of wicked when I brought him the
+cider."
+
+The room was almost dark when Witham entered it and stood still a
+moment staring at a man who sat, cigar in hand, quietly watching him.
+His appearance was curiously familiar, but Witham could not see his
+face until he moved forward another step or two. Then he stopped once
+more, and the two, saying nothing, looked at one another. It was
+Witham who spoke first, and his voice was very even.
+
+"What do you want here?" he asked.
+
+The other man laughed. "Isn't that a curious question when the place
+is mine? You don't seem overjoyed to see me come to life again."
+
+Witham sat down and slowly lighted a cigar. "We need not go into that.
+I asked you what you want."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne dryly, "it is not a great deal. Only the means
+to live in a manner more befitting a gentleman than I have been able
+to do lately."
+
+"You have not been prospering?" and Witham favoured his companion with
+a slow scrutiny.
+
+"No," and Courthorne laughed again. "You see, I could pick up a
+tolerable living as Lance Courthorne, but there is very little to be
+made at my business when you commence in new fields as an unknown
+man."
+
+"Well," said Witham coldly, "I don't know that it wouldn't be better
+to face my trial than stay here at your mercy. So far as my
+inclinations go, I would sooner fight than have any further dealings
+with a man like you."
+
+Courthorne shook his head. "I fixed up the thing too well, and you
+would be convicted. Still, we'll not go into that, and you will not
+find me unreasonable. A life at Silverdale would not suit me, and you
+know by this time that it would be difficult to sell the place, while
+I don't know where I could find a tenant who would farm it better than
+you. That being so, it wouldn't be good policy to bleed you too
+severely. Still, I want a thousand dollars in the meanwhile. They're
+mine, you see."
+
+Witham sat still a minute. He was sensible of a fierce distrust and
+hatred of the man before him, but he felt he must at least see the
+consummation of his sowing.
+
+"Then you shall have them on condition that you go away, and stay
+away, until harvest is over. After that I will send for you and shall
+have more to tell you. If in the meantime you come back here, or hint
+that I am Witham, I will surrender to the police or decide our
+differences in another fashion."
+
+Courthorne nodded. "That is direct," he said. "One knows where he is
+when he deals with a man who talks as you do. Now, are you not curious
+as to the way I cheated both the river and the police?"
+
+"No," said Witham grimly, "not in the least. We will talk business
+together when it is necessary, but I can only decline to discuss
+anything else with you."
+
+Courthorne laughed. "There's nothing to be gained by pretending to
+misunderstand you, but it wouldn't pay me to be resentful when I'm
+graciously willing to let you work for me. Still, I have been inclined
+to wonder how you were getting on with my estimable relatives and
+connexions. One of them has, I hear, unbent a trifle towards you, but
+I would like to warn you not to presume on any small courtesy shown
+you by the younger Miss Barrington."
+
+Witham stood up and set his back to the door. "You heard my terms, but
+if you mention that lady again in connexion with me it would suit me
+equally well to make good all I owe you very differently."
+
+Courthorne did not appear in any way disconcerted, but before he could
+answer a man outside opened the door.
+
+"Here's Sergeant Stimson and one of his troopers wanting you," he
+said.
+
+Witham looked at Courthorne, but the latter smiled. "The visit has
+nothing to do with me. It is probably accidental; but I fancy Stimson
+knows me, and it wouldn't be advisable for him to see us both
+together. Now, I wonder whether you could make it fifteen hundred
+dollars."
+
+"No," said Witham. "Stay, if it pleases you."
+
+Courthorne shook his head. "I don't know that it would. You don't do
+it badly, Witham."
+
+He went out by another door almost as the grizzled sergeant came in
+and stood still, looking at the master of the homestead.
+
+"I haven't seen you since I came here, Mr. Courthorne, and now you
+remind me of another man I once had dealings with," he said.
+
+Witham laughed a little. "I scarcely fancy that is very civil,
+Sergeant."
+
+"Well," said the prairie-rider, "there is a difference, when I look at
+you more closely. Let me see, I met you once or twice back there in
+Alberta?"
+
+He appeared to be reflecting, but Witham was on his guard. "More
+frequently, I fancy, but you had nothing definite against me, and the
+times have changed. I would like to point that out to you civilly.
+Your chiefs are also on good terms with us at Silverdale, you see."
+
+The sergeant laughed. "Well, sir, I meant no offence, and called round
+to requisition a horse. One of the Whitesod boys has been deciding a
+quarrel with a neighbour with an axe, and while I fancy they want me
+at once, my beast got his foot in a badger hole."
+
+"Tell Tom in the stables to let you have your choice," said Witham.
+"If you like them, there's no reason you shouldn't take some of these
+cigars along."
+
+The sergeant went out, and when the beat of hoofs sank into the
+silence of the prairie, Witham called Courthorne in. "I have offered
+you no refreshment, but the best in the house is at your service," he
+said.
+
+Courthorne looked at him curiously, and for the first time Witham
+noticed that the life he had led was telling upon his companion.
+
+"As your guest?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "I am tenant here, and, that I may owe you
+nothing, purpose paying you a second thousand dollars when the crop is
+in, as well as bank-rate interest on the value of the stock and
+machines and the money I have used, as shown in the documents handed
+me by Colonel Barrington. With wheat at its present price, nobody
+would give you more for the land. In return, I demand the
+unconditional use of the farm until within three months from harvest I
+have the elevator warrants for whatever wheat I raise, which will
+belong to me. If you do not agree, or remain here after sunrise
+to-morrow, I shall ride over to the outpost and make a declaration."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne slowly, "you can consider it a deal."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+FACING THE FLAME
+
+
+Courthorne rode away next morning, and some weeks had passed when Maud
+Barrington came upon Witham sitting beside his mower in a sloo. He did
+not at first see her, for the rattle of the machines in a neighbouring
+hollow drowned the muffled beat of hoofs, and the girl, reining her
+horse in, looked down on him. The man was sitting very still, which
+was unusual with him, a hammer in his hand, gazing straight before
+him, as though he could see something beyond the shimmering heat that
+danced along the rim of the prairie.
+
+Summer had come, and the grass, which grew scarcely ankle-deep on the
+great levels, was once more white and dry; but in the hollows that had
+held the melting snow it stood waist-high, scented with peppermint,
+harsh and wiry, and Witham had set out with every man he had to
+harvest it. Already a line of loaded wagons crawled slowly across the
+prairie, and men and horses moved half-seen amid the dust that whirled
+about another sloo. Out of it came the trampling of hoofs and the
+musical tinkle of steel.
+
+Suddenly Witham looked up, and the care which was stamped upon it fled
+from his face when he saw the girl. The dust that lay thick upon his
+garments had spared her, and as she sat, patting the restless horse,
+with a little smile in her face which showed just touched by the sun
+beneath the big white hat, something in her dainty freshness reacted
+upon the tired man's fancy. He had long borne the stress and the
+burden, and as he watched her a longing to taste for at least a space
+the life of leisure and refinement came upon him, as it had done too
+often for his tranquility since he came to Silverdale. This woman who
+had been born to it could, it seemed to him, lift the man she trusted
+beyond the sordid cares of the turmoil to her own high level, and as
+he waited for her to speak, a fit of passion shook him. It betrayed
+itself only by the sudden hardening of his face.
+
+"It is the first time I have surprised you idle. You were dreaming,"
+she said.
+
+Witham smiled a trifle mirthlessly. "I was, but I am afraid the
+fulfillment of the dreams is not for me. One is apt to be pulled up
+suddenly when he ventures over far."
+
+"We are inquisitive, you know," said Maud Barrington; "can't you tell
+me what they were?"
+
+Witham did not know what impulse swayed him, and afterwards blamed
+himself for complying; but the girl's interest compelled him, and he
+showed her a little of what was in his heart.
+
+"I fancy I saw Silverdale gorging the elevators with the choicest
+wheat," he said. "A new bridge flung level across the ravine where the
+wagons go down half-loaded to the creek; a dam turning the hollow
+into a lake, and big turbines driving our own flouring mill. Then
+there were herds of cattle fattening on the strippings of the grain
+that wasteful people burn, our products clamoured for, east in the old
+country, and west in British Columbia--and for a background,
+prosperity and power, even if it was paid for with half the traditions
+of Silverdale. Still, you see it may all be due to the effect of the
+fierce sunshine on an idle man's fancy."
+
+Maud Barrington regarded him steadily, and the smile died out of her
+eyes. "But," she said, slowly "is all that quite beyond realization.
+Could you not bring it about?"
+
+Witham saw her quiet confidence and something of her pride. There was
+no avarice in this woman, but the slight dilation of the nostrils and
+the glow in her eyes told of ambition, and for a moment his soul was
+not his own.
+
+"I could," he said; and Maud Barrington, who watched the swift
+straightening of his shoulders and lifting of his head, felt that he
+spoke no more than the truth. Then with a sudden access of bitterness,
+"But I never will."
+
+"Why?" she asked. "Have you grown tired of Silverdale, or has what you
+pictured no charm for you?"
+
+Witham leaned, as it were wearily against the wheel of the mower. "I
+wonder if you could understand what my life has been. The crushing
+poverty that rendered every effort useless from the beginning, the
+wounds that come from using imperfect tools, and the numb hopelessness
+that follows repeated failure. They are tolerably hard to bear alone,
+but it is more difficult to make the best of them when the poorly-fed
+body is as worn out as the mind. To stay here would be--paradise--but
+a glimpse of it will probably have to suffice. Its gates are well
+guarded and without are the dogs, you know."
+
+Something in Maud Barrington thrilled in answer to the faint
+hoarseness in Witham's voice, and she did not resent it. She was a
+woman with all her sex's instinctive response to passion and emotion,
+though as yet the primitive impulses that stir the hearts of men had
+been covered, if not wholly hidden, from her by the thin veneer of
+civilization. Now, at least, she felt in touch with them, and for a
+moment she looked at the man with a daring that matched his own
+shining in her eyes.
+
+"And you fear the angel with the sword?" she said. "There is nothing
+so terrible at Silverdale."
+
+"No," said Witham, "I think it is the load I have to carry I fear the
+most."
+
+For the moment Maud Barrington had flung off the bonds of
+conventionality. "Lance," she said, "you have proved your right to
+stay at Silverdale, and would not what you are doing now cover a great
+deal in the past?"
+
+Witham smiled wryly. "It is the present that is difficult," he said.
+"Can a man be pardoned and retain the offence?"
+
+He saw the faint bewilderment in the girl's face give place to the
+resentment of frankness unreturned, and with a little shake of his
+shoulders shrank into himself. Maud Barrington, who understood it,
+once more put on the becoming reticence of Silverdale.
+
+"We are getting beyond our depth, and it is very hot," she said. "You
+have all this hay to cut!"
+
+Witham laughed as he bent over the mower's knife. "Yes," he said, "it
+is really more in my line, and I have kept you in the sun too long."
+
+In another few moments Maud Barrington was riding across the prairie,
+but when the rattle of the machine rose from the sloo behind her she
+laughed curiously.
+
+"The man knew his place, but you came perilously near making a fool of
+yourself this morning, my dear," she said.
+
+It was a week or two later, and very hot when, with others of his
+neighbours, Witham sat in the big hall at Silverdale Grange. The
+windows were open wide, and the smell of hot dust came in from the
+white waste which rolled away beneath the stars. There was also
+another odour in the little puffs of wind that flickered in, and far
+off where the arch of indigo dropped to the dusky earth wavy lines of
+crimson moved along the horizon. It was then the season when fires
+that are lighted by means which no man knows creep up and down the
+waste of grass, until they put on speed and roll in a surf of flame
+before a sudden breeze. Still, nobody was anxious about them, for the
+guarding furrows that would oppose a space of dusty soil to the march
+of the flame had been ploughed round every homestead at Silverdale.
+
+Maud Barrington was at the piano, and her voice was good; while
+Witham, who had known what it is to toil from red dawn to sunset
+without hope of more than daily food, found the simple song she had
+chosen chime with his mood: "All day long the reapers."
+
+A faint staccato drumming that rose from the silent prairie throbbed
+through the final chords of it, and when the music ceased, swelled
+into the gallop of a horse. It seemed in some curious fashion
+portentous, and when there was a rattle and jingle outside other eyes
+than Witham's were turned towards the door. It swung open presently,
+and Dane came in. There was quiet elation and some diffidence in his
+bronzed face as he turned to Colonel Barrington.
+
+"I could not get away earlier from the settlement, sir, but I have
+great news," he said. "They have awoke to the fact that stocks are
+getting low in the old country. Wheat moved up at Winnipeg, and there
+was almost a rush to buy yesterday."
+
+There was a sudden silence, for among those present were men who
+remembered the acres of good soil they had not ploughed, but a little
+grim smile crept into their leader's face.
+
+"It is," he said quietly, "too late for most of us. Still, we will not
+grudge you your good fortune, Dane. You and a few of the others owe it
+to Courthorne."
+
+Every eye was on the speaker, for it had become known among his
+neighbours that he had sold for a fall; but Barrington could lose
+gracefully. Then both his niece and Dane looked at Witham with a
+question in their eyes.
+
+"Yes," he said very quietly, "it is the turning of the tide."
+
+He crossed over to Barrington, who smiled at him dryly as he said, "It
+is a trifle soon to admit that I was wrong."
+
+Witham made a gesture of almost impatient deprecation. "I was
+wondering how far I might presume, sir. You have forward wheat to
+deliver?"
+
+"I have," said Barrington; "unfortunately, a good deal. You believe
+the advance will continue?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham simply. "Still it is but the beginning, and there
+will be a reflux before the stream sets in. Wait a little, sir, and
+then telegraph your broker to cover all your contracts when the price
+drops again."
+
+"I fancy it would be wiser to cut my losses now," said Barrington
+dryly.
+
+Then Witham did a somewhat daring thing, for he raised his voice a
+trifle, in a fashion that seemed to invite the attention of the rest
+of the company.
+
+"The more certain the advance seems to be, the fiercer will be the
+bears' last attack," he said. "They have to get from under, and will
+take heavy chances to force prices back. As yet, they may contrive to
+check or turn the stream, and then every wise man who has sold down
+will try to cover, but no one can tell how far it may carry us, once
+it sets strongly in."
+
+The men understood, as did Colonel Barrington, that they were being
+warned, above their leader's head; and his niece, while resenting the
+slight, admitted the courage of the man. Barrington's face was
+sardonic, and a less resolute man would have winced under the
+implication as he said:
+
+"This is, no doubt, intuition. I fancy you told us you had no dealings
+on the markets at Winnipeg."
+
+Witham looked steadily at the speaker, and the girl noticed with a
+curious approval that he smiled.
+
+"Perhaps it is, but I believe events will prove me right. In any case,
+what I had the honour of telling you and Miss Barrington was the
+fact," he said.
+
+Nobody spoke, and the girl was wondering by what means the strain,
+which, though few heard what Barrington said, all seemed to feel,
+could be relieved, when out of the darkness came a second beat of
+hoofs, and by and by a man swaying on the driving-seat of a jolting
+wagon swept into the light from the windows. Then there were voices
+outside, and a breathless lad came in.
+
+"A big grass fire coming right down on Courthorne's farm!" he said.
+"It was tolerably close when I got away."
+
+In an instant there was commotion, and every man in Silverdale Grange
+was on his feet. For the most part they took life lightly, and looked
+upon their farming as an attempt to combine the making of dollars with
+gentlemanly relaxation; but there were no laggards among them when
+there was perilous work to be done, and they went out to meet the fire
+joyously. Inside five minutes scarcely a horse remained in the
+stables, and the men were flying at a gallop across the dusky prairie,
+laughing at the risk of a stumble in a deadly badger hole. Yet in the
+haste of saddling, they found time to arrange a twenty-dollar
+sweepstake and the allowance for weight.
+
+Up the long rise and down the back of it they swept, stirrup as yet by
+stirrup and neck by neck, while the roar of the hoofs reft the silence
+of the prairie like the roll of musketry. Behind came the wagons,
+lurching up the slope, and the blood surged to the brave young faces
+as the night wind smote them and fanned into brightness the crimson
+smear on the horizon. They were English lads, and healthy Englishmen,
+of the stock that had furnished their nation's fighting line, and not
+infrequently counted no sacrifice too great that brought their colours
+home first on the racing turf. Still, careless to the verge of
+irresponsibility as they were in most affairs that did not touch their
+pride, the man who rode with red spurs and Dane next behind him, a
+clear length before the first of them, asked no better allies in what
+was to be done.
+
+Then the line drew out as the pace began to tell, though the rearmost
+rode grimly, knowing the risks the leaders ran, and that the chance of
+being first to meet the fire might yet fall to them. There was not one
+among them who would not have killed his best horse for that honour,
+and for further incentive the Colonel's niece, in streaming habit,
+flitted in front of them. She had come up from behind them, and passed
+them on a rise, for Barrington disdained to breed horses for dollars
+alone, and there was blood well known on the English turf in the beast
+she rode.
+
+By-and-by a straggling birch bluff rose blackly across their way, but
+nobody swung wide. Swaying low while the branches smote them, they
+went through, the twigs crackling under foot, and here and there the
+red drops trickling down a flushed, scarred face, for the slanting
+rent of a birch bough cuts like a knife. Dim trees whirled by them,
+undergrowth went down, and they were out on the dusty grass again,
+while hurled straight, like field guns wanted at the front, the
+bouncing wagons went through behind. Then the fire rose higher in
+front of them, and when they topped the last rise the pace grew faster
+still. The slope they thundered down was undermined by gophers and
+seamed by badger-holes, but they took their chances gleefully, sparing
+no effort of hand and heel, for the sum of twenty dollars and the
+credit of being first man in. Then the smoke rolled up to them, and
+when eager hands drew bridle at last a youthful voice rose
+breathlessly out of it:
+
+"Stapleton a good first, but he'll go back on weight. It used to be
+black and orange when he was at home."
+
+There was a ripple of hoarse laughter, a gasping cheer, and then
+silence, for now their play was over, and it was with the grim
+quietness, which is not unusual with their kind, the men of Silverdale
+turned towards the fire. It rolled towards the homestead, a waving
+crimson wall, not fast, but with remorseless persistency, out of the
+dusky prairie, and already the horses were plunging in the smoke of
+it. That, however, did not greatly concern the men, for the bare fire
+furrows stretched between themselves and it; but there was also
+another blaze inside the defences, and, unless it was checked, nothing
+could save house and barns and granaries, rows of costly binders, and
+stock of prairie hay. They looked for a leader, and found one ready,
+for Witham's voice came up through the crackle of the fire:
+
+"Some of you lead the saddle-horses back to the willows and picket
+them. The rest to the stables and bring out the working beasts. The
+ploughs are by the corral, and the first team that comes up is to be
+harnessed to each in turn. Then start in, and turn over a fall-depth
+furrow a furlong from the fire."
+
+There was no confusion, and already the hired men were busy with two
+great machines until Witham displaced two of them.
+
+"How that fire passed the guards I don't know, but there will be time
+to find out later," he said to Dane. "Follow with the big breaker--it
+wants a strong man to keep that share in--as close as you can."
+
+Then they were off, a man at the heads of the leading horses harnessed
+to the great machines, and Witham sitting very intent in the
+driving-seat of one, while the tough sod crackled under the rending
+shares. Both the man and the reins were needed when the smoke rolled
+down on them, but it was for a moment torn aside again, and there
+roared up towards the blurred arch of indigo a great rush of flame.
+The heat of it smote into prickliness the uncovered skin, and in spite
+of all that Witham could do, the beasts recoiled upon the machine
+behind them. Then they swung round wrenching the shares from the
+triplex furrow, and for a few wild minutes man and terrified beast
+fought for the mastery. Breathless, half-strangled objurgations, the
+clatter of trace and swivel, and the thud of hoofs, rose muffled
+through the roar of the fire, for while swaying, plunging, panting,
+they fought with fist and hoof, it was rolling on, and now the heat
+was almost insupportable. The victory, however, was to the men, and
+when the great machine went on again, Maud Barrington, who with the
+wife of one of her neighbours had watched the struggle, stood
+wide-eyed, half-afraid, and yet thrilled in every fibre.
+
+"It was splendid!" she said. "They can't be beaten."
+
+Her companion seemed to shiver a little. "Yes," she said, "perhaps it
+was, but I wish it was over. It would appeal to you differently, my
+dear, if you had a husband at one of those horse's heads."
+
+For a moment Maud Barrington wondered whether it would, and then, when
+a red flame flickered out towards the team, felt a little chill of
+dread. In another second the smoke whirled about them, and she moved
+backward choking with her companion. The teams, however, went on, and,
+though the men who led them afterwards wondered how they kept their
+grip on the horses' heads, came out frantic with fear on the farther
+side. Then it was that while the machines swung round and other men
+ran to help, Witham, springing from the driving-seat, found Dane
+amidst the swaying, plunging medley of beasts and men.
+
+"If you can't find hook or clevis, cut the trace," he said. "It can't
+burn the plough, and the devils are out of hand now. The fire will
+jump these furrows, and we've got to try again."
+
+In another minute four maddened beasts were careering across the
+prairie with portions of their trappings banging about them, while one
+man who was badly kicked sat down grey in face and gasping, and the
+fire rolled up to the ridge of loam, checked, and then sprang across
+it here and there.
+
+"I'll take one of those lad's places," said Dane: "That fellow can't
+hold the breaker straight, Courthorne."
+
+It was a minute or two later when he flung a breathless lad away from
+his plough, and the latter turned upon him hoarse with indignation.
+
+"I raced Stapleton for it. Loose your hold, confound you. It's mine,"
+he said.
+
+Dane turned and laughed at him as he signed to one of the Ontario
+hired men to take the near horse's head.
+
+"You're a plucky lad, and you've done what you could," he said.
+"Still, if you get in the way of a grown man now, I'll break your head
+for you."
+
+He was off in another moment, crossed Witham, who had found fresh
+beasts, in his furrow, and had turned and doubled it before the fire
+that had passed the other barrier came close upon them. Once more the
+smoke grew blinding, and one of Dane's beasts went down.
+
+"I'm out of action now," he said. "Try back. That team will never face
+it, Courthorne."
+
+Witham's face showed very grim under the tossing flame. "They've got
+to. I'm going through," he said. "If the others are to stop it behind
+there, they must have time."
+
+Then he and the husband of the woman who had spoken to Maud Barrington
+passed on with the frantic team into the smoke that was streaked with
+flame.
+
+"Good Lord!" said Dane, and added more as, sitting on the horse's
+head, he turned his tingling face from the fire.
+
+It was some minutes before he and the hired man who came up loosed the
+fallen horse, and led it and its fellow back towards the last defences
+the rest had been raising, while the first furrows checked but did not
+stay the conflagration. There he presently came upon the man who had
+been with Witham.
+
+"I don't know where Courthorne is," he said. "The beasts bolted with
+us just after we'd gone through the worst of it, and I fancy they took
+the plough along. Anyway, I didn't see what became of them, and don't
+fancy anybody would have worried much about them after being trampled
+on by a horse in the lumbar region."
+
+Dane saw that the man was limping and white in face, and asked no more
+questions. It was evident to him that Courthorne would be where he was
+most needed, and he did what he could with those who were adding
+furrow to furrow across the path of the fire. It rolled up to them
+roaring, stopped, flung a shower of burning filaments before it, sank
+and swept aloft again, while the sparks rained down upon the grass
+before the draught it made.
+
+Blackened men with smouldering clothes were, however, ready, and they
+fought each incipient blaze with soaked grain bags, and shovels, some
+of them also, careless of blistered arms, with their own wet jackets.
+As fast as each fire was trampled out another sprang into life, but
+the parent blaze that fed them sank and died, and at last there was a
+hoarse cheer. They had won, and the fire they had beaten passed on
+divided across the prairie, leaving the homestead unscathed between.
+
+Then they turned to look for their leader, and did not find him until
+a lad came up to Dane.
+
+"Courthorne's back by the second furrows, and I fancy he's badly
+hurt," he said. "He didn't appear to know me, and his head seems all
+kicked in."
+
+It was not apparent how the news went round, but in a few more minutes
+Dane was kneeling beside a limp, blackened object stretched amidst the
+grass, and while his comrades clustered behind her, Maud Barrington
+bent over him. Her voice was breathless as she asked, "You don't
+believe him dead?"
+
+Somebody had brought a lantern, and Dane felt inclined to gasp when he
+saw the girl's white face, but what she felt was not his business
+then.
+
+"He's of a kind that is very hard to kill. Hold that lantern so I can
+see him," he said.
+
+The rest waited silent, glad that there was somebody to take a lead,
+and in a few moments Dane looked round again.
+
+"Ride in to the settlement, Stapleton, and bring that doctor fellow
+out if you bring him by the neck. Stop just a moment. You don't know
+where you're to bring him to."
+
+"Here, of course," said the lad, breaking into a run.
+
+"Wait," and Dane's voice stopped him. "Now, I don't fancy that would
+do. It seems to me that this is a case in which a woman to look after
+him would be necessary."
+
+Then, before any of the married men or their wives who had followed
+them could make an offer, Maud Barrington touched his shoulder.
+
+"He is coming to the Grange," she said.
+
+Dane nodded, signed to Stapleton, then spoke quickly to the men about
+him and turned to Maud Barrington.
+
+"Ride on at a gallop and get everything ready. I'll see he comes to no
+harm," he said.
+
+The girl felt curiously grateful as she rode out with her companion,
+and Dane who laid Witham carefully in a wagon, drew two of the other
+men aside when it rolled away towards the Grange.
+
+"There is something to be looked into. Did you notice anything unusual
+about the affair?" he said. "Since you asked me, I did," said one of
+the men. "I, however, scarcely cared to mention it until I had time
+for reflection, but while I fancy the regulation guards would have
+checked the fire on the boundaries without our help, I don't see how
+one started in the hollow inside them."
+
+"Exactly," said Dane very dryly. "Well, we have got to discover it,
+and the more quickly we do it the better. I fancy, however, that the
+question who started it is what we have to consider."
+
+The men looked at one another, and the third of them nodded.
+
+"I fancy it comes to that--though it is horribly unpleasant to admit
+it," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MAUD BARRINGTON IS MERCILESS
+
+
+Dane overtook the wagon close by the birch bluff at Silverdale
+Grange. It was late then, but there were lights in the windows that
+blinked beyond the trees, and, when the wagon stopped, Barrington
+stood in the doorway with one or two of his hired men. Accidents are
+not infrequent on the prairie, where surgical assistance is not always
+available, and there was a shutter ready on the ground beside him, for
+the Colonel had seen the field hospital in operation.
+
+"Unhook the tailboard," he said sharply. "Two of you pick up the
+shutter. Four more here. Now, arms about his shoulders, hips, and
+knees. Lift and lower--step off with right foot leading bearer, with
+your left in the rear!"
+
+It was done in a few moments, and when the bearers passed into the big
+hall that rang with their shuffling steps, Maud Barrington shivered as
+she waited with her aunt in an inner room. That tramping was horribly
+suggestive, and she had seen but little of sickness and grievous
+wounds. Still, the fact scarcely accounted for the painful throbbing
+of her heart, and the dizziness that came upon her. Then the bearers
+came in, panting, with Barrington and Dane behind them, and the girl
+was grateful to her aunt, who laid a hand upon her arm when she saw
+the singed head, and blackened face that was smeared with a ruddier
+tint, upon the shutter.
+
+"Lower!" said Colonel Barrington. "Lift, as I told you," and the
+huddled object was laid upon the bed. Then there was silence until the
+impassive voice rose again.
+
+"We shall not want you, Maud. Dane, you and I will get these burnt
+things off him."
+
+The girl went out, and while she stood, feeling curiously chilly in an
+adjoining room, Barrington bent over his patient.
+
+"Well put together!" he said thoughtfully. "Most of his people were
+lighter in the frame. Well, we can only oil the burns, and get a cold
+compress about his head. All intact, so far as I can see, and I fancy
+he'd pull through a good deal more than has happened to him. I am
+obliged for your assistance, but I need not keep you."
+
+The men withdrew, and when a rattle of wheels rose from the prairie,
+Maud Barrington waylaid her uncle in the hall. Her fingers were
+trembling, and, though her voice was steady, the man glanced at her
+curiously as she asked, "How is he?"
+
+"One can scarcely form an opinion yet," he said slowly. "He is burned
+here and there, and his head is badly cut, but it is the concussion
+that troubles me. A frantic horse kicks tolerably hard, you know, but
+I shall be able to tell you more when the doctor comes to-morrow. In
+the meanwhile you had better rest, though you could look in and see if
+your aunt wants anything in an hour or two."
+
+Maud Barrington passed an hour in horrible impatience, and then stole
+quietly into the sick-room. The windows were open wide, and the shaded
+lamp burned unsteadily as the cool night breeze flowed in. Its dim
+light just touched the man who lay motionless with a bandage round his
+head, and the drawn pallor of his face once more sent a shiver through
+the girl. Then Miss Barrington rose and lifted a warning hand.
+
+"Quite unconscious still," she said softly. "I fancy he was knocked
+down by one of the horses and trampled on, but your uncle has hopes of
+him. He has evidently led a healthy life."
+
+The girl was a little less serene than usual then, and drew back into
+the shadow.
+
+"Yes," she said. "We did not think so once."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled curiously. "Are you very much astonished, Maud?
+Still, there is nothing you can do for me, and we shall want you
+to-morrow."
+
+Realizing that there was no need for her, the girl went out, and when
+the door closed behind her the little white-haired lady bent down and
+gazed at her patient long and steadily. Then she shook her head, and
+moved back to the seat she had risen from, with perplexity in her
+face.
+
+In the meantime Maud Barrington sat by the open window in her room,
+staring out into the night. There was a whispering in the birch bluff,
+and the murmuring of leagues of grasses rose from the prairie that
+stretched away beyond it. Still, though the wind fanned her throbbing
+forehead with a pleasant coolness, the nocturnal harmonies awoke no
+response in her. Sleep was out of the question, for her brain was in a
+whirl of vague sensation, through which fear came uppermost every now
+and then. Why anything which could befall this man who had come out of
+the obscurity and was he had told her, to go back into it again,
+should disturb her, Maud Barrington did not know; but there was no
+disguising the fact that she would feel his loss grievously, as others
+at Silverdale would do. Then with a little tremor she wondered whether
+they must lose him, and, rising, stood tensely still, listening for
+any sound from the room where the sick man lay.
+
+There was nothing but the sighing of the grasses outside and the
+murmur of the birches in the bluff, until the doleful howl of a coyote
+stole faintly out of the night. Again the beast sent its cry out upon
+the wind, and the girl trembled as she listened. The unearthly wail
+seemed charged with augury, and every nerve in her thrilled.
+
+Then she sank down into her chair again, and sat still, hoping,
+listening, fearing, and wondering when the day would come, until at
+last her eyes grew heavy, and it was with a start she roused herself
+when a rattle of wheels came up out of the prairie in the early
+morning. Then a spume-flecked team swept up to the house, a door swung
+open, there was a murmur of voices and a sound of feet that moved
+softly in the hall, after which for what seemed an interminable time,
+silence reigned again. At last, when the stealthy patter of feet
+recommenced, the girl slipped down the stairway and came upon
+Barrington. Still, she could not ask the question that was trembling
+on her lips.
+
+"Is there anything I can do?" she said.
+
+Barrington shook his head. "Not now! The doctor is here, and does not
+seem very anxious about him. The concussion is not apparently serious,
+and his other injuries will not trouble him much."
+
+Maud Barrington said nothing and turned away, sensible of a great
+relief, while her aunt entering her room an hour later found her lying
+fast asleep but still dressed as she had last seen her. Then, being a
+discerning woman, she went out softly with a curious smile, and did
+not at any time mention what she had seen.
+
+It was that evening, and Barrington had departed suddenly on business
+to Winnipeg, when Dane rode up to the Grange. He asked for Miss
+Barrington and her niece, and when he heard that his comrade was
+recovering sensibility, sat down looking very grave.
+
+"I have something to tell you, but Courthorne must not know until he
+is better, while I'm not sure that we need tell him then," he said.
+"In the meanwhile, I am also inclined to fancy it would be better kept
+from Colonel Barrington on his return. It is the first time anything
+of the kind has happened at Silverdale, and it would hurt him
+horribly, which decided us to come first to you."
+
+"You must be more concise," said Miss Barrington quietly, and Dane
+trifled with the hat in his hand.
+
+"It is," he said, "a most unpleasant thing, and is known to three men
+only, of whom I am one. We have also arranged that nobody else will
+chance upon what we have discovered. You see, Ferris is unfortunately
+connected with you, and his people have had trouble enough already."
+
+"Ferris?" said Maud Barrington, with a sudden hardening of her face.
+"You surely don't mean----"
+
+Dane nodded. "Yes," he said reluctantly. "I'm afraid I do. Now, if you
+will listen to me for a minute or two."
+
+He told his story with a grim, convincing quietness, and the blood
+crept into the girl's cheeks as she followed his discoveries step by
+step. Glancing at her aunt, she saw that there was horror as well as
+belief in the gentle lady's face.
+
+"Then," she said with cold incisiveness, "Ferris cannot stay here, and
+he shall be punished."
+
+"No," said Dane. "We have no room for a lad of his disposition at
+Silverdale--but I'm very uncertain in regard to the rest. You see,
+it couldn't be done without attracting attention--and I have the
+honour of knowing his mother. You will remember how she lost
+another son. That is why I did not tell Colonel Barrington. He is a
+trifle--precipitate--occasionally."
+
+Miss Barrington glanced at him gratefully. "You have done wisely," she
+said. "Ethel Ferris has borne enough, and she has never been the same
+since the horrible night they brought Frank home, for she knew how he
+came by his death, though the coroner brought it in misadventure. I
+also fancy my brother would be implacable in a case like this, though
+how far I am warranted in keeping the facts from him I do not know."
+
+Dane nodded gravely. "We leave that to you. You will, however,
+remember what happened once before. We cannot go through what we did
+then again."
+
+Miss Barrington recalled the formal court-martial that had once been
+held in the hall of the Grange, when every man in the settlement had
+been summoned to attend, for there were offences in regard to which
+her brother was inflexible. When it was over and the disgraced man
+went forth an outcast, a full account of the proceedings had been
+forwarded to those at home who had hoped for much from him.
+
+"No," she said. "For the sake of the woman who sent him here we must
+stop short of that."
+
+Then Maud Barrington looked at them both. "There is one person you do
+not seem to consider at all, and that is the man who lies here in
+peril through Ferris's fault," she said. "Is there nothing due to
+him?"
+
+Dane noticed the sternness in her eyes, and glanced as if for support
+towards Miss Barrington. "I fancy he would be the last to claim it if
+he knew what we do. Still, in the meanwhile, I leave the affair to
+your aunt and you. We would like to have your views before doing
+anything further."
+
+He rose as he spoke, and when he had gone out Maud Barrington sat down
+at a writing table. "Aunt," she said quietly, "I will ask Ferris to
+come here at once."
+
+It was next day when Ferris came, evidently ill at ease, though he
+greeted Miss Barrington with elaborate courtesy, and would have done
+the same with her niece but the girl turned from him with visible
+disdain.
+
+"Sit down," she said coldly. "Colonel Barrington is away, but his
+sister will take his place, and after him I have the largest stake in
+the welfare of Silverdale. Now, a story has come to our ears which, if
+it had not been substantiated, would have appeared incredible. Shall
+Miss Barrington tell it you?"
+
+Ferris, who was a very young man, flushed, but the colour faded and
+left his cheeks a trifle grey. He was not a very prepossessing lad,
+for it requires a better physique than he was endowed with to bear the
+stamp of viciousness that is usually most noticeable on the feeble,
+but he was distinguished by a trace of arrogance that not infrequently
+served him as well as resolution.
+
+"If it would not inconvenience Miss Barrington, it would help me to
+understand a good deal I can find no meaning for now," he said.
+
+The elder lady's face grew sterner, and very quietly but remorselessly
+she set forth his offence, until no one who heard the tale could have
+doubted the origin of the fire.
+
+"I should have been better pleased had you, if only when you saw we
+knew everything, appeared willing to confess your fault and make
+amends," she said.
+
+Ferris laughed as ironically as he dared under the eyes which had lost
+their gentleness. "You will pardon me for telling you that I have no
+intention of admitting it now. That you should be so readily
+prejudiced against me is not gratifying, but, you see, nobody could
+take any steps without positive proof of the story, and my word is at
+least as credible as that of the interloper who told it you."
+
+Maud Barrington raised her head suddenly, and looked at him with a
+curious light in her eyes, but the elder lady made a little gesture of
+deprecation.
+
+"Mr. Courthorne has told us nothing," she said. "Still, three
+gentlemen whose worth is known at Silverdale are willing to certify
+every point of it. If we lay the affair before Colonel Barrington, you
+will have an opportunity of standing face to face with them."
+
+The lad's assurance, which, so far and no further, did duty for
+courage, deserted him. He was evidently not prepared to be made the
+subject of another court-martial, and the hand he laid on the table in
+front of him trembled a little.
+
+"Madam," he said hoarsely, "if I admit everything what will you do?"
+
+"Nothing," said Maud Barrington coldly. "On conditions that within a
+month you leave Silverdale."
+
+Ferris stared at her. "You can't mean that. You see, I'm fond of
+farming, and nobody would give me what the place cost me. I couldn't
+live among the outside settler fellows."
+
+The girl smiled coldly. "I mean exactly what you heard, and, if you do
+not enlighten them, the settlers would probably not object to you.
+Your farm will be taken over at what you gave for it."
+
+Ferris stood up. "I am going to make a last appeal. Silverdale's the
+only place fit for a gentleman to live in in Canada, and I want to
+stay here. You don't know what it would cost me to go away, and I'd do
+anything for reparation--send a big cheque to a Winnipeg hospital and
+starve myself to make up for it if that would content you. Only, don't
+send me away."
+
+His tone grew almost abject as he proceeded, and while Miss
+Barrington's eyes softened, her niece's heart grew harder because of
+it, as she remembered that he had brought a strong man down.
+
+"No," she said dryly. "That would punish your mother and sisters from
+whom you would cajole the money. You can decide between leaving
+Silverdale and having the story, and the proof of it, put into the
+hands of Colonel Barrington."
+
+She sat near an open window regarding him with quiet scorn, and the
+light that shone upon her struck a sparkle from her hair and set the
+rounded cheek and neck gleaming like ivory. The severity of her pose
+became her, and the lad's callow desire that had driven him to his
+ruin stirred him to impotent rage in his desperation. There were grey
+patches in his cheeks, and his voice was strained and hoarse.
+
+"You have no mercy on me because I struck at him," he said. "The one
+thing I shall always be sorry for is that I failed, and I would go
+away with pleasure if the horse had trampled the life out of him.
+Well, there was a time when you could have made what you wished of me,
+and now, at least, I shall not see the blackleg you have showered your
+favours on drag you down to the mire he came from."
+
+Maud Barrington's face had grown very colourless, but she said
+nothing, and her aunt rose and raised the hammer of a gong.
+
+"Ferris," she said, "do you wish to be led out by the hired men?"
+
+The lad laughed, and the hideous merriment set the white-haired lady's
+nerves on edge. "Oh, I am going now; but, for once, let us be honest.
+It was for her I did it, and if it had been any other man I had
+injured, she would have forgiven me."
+
+Then with an ironical farewell he swung out of the room, and the two
+women exchanged glances when the door closed noisily behind him. Miss
+Barrington was flushed with anger, but her niece's face was paler than
+usual.
+
+"Are there men like him?" she said.
+
+Miss Barrington shook off her anger and, rising, laid a gentle hand on
+her niece's shoulder. "Very few, I hope," she said. "Still, it would
+be better if we sent word to Dane. You would not care for that tale to
+spread?"
+
+For a moment the girl's cheek flamed, then she rose quietly and
+crossed the room.
+
+"No," she said; and her aunt stood still, apparently lost in
+contemplation, after the door swung softly to. Then she sat down at
+the writing table. There was very little in the note, but an hour
+after Dane received it that night, a wagon drew up outside Ferris's
+farm. Two men went quietly in and found the owner of the homestead
+sitting with a sheaf of papers scattered about the table in front of
+him.
+
+"Come back to-morrow. I can't be worried now," he said. "Well, why the
+devil don't you go?"
+
+Dane laid a hand on his shoulder. "We are waiting for you. You are
+coming with us!"
+
+Ferris turned and stared at them. "Where to?"
+
+"To the railroad," said Dane dryly. "After that you can go just where
+it pleases you. Now, there's no use whatever making a fuss, and every
+care will be taken of your property until you can arrange to dispose
+of it. Hadn't you better get ready?"
+
+The grim quietness of the voice was sufficient, and Ferris, who saw
+that force would be used if it was necessary, decided that it was
+scarcely likely his hired men would support him.
+
+"I might have expected it!" he said. "Of course, it was imprudent to
+speak the truth to our leader's niece. You know what I have done."
+
+"I know what you did the night Courthorne nearly lost his life," said
+Dane. "One would have fancied that would have contented you."
+
+"Well," said Ferris, "if you like to hear of a more serious offence,
+I'll oblige you."
+
+Dane's finger closed on his arm. "If you attempt to tell me, I'll
+break your head for you."
+
+Next moment Ferris was lifted from his chair, and in less than ten
+minutes Dane thrust him into the wagon, where another man, who passed
+a hand through his arm, sat beside him. It was a very long drive to
+the railroad, but few words were exchanged during it, and when they
+reached the settlement one of Ferris's companions mounted guard
+outside the hotel he found accommodation in, until the Montreal
+express crawled up above the rim of the prairie. Then both went with
+him to the station, and as the long cars rolled in Dane turned quietly
+to the lad.
+
+"Now, I am quite aware that we are incurring some responsibility, so
+you need not waste your breath," he said. "There are, however, lawyers
+in Winnipeg, if you fancy it is advisable to make use of them, and you
+know where I and Macdonald are, if you want us. In the meanwhile, your
+farm will be run better than ever it was in your hands, until you
+dispose of it. That is all I have to tell you, except that if any
+undesirable version of the affair gets about, Courthorne or I will
+assuredly find you."
+
+Then there was a scream of the whistle, and the train rolled away with
+Ferris standing white with fury on the platform of a car.
+
+In the meanwhile, Maud Barrington spent a sleepless night. Ferris's
+taunt had reached its mark, and she realized with confusion that it
+was the truth he spoke. The fact that brought the blood to her cheeks
+would no longer be hidden, and she knew it was a longing to punish the
+lad who had struck down the man she loved that had led to her
+insistence on the former leaving Silverdale. It was a difficult
+admission, but she made it that night. The outcast who had stepped out
+of the obscurity and into her peaceful life, had shown himself a man
+that any woman might be proud to mate with; and, though he had said
+very little, and now and then his words were bitter, she knew that he
+loved her. Whatever he had done--and she felt against all the
+teachings of her reason that it had not been evil--he had shown
+himself the equal of the best at Silverdale, and she laughed as she
+wondered which of the men there she could set in the balance against
+him. Then she shivered a little, remembering that there was a barrier
+whose extent he alone realized between them, and wondered vaguely what
+the future would bring.
+
+It was a week or two before Witham was on his feet again, and Maud
+Barrington was one of the first to greet him when he walked feebly
+into the hall. She had, however, decided on the line of conduct that
+would be most fitting, and there was no hint of more than neighbourly
+kindliness in her tone. They had spoken about various trifles when
+Witham turned to her.
+
+"You and Miss Barrington have taken such good care of me that, if I
+consulted my inclinations I would linger in convalescence a long
+while," he said. "Still, I must make an effort to get away to-morrow."
+
+"We cannot take the responsibility of letting you go under a week
+yet," said Maud Barrington. "Have you anything especially important to
+do?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham--and the girl understood the grimness of his
+face--"I have."
+
+"It concerns the fire?"
+
+Witham looked at her curiously. "I would sooner you did not ask me
+that question, Miss Barrington."
+
+"I scarcely fancy it is necessary," said the girl, with a little
+smile. "Still I have something to tell you, and a favour to ask.
+Ferris has left Silverdale, and you must never make any attempt to
+discover what caused the fire."
+
+"You know?"
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington. "Dane, Macdonald, and Hassal know, too;
+but you will not ask them, and if you did they would not tell you."
+
+"I can refuse you nothing," said Witham with a laugh, though his voice
+betrayed him. "Still, I want a _quid pro quo_. Wait until Ferris's
+farm is in the sale list, and then take it with the growing crop."
+
+"I could not. There are reasons," said the girl.
+
+Witham gazed at her steadily, and a little colour crept to his
+forehead, but he answered unconcernedly, "They can be over-ridden. It
+may be the last favour I shall ever ask you."
+
+"No," said Maud Barrington. "Anything else you wish, but not that. You
+must believe, without wondering why, that it is out of the question!"
+
+Witham yielded with a curious little smile. "Well," he said, "we will
+let it drop. I ask no questions. You have accepted so much already
+without understanding it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+WITH THE STREAM
+
+
+It was Witham's last afternoon at the Grange, and almost unpleasantly
+hot, while the man whose vigour had not as yet returned to him was
+content to lounge in the big window-seat listlessly watching his
+companion. He had borne the strain of effort long, and the time of his
+convalescence amidst the tranquility of Silverdale Grange had, with
+the gracious kindliness of Miss Barrington and her niece, been a
+revelation to him. There were moments when it brought him bitterness
+and self-reproach, but these were usually brief, and he made the most
+of what he knew might never be his again, telling himself that it
+would at least be something to look back upon.
+
+Maud Barrington sat close by, glancing through the letters a mounted
+man had brought in, and the fact that his presence put no restraint on
+her curiously pleased the man. At last, however, she opened a paper
+and passed it across to him.
+
+"You have been very patient, but no doubt you will find something that
+will atone for my silence there," she said.
+
+Witham turned over the journal, and then smiled at her. "Is there
+anything of moment in your letters?"
+
+"No," said the girl with a little laugh. "I scarcely think there is--a
+garden party, a big reception, the visit of a high official, and a
+description of the latest hat. Still, you know, that is supposed to be
+enough for us."
+
+"Then I wonder whether you will find this more interesting. 'The bears
+made a determined rally yesterday, and wheat moved back again. There
+was later in the day a rush to sell, and prices now stand at almost
+two cents below their lowest level.'"
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington, noticing the sudden intentness of his
+pallid face. "I do. It is serious news for you?"
+
+"And for you! You see where I have led you. Ill or well, I must start
+for Winnipeg to-morrow."
+
+Maud Barrington smiled curiously. "You and I and a handful of others
+stand alone, but I told you I would not blame you whether we won or
+lost. Do you know that I am grateful for the glimpses of the realities
+of life that you have given me?"
+
+Witham felt his pulses throb faster, for the girl's unabated
+confidence stirred him, but he looked at her gravely. "I wonder if you
+realize what you have given me in return? Life as I had seen it was
+very grim and bare--and now I know what, with a little help, it is
+possible to make of it."
+
+"With a little help?" said Maud Barrington.
+
+Witham nodded, and his face, which had grown almost wistful, hardened.
+"Those who strive in the pit are apt to grow blind to the best--the
+sweetness and order and all the little graces that mean so much. Even
+if their eyes are opened, it is usually too late. You see, they lose
+touch with all that lies beyond the struggle, and without some one to
+lead them they cannot get back to it. Still, if I talk in this fashion
+you will laugh at me; but every one has his weakness now and then--and
+no doubt I shall make up for it at Winnipeg to-morrow. One cannot
+afford to be fanciful when wheat is two cents down."
+
+Maud Barrington was not astonished. Tireless in his activities and,
+more curious still, almost ascetic in his mode of life, the man had
+already given her glimpses of his inner self and the vague longings
+that came upon him. He never asked her pity, but she found something
+pathetic in his attitude, for it seemed he knew that the stress and
+the turmoil alone could be his. Why this was so, she did not know, but
+it was with a confidence that could not be shaken now she felt it was
+through no fault of his. His last words, however, showed her that the
+mask was on again.
+
+"I scarcely fancy you are well enough, but if you must go, I wonder
+whether you would do a good turn to Alfreton?" she said. "The lad has
+been speculating and he seems anxious lately."
+
+"It is natural that they should all bring their troubles to you."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed. "I, however, generally pass them on to you."
+
+A trace of colour crept into the man's face, and his voice was a
+trifle hoarse as he said. "Do you know that I would ask nothing better
+than to take every care you had and bear it for you?"
+
+"Still," said the girl with a little smile, "that is very evidently
+out of the question."
+
+Witham rose, and she saw that one hand was closed as he looked down
+upon her. Then he turned and stared out at the prairie, but there was
+something very significant in the rigidity of his attitude, and his
+face seemed to have grown suddenly careworn when he glanced back at
+her.
+
+"Of course," he said quietly. "You see, I have been ill, and a little
+off my balance lately. That accounts for erratic speeches, though I
+meant it all. Colonel Barrington is still in Winnipeg?"
+
+"Yes," said the girl, who was not convinced by the explanation, very
+quietly. "I am a little anxious about him, too. He sold wheat forward,
+and I gather from his last letter has not bought it yet. Now, as
+Alfreton is driving in to-morrow, he could take you."
+
+Witham was grateful to her, and still more to Miss Barrington, who
+came in just then; while he did not see the girl again before he
+departed with Alfreton on the morrow. When they had left Silverdale a
+league behind, the trail dipped steeply amidst straggling birches to a
+bridge which spanned the creek in a hollow, and Witham glanced at the
+winding ascent thoughtfully.
+
+"It has struck me that going round by this place puts another six
+miles on to your journey to the railroad, and a double team could not
+pull a big load up," he said.
+
+The lad nodded. "The creek is a condemned nuisance. We have either to
+load light when we are hauling grain in and then pitch half the bags
+off at the bottom and come back for them--while, you know, one man
+can't put up many four bushel bags--or keep a man and horses at the
+ravine until we're through."
+
+Witham laughed. "Now, I wonder whether you ever figured how much those
+little things put up the price of your wheat."
+
+"This is the only practicable way down," said the lad. "You can
+scarcely climb up one side where the ravine's narrow abreast of
+Silverdale."
+
+"Drive round. I want to see it," said Witham. "Call at Rushforth for a
+spool of binder twine."
+
+Half-an-hour later Alfreton pulled the wagon up amidst the birches on
+the edge of the ravine, which just there sloped steep as a railway
+cutting, and not very much broader, to the creek. Witham gazed at it,
+and then handed the twine to the hired man.
+
+"Take that with you, Charley, and get down," he said. "If you strip
+your boots off you can wade through the creek."
+
+"I don't know that I want to," said the man.
+
+"Well," said Witham, "it would please me if you did, as well as cool
+your feet. Then you could climb up and hold that twine down on the
+other side."
+
+The man grinned; and, though Alfreton remembered that he was not
+usually so tractable with him, proceeded to do Witham's bidding. When
+he came back there was a twinkle of comprehension in his eyes; and
+Witham, who cut off the length of twine, smiled at Alfreton.
+
+"It is," he said dryly, "only a little idea of mine."
+
+They drove on, and, reaching Winnipeg next day, went straight to
+Graham the wheat-broker's offices. He kept them waiting some time, and
+in the meanwhile men with intent faces passed hastily in and out
+through the outer office. Some of them had telegrams or bundles of
+papers in their hands, and the eyes of all were eager. The corridor
+rang with footsteps, the murmur of voices seemed to vibrate through
+the great building; while it seemed to Alfreton there was a suggestion
+of strain and expectancy in all he heard and saw. Witham, however, sat
+gravely still, though the lad noticed that his eyes were keener than
+usual, for the muffled roar of the city, patter of messengers' feet,
+ceaseless tinkle of telephone call bells, and whirr of the elevators,
+each packed with human freight, all stirred him. Hitherto, he had
+grappled with nature, but now he was to test his judgment against the
+keenest wits of the cities, and stand or fall by it, in the struggle
+that was to be waged over the older nation's food.
+
+At last, however, a clerk signed to them from a doorway, and they
+found Graham sitting before a littered table. A man sat opposite him
+with the telephone receiver in his hand.
+
+"Sorry to keep you, but I've both hands full just now. Every man in
+this city is thinking wheat," he said. "Has he word from Chicago,
+Thomson?"
+
+"Yes," said the clerk. "Bears lost hold this morning. General buying!"
+
+Just then the door swung open, and a breathless man came in. "Guess I
+scared that clerk of yours who wanted to turn me off," he said. "Heard
+what Chicago's doing? Well, you've got to buy for me now. They're
+going to send her right up into the sky, and it's 'bout time I got out
+before the bulls trample the life out of me."
+
+"Quite sure you can't wait until to-morrow?" asked Graham.
+
+The man shook his head. "No, sir. When I've been selling all along the
+line! Send off right away, and tell your man on the market to cover
+every blame sale for me."
+
+Graham signed to the clerk, and as the telephone bell tinkled, a lad
+brought in a message. The broker opened it. "'New York lost advance
+and recovered it twice in the first hour,'" he read. "'At present a
+point or two better. Steady buying in Liverpool.'"
+
+"That," said the other man, "is quite enough for me. Let me have the
+contracts as soon as they're ready."
+
+He went out, and Graham turned to Witham. "There's half-a-dozen more
+of them outside," he said. "Do you buy or sell?"
+
+Witham laughed. "I want to know which a wise man would do."
+
+"Well," said Graham, "I can't tell you. The bulls rushed wheat up as I
+wired you, but the other folks got their claws in and worried it down
+again. Wheat's anywhere and nowhere all the time, and I'm advising
+nobody just now. No doubt you've formed your own opinion."
+
+Witham nodded. "It's the last of the grappled, and the bears aren't
+quite beaten yet, but any time the next week or two the decisive turn
+will come. Then, if they haven't got out, there'll be very little left
+of them."
+
+"You seem tolerably sure of the thing. Got plenty of confidence in the
+bulls?"
+
+Witham smiled. "I fancy I know how Western wheat was sown this year
+better than any statistician of the ring, and it's not the bulls I'm
+counting on but those millions of hungry folks in the old country.
+It's not New York or Chicago, but Liverpool the spark is coming from."
+
+"Well," said Graham, "that's my notion, too, but I've no time for
+anybody who hasn't grist for me just now. Still, I'd be glad to come
+round and take you home to supper if you haven't the prejudice, which
+is not unknown at Silverdale, against eating with a man who makes his
+dollars on the market and didn't get them given him."
+
+Witham laughed, and held up a lean brown hand. "All I ever had until
+less than a year ago I earned with that. I'll be ready for you."
+
+He went out with Alfreton, and noticed that the lad ate little at
+lunch. When the meal was over he glanced at him with a smile through
+the cigar smoke.
+
+"I think it would do you good to take me into your confidence," he
+said.
+
+"Well," said Alfreton, "it would be a relief to talk, and I feel I
+could trust you. Still, it's only fair to tell you I didn't at the
+beginning. I was an opinionated ass, you see."
+
+Witham laughed. "I don't mind in the least, and we have most of us
+felt that way."
+
+"Well," said the lad, "I was a little short of funds, and proud of
+myself, and when everybody seemed certain that wheat was going down
+for ever, I thought I saw my chance of making a little. Now I've more
+wheat than I care to think of to deliver, the market's against me. If
+it stiffens any further it will break me; and that's not all, you see.
+Things have gone tolerably badly with the folks at home, and I fancy
+it took a good deal of what should have been the girls' portion to
+start me at Silverdale."
+
+"Then," said Witham, "it's no use trying to show you how foolish
+you've been. That is the usual thing, and it's easy; but what the man
+in the hole wants to know is the means of getting out again."
+
+Alfreton smiled ruefully. "I'm tolerably far in. I could just cover at
+to-day's prices if I pledged my crop, but it would leave me nothing to
+go on with and the next advance would swamp the farm."
+
+"Well," said Witham quietly, "don't buy to-day. There's going to be an
+advance that will take folks' breath away, but the time's not quite
+ripe yet. You'll see prices knocked back a little the next day or two,
+and then you will cover your sales to the last bushel."
+
+"But are you sure?" asked the lad a trifle hoarsely. "You see, if
+you're mistaken, it will mean ruin to me."
+
+Witham laid his hand on his shoulder. "If I am wrong, I'll make your
+losses good."
+
+Nothing more was said on that subject, but Alfreton's face grew
+anxious once more as they went up and down the city. Everybody was
+talking wheat, which was not astonishing, for that city and the two
+great provinces to the west of it lived by the trade in grain; and
+before the afternoon had passed they learned that there had been a
+persistent advance. The lad's uneasiness showed itself, but when they
+went back to the hotel about the supper hour Witham smiled at him.
+
+"You're feeling sick?" he said. "Still, I don't fancy you need worry."
+
+Then Graham appeared and claimed him, and it was next morning when he
+saw Alfreton again. He was breakfasting with Colonel Barrington and
+Dane, and Witham noticed that the older man did not appear to have
+much appetite. When the meal was finished he drew him aside.
+
+"You have covered your sales, sir?" he asked.
+
+"No, sir," said Barrington. "I have not."
+
+"Then I wonder if it would be presumption if I asked you a question?"
+
+Barrington looked at him steadily. "To be frank, I fancy it would be
+better if you did not. I have, of course, only my own folly to blame
+for believing I could equal your natural aptitude for this risky
+amusement, which I had, and still have, objections to. I was, however,
+in need of money, and seeing your success, yielded to the temptation.
+I am not laying any of the responsibility on you, but am not inclined
+to listen to more of your suggestions."
+
+Witham met his gaze without embarrassment. "I am sorry you have been
+unfortunate, sir."
+
+Just then Dane joined them. "I sat up late last night in the hope of
+seeing you," he said. "Now, I don't know what to make of the market,
+but there were one or two fellows who would have bought my estimated
+crop from me at a figure which would have about covered working
+expenses. Some of the others who did not know you were coming in, put
+their affairs in my hands, too."
+
+"Sell nothing," said Witham quietly.
+
+It was an hour later when a messenger from Graham found them in the
+smoking-room, and Colonel Barrington smiled dryly as he tore up the
+envelope handed him.
+
+"'Market opened with sellers prevailing. Chicago flat!'" he read.
+
+Dane glanced at Witham somewhat ruefully, but the latter's eyes were
+fixed on Colonel Barrington.
+
+"If I had anything to cover I should still wait," he said.
+
+"That," said Dane, "is not exactly good news to me."
+
+"Our turn will come," said Witham gravely.
+
+That day, and during several which followed it, wheat moved down, and
+Dane said nothing to Witham about what he felt, though his face grew
+grimmer as the time went on. Barrington was quietly impassive when
+they met him, while Alfreton, who saw a way out of his difficulties,
+was hard to restrain. Witham long afterwards remembered that horrible
+suspense, but he showed no sign of what he was enduring then, and was
+only a trifle quieter than usual when he and Alfreton entered Graham's
+office one morning. It was busier than ever, while the men who
+hastened in and out seemed to reveal by attitude and voice that they
+felt something was going to happen.
+
+"In sellers' favour!" said the broker. "Everybody with a few dollars
+is hammering prices one way or the other. Nothing but wheat is heard
+of in this city. Well, we'll simmer down when the turn comes, and
+though I'm piling up dollars, I'll be thankful. Hallo, Thomson,
+anything going on now?"
+
+"Chicago buying," said the clerk. "Now it's Liverpool! Sellers holding
+off. Wanting a two-eights more the cental."
+
+The telephone bell tinkled again, and there was a trace of excitement
+in the face of the man who answered it.
+
+"Walthew has got news ahead of us," he said. "Chicago bears caved in.
+Buying orders from Liverpool broke them. Got it there strong."
+
+Witham tapped Alfreton's shoulder. "Now is the time. Tell him to buy,"
+he said. "We'll wait outside until you've put this deal through,
+Graham."
+
+It was twenty minutes before Graham came out to them. "I'll let you
+have your contracts, Mr. Alfreton, and my man on the market just fixed
+them in time," he said. "They're up a penny on the cental in Liverpool
+now, and nobody will sell, while here in Winnipeg they're falling over
+each other to buy. Never had such a circus since the trade began."
+
+Alfreton, who seemed to quiver, turned to his companion, and then
+forgot what he had to tell him. Witham had straightened himself and
+his eyes were shining, while the lad was puzzled by his face. Still,
+save for the little tremor in it, his voice was very quiet.
+
+"It has come at last," he said. "Two farms would not have covered your
+losses, Alfreton, if you had waited until to-morrrow. Have supper with
+us Graham--if you like it, lakes of champagne."
+
+"I want my head, but I'll come," said Graham, with a curious smile. "I
+don't know that it wouldn't pay me to hire yours just now."
+
+Then Witham turned suddenly, and running down the stairway shook the
+man awaiting him by the arm.
+
+"The flood's with us now," he said. "Find Colonel Barrington, and make
+him cover everything before he's ruined. Dane, you and I, and a few
+others, will see the dollars rolling into Silverdale."
+
+Dane found Barrington, who listened with a grim smile to what he had
+to tell him.
+
+"The words are yours, Dane, but that is all," he said. "Wheat will go
+down again, and I do not know that I am grateful to Courthorne."
+
+Dane dare urge nothing further, and spent the rest of that day
+wandering up and down the city, in a state of blissful content, with
+Alfreton and Witham. One of them had turned his losses into a small
+profit, and the other two, who had, hoping almost against hope, sown
+when others had feared to plough, saw that the harvest would repay
+them beyond their wildest expectations. They heard nothing but
+predictions of higher prices everywhere, and the busy city seemed to
+throb with exultation. The turn had come, and there was hope for the
+vast wheat lands it throve upon.
+
+Graham had much to tell them when they sat down to the somewhat
+elaborate meal Witham termed supper that night, and he nodded
+approvingly when Dane held out his glass of champagne and touched his
+comrade's.
+
+"I'm not fond of speeches, Courthorne, and I fancy our tastes are the
+same," he said. "Still, I can't let this great night pass without
+greeting you as the man who has saved not a few of us at Silverdale.
+We were in a very tight place before you came, and we are with you
+when you want us from this time, soul and body, and all our
+possessions." Alfreton's eyes glistened, and his hand shook a little
+as he touched the rim of Witham's goblet.
+
+"There are folks in the old country who will bless you when they
+know," he said. "You'll forget it, though I can't, that I was once
+against you."
+
+Witham nodded to them gravely, and when the glasses were empty shook
+hands with the three.
+
+"We have put up a good fight, and I think we shall win; but, while you
+will understand me better by-and-by what you have offered me almost
+hurts," he said.
+
+"What we have given is yours. We don't take it back," said Dane.
+
+Witham smiled, though there was a wistfulness in his eyes as he saw
+the faint bewilderment in his companions' faces.
+
+"Well," he said slowly, "you can do a little for me now. Colonel
+Barrington was right when he set his face against speculation, and it
+was only because I saw dollars were badly needed at Silverdale, and
+the one means of getting them, I made my deal. Still, if we are to
+succeed as farmers we must market our wheat as cheaply as our rivals,
+and we want a new bridge on the level. Now, I got a drawing of one and
+estimates for British Columbia stringers, yesterday, while the birches
+in the ravine will give us what else we want. I'll build a bridge
+myself, but it will cheapen the wheat-hauling to everybody, and you
+might like to help me."
+
+Dane glanced at the drawing laid before him, but Alfreton spoke first.
+"One hundred dollars. I'm only a small man, but I wish it was five,"
+he said.
+
+"I'll make it that much, and see the others do their share," said
+Dane, and then glanced at the broker with a curious smile.
+
+"How does he do it--this and other things? He was never a business
+man!"
+
+Graham nodded. "He can't help it. It was born in him. You and I can
+figure and plan, but Courthorne is different--the right thing comes to
+him. I knew, the first night I saw him, you had got the man you wanted
+at Silverdale."
+
+Then Witham stood up, wineglass in hand. "I am obliged to you, but I
+fancy this has gone far enough," he said. "There is one man who has
+done more for you than I could ever do. Prosperity is a good thing,
+but you at least know what he has aimed at stands high above that. May
+you have the head of the Silverdale community long with you!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+UNDER TEST
+
+
+The prairie lay dim and shadowy in the creeping dusk when Witham sat
+on a redwood stringer near the head of his partly-finished bridge.
+There was no sound from the hollow behind him but the faint gurgle of
+the creek and the almost imperceptible vibration of countless minute
+wings. The birches which climbed the slope to it wound away sinuously,
+a black wall on either hand, and the prairie lying grey and still
+stretched back into the silence in front of him. Here and there a
+smouldering fire showed dully red on the brink of the ravine, but the
+tired men who had lighted them were already wrapped in heavy slumber.
+
+The prairie hay was gathered, harvest had not come, and for the last
+few weeks Witham, with his hired men from the bush of Ontario, had
+toiled at the bridge with a tireless persistency which had somewhat
+astonished the gentlemen farmers of Silverdale. They, however, rode
+over every now and then, and most cheerfully rendered what assistance
+they could, until it was time to return for tennis or a shooting
+sweepstake, and Witham thanked them gravely, even when he and his
+Ontario axemen found it necessary to do the work again. He could have
+told nobody why he had undertaken to build the bridge, which could be
+of no use to him, but he was in a measure prompted by instincts born
+in him; for he was one of the Englishmen who, with a dim recognition
+of the primeval charge to subdue the earth and render it fruitful,
+gravitate to the newer lands, and usually leave their mark upon them.
+He had also a half-defined notion that it would be something he could
+leave behind in reparation, that the men of Silverdale might remember
+the stranger who had imposed on them more leniently, while in the
+strain of the mental struggle strenuous occupation was a necessity to
+him.
+
+A bundle of papers it was now too dim to see lay beside him, clammy
+with the dew, and he sat bareheaded, a pipe which had gone out in his
+hand, staring across the prairie with an ironical smile in his eyes.
+He had planned boldly and striven tirelessly, and now the fee he could
+not take would surely be tendered him. Wheat was growing dearer every
+day, and such crops as he had sown had not been seen at Silverdale.
+Still, the man, who had had few compunctions before he met Maud
+Barrington, knew now that in a little while he must leave all he had
+painfully achieved behind. What he would do then he did not know, for
+only one fact seemed certain--in another four months, or less, he
+would have turned his back on Silverdale.
+
+Presently, however, the sound of horse-hoofs caught his ears, and he
+stood up when a mounted figure rose out of the prairie. The moon had
+just swung up, round and coppery, from behind a rise, and when horse
+and rider cut black and sharp against it his pulses throbbed faster
+and a little flush crept into his face, for he knew every line of the
+figure in the saddle. Some minutes had passed when Maud Barrington
+rode slowly to the head of the bridge, and pulled up her horse at the
+sight of him.
+
+The moon, turning silver now, shone behind her head, and a tress of
+hair sparkled beneath her wide hat, while the man had a glimpse of the
+gleaming whiteness of rounded cheek and neck. Her face he could not
+see, but shapely shoulders, curve of waist, and sweeping line of the
+light habit were forced up as in a daguerreotype, and as the girl sat
+still looking down on him, slender, lissom, dainty, etherealized
+almost by the brightening radiance, she seemed to him a visionary
+complement of the harmonies of the night. It also appeared wiser to
+think of her as such than a being of flesh and blood whom he had
+wildly ventured to long for, and he almost regretted when her first
+words dispelled the illusion.
+
+"It is dreadfully late," she said. "Pluto went very lame soon after I
+left Macdonald's, and I knew if I went back for another horse he would
+have insisted on riding home with me. I had slipped away while he was
+in the granary. One can cross the bridge?"
+
+"Not mounted," said Witham. "There are only a few planks between the
+stringers here and there, but, if you don't mind waiting, I can lead
+your horse across."
+
+He smiled a little, for the words seemed trivial and out of place in
+face of the effect the girl's appearance had on him, but she glanced
+at him questioningly.
+
+"No!" she said. "Now, I would have gone round by the old bridge, only
+that Allardyce told me you let him ride across this afternoon."
+
+"Still," and the man stopped a moment, "it was daylight then, you
+see."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed a little, for his face was visible, and she
+understood the slowness of his answer. "Is that all? It is moonlight
+now."
+
+"No," said Witham dryly, "but one is apt to make an explanation too
+complete occasionally. Will you let me help you down?"
+
+Maud Barrington held out her hands, and when he swung her down watched
+him tramp away with the horse with a curious smile. A light compliment
+seldom afforded her much pleasure, but the man's grim reserve had now
+and then piqued more than her curiosity, though she was sensible that
+the efforts she occasionally made to uncover what lay behind it were
+not without their risk. Then he came back, and turned to her very
+gravely.
+
+"Let me have your hand," he said.
+
+Maud Barrington gave it him, and hoped the curious little thrill that
+ran through her when his hard fingers closed upon her palm did not
+communicate itself to him. She also noticed that he moved his head
+sharply a moment, and then looked straight in front again. Then the
+birches seemed to fall away beneath them, and they moved out across
+the dim gully with the loosely-laid planking rattling under their
+feet, until they came to a strip scarcely three feet wide which
+spanned a gulf of blackness in the shadow of the trees.
+
+"Hold fast!" said Witham with a trace of hoarseness. "You are sure you
+feel quite steady?"
+
+"Of course!" said the girl with a little laugh, though she recognized
+the anxiety in his voice, and felt his hand close almost cruelly on
+her own. She was by no means timorous, and still less fanciful, but
+when they moved out into the blackness that closed about them above
+and beneath along the slender strip of swaying timber she was glad of
+the masterful grip. It seemed in some strange fashion portentous, for
+she felt that she would once more be willing to brave unseen perils,
+secure only in his guidance. What he felt she did not know, and was
+sensible of an almost overwhelming curiosity, until when at last
+well-stiffened timber lay beneath them, she contrived to drop a glove
+just where the moonlight smote the bridge. Witham stooped, and his
+face was clear in the silvery light when he rose again. Maud
+Barrington saw the relief in it, and, compelled by some influence,
+stood still looking at him with a little glow behind the smile in her
+eyes. A good deal was revealed to both of them in that instant, but
+the man dare not admit it, and was master of himself.
+
+"Yes," he said, very simply, "I am glad you are across."
+
+Maud Barrington laughed. "I scarcely fancy the risk was very great,
+but tell me about the bridge," she said. "You are living beside it?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham, "in a tent, I must have it finished before
+harvest, you see!"
+
+The girl understood why this was necessary, but deciding that she had
+on other occasions ventured sufficiently far with that topic, moved on
+across the bridge.
+
+"A tent," she said, "cannot be a very comfortable place to live in,
+and who cooks for you?"
+
+Witham smiled dryly. "I am used to it, and can do all the cooking that
+is necessary," he said. "It is the usual home for the beginner, and I
+lived six months in one--on grindstone bread, the tinctured glucose
+you are probably not acquainted with as 'drips,' and rancid pork--when
+I first came out to this country and hired myself, for ten dollars
+monthly, to another man. It is a diet one gets a little tired of
+occasionally, but after breaking prairie twelve hours every day one
+can eat almost anything, and when I afterwards turned farmer my credit
+was rarely good enough to provide the pork."
+
+The girl looked at him curiously, for she knew how some of the smaller
+settlers lived, and once more felt divided between wonder and
+sympathy. She could picture the grim self-denial, for she had seen the
+stubborn patience in this man's face as well as a stamp that was not
+borne by any other man at Silverdale. Some of the crofter settlers,
+who periodically came near starvation in their sod hovels, and the men
+from Ontario who staked their little handful of dollars on the first
+wheat crop to be wrested from the prairie, bore it, however. From what
+Miss Barrington had told her, it was clear that Courthorne's first
+year in Canada could not have been spent in this fashion, but there
+was no doubt in the girl's mind as she listened. Her faith was equal
+to a more strenuous test.
+
+"There is a difference in the present, but who taught you
+bridge-building? It takes years to learn the use of the axe," she
+said.
+
+Witham laughed. "I think it took me four, but the man who has not a
+dollar to spare usually finds out how to do a good many things for
+himself, and I had working drawings of the bridge made in Winnipeg.
+Besides, your friends have helped me with their hands as well as their
+good-will. Except at the beginning, they have all been kind to me, and
+one could not well have expected very much from them then."
+
+Maud Barrington coloured a trifle as she remembered her own attitude
+towards him. "Cannot you forget it?" she said, with a curious little
+ring in her voice. "They would do anything you asked them now."
+
+"One generally finds it useful to have a good memory, and I remember
+most clearly that, although they had very little reason for it, most
+of them afterwards trusted me. That made, and still makes, a great
+difference to me."
+
+The girl appeared thoughtful. "Does it?" she said. "Still, do you
+know, I fancy that if they had tried to drive you out, you would have
+stayed in spite of them."
+
+"Yes," said Witham dryly, "I believe I would, but the fact that in a
+very little while they held out a friendly hand to a stranger steeped
+in suspicion, and gave him the chance to prove himself their equal,
+carries a big responsibility. That, and your aunt's goodness, puts so
+many things one might have done out of the question."
+
+The obvious inference was that the prodigal had been reclaimed by the
+simple means of putting him on his honour, but that did not for a
+moment suggest itself to the girl. She had often regretted her own
+disbelief, and once more felt the need for reparation.
+
+"Lance," she said, very quietly, "my aunt was wiser than I was, but
+she was mistaken. What she gave you out of her wide charity was
+already yours by right."
+
+That was complete and final, for Maud Barrington did nothing by half,
+and Witham recognized that she held him blameless in the past, which
+she could not know, as well as in the present, which was visible to
+her. Her confidence stung him as a whip, and when in place of
+answering he looked away, the girl fancied that a smothered groan
+escaped him. She waited, curiously expectant, but he did not speak,
+and just then the fall of hoofs rose from behind the birches in the
+bluff. Then a man's voice came through it singing a little French
+song, and Maud Barrington glanced at her companion.
+
+"Lance," she said, "how long is it since you sang that song?"
+
+"Well," said Witham, doggedly conscious of what he was doing, "I do
+not know a word of it, and never heard it in my life."
+
+Maud Barrington stared at him. "Think," she said. "It seems ever so
+long ago, but you cannot have forgotten. Surely you remember Madame
+Aubert, who taught me to prattle in French, and the day you slipped
+into the music-room and picked up the song, while she tried in vain to
+teach it me. Can't you recollect how I cried, when you sang it in the
+billiard-room, and Uncle Geoffrey gave you the half-sovereign which
+had been promised to me?"
+
+"No," said Witham a trifle hoarsely, and with his head turned from her
+watched the trail.
+
+A man in embroidered deerskin jacket was riding into the moonlight,
+and though the little song had ceased, and the wide hat hid his face,
+there was an almost insolent gracefulness in his carriage that seemed
+familiar to Witham. It was not the _abandon_ of the swashbuckler
+stock-rider from across the frontier, but something more finished and
+distinguished that suggested the bygone cavalier. Maud Barrington, it
+was evident, also noticed it.
+
+"Geoffrey Courthorne rode as that man does," she said. "I remember
+hearing my mother once tell him that he had been born too late,
+because his attributes and tastes would have fitted him to follow
+Prince Rupert."
+
+Witham made no answer, and the man rode on until he drew bridle in
+front of them. Then he swung his hat off, and while the moonlight
+shone into his face looked down with a little ironical smile at the
+man and woman standing beside the horse. Witham closed one hand a
+trifle, and slowly straightened himself, feeling that there was need
+of all his self-control, for he saw his companion glance at him, and
+then almost too steadily at Lance Courthorne.
+
+The latter said nothing for a space of seconds, for which Witham hated
+him, and yet in the tension of the suspense he noticed that the signs
+of indulgence he had seen on the last occasion were plainer in
+Courthorne's face. The little bitter smile upon his lips was also not
+quite in keeping with the restlessness of his fingers upon the bridle.
+
+"Is that bridge fit for crossing, farmer?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly. "You must lead your horse."
+
+Maud Barrington had in the meanwhile stood very still, and now moved
+as by an effort. "It is time I rode on, and you can show the stranger
+across," she said. "I have kept you at least five minutes longer than
+was necessary."
+
+Courthorne, Witham fancied, shifted one foot from the stirrup, but
+then sat still as the farmer held his hand for the girl to mount by,
+while when she rode away he looked at his companion with a trace of
+anger as well as irony in his eyes.
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "What you heard was correct. Miss Barrington's
+horse fell lame coming from one of the farms, which accounts for her
+passing here so late. I had just led the beast across the incompleted
+bridge. Still, it is not on my account I tell you this. Where have you
+been and why have you broken one of my conditions?"
+
+Courthorne laughed. "It seems to me you are adopting a somewhat
+curious tone. I went to my homestead to look for you."
+
+"You have not answered my other question, and in the meanwhile I am
+your tenant, and the place is mine."
+
+"We really needn't quibble," said Courthorne. "I came for the very
+simple reason that I wanted money."
+
+"You had one thousand dollars," said Witham dryly.
+
+Courthorne made a little gesture of resignation. "It is, however,
+certain that I haven't got them now. They went as dollars usually do.
+The fact is, I have met one or two men recently who apparently know
+rather more about games of chance than I do, and I passed on the fame,
+which was my most valuable asset, to you."
+
+"You passed me on the brand of a crime I never committed," said Witham
+grimly. "That, however, is not the question now. Not one dollar,
+except at the time agreed upon, will you get from me. Why did you come
+here dressed as we usually are on the prairie?"
+
+Courthorne glanced down at the deerskin jacket and smiled as he
+straightened himself into a caricature of Witham's mounted attitude.
+It was done cleverly.
+
+"When I ride in this fashion we are really not very unlike, you see,
+and I let one or two men I met get a good look at me," he said. "I
+meant it as a hint that it would be wise of you to come to terms with
+me."
+
+"I have done so already. You made the bargain."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne smiling, "a contract may be modified at any
+time when both parties are willing."
+
+"One is not," said Witham dryly. "You heard my terms, and nothing that
+you can urge will move me a hairsbreadth from them."
+
+Courthorne looked at him steadily, and some men would have found his
+glance disconcerting, for now and then all the wickedness that was in
+him showed in his half-closed eyes. Still, he saw that the farmer was
+unyielding.
+
+"Then we will let it go; in the meanwhile," he said, "take me across
+the bridge."
+
+They were half-way along it when he pulled the horse up, and once more
+looked down on Witham.
+
+"Your hand is a tolerably good one so long as you are willing to
+sacrifice yourself, but it has its weak points, and there is one thing
+I could not tolerate," he said.
+
+"What is that?"
+
+Courthorne laughed wickedly, "You wish me to be explicit? Maud
+Barrington is devilishly pretty, but it is quite out of the question
+that you should ever marry her."
+
+Witham turned towards him with the veins on his forehead swollen.
+"Granting that it is so, what is that to you?"
+
+Courthorne nodded as if in comprehension. "Well, I'm probably not
+consistent, but one rarely quite loses touch with everything, and if I
+believed that my kinswoman was growing fond of a beggarly farmer, I'd
+venture to put a sudden stop to your love-making. This, at least, is
+perfectly _bona fide_, Witham."
+
+Witham had borne a good deal of late, and his hatred of the man flared
+up. He had no definite intention, but he moved a pace forward, and
+Courthorne touched the horse with his heel. It backed, and then
+growing afraid of the blackness about it plunged, while Witham for the
+first time saw that there was a gap in the loosely-laid planking close
+behind it. Another plunge or flounder, and horse and rider would go
+down together.
+
+For a moment he held his breath and watched. Then, as the beast,
+resisting its rider's efforts, backed again, sprang forward and seized
+the bridle.
+
+"Get your spurs in! Shove him forward for your life," he said.
+
+There was a momentary struggle on the slippery planking, and, almost
+as its hind hoofs overhung the edge, Witham dragged the horse away.
+Courthorne swung himself out of the saddle, left the farmer the
+bridle, and glanced behind him at the gap. Then he turned, and the two
+men looked at each other steadily. Their faces were a trifle paler
+than usual.
+
+"You saw it?" asked Courthorne.
+
+"Yes, but not until you backed the beast and he commenced plunging."
+
+"He plunged once or twice before you caught the bridle?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly.
+
+Courthorne laughed. "You are a curious man. It would have cleared the
+ground for you."
+
+"No," said Witham dryly, "I don't know that you will understand me,
+but I scarcely think it would. It may have been a mistake of mine to
+do what I did, but I have a good deal on my shoulders already."
+
+Courthorne made no answer as he led his horse across the bridge. Then
+he mounted and looked down on the farmer who stood beside him.
+
+"I remember some things, though I don't always let them influence me
+to my detriment," he said. "I'm going back to the railroad, and then
+West, and don't quite know when you will have the pleasure of seeing
+me again."
+
+Witham watched him quietly. "It would be wiser if you did not come
+back until I send for you."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+COURTHORNE BLUNDERS
+
+
+Lance Courthorne had lightly taken a good many risks in his time, for
+he usually found a spice of danger stimulating, and there was in him
+an irresponsible daring that not infrequently served him better than a
+well-laid plan. There are also men of his type who, for a time at
+least, appear immune from the disasters which follow the one rash
+venture the prudent make, and it was half in frolic and half in malice
+he rode to Silverdale dressed as a prairie farmer in the light of day,
+and forgot that their occupation sets a stamp he had never worn upon
+the tillers of the soil. The same spirit induced him to imitate one or
+two of Witham's gestures for the benefit of his cook, and afterwards
+wait for a police trooper, who, apparently desired to overtake him
+when he had just left the homestead.
+
+He pulled his horse up when the other man shouted to him, and trusting
+to the wide hat that hid most of his face, smiled out of half-closed
+eyes when he handed a packet.
+
+"You have saved me a ride, Mr. Courthorne, I heard you were at the
+bridge," the trooper said, "If you'll sign for those documents I
+needn't keep you."
+
+He brought out a pencil, and Courthorne scribbled on the paper handed
+him. He was quite aware that there was a risk attached to this, but if
+Witham had any communications with the police it appeared advisable to
+discover what they were about. Then he laughed, as riding on again he
+opened the packet.
+
+"Agricultural Bureau documents," he said. "This lot to be returned
+filled in! Well, if I can remember, I'll give them to Witham."
+
+As it happened, he did not remember; but he made a worse mistake just
+before his departure from the railroad settlement. He had spent two
+nights at a little wooden hotel, which was not the one where Witham
+put up when he drove into the place, and to pass the time commenced a
+flirtation with the proprietor's daughter. The girl was pretty, and
+Courthorne a man of different type from the wheat-growers she had been
+used to. When his horse was at the door, he strolled into the saloon
+where he found the girl alone in the bar.
+
+"I'm a very sad man to-day, my dear," he said, and his melancholy
+became him.
+
+The girl blushed prettily. "Still," she said, "whenever you want to,
+you can come back again."
+
+"If I did, would you be pleased to see me?"
+
+"Of course!" said the girl. "Now, you wait a minute, and I'll give you
+something to remember me by. I don't mix this up for everybody."
+
+She busied herself with certain decanters and essences, and Courthorne
+held the glass she handed him high.
+
+"The brightest eyes and the reddest lips between Winnipeg and the
+Rockies!" he said. "This is nectar, but I would like to remember you
+by something sweeter still!"
+
+Their heads were not far apart when he laid down his glass, and before
+the girl quite knew what was happening an arm was round her neck. Next
+moment she had flung the man backwards, and stood very straight,
+quivering with anger and crimson in face, for Courthorne, as
+occasionally happens with men of his type, assumed too much, and did
+not always know when to stop. Then she called sharply, "Jake."
+
+There was a tramp of feet outside, and when a big, grim-faced man
+looked in at the door Courthorne decided it was time for him to effect
+his retreat while it could be done with safety. He knew already that
+there were two doors to the saloon, and his finger closed on the neck
+of a decanter. Next moment it smote the newcomer on the chest, and
+while he staggered backwards with the fluid trickling from him,
+Courthorne departed through the opposite entrance. Once outside, he
+mounted leisurely, but nobody came out from the hotel, and shaking the
+bridle with a little laugh he cantered out of the settlement.
+
+In the meanwhile, the other man carefully wiped his garments, and then
+turned to his companion.
+
+"Now what's all this about?" he said.
+
+The girl told him, and the man ruminated for a minute or two. "Well,
+he's gone, and I don't know that I'm sorry there wasn't a circus
+here," he said. "I figured there was something not square about that
+fellow, anyway. Registered as Guyler from Minnesota, but I've seen
+somebody like him among the boys from Silverdale. Guess I'll find out
+when I ride over about the horse, and then I'll have a talk with him
+quietly."
+
+In the meanwhile, the police trooper who had handed him the packet
+returned to the outpost, and, as it happened, found the grizzled
+Sergeant Stimson, who appeared astonished to see him back so soon
+there.
+
+"I met Courthorne near his homestead, and gave him the papers, sir,"
+he said.
+
+"You did?" said the Sergeant. "Now that's kind of curious, because
+he's at the bridge."
+
+"It couldn't have been anybody else, because he took the documents and
+signed for them," said the trooper.
+
+"Big bay horse?"
+
+"No, sir," said the trooper. "It was a bronco, and a screw at that."
+
+"Well," said Stimson dryly, "let me have your book. If Payne has come
+in, tell him I want him."
+
+The trooper went out, and when his comrade came in Stimson laid a
+strip of paper before him. "You have seen Courthorne's writing," he
+said; "would you call it anything like that?"
+
+"No, sir," said Trooper Payne. "I would not!"
+
+Stimson nodded. "Take a good horse and ride round by the bridge. If
+you find Courthorne there, as you probably will, head for the
+settlement and see if you can come across a man who might pass for
+him. Ask your question as though the answer didn't count, and tell
+nobody what you hear but me."
+
+Payne rode out, and when he returned three days later, Sergeant
+Stimson made a journey to confer with one of his superiors. The
+officer was a man who had risen in the service somewhat rapidly, and
+when he heard the tale said nothing, while he turned over a bundle of
+papers a trooper brought him. Then he glanced at Stimson thoughtfully.
+
+"I have a report of the Shannon shooting case here," he said. "How did
+it strike you at the time?"
+
+Stimson's answer was guarded. "As a curious affair. You see, it was
+quite easy to get at Witham's character from anybody down there, and
+he wasn't the kind of man to do the thing. There were one or two other
+trifles I couldn't quite figure out the meaning of."
+
+"Witham was drowned?" said the officer.
+
+"Well," said Stimson, "the trooper who rode after him heard him break
+through the ice, but nobody ever found him, though a farmer came upon
+his horse."
+
+The officer nodded. "I fancy you are right, and the point is this.
+There were two men, who apparently bore some resemblance to each
+other, engaged in an unlawful venture, and one of them commits a crime
+nobody believed him capable of, but which would have been less out of
+keeping with the other's character. Then the second man comes into an
+inheritance, and leads a life which seems to have astonished everybody
+who knows him. Now, have you ever seen these two men side by side?"
+
+"No, sir," said Stimson. "Courthorne kept out of our sight when he
+could in Alberta, and I don't think I or any of the boys, except
+Shannon, ever saw him for more than a minute or two. Now and then we
+passed Witham on the prairie or saw him from the trail, but I think I
+only once spoke to him."
+
+"Well," said the officer, "it seems to me I had better get you sent
+back to your old station, where you can quietly pick up the threads
+again. Would the trooper you mentioned be fit to keep an eye on things
+at Silverdale?"
+
+"No one better, sir," said Stimson.
+
+"Then it shall be done," said the officer. "The quieter you keep the
+affair the better."
+
+It was a week or two later when Witham returned to his homestead from
+the bridge, which was almost completed. Dusk was closing in, but as he
+rode down the rise he could see the wheat roll in slow ripples back
+into the distance. The steady beat of its rhythmic murmur told of
+heavy ears, and where the stalks stood waist-high on the rise, the
+last flush of saffron in the north-west was flung back in a dull
+bronze gleam. The rest swayed athwart the shadowy hollow, dusky indigo
+and green, but that flash of gold and red told that harvest was nigh
+again.
+
+Witham had seen no crop to compare with it during the eight years he
+had spent in the Dominion. There had been neither drought nor hail
+that year, and now, when the warm western breezes kept sweet and
+wholesome the splendid ears they fanned, there was removed from him
+the terrors of the harvest frost, which not infrequently blights the
+fairest prospects in one bitter night. Fate, which had tried him
+hardly hitherto, denying the seed its due share of fertilizing rain,
+sweeping his stock from existence with icy blizzard, and mowing down
+the tall green corn with devastating hail, was now showering favours
+on him when it was too late. Still, though he felt the irony of it, he
+was glad, for others had followed his lead, and while the lean years
+had left a lamentable scarcity of dollars at Silverdale, wealth would
+now pour in to every man who had had the faith to sow.
+
+He dismounted beside the oats which he would harvest first, and
+listened with a curious stirring of his pulses to their musical
+patter. It was not the full-toned song of the wheat, but there was
+that in the quicker beat of it which told that each graceful tassel
+would redeem its promise. He could not see the end of them, but by the
+right of the producer they were all his. He knew that he could also
+hold them by right of conquest, too, for that year a knowledge of his
+strength had been forced upon him. Still, from something he had seen
+in the eyes of a girl and grasped at in the words of a white-haired
+lady, he realized that there is a limit beyond which man's ambition
+may not venture, and a right before which even that of possession must
+bow.
+
+It had been shown him plainly that no man of his own devices can make
+the wheat grow, and standing beside it in the creeping dusk he felt in
+a vague, half-pagan fashion that there was, somewhere behind what
+appeared the chaotic chances of life, a scheme of order and justice
+immutable, which would in due time crush the too presumptuous human
+atom who opposed himself to it. Regret and rebellion were, it seemed,
+equally futile, and he must go out from Silverdale before retribution
+overtook him. He had done wrong, and, though he had made what
+reparation he could, knew that he would carry his punishment with him.
+
+The house was almost dark when he reached it, and as he went in his
+cook signed to him. "There's a man in here waiting for you," he said.
+"He doesn't seem in any way friendly or civil."
+
+Witham nodded as he went on, wondering with a grim expectancy whether
+Courthorne had returned again. If he had, he felt in a mood for very
+direct speech with him. His visitor was, however, not Courthorne.
+Witham could see that at a glance, although the room was dim.
+
+"I don't seem to know you, but I'll get a light in a minute," he said.
+
+"I wouldn't waste time," said the other. "We can talk just as straight
+in the dark, and I guess this meeting will finish up outside on the
+prairie. You've given me a good deal of trouble to trail you, Mr.
+Guyler."
+
+"Well," said Witham dryly, "it seems to me that you have found the
+wrong man."
+
+The stranger laughed unpleasantly. "I was figuring you'd take it like
+that, but you can't bluff me. Well now, I've come round to take it out
+of you for slinging that decanter at me, and if there is another
+thing, we needn't mention it."
+
+Witham stared at the man, and his astonishment was evident, but the
+fact that he still spoke with an English accentuation, as Courthorne
+did, was against him.
+
+"To the best of my recollection, I have never suffered the
+unpleasantness of meeting you in my life," he said. "I certainly never
+threw a decanter or anything else at you, though I understand that one
+might feel tempted to."
+
+The man rose up slowly, and appeared big and heavy-shouldered as he
+moved athwart the window. "I guess that is quite enough for me," he
+said. "What were you condemned Englishmen made for, anyway, but to
+take the best of what other men worked for, until the folks who've got
+grit enough run you out of the old country! Lord, why don't they drown
+you instead of dumping you and your wickedness on to us? Still, I'm
+going to show one of you, as I've longed to do, that you can't play
+your old tricks with the women of this country."
+
+"I don't see the drift of a word of it," said Witham. "Hadn't you
+better come back when you've worked the vapours off to-morrow?"
+
+"Come out!" said the other man grimly. "There's scarcely room in here.
+Well then, have it your own way, and the devil take care of you!"
+
+"I think there's enough," said Witham, and as the other swung forward,
+closed with him.
+
+He felt sick and dizzy for a moment, for he had laid himself open and
+the first blow got home, but he had decided that if the grapple was
+inevitable, it was best to commence it and end it speedily. A few
+seconds later there was a crash against the table, and the stranger
+gasped as he felt the edge of it pressed into his backbone. Then he
+felt himself borne backwards until he groaned under the strain, and
+heard a hoarse voice say, "If you attempt to use that foot again, I'll
+make the leg useless all your life to you. Come right in here, Tom."
+
+A man carrying a lantern came in, and stared at the pair as he set it
+down. "Do you want me to see a fair finish-up?" he said.
+
+"No," said Witham. "I want you to see this gentleman out with me. Nip
+his arms behind his back; he can't hurt you."
+
+It was done with a little difficulty, and there was a further scuffle
+in the hall, for the stranger resisted strenuously, but a minute later
+the trio reeled out of the door just as a buggy pulled up. Then, as
+the evicted man plunged forward alone, Witham, straightening himself
+suddenly, saw that Colonel Barrington was looking down on him, and
+that his niece was seated at his side. He stood still, flushed and
+breathless, with his jacket hanging rent half-way up about him, and
+the Colonel's voice was quietly ironical.
+
+"I had a question or two to ask you, but can wait," he said. "No doubt
+I shall find you less engaged another time."
+
+He flicked the horse, and as the buggy rolled away the other man
+walked up to Witham.
+
+"While I only wanted to get rid of you before, I feel greatly tempted
+to give you your wish now," said the latter.
+
+The stranger laughed dryly. "I guess you needn't worry. I don't fight
+because I'm fond of it, and you're not the man."
+
+"Not the man?" said Witham.
+
+"No, sir," said the other. "Not like him, now I can see you better.
+Well, I'm kind of sorry I started a circus here."
+
+A suspicion of the truth flashed upon Witham. "What sort of a man was
+the one you mistook for me?"
+
+"Usual British waster. Never done a day's work in his life, and never
+wanted to; too tired to open his eyes more than half-way when he
+looked at you, but if he ever fools round the saloon again, he'll know
+what he is before I'm through with him."
+
+Witham laughed. "I wouldn't be rash or you may get another
+astonishment. We really know one or two useful things in the old
+country, but you can't fetch the settlement before morning, and we'll
+put you up if you like."
+
+"No, sir," said the other dryly. "I'm not fond of Englishmen, and we
+might get arguing, while I've had 'bout enough of you for one night."
+
+He rode away, and Witham went back into the house very thoughtfully,
+wondering whether he would be called upon to answer for more of
+Courthorne's doings.
+
+It was two or three days later when Maud Barrington returned with her
+aunt from a visit to an outlying farm, where, because an account of
+what took place in the saloon had by some means been spread about, she
+heard a story brought in from the settlement. It kept her silent
+during the return journey, and Miss Barrington said nothing, but when
+the Colonel met them in the hall he glanced at his niece.
+
+"I see Mrs. Carndall has been telling you both a tale," he said. "It
+would have been more fitting if she had kept it to herself."
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington. "Still, you do not credit it?"
+
+Barrington smiled a trifle dryly. "I should very much prefer not to,
+my dear, but what we saw the other night appears to give it
+probability. The man Courthorne was dismissing somewhat summarily is,
+I believe, to marry the lady in question. You will remember I asked
+you once before whether the leopard can change his spots."
+
+The girl laughed a little. "Still, are you not presuming when you take
+it for granted that there are spots to change?"
+
+Colonel Barrington said nothing further, and it was late that night
+when the two women reopened the subject.
+
+"Aunt," said Maud Barrington, "I want to know what you think about
+Mrs. Carndall's tale."
+
+The little lady shook her head. "I should like to disbelieve it if I
+could."
+
+"Then," said Maud Barrington, "why don't you?"
+
+"Can you give me any reasons? One must not expect too much from human
+nature, my dear."
+
+The girl sat silent awhile, remembering the man whom she had at first
+sight, and in the moonlight, fancied was like her companion at the
+time. It was not, however, the faint resemblance that had impressed
+her, but a vague something in his manner--his grace, his half-veiled
+insolence, his poise in the saddle. She had only seen Lance Courthorne
+on a few occasions when she was very young, but she had seen others of
+his race, and the man reminded her of them. Still, she felt
+half-instinctively that as yet it would be better that nobody should
+know this, and she stooped over some lace on the table as she answered
+the elder lady.
+
+"I only know one, and it is convincing. That Lance should have done
+what he is credited with doing is quite impossible."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled. "I almost believe so, too, but others of his
+family have done such things somewhat frequently. Do you know that
+Lance has all along been a problem to me, for there is a good deal in
+my brother's question. Although it seems out of the question, I have
+wondered whether there could be two Lance Courthornes in Western
+Canada."
+
+The girl looked at her aunt in silence for a space, but each hid a
+portion of her thoughts. Then Maud Barrington laughed.
+
+"The Lance Courthorne now at Silverdale is as free from reproach as
+any man may be," she said. "I can't tell you why I am sure of it--but
+I know I am not mistaken."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE FACE AT THE WINDOW
+
+
+It was a hot morning when Sergeant Stimson and Corporal Payne rode
+towards the railroad across the prairie. The grassy levels rolled away
+before them, white and parched, into the blue distance, where willow
+grove and straggling bluff floated on the dazzling horizon, and the
+fibrous dust rose in little puffs beneath the horses' feet, until
+Stimson pulled his beast up in the shadow of the birches by the
+bridge, and looked back towards Silverdale. There, wooden homesteads
+girt about with barns and granaries rose from the whitened waste, and
+behind some of them stretched great belts of wheat. Then the Sergeant,
+understanding the faith of the men who had sown that splendid grain,
+nodded, for he was old and wise, and had seen many adverse seasons,
+and the slackness that comes, when hope has gone, to beaten men.
+
+"They will reap this year--a handful of cents on every bushel," he
+said. "A fine gentleman is Colonel Barrington, but some of them will
+be thankful there's a better head than the one he has at Silverdale.
+
+"Yes, sir," said Corporal Payne, who wore the double chevrons for the
+first time, and surmised that his companion's observations were not
+without their purpose.
+
+Stimson glanced at the bridge. "Good work," he said. "It will save
+them dollars on every load they haul in. A gambler built it! Do they
+teach men to use the axe in Montana saloons?"
+
+The corporal smiled and waited for what he felt would come. He was no
+longer the hot-blooded lad who had come out from the old country, for
+he had felt the bonds of discipline, and been taught restraint and
+silence on the lonely marches of the prairie.
+
+"I have," he said tentatively, "fancied there was something a little
+unusual about the thing."
+
+Stimson nodded, but his next observation was apparently quite
+unconnected with the topic. "You were a raw colt when I got you,
+Payne, and the bit galled you now and then, but you had good hands on
+a bridle, and somebody who knew his business had taught you to sit a
+horse in the old country. Still, you were not as handy with brush and
+fork at stable duty."
+
+The bronze seemed to deepen in the corporal's face, but it was turned
+steadily toward his officer. "Sir," he said, "has that anything to do
+with what you were speaking of?"
+
+Stimson laughed softly. "That depends, my lad. Now, I've taught you to
+ride straight and to hold your tongue. I've asked you no questions,
+but I've eyes in my head, and it's not without a purpose you've been
+made corporal. You're the kind they give commissions to now and
+then--and your folks in the old country never raised you for a police
+trooper."
+
+"Can you tell me how to win one?" asked the corporal, and Stimson
+noticed the little gleam in his eyes.
+
+"There's one road to advancement, and you know where to find the
+trooper's duty laid down plain," he said with a dry smile. "Now, you
+saw Lance Courthorne once or twice back there in Alberta?"
+
+"Yes, sir; but never close to."
+
+"And you knew Farmer Witham?"
+
+Payne appeared thoughtful. "Of course I met him a few times on the
+prairie, always on horseback, with his big hat on; but Witham is
+dead--that is, I heard him break through the ice."
+
+The men's eyes met for a moment, and Stimson smiled curiously. "There
+is," he said, "still a warrant out for him. Now, you know where I am
+going, and while I am away you will watch Courthorne and his
+homestead. If anything curious happens there you will let me know. The
+new man has instructions to find you any duty that will suit you."
+
+The corporal looked at his officer steadily, and again there was
+comprehension in his eyes. Then he nodded. "Yes, sir. I have wondered
+whether, if Shannon could have spoken another word that night, it
+would have been Witham the warrant was issued for."
+
+Stimson raised a restraining hand. "My lad," he said dryly, "the
+police trooper who gets advancement is the one that carries out his
+orders and never questions them until he can show that they are wrong.
+Then he uses a good deal of discretion. Now you know your duty?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said Payne, and Stimson shaking his bridle cantered off
+across the prairie.
+
+Then, seeing no need to waste time, the corporal rode towards
+Courthorne's homestead and found its owner stripping a binder. Pieces
+of the machine lay all around him, and from the fashion in which he
+handled them it was evident that he was capable of doing what the
+other men at Silverdale left to the mechanic at the settlement. Payne
+wondered, as he watched him, who had taught the gambler to use spanner
+and file.
+
+"I will not trouble you if you are busy, Mr. Courthorne; but if you
+would give me the returns the Bureau ask for, it would save me riding
+round again," he said.
+
+"I'm afraid I can't," said Witham. "You see, I haven't had the
+papers."
+
+"Trooper Bacon told me he had given them to you."
+
+"I don't seem to remember it," said Witham.
+
+Payne laughed. "One forgets things when he is busy. Still, you had
+them--because you signed for them."
+
+Witham looked up suddenly, and in another moment smiled; but he was a
+trifle too late, for Payne had seen his astonishment, and that he was
+now on guard.
+
+"Well," he said, "I haven't got them now. Send me a duplicate. You
+have, no doubt, some extra forms at the outpost."
+
+Payne decided that the man had never had the documents, but was too
+clever to ask any questions or offer explanations that might involve
+him. It was evident he knew that somebody had personated him, and the
+fact sent a little thrill through the corporal; he was at least on the
+trail.
+
+"I'll bring you one round the next time I'm in the neighbourhood," he
+said; and Witham sat still with the spanner lying idle in his hand
+when he rode away.
+
+He realized that Courthorne had taken the papers, and his face grew
+anxious as well as grim. The harvest was almost ready now, and a
+little while would see it in. Then his work would be over; but he had
+of late felt a growing fear lest something, that would prevent its
+accomplishment, might happen in the meanwhile. Then almost fiercely he
+resumed the stripping of the machine.
+
+An hour or two later Dane rode up, and sat still in his saddle looking
+down on Witham with a curious smile in his face.
+
+"I was down at the settlement and found a curious story going round,"
+he said. "Of course, it had its humorous aspect, but I don't know that
+the thing was quite discreet. You see, Barrington has once or twice
+had to put a stern check on the indulgence in playfulness of that kind
+by some of the younger men, and you are becoming an influence at
+Silverdale."
+
+"You naturally believed what you heard. It was in keeping with what
+you have seen of me?"
+
+Dane's eyes twinkled. "I didn't want to, and I must admit that it
+isn't. Still, a good many of you quiet men are addicted to
+occasionally astonishing our friends, and I can't help a fancy that
+you could do that kind of thing as well as most folks, if it pleased
+you. It fact, there was an artistic finish to the climax that
+suggested your usual thoroughness."
+
+"It did?" said Witham grimly, remembering his recent visitor and one
+or two of Courthorne's Albertan escapades. "Still, as I'm afraid I
+haven't the dramatic instinct, do you mind telling me how?"
+
+Dane laughed. "Well, it is probable there are other men who would have
+kissed the girl, but I don't know that it would have occurred to them
+to smash a decanter on the irate lover's head."
+
+Witham felt his finger tingle for a grip on Courthorne's throat. "And
+that's what I've been doing lately? You, of course, concluded that
+after conducting myself in an exemplary fashion an astonishing time it
+was a trifling lapse?"
+
+"Well," said Dane dryly. "As I admitted, it appeared somewhat out of
+your usual line; but when I heard that a man from the settlement had
+been ejected with violence from your homestead, what could one
+believe?"
+
+"Colonel Barrington told you that!"
+
+"No," said Dane; "you know he didn't. Still, he had a hired man riding
+a horse he'd bought, and I believe--though it is not my affair--Maud
+Barrington was there. Now, of course, one feels diffident about
+anything that may appear like preaching, but you see a good many of us
+are following you, and I wouldn't like you to have many little lapses
+of that kind while I am backing you. You and I have done with these
+frivolities some time ago, but there are lads here they might appeal
+to. I should be pleased if you could deny the story."
+
+Witham's face was grim. "I'm afraid it would not suit me to do as much
+just now," he said. "Still, between you and me, do you believe it
+likely that I would fly at that kind of game?"
+
+Dane laughed softly. "Well," he said, "tastes differ, and the girl is
+pretty, while, you know, after all they're very much the same. We
+have, however, got to look at the thing sensibly, and you admit you
+can't deny it."
+
+"I told you it wouldn't suit me."
+
+"Then there is a difference?"
+
+Witham nodded. "You must make the best of that, but the others may
+believe exactly what they please. It will be a favour to me if you
+remember it."
+
+Dane smiled curiously. "Then I think it is enough for me, and you will
+overlook my presumption. Courthorne, I wonder now and then when I
+shall altogether understand you!"
+
+"The time will come," said Witham dryly, to hide what he felt; for his
+comrade's simple avowal had been wonderfully eloquent. Then Dane
+touched his horse with his heel and rode away.
+
+It was two or three weeks later when Witham, being requested to do so,
+drove over to attend one of the assemblies at Silverdale Grange. It
+was dark when he reached the house, for the nights were drawing in;
+but because of the temperature, few of the great oil lamps were
+lighted, and the windows were open wide. Somebody had just finished
+singing when he walked into the big general room, and he would have
+preferred another moment to make his entrance, but disdained to wait.
+He, however, felt a momentary warmth in his face when Miss Barrington,
+stately as when he had first seen her in her rustling silk and ancient
+laces, came forward to greet him with her usual graciousness. He knew
+that every eye was upon them, and guessed why she had done so much.
+
+What she said was of no moment, but the fact that she had received him
+without sign of coldness was eloquent, and the man bent very
+respectfully over the little white hand. Then he stood straight and
+square for a moment and met her eyes.
+
+"Madam," he said, "I shall know who to come to when I want a friend."
+
+Afterwards he drifted towards a group of married farmers and their
+wives, who, except for that open warranty, might have been less
+cordial to him; and presently, though he was never quite sure how it
+came about, found himself standing beside Maud Barrington. She smiled
+at him and then glanced towards one of the open windows, outside which
+one or two of the older men were sitting.
+
+"The room is very hot," said Witham tentatively.
+
+"Yes," said the girl, "I fancy it would be cooler in the hall."
+
+They passed out together into the shadowy hall, but a little gleam of
+light from the doorway behind them rested on Maud Barrington as she
+sat down. She looked inquiringly at the man as though in wait for
+something.
+
+"It is distinctly cooler here," he said.
+
+Maud Barrington laughed impatiently. "It is," she said.
+
+"Well," said Witham, with a little smile. "I will try again. Wheat has
+made another advance lately."
+
+The girl turned towards him with a little sparkle in her eyes. Witham
+saw it, and the faint shimmer of the pearls upon the whiteness of her
+neck and then moved his head so that he looked out upon the dusky
+prairie.
+
+"Pshaw!" she said. "You know why you were brought here to-night."
+
+Witham admired her courage, but did not turn round, for there were
+times when he feared his will might fail him. "I fancy I know why your
+aunt was so gracious to me. Do you know that her confidence almost
+hurts me."
+
+"Then why don't you vindicate it and yourself? Dane would be your
+mouthpiece, and two or three words would be sufficient."
+
+Witham made no answer for a space. Somebody was singing in the room
+behind them, and through the open window he could see the stars in the
+soft indigo above the great sweep of prairie. He noticed them
+vacantly, and took a curious impersonal interest in the two dim
+figures standing close together outside the window. One was a young
+English lad, and the other a girl in a long white dress. What they
+were doing there was no concern of his, but any trifle that diverted
+his attention a moment was welcome in that time of strain, for he had
+felt of late that exposure was close at hand, and was fiercely anxious
+to finish his work before it came. Maud Barrington's finances must be
+made secure before he left Silverdale, and he must remain at any cost
+until the wheat was sold.
+
+Then he turned slowly towards her. "It is not your aunt's confidence
+that hurts me the most."
+
+The girl looked at him steadily, the colour a trifle plainer in her
+face, which she would not turn from the light, and a growing wonder in
+her eyes.
+
+"Lance," she said, "we both know that it is not misplaced. Still, your
+impassiveness does not please us."
+
+Witham groaned inwardly, and the swollen veins showed on his forehead.
+His companion had leaned forward a little, so that she could see him,
+and one white shoulder almost touched his own. The perfume of her hair
+was in his nostrils, and when he remembered how cold she had once been
+to him, a longing that was stronger than the humiliation that came
+with it grew almost overwhelming. Still, because of her very trust in
+him, there was a wrong he could not do, and it dawned on him that a
+means of placing himself beyond further temptation was opening to him.
+Maud Barrington, he knew, would have scanty sympathy with an intrigue
+of the kind Courthorne's recent adventure pointed to.
+
+"You mean, why do I not deny what you have no doubt heard?" he said.
+"What could one gain by that if you had heard the truth?"
+
+Maud Barrington laughed softly. "Isn't the question useless?"
+
+"No," said Witham, a trifle hoarsely now.
+
+The girl touched his arm almost imperiously as he turned his head
+again.
+
+"Lance," she said, "men of your kind need not deal in subterfuge. The
+wheat and the bridge you built speak for you."
+
+"Still----" persisted Witham, and the girl checked him with a smile.
+
+"I fancy you are wasting time," she said. "Now, I wonder whether, when
+you were in England, you ever saw a play founded on an incident in the
+life of a once famous actor. At the time it rather appealed to me. The
+hero, with a chivalric purpose, assumed various shortcomings he had
+really no sympathy with--but while there is, of course, no similarity
+beyond the generous impulse between the cases, he did not do it
+clumsily. It is, however, a trifle difficult to understand what
+purpose you could have, and one cannot help fancying that you owe a
+little to Silverdale and yourself."
+
+It was a somewhat daring parallel; for Witham, who dare not look at
+his companion and saw that he had failed, knew the play.
+
+"Isn't the subject a trifle difficult?" he asked.
+
+"Then," said Maud Barrington, "we will end it. Still, you promised
+that I should understand--a good deal--when the time came."
+
+Witham nodded gravely. "You shall," he said.
+
+Then, somewhat to his embarrassment, the two figures moved further
+across the window, and as they were silhouetted against the blue
+duskiness, he saw that there was an arm about the waist of the girl's
+white dress. He became sensible that Maud Barrington saw it too, and
+then that, perhaps to save the situation, she was smiling. The two
+figures, however, vanished, and a minute later a young girl in a long
+white dress came in and stood still, apparently dismayed, when she saw
+Maud Barrington. She did not notice Witham, who sat further in the
+shadow. He, however, saw her face suddenly crimson.
+
+"Have you been here long?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington, with a significant glance towards the
+window. "At least ten minutes. I am sorry, but I really couldn't help
+it. It was very hot in the other room, and Allender was singing."
+
+"Then," said the girl, with a little tremor in her voice, "you will
+not tell?"
+
+"No," said Maud Barrington. "But you must not do it again."
+
+The girl stooped swiftly and kissed her, then recoiled with a gasp
+when she saw the man, but Maud Barrington laughed.
+
+"I think," she said, "I can answer for Mr. Courthorne's silence.
+Still, when I have an opportunity, I am going to lecture you."
+
+Witham turned with a twinkle he could not quite repress in his eyes,
+and with a flutter of her dress the girl whisked away.
+
+"I'm afraid this makes me an accessory, but I can only neglect my
+manifest duty, which would be to warn her mother," said Maud
+Barrington.
+
+"Is it a duty?" asked Witham, feeling that the further he drifted away
+from the previous topic, the better it would be for him.
+
+"Some people would fancy so," said his companion. "Lily will have a
+good deal of money by and by, and she is very young. Atterly has
+nothing but an unprofitable farm; but he is an honest lad, and I know
+she is very fond of him."
+
+"And would that count against the dollars?"
+
+Maud Barrington laughed a little. "Yes," she said quietly. "I think it
+would if the girl is wise. Even now such things do happen; but I fancy
+it is time I went back again."
+
+She moved away, but Witham stayed where he was until the lad came in
+with a cigar in his hand.
+
+"Hallo, Courthorne!" he said. "Did you notice anybody pass the window
+a little while ago?"
+
+"You are the first come in through it," said Witham dryly. "The kind
+of things you wear admit of climbing."
+
+The lad glanced at him with a trace of embarrassment.
+
+"I don't quite understand you; but I meant a man," he said. "He was
+walking curiously, as if he was half asleep, but he slipped round the
+corner of the building, and I lost him."
+
+Witham laughed. "There's a want of finish in the tale, but you needn't
+worry about me. I didn't see a man."
+
+"There's rather less wisdom than usual in your remarks to-night; but I
+tell you I saw him," said the lad.
+
+He passed on, and a minute later there was a cry from the inner room.
+"It's there again! Can't you see the face at the window?"
+
+Witham was in the larger room next moment, and saw, as a startled girl
+had evidently done, a face that showed distorted and white to
+ghastliness through the window. He also recognized it, and running
+back through the hall was outside in another few seconds. Courthorne
+was leaning against one of the casements as though faint with weakness
+or pain, and collapsed when Witham dragged him backwards into the
+shadow. He had scarcely laid him down when the window was opened and
+Colonel Barrington's shoulders showed black against the light.
+
+"Come outside alone, sir," said Witham. Barrington did so, and Witham
+stood so that no light fell on the pallid face in the grass. "It's a
+man I have dealings with," he said. "He has evidently ridden out from
+the settlement and fallen from his horse."
+
+"Why should he fall?" asked the Colonel.
+
+Witham laughed. "There is a perfume about him that is tolerably
+conclusive. I was, however, on the point of going, and if you will
+tell your hired man to get my wagon out, I'll take him away quietly.
+You can make light of the affair to the others."
+
+"Yes," said Barrington. "Unless you think the man is hurt, that would
+be best, but we'll keep him if you like."
+
+"No, sir. I couldn't trouble you," said Witham hastily. "Men of his
+kind are also very hard to kill."
+
+Five minutes later he and the hired man hoisted Courthorne into the
+wagon and packed some hay about him, while, soon after the rattle of
+wheels sank into the silence of the prairie, the girl Maud Barrington
+had spoken to rejoined her companion.
+
+"Could Courthorne have seen you coming in?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said the girl, blushing. "He did."
+
+"Then it can't be helped, and, after all, Courthorne wouldn't talk,
+even if he wasn't what he is," said the lad. "You don't know why, and
+I'm not going to tell you, but it wouldn't become him."
+
+"You don't mean Maud Barrington?" asked his companion.
+
+"No," said the lad with a laugh. "Courthorne is not like me. He has no
+sense. It's quite another kind of girl, you see."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+COLONEL BARRINGTON IS CONVINCED
+
+
+It was not until early morning that Courthorne awakened from the
+stupor he sank into, soon after Witham conveyed him into his
+homestead. First, however, he asked for a little food, and ate it with
+apparent difficulty. When Witham came in, he looked up from the bed
+where he lay, with the dust still white upon his clothing, and his
+face showed grey and haggard in the creeping light.
+
+"I'm feeling a trifle better now," he said; "still, I scarcely fancy I
+could get up just yet. I gave you a little surprise last night?"
+
+Witham nodded. "You did. Of course, I knew how much your promise was
+worth, but in view of the risks you ran, I had not expected you to
+turn up at the Grange."
+
+"The risks!" said Courthorne with an unpleasant smile.
+
+"Yes," said Witham wearily; "I have a good deal on hand I would like
+to finish here, and it will not take me long, but I am quite prepared
+to give myself up now, if it is necessary."
+
+Courthorne laughed. "I don't think you need, and it wouldn't be wise.
+You see, even if you made out your innocence, which you couldn't do,
+you rendered yourself an accessory by not denouncing me long ago. I
+fancy we can come to an understanding which would be pleasanter to
+both of us."
+
+"The difficulty," said Witham, "is that an understanding is useless
+when made with a man who never keeps his word."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne dryly, "we shall gain nothing by paying each
+other compliments, and whether you believe it or otherwise, it was not
+by intention I turned up at the Grange. I was coming here from a place
+west of the settlement and you can see that I have been ill if you
+look at me. I counted too much on my strength, couldn't find a
+homestead where I could get anything to eat, and the rest may be
+accounted for by the execrable brandy I had with me. Anyway, the horse
+threw me and made off, and after lying under some willows a good deal
+of the day, I dragged myself along until I saw a house."
+
+"That," said Witham, "is beside the question. What do you want of me?
+Dollars, in all probability. Well, you will not get them."
+
+"I'm afraid I'm scarcely fit for a discussion now," said Courthorne.
+"The fact is, it hurts me to talk, and there's an aggressiveness about
+you which isn't pleasant to a badly-shaken man. Wait until this
+evening, but there is no necessity for you to ride to the outpost
+before you have heard me."
+
+"I'm not sure it would be advisable to leave you here," said Witham
+dryly.
+
+Courthorne smiled ironically. "Use your eyes. Would any one expect me
+to get up and indulge in a fresh folly? Leave me a little brandy--I
+need it--and go about your work. You'll certainly find me here when
+you want me."
+
+Witham, glancing at the man's face, considered this very probable, and
+went out. He found his cook, who could be trusted, and said to him,
+"The man yonder is tolerably sick, and you'll let him have a little
+brandy, and something to eat when he asks for it. Still, you'll bring
+the decanter away with you, and lock him in whenever you go out."
+
+The man nodded, and making a hasty breakfast, Witham, who had business
+at several outlying farms, mounted and rode away. It was evening
+before he returned, and found Courthorne lying in a big chair with a
+cigar in his hand, languidly _debonair_ but apparently ill. His face
+was curiously pallid, and his eyes dimmer than they had been, but
+there was a sardonic twinkle in them.
+
+"You take a look at the decanter," said the man, who went up with
+Witham, carrying a lamp. "He's been wanting brandy all the time, but
+it doesn't seem to have muddled him."
+
+Witham dismissed the man and sat down in front of Courthorne.
+
+"Well?" he said.
+
+Courthorne laughed. "You ought to be a witty man, though one would
+scarcely charge you with that. You surmised correctly this morning. It
+is dollars I want."
+
+"You had my answer."
+
+"Of course. Still, I don't want very many in the meanwhile, and you
+haven't heard what led up to the demand, or why I came back to you.
+You are evidently not curious, but I'm going to tell you. Soon after I
+left you, I fell very sick, and lay in the saloon of a little desolate
+settlement for days. The place was suffocating, and the wind blew the
+alkali dust in. They had only horrible brandy, and bitter water to
+drink it with, and I lay there on my back, panting, with the flies
+crawling over me. I knew if I stayed any longer it would finish me,
+and when there came a merciful cool day I got myself into the saddle
+and started off to find you. I don't quite know how I made the
+journey, and during a good deal of it I couldn't see the prairie, but
+I knew you would feel there was an obligation on you to do something
+for me. Of course, I could put it differently."
+
+Witham had as little liking for Courthorne as he had ever had, but he
+remembered the time when he had lain very sick in his lonely log hut.
+He also remembered that everything he now held belonged to this man.
+
+"You made the bargain," he said, less decisively.
+
+Courthorne nodded. "Still, I fancy one of the conditions could be
+modified. Now, if I wait for another three months I may be dead before
+the reckoning comes, and while that probably wouldn't grieve you, I
+could, when it appeared advisable, send for a magistrate and make a
+deposition."
+
+"You could," said Witham. "I have, however, something of the same kind
+in contemplation."
+
+Courthorne smiled curiously. "I don't know that it will be necessary.
+Carry me on until you have sold your crop, and then make a reasonable
+offer, and it's probable you may still keep what you have at
+Silverdale. To be quite frank, I've a notion that my time in this
+world is tolerably limited, and I want a last taste of all it has to
+offer a man of my capacities before I leave it. One is a long while
+dead, you know."
+
+Witham nodded, for he understood. He had also during the grim cares of
+the lean years known the fierce longing for one deep draught of the
+wine of pleasure, whatever it afterwards cost him.
+
+"It was that which induced you to look for a little relaxation at the
+settlement at my expense," he said. "A trifle paltry, wasn't it?"
+
+Courthorne laughed. "It seems you don't know me yet. That was a
+frolic, indulged in out of humour, for your benefit. You see, your
+role demanded a good deal more ability than you ever displayed in it,
+and it did not seem fitting that a very puritanical and priggish
+person should pose as me at Silverdale. The little affair was the one
+touch of verisimilitude about the thing. No doubt my worthy connexions
+are grieving over your lapse."
+
+"My sense of humour had never much chance of developing," said Witham
+grimly. "What is the matter with you?"
+
+"Pulmonary haemorrhage!" said Courthorne. "Perhaps it was born in me,
+but I never had much trouble until after that night in the snow at the
+river. Would you care to hear about it? We're not fond of each other,
+but after the steer-drivers I've been herding with, it's a relief to
+talk to a man of moderate intelligence."
+
+"Go on," said Witham.
+
+"Well," said Courthorne, "when the trooper was close behind me, my
+horse went through the ice, but somehow I crawled out. We were almost
+across the river, and it was snowing fast, while I had a fancy that I
+might have saved the horse but, as the trooper would probably have
+seen a mounted man, I let him go. The stream sucked him under, and,
+though you may not believe it, I felt very mean when I saw nothing but
+the hole in the ice. Then, as the troopers didn't seem inclined to
+cross, I went on through the snow, and, as it happened, blundered
+across Jardine's old shanty. There was still a little prairie hay in
+the place, and I lay in it until morning, dragging fresh armfuls
+around me as I burnt it in the stove. Did you ever spend a night, wet
+through, in a place that was ten to twenty under freezing?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham dryly. "I have done it twice."
+
+"Well," said Courthorne, "I fancy that night narrowed in my life for
+me, but I made out across the prairie in the morning, and as we had a
+good many friends up and down the country, one of them took care of
+me."
+
+Witham sat silent a while. The story had held his attention, and the
+frankness of the man who lay panting a little in his chair had its
+effect on him. There was no sound from the prairie, and the house was
+very still.
+
+"Why did you kill Shannon?" he asked at length.
+
+"Is any one quite sure of his motives?" said Courthorne. "The lad had
+done something which was difficult to forgive him, but I think I would
+have let him go if he hadn't recognized me. The world is tolerably
+good to the man who has no scruples, you see, and I took all it
+offered me, while it did not seem fitting that a clod of a trooper
+without capacity for enjoyment, or much more sensibility than the
+beast he rode, should put an end to all my opportunities. Still, it
+was only when he tried to warn his comrades he threw his last chance
+away."
+
+Witham shivered a little at the dispassionate brutality of the speech,
+and then checked the anger that came upon him.
+
+"Fate, or my own folly, has put it out of my power to denounce you
+without abandoning what I have set my heart upon, and after all it is
+not my business," he said. "I will give you five hundred dollars and
+you can go to Chicago or Montreal, and consult a specialist. If the
+money is exhausted before I send for you, I will pay your hotel bills,
+but every dollar will be deducted when we come to the reckoning."
+
+Courthorne laughed a little. "You had better make it seven-fifty. Five
+hundred dollars will not go very far with me."
+
+"Then you will have to husband them," said Witham dryly. "I am paying
+you at a rate agreed upon for the use of your land and small bank
+balance handed me, and want all of it. The rent is a fair one in face
+of the fact that a good deal of the farm consisted of virgin prairie,
+which can be had from the Government for nothing."
+
+He said nothing further, and soon after he went out Courthorne went to
+sleep, but Witham sat by an open window with a burned-out cigar in his
+hand, staring at the prairie while the night wore through, until he
+rose with a shiver in the chill of early morning to commence his task
+again.
+
+A few days later he saw Courthorne safely into a sleeping car with a
+ticket for Chicago in his pocket, and felt that a load had been lifted
+off his shoulders when the train rolled out of the little prairie
+station. Another week had passed, when, riding home one evening, he
+stopped at the Grange, and, as it happened, found Maud Barrington
+alone. She received him without any visible restraint, but he realized
+that all that had passed at their last meeting was to be tacitly
+ignored.
+
+"Has your visitor recovered yet?" she asked.
+
+"So far as to leave my place, and I was not anxious to keep him," said
+Witham with a little laugh. "I am sorry he disturbed you."
+
+Maud Barrington seemed thoughtful. "I can scarcely think the man was
+to blame."
+
+"No?" said Witham.
+
+The girl looked at him curiously, and shook her head. "No," she said.
+"I heard my uncle's explanation, but it was not convincing. I saw the
+man's face."
+
+It was several seconds before Witham answered, and then he took the
+bold course.
+
+"Well?" he said.
+
+Maud Barrington made a curious little gesture. "I knew I had seen it
+before at the bridge, but that was not all. It was vaguely familiar,
+and I felt I ought to know it. It reminded me of somebody."
+
+"Of me?" and Witham laughed.
+
+"No. There was a resemblance, but it was very superficial. That man's
+face had little in common with yours."
+
+"These faint likenesses are not unusual," said Witham, and once more
+Maud Barrington looked at him steadily.
+
+"No," she said. "Of course not. Well, we will conclude that my fancies
+ran away with me, and be practical. What is wheat doing just now?"
+
+"Rising still," said Witham, and regretted the alacrity with which he
+had seized the opportunity of changing the topic when he saw that it
+had not escaped the notice of his companion. "You and I and a few
+others will be rich this year."
+
+"Yes, but I am afraid some of the rest will find it has only further
+anxieties for them."
+
+"I fancy," said Witham, "you are thinking of one."
+
+Maud Barrington nodded. "Yes; I am sorry for him."
+
+"Then it would please you if I tried to straighten out things for him?
+It would be difficult, but I believe it could be accomplished."
+
+Maud Barrington's eyes were grateful, but there was something that
+Witham could not fathom behind her smile.
+
+"If you undertook it. One could almost believe you had the wonderful
+lamp," she said.
+
+Witham smiled somewhat dryly. "Then all its virtues will be tested
+to-night, and I had better make a commencement while I have the
+courage. Colonel Barrington is in?"
+
+Maud Barrington went with him to the door, and then laid her hand a
+moment on his arm. "Lance," she said, with a little tremor in her
+voice, "if there was a time when our distrust hurt you, it has
+recoiled upon our heads. You have returned it with a splendid
+generosity."
+
+Witham did not trust himself to answer, but walked straight to
+Barrington's room, and finding the door open went quietly in. The head
+of the Silverdale settlement was sitting at a littered table in front
+of a shaded lamp, and the light that fell upon it showed the care in
+his face. It grew a trifle grimmer when he saw the younger man.
+
+"Will you sit down?" he said. "I have been looking for a visit from
+you for some little time. It would have been more fitting had you made
+it earlier."
+
+Witham nodded as he took a chair. "I fancy I understand you, but I
+have nothing that you expect to hear to tell you, sir."
+
+"That," said Barrington, "is unfortunate. Now, it is not my business
+to pose as a censor on the conduct of any man here, except when it
+affects the community, but their friends have sent out a good many
+young English lads, some of whom have not been too discreet in the old
+country, to me. They did not do so solely that I might teach them
+farming. A charge of that kind is no light responsibility, and I look
+for assistance from the men who have almost as large a stake as I have
+in the prosperity of Silverdale."
+
+"Have you ever seen me do anything you could consider prejudicial to
+it?" asked Witham.
+
+"I have not," said Colonel Barrington.
+
+"And it was by her own wish Miss Barrington, who, I fancy, is seldom
+mistaken, asked me to the Grange?"
+
+"Is is a good plea," said Barrington. "I cannot question anything my
+sister does."
+
+"Then we will let it pass, though I am afraid you will consider what I
+am going to ask a further presumption. You have forward wheat to
+deliver, and find it difficult to obtain it?"
+
+Barrington's smile was somewhat grim. "In both cases you have surmised
+correctly."
+
+Witham nodded. "Still, it is not mere inquisitiveness, sir. I fancy I
+am the only man at Silverdale who can understand your difficulties,
+and, what is more to the point, suggest a means of obviating them. You
+still expect to buy at lower prices before the time to make delivery
+comes?"
+
+Again the care crept into Barrington's face, and he sat silent for
+almost a minute. Then he said, very slowly, "I feel that I should
+resent the question, but I will answer. It is what I hope to do."
+
+"Well," said Witham, "I am afraid you will find prices higher still.
+There is very little wheat in Minnesota this year, and what there was
+in Dakota was cut down by hail. Millers in St. Paul and Minneapolis
+are anxious already, and there is talk of a big corner in Chicago.
+Nobody is offering again, while you know what land lies fallow in
+Manitoba, and the activity of their brokers shows the fears of
+Winnipeg millers with contracts on hand. This is not my opinion alone.
+I can convince you from the papers and market reports I see before
+you."
+
+Barrington could not controvert the unpleasant truth he was still
+endeavouring to shut his eyes to. "The demand from the East may
+slacken," he said.
+
+Witham shook his head. "Russia can give them nothing. There was a
+failure in the Indian monsoon, and South American crops were small.
+Now, I am going to take a further liberty. How much are you short?"
+
+Barrington was never sure why he told him, but he was hard pressed
+then, and there was a quiet forcefulness about the younger man that
+had its effect on him. "That," he said, holding out a document, "is
+the one contract I have not covered."
+
+Witham glanced at it. "The quantity is small. Still, money is very
+scarce, and bank interest almost extortionate just now."
+
+Barrington flushed a trifle, and there was anger in his face. He knew
+the fact that his loss on this sale should cause him anxiety was
+significant, and that Witham had surmised the condition of his
+finances tolerably correctly.
+
+"Have you not gone quite far enough?" he said.
+
+Witham nodded. "I fancy I need ask no more, sir. You can scarcely buy
+the wheat, and the banks will advance nothing further on what you have
+to offer at Silverdale. It would be perilous to put yourself in the
+hands of a mortgage-broker."
+
+Barrington stood up very grim and straight, and there were not many
+men at Silverdale who would have met his gaze.
+
+"Your content is a little too apparent, but I can still resent an
+impertinence," he said. "Are my affairs your business?"
+
+"Sit down, sir," said Witham. "I fancy they are, and had it not been
+necessary, I would not have ventured so far. You have done much for
+Silverdale, and it had cost you a good deal, while it seems to me that
+every man here has a duty to the head of the settlement. I am,
+however, not going to urge that point, but have, as you know, a
+propensity for taking risks. I can't help it. It was probably born in
+me. Now, I will take that contract up for you."
+
+Barrington gazed at him in bewildered astonishment. "But you would
+lose on it heavily. How could you overcome a difficulty that is too
+great for me?"
+
+"Well," said Witham with a little smile, "it seems I have some ability
+in dealing with these affairs."
+
+Barrington did not answer for a while, and when he spoke it was
+slowly. "You have a wonderful capacity for making any one believe in
+you."
+
+"That is not the point," said Witham. "If you will let me have the
+contract, or, and it comes to the same thing, buy the wheat it calls
+for, and if advisable sell as much again, exactly as I tell you, at my
+risk and expense, I shall get what I want out of it. My affairs are a
+trifle complicated, and it would take some little time to make you
+understand how this would suit me. In the meanwhile you can give me a
+mere I O U for the difference between what you sold at, and the price
+to-day, to be paid without interest and whenever it suits you. It
+isn't very formal, but you will have to trust me."
+
+Barrington moved twice up and down the room before he turned to the
+younger man. "Lance," he said, "when you first came here, any deal of
+this kind between us would have been out of the question. Now, it is
+only your due to tell you that I have been wrong from the beginning,
+and you have a good deal to forgive."
+
+"I think we need not go into that," said Witham, with a little smile.
+"This is a business deal, and if it hadn't suited me I would not have
+made it."
+
+He went out in another few minutes with a little strip of paper, and
+just before he left the Grange placed it in Maud Barrington's hand.
+
+"You will not ask any questions, but if ever Colonel Barrington is not
+kind to you, you can show him that," he said.
+
+He had gone in another moment, but the girl, comprehending dimly what
+he had done, stood still, staring at the paper with a warmth in her
+cheeks and a mistiness in her eyes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+SERGEANT STIMSON CONFIRMS HIS SUSPICIONS
+
+
+It was late in the afternoon when Colonel Barrington drove up to
+Witham's homestead. He had his niece and sister with him, and when he
+pulled up his team, all three were glad of the little breeze that came
+down from the blueness of the north and rippled the whitened grass. It
+had blown over leagues of sun-bleached prairie, and the great
+desolation beyond the pines of the Saskatchewan, but had not wholly
+lost the faint wholesome chill it brought from the Pole.
+
+There was no cloud in the vault of ether, and slanting sunrays beat
+fiercely down upon the prairie, until the fibrous dust grew fiery, and
+the eyes ached from the glare of the vast stretch of silvery grey. The
+latter was, however, relieved by stronger colour in front of the
+party, for, blazing gold on the dazzling stubble, the oat sheaves
+rolled away in long rows that diminished and melted into each other,
+until they cut the blue of the sky in a delicate filigree. Oats had
+moved up in value in sympathy with wheat, and the good soil had most
+abundantly redeemed its promise that year. Colonel Barrington,
+however, sighed a little as he looked at them, and remembered that
+such a harvest might have been his.
+
+"We will get down and walk towards the wheat," he said. "It is a good
+crop, and Lance is to be envied."
+
+"Still," said Miss Barrington, "he deserved it, and those sheaves
+stand for more than the toil that brought them there."
+
+"Of course!" said the Colonel with a curious little smile. "For
+rashness, I fancied, when they showed the first blade above the clod,
+but I am less sure of it now. Well, the wheat is even finer."
+
+A man who came up took charge of the horses, and the party walked in
+silence towards the wheat. It stretched before them in a vast
+parallelogram, and while the oats were the pale gold of the austral,
+there was the tint of the ruddier metal of their own North-West in
+this. It stood tall and stately, murmuring as the sea does, until it
+rolled before a stronger puff of breeze in waves of ochre, through
+which the warm bronze gleamed when its rhythmic patter swelled into
+deeper-toned harmonies. There was that in the elfin music and blaze of
+colour which appealed to sensual ear and eye, and something which
+struck deeper still, as it did in the days men poured libations on the
+fruitful soil, and white-robed priest blessed it, when the world was
+young.
+
+Maud Barrington felt it vaguely, but she recognized more clearly, as
+her aunt had done, the faith and daring of the sower. The earth was
+very bountiful, but that wheat had not come there of itself; and she
+knew the man who had called it up had done more than bear his share of
+the primeval curse which, however, was apparently more or less evaded
+at Silverdale. Even when the issue appeared hopeless, the courage that
+held him resolute in face of other's fears, and the greatness of his
+projects, had appealed to her, and it almost counted for less that he
+had achieved success. Then, glancing further across the billowing
+grain she saw him--still, as it seemed it had always been with him,
+amidst the stress and dust of strenuous endeavour.
+
+Once more, as she had seen them when the furrows were bare at seed
+time, and there was apparently only ruin in store for those who raised
+the Eastern people's bread, lines of dusty teams came plodding down
+the rise. They advanced in echelon, keeping their time and distance
+with a military precision; but in place of the harrows the tossing
+arms of the binders flashed and swung. The wheat went down before
+them, their wake was strewn with gleaming sheaves, and one man came
+foremost, swaying in the driving-seat of a rattling machine. His face
+was the colour of a Blackfoot's, and she could see the darkness of his
+neck above the loose-fronted shirt and a bare blackened arm that was
+raised to hold the tired beasts to their task. Their trampling and the
+crash and rattle that swelled in slow crescendo drowned the murmur of
+the wheat, until one of the machines stood still, and the leader,
+turning a moment in his saddle, held up a hand. Then those that came
+behind swung into changed formation, passed, and fell into indented
+line again, while Colonel Barrington nodded with grim approval.
+
+"It is very well done," he said. "The best of harvesters! No newcomers
+yonder. They're capable Manitoba men. I don't know where he got them,
+and, in any other year, one would have wondered where he would find
+the means of paying them. We have never seen farming of this kind at
+Silverdale."
+
+He seemed to sigh a little, while his hand closed on the bridle; and
+Maud Barrington fancied she understood his thoughts just then.
+
+"Nobody can be always right, and the good years do not come alone,"
+she said. "You will plough every acre next one."
+
+Barrington smiled dryly. "I'm afraid that will be a little late, my
+dear. Any one can follow, but since, when everybody's crop is good,
+the price comes down, the man who gets the prize is the one who shows
+the way."
+
+"He was content to face the risk," said Miss Barrington.
+
+"Of course," said the Colonel quietly. "I should be the last to make
+light of his foresight and courage. Indeed, I am glad I can
+acknowledge it, in more ways than one, for I have felt lately that I
+am getting an old man. Still, there is one with greater capacities
+ready to step into my shoes; and though it was long before I could
+overcome my prejudice against him, I think I should now be content to
+let him have them. Whatever Lance may have been, he was born a
+gentleman, and blood is bound to tell."
+
+Maud Barrington, who was of a patrician parentage, and would not at
+one time have questioned this assertion, wondered why she felt less
+sure of it just then.
+
+"But if he had not been, would not what he has done be sufficient to
+vouch for him?" she said.
+
+Barrington smiled a little, and the girl felt that her question was
+useless as she glanced at him. He sat very straight in his saddle,
+immaculate in dress, with a gloved hand on his hip and a stamp which
+he had inherited, with the thinly-covered pride that usually
+accompanies it, from generations of a similar type, on his clean-cut
+face. It was evidently needless to look for any sympathy with that
+view from him.
+
+"My dear," he said, "there are things at which the others can beat us;
+but, after all, I do not think they are worth the most; and while
+Lance has occasionally exhibited a few undesirable characteristics, no
+doubt acquired in this country, and has not been always blameless, the
+fact that he is a Courthorne at once covers and accounts for a good
+deal."
+
+Then Witham recognized them, and made a sign to one of the men behind
+him as he hauled his binder clear of the wheat. He had dismounted in
+another minute and came towards them, with the jacket he had not
+wholly succeeded in struggling into loose about his shoulders.
+
+"It is almost time I gave my team a rest," he said. "Will you come
+with me to the house?"
+
+"No," said Colonel Barrington. "We only stopped in passing. The crop
+will harvest well."
+
+"Yes," said Witham, turning with a little smile to Miss Barrington.
+"Better than I expected, and prices are still moving up. You will
+remember, madam, who it was wished me good fortune. It has undeniably
+come!"
+
+"Then," said the white-haired lady, "next year I will do as much
+again, though it will be a little unnecessary, because you have my
+good wishes all the time. Still, you are too prosaic to fancy they can
+have anything to do with--this."
+
+She pointed to the wheat, but though Witham smiled again, there was a
+curious expression in his face as he glanced at her niece.
+
+"I certainly do, and your good-will has made a greater difference than
+you realize to me," he said.
+
+Miss Barrington looked at him steadily. "Lance," she said, "there is
+something about you and your speeches that occasionally puzzles me.
+Now, of course, that was the only rejoinder you could make, but I
+fancied you meant it."
+
+"I did," said Witham, with a trace of grimness in his smile. "Still,
+isn't it better to tell any one too little rather than too much?"
+
+"Well," said Miss Barrington, "you are going to be franker with me by
+and by. Now, my brother has been endeavouring to convince us that you
+owe your success to qualities inherited from bygone Courthornes."
+
+Witham did not answer for a moment and then he laughed. "I fancy
+Colonel Barrington is wrong," he said. "Don't you think there are
+latent capabilities in every man, though only one here and there gets
+an opportunity of using them? In any case, wouldn't it be pleasanter
+for any one to feel that his virtues were his own and not those of his
+family?"
+
+Miss Barrington's eyes twinkled but she shook her head. "That," she
+said, "would be distinctly wrong of him, but I fancy it is time we
+were getting on."
+
+In another few minutes Colonel Barrington took up the reins, and as
+they drove slowly past the wheat his niece had another view of the
+toiling teams. They were moving on tirelessly with their leader in
+front of them, and the rasp of the knives, trample of hoofs, and clash
+of the binders' wooden arms once more stirred her. She had heard those
+sounds often before, and attached no significance to them; but now she
+knew a little of the stress and effort that preceded them; she could
+hear through the turmoil the exultant note of victory.
+
+Then the wagon rolled more slowly up the rise and had passed from
+view behind it when a mounted man rode up to Witham with an envelope
+in his hand.
+
+"Mr. Macdonald was in at the settlement, and the telegraph clerk gave
+it him," he said. "He told me to come along with it."
+
+Witham opened the message, and his face grew grim as he read, "Send me
+five hundred dollars. Urgent."
+
+Then he thrust it into his pocket and went on with his harvesting,
+when he had thanked the man. He also worked until dusk was creeping up
+across the prairie before he concerned himself further about the
+affair; and then the note he wrote was laconic.
+
+"Enclosed you will find fifty dollars, sent only because you may be
+ill. In case of necessity, you can forward your doctor's or hotel
+bills," it ran.
+
+It was with a wry smile he watched the man ride off towards the
+settlement with it. "I shall not be sorry when the climax comes," he
+said. "The strain is telling."
+
+In the meanwhile, Sergeant Stimson had been quietly renewing his
+acquaintance with certain ranchers and herders of sheep scattered
+across the Albertan prairie some six hundred miles away. They found
+him more communicative and cordial than he used to be, and with one or
+two he unbent so far as, in the face of regulations, to refresh
+himself with whisky which had contributed nothing to the Canadian
+revenue. Now, the lonely ranchers have, as a rule, few opportunities
+of friendly talk with anybody, and as they responded to the sergeant's
+geniality, he became acquainted with a good many facts, some of which
+confirmed certain vague suspicions of his, though others astonished
+him. In consequence of this, he rode out one night with two or three
+troopers of a Western squadron.
+
+His apparent business was somewhat prosaic. Musquash, the Blackfoot,
+in place of remaining quietly on his reserve, had in a state of
+inebriation reverted to the primitive customs of his race, and taking
+the trail not only annexed some of his white neighbours' ponies and
+badly frightened their wives, but drove off a steer with which he
+feasted his people. The owner, following, came upon the hide, and
+Musquash, seeing it was too late to remove the brand from it,
+expressed his contrition, and pleaded in extenuation that he was
+rather worthy of sympathy than blame, because he would never have laid
+hands on what was not his had not a white man sold him deleterious
+liquor. As no white man is allowed to supply an Indian with alcohol in
+any form, the wardens of the prairie took a somewhat similar view of
+the case; and Stimson was, from motives which he did not mention,
+especially anxious to get his grip upon the other offender.
+
+The night when they rode out was very dark, and they spent half of it
+beneath a birch bluff, seeing nothing whatever, and only hearing a
+coyote howl. It almost appeared that there was something wrong with
+the information supplied them respecting the probable running of
+another load of prohibited whisky, and towards morning Stimson rode up
+to the young commissioned officer.
+
+"The man who brought us word has either played their usual trick and
+sent us here while his friends take the other trail, or somebody saw
+us ride out and went south to tell the boys," he said. "Now, you might
+consider it advisable that I and one of the troopers should head for
+the ford at Willow Hollow, sir."
+
+"Yes," said the young officer, who was quite aware that there was as
+yet many things connected with his duties he did not know. "Now I come
+to think of it, Sergeant, I do. We'll give you two hours, and then, if
+you don't turn up, ride over after you; it's condemnably shivery
+waiting for nothing here."
+
+Stimson saluted and shook his bridle, and rather less than an hour
+later faintly discerned a rattle of wheels that rose from a long way
+off across the prairie. Then he used the spur, and by and by it became
+evident that the drumming of their horses' feet had carried far, for
+though the rattle grew a little louder there was no doubt that whoever
+drove the wagon had no desire to be overtaken. Still, two horses
+cannot haul a vehicle over a rutted trail as fast as one can carry a
+man, and when the wardens of the prairie raced towards the black wall
+of birches that rose higher in front of them, the sound of wheels
+seemed very near. It, however, ceased suddenly, and was followed by a
+drumming that could only have been made by a galloping horse.
+
+"One beast!" said the Sergeant. "Well, they'd have two men, anyway, in
+that wagon. Get down and picket. We'll find the other fellow
+somewhere in the bluff."
+
+They came upon him within five minutes endeavouring to cut loose the
+remaining horse from the entangled harness in such desperate haste
+that he did not hear them until Stimson grasped his shoulder.
+
+"Hold out your hands," he said. "You have your carbine ready,
+trooper?"
+
+The man made no resistance, and Stimson laughed when the handcuffs
+were on.
+
+"Now," he said, "where's your partner?"
+
+"I don't know that I mind telling you," said the prisoner. "It was a
+low down trick he played on me. We got down to take out the horses,
+when we saw we couldn't get away from you, and I'd a blanket girthed
+round the best of them, when he said he'd hold him while I tried what
+I could do with the other. Well, I let him, and the first thing I knew
+he was off at a gallop, leaving me with the other kicking devil two
+men couldn't handle. You'll find him rustling south over the Montana
+trail."
+
+"Mount and ride!" said Stimson, and when his companion galloped off
+turned once more to his prisoner.
+
+"You'll have a lantern somewhere, and I'd like a look at you," he
+said. "If you're the man I expect, I'm glad I found you."
+
+"It's in the wagon," said the other dejectedly.
+
+Stimson got a light, and when he had released and picketed the
+plunging horse, held it so that he could see his prisoner. Then he
+nodded with evident contentment.
+
+"You may as well sit down. We've got to have a talk," he said.
+
+"Well," said the other, "I'd help you to catch Harmon if I could, but
+I can prove he hired me to drive him over to Kemp's in the wagon, and
+you'd find it difficult to show I knew what there was in the packages
+he took along."
+
+Stimson smiled dryly. "Still," he said, "I think it could be done, and
+I've another count against you. You had one or two deals with the boys
+some little while ago."
+
+"I'm not afraid of your fixing up against me anything I did then,"
+said the other man.
+
+"No?" said Stimson. "Now, I guess you're wrong, and it might be a good
+deal more serious than whisky-running. One night a man crawled up to
+your homestead through the snow, and you took him in."
+
+He saw the sudden fear in his companion's face before he turned it
+from the lantern.
+
+"It has happened quite a few times," said the latter. "We don't turn
+any stranger out in this country."
+
+"Of course!" said the Sergeant gravely, though he felt a little thrill
+of content as he saw the shot, he had been by no means sure of, had
+told. "That man, however, had lost his horse in the river, and it was
+the one he got from you that took him out of the country. Now, if we
+could show you knew what he had done, it might go as far as hanging
+somebody."
+
+The man was evidently not a confirmed law-breaker, but merely one of
+the small farmers who were willing to pick up a few dollars by
+assisting the whisky-runners now and then, and he abandoned all
+resistance.
+
+"Sergeant," he said, "it was most a week before I knew, and if anybody
+had told me at the time I'd have turned him out to freeze before I'd
+have let him have a horse of mine."
+
+"That wouldn't go very far if we brought the charge against you," said
+Stimson grimly. "If you'd sent us word when you did know, we'd have
+had him."
+
+"Well," said the man, "he was across the frontier by that time, and I
+don't know that most folks would have done it, if they'd had the
+warning the boys sent me."
+
+Stimson appeared to consider for almost a minute, and then gravely
+rapped his companion's arm.
+
+"It seems to me that the sooner you and I have an understanding, the
+better it will be for you," he said.
+
+They were some time arriving at it, and the Sergeant's superiors might
+not have been pleased with all he promised during the discussion.
+Still, he was flying at higher game and had to sacrifice a little,
+while he knew his man.
+
+"We'll fix it up without you, as far as we can; but if we want you to
+give evidence that the man who lost his horse in the river was not
+Farmer Witham, we'll know where to find you," he said. "You'll have to
+take your chance of being tried with him, if we find you trying to get
+out of the country."
+
+It was half an hour later when the rest of the troopers arrived, and
+Stimson had some talk with their officer aside.
+
+"A little out of the usual course, isn't it?" said the latter. "I
+don't know that I'd have countenanced it, so to speak, off my own bat
+at all, but I had a tolerably plain hint that you were to use your
+discretion over this affair. After all, one has to stretch a point or
+two occasionally."
+
+"Yes, sir," said Stimson; "a good many now and then."
+
+The officer smiled a little and went back to the rest. "Two of you
+will ride after the other rascal," he said. "Now look here, my man;
+the first time my troopers, who'll call round quite frequently, don't
+find you about your homestead, you'll land yourself in a tolerably
+serious difficulty. In the meanwhile, I'm sorry we can't bring a
+charge of whisky-running against you, but another time be careful who
+you hire your wagon to."
+
+Then there was a rapid drumming of hoofs as two troopers went off at a
+gallop, while when the rest turned back towards the outpost, Stimson
+rode with them, quietly content.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE REVELATION
+
+
+Witham's harvesting prospered as his sowing had done, for day by day
+the bright sunshine shone down on standing wheat and lengthening rows
+of sheaves. It was in the bracing cold of sunrise the work began, and
+the first pale stars were out before the tired men and jaded horses
+dragged themselves home again. Not infrequently it happened that the
+men wore out the teams and machines, but there was no stoppage then,
+for fresh horses were led out from the corral or a new binder was
+ready. Every minute was worth a dollar, and Witham, who had apparently
+foreseen and provided for everything, wasted none.
+
+Then--for wheat is seldom stacked in that country--as the days grew
+shorter and the evenings cool, the smoke of the big thrasher streaked
+the harvest field, and the wagons went jolting between humming
+separator and granary, until the latter was gorged to repletion, and
+the wheat was stored within a willow framing beneath the chaff and
+straw that streamed from the shoot of the great machine. Witham had
+round him the best men that dollars could hire, and toiled tirelessly
+with the grimy host in the whirling dust of the thrasher and amidst
+the sheaves, wherever another pair of hands, or the quick decision
+that would save an hour's delay, was needed most.
+
+As compared with the practice of insular Britain, there were not half
+enough of them; but wages are high in that country, and the crew of
+the thrasher paid by the bushel, while the rest had long worked for
+their own hand on the levels of Manitoba and in the bush of Ontario,
+and knew that the sooner their toil was over the sooner they would go
+home again with well-lined pockets. So, generously fed, splendid human
+muscle kept pace with clinking steel under a stress that is seldom
+borne outside the sun-bleached prairie at harvest time, and Witham
+forgot everything save the constant need for the utmost effort of body
+and brain. It was even of little import to him that prices moved
+steadily upwards as he toiled.
+
+At last it was finished, and only knee-high stubble covered his land
+and that of Maud Barrington; while--for he was one who could venture
+fearlessly and still know when he had risked enough--soon after it was
+thrashed out the wheat was sold. The harvesters went home with enough
+to maintain them through the winter; and Witham, who spent two days
+counting his gain, wrote asking Graham to send him an accountant from
+Winnipeg. With him he spent a couple more, and then, with an effort he
+was never to forget, prepared himself for the reckoning. It was time
+to fling off the mask before the eyes of all who had trusted him.
+
+He had thought over it carefully, and his first decision had been to
+make the revelation alone to Colonel Barrington. That, however, would,
+he felt be too simple, and his pride rebelled against anything that
+would stamp him as one who dare not face the men he had deceived. One
+by one they had tacitly offered him their friendship and then their
+esteem, until he knew that he was virtually leader at Silverdale; and
+it seemed fitting that he should admit the wrong he had done them, and
+bear the obloquy before them all. For a while the thought of Maud
+Barrington restrained him, and then he brushed that aside. He had
+fancied with masculine blindness that what he felt for her had been
+well concealed, and that her attitude to him could be no more than
+kindly sympathy with one who was endeavouring to atone for a
+discreditable past. Her anger and astonishment would be hard to bear,
+but once more his pride prompted him, and he decided that she should
+at least see he had the courage to face the results of his
+wrong-doing. As it happened, he was also given an opportunity when he
+was invited to the harvest celebration that was held each year at
+Silverdale.
+
+It was a still, cool evening when every man of the community, and most
+of the women gathered in the big dining-room of the Grange. The
+windows were shut now, for the chill of the early frost was on the
+prairie, and the great lamps burned steadily above the long tables.
+Cut glass, dainty china and silver gleamed beneath them amidst the
+ears of wheat that stood in clusters for sole and appropriate
+ornamentation. They merited the place of honour, for wheat had brought
+prosperity to every man at Silverdale who had had the faith to sow
+that year.
+
+On either hand were rows of smiling faces: the men's burned and
+bronzed, the women's kissed into faintly warmer colour by the sun, and
+white shoulders shone amidst the sombrely covered ones, while here and
+there a diamond gleamed on a snowy neck. Barrington sat at the head of
+the longest table, with his niece and sister, Dane, and his oldest
+followers about him, and Witham at its foot, dressed very simply after
+the usual fashion of the prairie farmers. There were few in the
+company who had not noticed this, though they did not as yet
+understand its purport.
+
+Nothing happened during dinner, but Maud Barrington noticed that
+although some of his younger neighbours rallied him, Witham was grimly
+quiet. When it was over, Barrington rose, and the men who knew the
+care he had borne that year never paid him more willing homage than
+they did when he stood smiling down on them. As usual, he was
+immaculate in dress, erect, and quietly commanding; but, in spite of
+its smile, his face seemed worn, and there were thickening wrinkles,
+which told of anxiety, about his eyes.
+
+"Another year has gone, and we have met again to celebrate with
+gratefulness the fulfilment of the promise made when the world was
+young," he said. "We do well to be thankful, but I think humility
+becomes us, too. While we doubted, the sun and the rain have been with
+us for a sign that, though men grow faint-hearted and spare their
+toil, seed time and harvest shall not fail."
+
+It was the first time Colonel Barrington had spoken in quite that
+strain, and when he paused a moment there was a curious stillness, for
+those who heard him noticed an unusual tremor in his voice. There was
+also a gravity that was not far removed from sadness in his face when
+he went on again, but the intentness of his retainers would have been
+greater had they known that two separate detachments of police
+troopers were then riding toward Silverdale.
+
+"The year has brought its changes and set its mark deeply on some of
+us," he said. "We cannot recall it, or retrieve our blunders, but we
+can hope they will be forgiven us, and endeavour to avoid them again.
+This is not the fashion in which I had meant to speak to you to-night,
+but after the bounty showered upon us I feel my responsibility. The
+law is unchangeable. The man who would have bread to eat or sell must
+toil for it, and I, in disregard of it, bade you hold your hand. Well,
+we have had our lesson, and we will be wiser another time; but I have
+felt that my usefulness as your leader is slipping away from me. This
+year has shown me that I am getting an old man."
+
+Dane kicked the foot of a lad beside him, and glanced at the piano as
+he stood up.
+
+"Sir," he said simply, "although we have differed about trifles and
+may do again, we don't want a better one--and if we did, we couldn't
+find him."
+
+A chord from the piano rang through the approving murmurs, and the
+company rose to their feet before the lad had beaten out the first bar
+of the jingling rhythm. Then the voices took it up, and the great hall
+shook to the rafters with the last "Nobody can deny."
+
+Trite as it was, Barrington saw the darker flush in the bronzed faces,
+and there was a shade of warmer colour in his own as he went on again.
+
+"The things one feels the most are those one can least express, and I
+will not try to tell you how I value your confidence," he said.
+"Still, the fact remains that sooner or later I must let the reins
+fall into younger hands, and there is a man here who will, I fancy,
+lead you farther than you would ever go with me. Times change, and he
+can teach you how those who would do the most for the Dominion need
+live to-day. He is also, and I am glad of it, one of us, for
+traditions do not wholly lose their force, and we know that blood will
+tell. That this year has not ended hi disaster irretrievable is due to
+our latest comrade, Lance Courthorne."
+
+This time there were no musical honours or need of them, for a shout
+went up that called forth an answering rattle from the cedar
+panelling. It was flung back from table to table up and down the great
+room, and when the men sat down flushed and breathless, their eyes
+still shining, the one they admitted had saved Silverdale rose up
+quietly at the foot of the table. The hand he laid on the snowy cloth
+shook a little, and the bronze that generally suffused it was less
+noticeable in his face. All who saw it felt that something unusual was
+coming, and Maud Barrington leaned forward a trifle with a curious
+throbbing of her heart.
+
+"Comrades! It is, I think, the last time you will hear the term from
+me," he said--"I am glad that we have made and won a good fight at
+Silverdale, because it may soften your most warranted resentment when
+you think of me."
+
+Every eye was turned upon him, and an expression of bewilderment crept
+into the faces, while a lad who sat next to him touched his arm
+reassuringly.
+
+"You'll feel your feet in a moment, but that's a curious fashion of
+putting it," he said.
+
+Witham turned to Barrington, and stood silent a moment. He saw Maud
+Barrington's face showing strained and intent, but less bewildered
+than the others, and that of her aunt, which seemed curiously
+impassive, and a little thrill ran through him. It passed, and once
+more he only saw the leader of Silverdale.
+
+"Sir," he said, "I did you a wrong when I came here, and with your
+convictions you would never tolerate me as your successor."
+
+There was a rustle of fabric as some of the women moved, and a murmur
+of uncontrollable astonishment, while those who noticed it remembered
+Barrington's gasp. It expressed absolute bewilderment, but in another
+moment he smiled.
+
+"Sit down, Lance," he said. "You need make no speeches. We expect
+better things from you."
+
+Witham stood very still. "It was the simple truth I told you, sir," he
+said. "Don't make it too hard for me."
+
+Just then there was a disturbance at the rear of the room, and a man,
+who shook off the grasp of one that followed him, came in. He moved
+forward with uneven steps, and then, resting his hand on a chair-back,
+faced about and looked at Witham. The dust was thick upon his clothes,
+but it was his face that seized and held attention. It was horribly
+pallid, save for the flush that showed in either cheek, and his
+half-closed eyes were dazed.
+
+"I heard them cheering," he said. "Couldn't find you at your
+homestead. You should have sent the five hundred dollars. They would
+have saved you this."
+
+The defective utterance would alone have attracted attention, and,
+with the man's attitude, was very significant, but it was equally
+evident to most of those who watched him that he was also struggling
+with some infirmity. Western hospitality has, however, no limit, and
+one of the younger men drew out a chair.
+
+"Hadn't you better sit down, and if you want anything to eat we'll get
+it you," he said. "Then you can tell us what your errand is."
+
+The man made a gesture of negation, and pointed to Witham.
+
+"I came to find a friend of mine. They told me at his homestead that
+he was here," he said.
+
+There was an impressive silence, until Colonel Barrington glanced at
+Witham, who still stood, quietly impassive, at the foot of the table.
+
+"You know our visitor?" he said. "The Grange is large enough to give a
+stranger shelter."
+
+The man laughed. "Of course, he does! It's my place he's living in!"
+
+Barrington turned again to Witham and his face seemed to have grown a
+trifle stern.
+
+"Who is this man?" he said.
+
+Witham looked steadily in front of him, vacantly noticing the rows of
+faces turned towards him under the big lamps. "If he had waited a few
+minutes longer, you would have known," he said. "He is Lance
+Courthorne!"
+
+This time the murmurs implied incredulity, but the man who stood
+swaying a little with his hand on the chair, and a smile in his
+half-closed eyes, made an ironical inclination.
+
+"It's evident you don't believe it, or wish to. Still, it's true," he
+said.
+
+One of the men nearest him rose and quietly pushed him into the chair.
+
+"Sit down in the meanwhile," he said dryly. "By and by, Colonel
+Barrington will talk to you."
+
+Barrington thanked him with a gesture, and glanced at the rest. "One
+would have preferred to carry out this inquiry more privately," he
+said, very slowly, but with hoarse distinctness. "Still, you have
+already heard so much."
+
+Dane nodded. "I fancy you are right, sir. Because we have known and
+respected the man who has, at least, done a good deal for us, it would
+be better that we should hear the rest."
+
+Barrington made a little gesture of agreement, and once more fixed his
+eyes on Witham. "Then will you tell us who you are?"
+
+"A struggling prairie farmer," said Witham quietly. "The son of an
+English country doctor, who died in penury, and one who, from your
+point of view, could never have been entitled to more than courteous
+toleration from any of you."
+
+He stopped, but--for the astonishment was passing--there was negation
+in the murmurs which followed, while somebody said, "Go on!"
+
+Dane stood up. "I fancy our comrade is mistaken," he said. "Whatever
+he may have been, we recognize our debt to him. Still, I think he owes
+us a more complete explanation."
+
+Then Maud Barrington, sitting where all could see her, signed
+imperiously to Alfreton, who was on his feet next moment, with
+Macdonald and more of the men following him.
+
+"I," he said with a little ring in his voice and a flush in his young
+face, "owe him everything, and I'm not the only one. This, it seems to
+me, is the time to acknowledge it."
+
+Barrington checked him with a gesture. "Sit down, all of you. Painful
+and embarrassing as it is, now we have gone so far, this affair must
+be elucidated. It would be better if you told us more."
+
+Witham drew back a chair, and when Courthorne moved, the man who sat
+next to him laid a grasp on his arm. "You will oblige me by not making
+any remarks just now," he said dryly. "When Colonel Barrington wants
+to hear anything from you he'll ask you."
+
+"There is little more," said Witham. "I could see no hope in the old
+country, and came out to this one with one hundred pounds, a distant
+connexion lent me. That sum will not go very far anywhere, as I found
+when, after working for other men, I bought stock and took up
+Government land. To hear how I tried to do three men's work for six
+weary years, and at times went for months together half-fed, might not
+interest you, though it has its bearing on what came after. The
+seasons were against me, and I had not the dollars to tide me over the
+time of drought and blizzard until a good one came. Still, though my
+stock died, and I could scarcely haul in the little wheat the frost
+and hail left me, with my worn-out team, I held on, feeling that I
+could achieve prosperity if I once had the chances of other men."
+
+He stopped a moment, and Macdonald poured out a glass of wine and
+passed it across to him in a fashion that made the significance of
+what he did evident.
+
+"We know what kind of a struggle you made by what we have seen at
+Silverdale," he said.
+
+Witham put the glass aside, and turned once more to Colonel
+Barrington.
+
+"Still," he said, "until Courthorne crossed my path, I had done no
+wrong, and I was in dire need of the money that tempted me to take his
+offer. He made a bargain with me that I should ride his horse and
+personate him, that the police troopers might leave him unsuspected to
+lead his comrades running whisky, while they followed me. I kept my
+part of the bargain, and it cost me what I fancy I can never recover,
+unless the trial I shall shortly face will take the stain from me.
+While I passed for him your lawyer found me, and I had no choice
+between being condemned as a criminal for what Courthorne had in the
+meanwhile done, or continuing the deception. He had, as soon as I had
+left him, taken my horse and garments, so that if seen by the police
+they would charge me. I could not take your money, but, though
+Courthorne was apparently drowned I did wrong when I came to
+Silverdale. For a time the opportunities dazzled me; ambition drew me
+on, and I knew what I could do."
+
+He stopped again, and once more there was a soft rustle of dresses,
+and a murmur, as those who listened gave inarticulate expression to
+their feelings. Moving a little, he looked steadily at Maud
+Barrington, and her aunt, who sat close together.
+
+"Then," he said very slowly, "it was borne in upon me that I could not
+persist in deceiving you. Courthorne, I fancied, could not return to
+trouble me, but the confidence that little by little you placed in me
+rendered it out of the question. Still, I saw that I could save some
+at least at Silverdale from drifting to disaster, and there was work
+for me here which would go a little way in reparation, and now that it
+is done I was about to bid you good-bye and ask you not to think too
+hardly of me."
+
+There was a moment's intense silence until once more Dane rose up, and
+pointed to Courthorne sitting with half-closed eyes, dusty, partly
+dazed by indulgence, and with the stamp of dissolute living on him, in
+his chair. Then, he glanced at Witham's bronzed face, which showed
+quietly resolute at the bottom of the table.
+
+"Whatever we would spare you and ourselves, sir, we must face the
+truth," he said. "Which of these men was needed at Silverdale?"
+
+Again the murmurs rose up, but Witham sat silent, his pulses throbbing
+with a curious exultation. He had seen the colour creep into Maud
+Barrington's face, and her aunt's eyes, when he told her what had
+prompted him to leave Silverdale, and knew they understood him. Then,
+in the stillness that followed, the drumming of hoofs rose from the
+prairie. It grew louder, and when another sound became audible too,
+more than one of those who listened recognized the jingle of
+accoutrements. Courthorne rose unsteadily, and made for the door.
+
+"I think," he said with a curious laugh, "I must be going. I don't
+know whether the troopers want me or your comrade."
+
+A lad sprang to his feet, and as he ran to the door called "Stop him!"
+
+In another moment Dane had caught his arm, and his voice rang through
+the confusion, as everybody turned or rose.
+
+"Keep back all of you," he said. "Let him go!"
+
+Courthorne was outside by this time, and only those who reached the
+door before Dane closed it heard a faint beat of hoofs as somebody
+rode quietly away beneath the bluff, while as the rest clustered
+together, wondering, a minute or two later, Corporal Payne, flecked
+with spume and covered with dust came in. He raised his hand in
+salutation to Colonel Barrington, who sat very grim in face in his
+chair at the head of the table.
+
+"I'm sorry, sir, but it's my duty to apprehend Lance Courthorne," he
+said.
+
+"You have a warrant?" asked Barrington.
+
+"Yes, sir," said the corporal.
+
+There was intense silence for a moment. Then the Colonel's voice broke
+through it very quietly.
+
+"He is not here," he said.
+
+Payne made a little deprecatory gesture. "We knew he came here. It is
+my duty to warn you that proceedings will be taken against any one
+concealing or harbouring him."
+
+Barrington rose up very stiffly, with a little grey tinge in his face,
+but words seemed to fail him, and Dane laid his hand on the corporal's
+shoulder.
+
+"Then," he said grimly, "don't exceed it. If you believe he's here, we
+will give you every opportunity of finding him."
+
+Payne called to a comrade outside, who was, as it happened, new to the
+force, and they spent at least ten minutes questioning the servants
+and going up and down the house. Then, as they glanced into the
+general room, the trooper looked deprecatingly at his officer.
+
+"I fancied I heard somebody riding by the bluff just before we reached
+the house," he said.
+
+Payne wheeled round with a flash in his eyes. "Then you have lost us
+our man. Out with you, and tell Jackson to try the bluff for a trail."
+
+They had gone in another moment, and Witham still sat at the foot of
+the table and Barrington at the head, while the rest of the company
+were scattered, some wonderingly silent, though others talked in
+whispers, about the room. As yet they felt only consternation and
+astonishment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+COURTHORNE MAKES REPARATION
+
+
+The silence in the big room had grown oppressive when Barrington
+raised his head and sat stiffly upright.
+
+"What has happened has been a blow to me, and I am afraid I am
+scarcely equal to entertaining you to-night," he said. "I should,
+however, like Dane and Macdonald, and one or two of the older men, to
+stay a while. There is still, I fancy, a good deal for us to do."
+
+The others turned towards the door, but as they passed Witham, Miss
+Barrington turned and touched his shoulder. The man, looking up
+suddenly, saw her and her niece standing close beside her.
+
+"Madam," he said hoarsely, though it was Maud Barrington he glanced
+at, "the comedy is over. Well, I promised you an explanation, and now
+you have it you will try not to think too bitterly of me. I cannot ask
+you to forgive me."
+
+The little white-haired lady pointed to the ears of wheat which stood
+gleaming ruddy-bronze in front of him.
+
+"That," she said very quietly, "will make it easier."
+
+Maud Barrington said nothing, but every one in the room saw her
+standing a moment beside the man with a little flush in her face and
+no blame in her eyes. Then she passed on, but, short as it was, the
+pause had been very significant, for it seemed that whatever the
+elders of the community might decide, the two women, whose influence
+was supreme at Silverdale, had given the impostor absolution.
+
+The girl could not analyse her feelings, but through them all a vague
+relief was uppermost; for whatever he had been, it was evident the man
+had done one wrong only, and daringly, and that was a good deal easier
+to forgive than several incidents in Courthorne's past would have
+been. Then she was conscious that Miss Barrington's eyes were upon
+her.
+
+"Aunt," she said with a little tremor in her voice, "it is almost
+bewildering. Still one seemed to feel that what that man has done
+could never have been the work of Lance Courthorne."
+
+Miss Barrington made no answer, but her face was very grave; and just
+then those nearest it drew back a little from the door. A trooper
+stood outside it, his carbine glinting in the light, and another was
+silhouetted against the sky, sitting motionless in his saddle further
+back on the prairie.
+
+"The police are still there," said somebody.
+
+One by one they passed out under the trooper's gaze, but there was the
+usual delay in harnessing and saddling, and the first vehicle had
+scarcely rolled away when again the beat of hoofs and thin jingle of
+steel came portentously out of the silence. Maud Barrington shivered a
+little as she heard it.
+
+In the meanwhile, the few who remained had seated themselves about
+Colonel Barrington. When there was quietness again he glanced at
+Witham, who still sat at the foot of the table.
+
+"Have you anything more to tell us?" he asked. "These gentlemen are
+here to advise me if necessary."
+
+"Yes," said Witham quietly. "I shall probably leave Silverdale before
+morning, and have now to hand you a statement of my agreement with
+Courthorne and the result of my farming here, drawn up by a Winnipeg
+accountant. Here is also a document in which I have taken the liberty
+of making you and Dane my assigns. You will, as authorized by it, pay
+to Courthorne the sum due to him, and with your consent, which you
+have power to withhold, I propose taking one thousand dollars only of
+the balance that remains to me. I have it here now, and in the
+meanwhile surrender it to you. Of the rest, you will make whatever use
+that appears desirable for the general benefit of Silverdale.
+Courthorne has absolutely no claim upon it."
+
+He laid a wallet on the table, and Dane glanced at Colonel Barrington,
+who nodded when he returned it unopened.
+
+"We will pass it without counting. You accept the charge, sir?" he
+said.
+
+"Yes," said Barrington gravely. "It seems it is forced on me. Well, we
+will glance through the statement."
+
+For at least ten minutes nobody spoke, and then Dane said, "There are
+prairie farmers who would consider what he is leaving behind him a
+competence."
+
+"If this agreement, which was apparently verbal, is confirmed by
+Courthorne, the entire sum rightfully belongs to the man he made his
+tenant," said Barrington; and Macdonald smiled gravely as he glanced
+at Witham.
+
+"I think we can accept the statement that it was made, without
+question, sir," he said.
+
+Witham shook his head. "I claim one thousand dollars as the fee of my
+services, and they should be worth that much; but I will take no
+more."
+
+"Are we not progressing a little too rapidly, sir?" said Dane. "It
+seems to me we have yet to decide whether it is necessary that the man
+who has done so much for us should leave Silverdale."
+
+Witham smiled a trifle grimly. "I think," he said, "that question will
+very shortly be answered for you."
+
+Macdonald held his hand up, and a rapid thud of hoofs came faintly
+through the silence.
+
+"Troopers! They are coming here," he said.
+
+"Yes," said Witham. "I fancy they will relieve you from any further
+difficulty."
+
+Dane strode to one of the windows, and glanced at Colonel Barrington
+as he pulled back the catch. Witham, however, shook his head, and a
+little flush crept into Dane's bronzed face.
+
+"Sorry. Of course, you are right," he said. "It will be better that
+they should acquit you."
+
+No one moved for a few more minutes, and then with a trooper behind
+him Sergeant Stimson came in, and laid his hand on Witham's shoulder.
+
+"I have a warrant for your apprehension, Farmer Witham," he said. "You
+probably know the charge against you."
+
+"Yes," said Witham, simply. "I hope to refute it. I will come with
+you."
+
+He went out, and Barrington stared at the men about him. "I did not
+catch the name before. That was the man who shot the police trooper in
+Alberta?"
+
+"No, sir," said Dane very quietly. "Nothing would induce me to believe
+it of him."
+
+Barrington looked at him in bewilderment. "But he must have
+done--unless," he said, and ended with a little gasp. "Good Lord!
+There was the faint resemblance, and they changed horses--it is
+horrible."
+
+Dane's eyes were very compassionate as he laid his hand gently on his
+leader's shoulder.
+
+"Sir," he said, "you have our sympathy, and I am sorry that to offer
+it is all we can do. Now, I think, we have stayed too long already."
+
+They went out and left Colonel Barrington sitting alone with a grey
+face at the head of the table.
+
+It was a minute or two later when Witham swung himself into the saddle
+at the door of the Grange; All the vehicles had not left as yet, and
+there was a little murmur of sympathy--when the troopers closed in
+about him. Still before they rode away, one of the men wheeled his
+horse aside, and Witham saw Maud Barrington standing bareheaded by his
+stirrup. The moonlight showed that her face was impassive but
+curiously pale.
+
+"We could not let you go without a word; and you will come back to us
+with your innocence made clear," she said.
+
+Her voice had a little ring in it that carried far, and her companions
+heard her. What Witham said, they could not hear, and he did not
+remember it, but he swung his hat off, and those who saw the girl at
+his stirrup recognized with confusion that she alone had proclaimed
+her faith, while they had stood aside from him. Then the Sergeant
+raised his hand and the troopers rode forward with their prisoner.
+
+In the meanwhile, Courthorne was pressing south for the American
+frontier and daylight was just creeping across the prairie when the
+pursuers, who had found his trail and the ranch he obtained a fresh
+horse at, had sight of him. There were three of them, riding wearily,
+grimed with dust, when a lonely mounted figure showed for a moment on
+the crest of a rise. In another minute it dipped into a hollow, and
+Corporal Payne smiled grimly.
+
+"I think we have him now. The creek can't be far away, and he's west
+of the bridge," he said. "While we try to head him off, you'll follow
+behind him Hilton."
+
+One trooper sent the spurs in and, while the others swung off, rode
+straight on. Courthorne was at least a mile from them, but they were
+nearer the bridge, and Payne surmised that his jaded horse would fail
+him if he essayed to ford the creek and climb the farther side of the
+deep ravine it flowed through. They saw nothing of him when they swept
+across the rise, for here and there a grove of willows stretched out
+across the prairie from the sinuous band of trees in front of them.
+These marked the river hollow, and Payne knowing that the chase might
+be ended in a few more minutes did not spare the spur. He also
+remembered, as he tightened his grip on the bridle, the white face of
+Trooper Shannon flecked with the drifting snow.
+
+The bluff that rose steadily higher came back to them, willow and
+straggling birch flashed by, and at last Payne drew bridle where a
+rutted trail wound down between the trees to the bridge in the hollow.
+A swift glance showed him that a mounted man could scarcely make his
+way between them and he smiled dryly as he signed to his companion.
+
+"Back your horse clear of the trail," he said; and there was a rattle
+as he flung his carbine across the saddle. "With Hilton behind him,
+he'll ride straight into our hands."
+
+He wheeled his horse in among the birches, and then sat still, with
+fingers that quivered a little on the carbine stock, until a faint
+drumming rose from the prairie.
+
+"He's coming!" said the trooper. "Hilton's hanging on to him!"
+
+Payne made no answer, and the sound that rang more loudly every moment
+through the greyness of the early daylight was not pleasant to hear.
+Man's vitality is near its lowest about that hour, and the troopers
+had ridden furiously the long night through, while one of them, who
+knew Lance Courthorne, surmised that there was grim work before him.
+Still, though he shivered as a little chilly wind shook the birch
+twigs, he set his lips, and once more remembered the comrade who had
+ridden far and kept many a lonely vigil with him.
+
+Then a mounted man appeared in the space between the trees. His horse
+was jaded, and he rode loosely, swaying once or twice in his saddle;
+but he came straight on, and there was a jingle and rattle as the
+troopers swung out into the trail. The man saw them, for he glanced
+over his shoulder, as if at the rider who appeared behind, and then
+sent the spurs in again.
+
+"Pull him up," cried Corporal Payne, and his voice was a little
+strained. "Stop right where you are before we fire on you!"
+
+The man must have seen the carbines, for he raised himself a trifle,
+and Payne saw his face under the flapping hat. It was drawn and grey,
+but there was no sign of yielding or consternation in the half-closed
+eyes. Then he lurched in his saddle, as from exhaustion or weariness,
+and straightened himself again with both hands on the bridle. Payne
+saw his heels move and the spurs drip red, and slid his left hand
+further along the carbine stock. The trail was steep and narrow. A
+horseman could scarcely turn in it, and the stranger was coming on at
+a gallop.
+
+"He will have it," said the trooper hoarsely. "If he rides one of us
+down he may get away."
+
+"We have got to stop him," said Corporal Payne.
+
+Once more the swaying man straightened himself, flung his head back,
+and with a little breathless laugh drove his horse furiously at Payne.
+He was very close now, and his face showed livid under the smearing
+dust; but his lips were drawn up in a little bitter smile as he rode
+straight upon the levelled carbines. Payne at least understood it, and
+the absence of flung-up hand or cry. Courthorne's inborn instincts
+were strong to the end.
+
+There was a hoarse shout from the trooper, and no answer, and a
+carbine flashed. Then Courthorne loosed the bridle, reeled sideways
+from the saddle, rolled half round with one foot in the stirrup and
+his head upon the ground, and was left behind, while the riderless
+horse and pursuer swept past the two men who, avoiding them by a
+hairsbreadth, sat motionless a moment in the thin drifting smoke.
+
+Then Corporal Payne swung himself down, and, while the trooper
+followed, stooped over the man who lay, a limp huddled object, in the
+trail. He blinked up at them out of eyes that were almost closed.
+
+"I think you have done for me," he said.
+
+Payne glanced at his comrade. "Push on to the settlement," he said.
+"They've a doctor there. Bring him and Harland the magistrate out."
+
+The trooper seemed glad to mount and ride away, and Payne once more
+bent over the wounded man.
+
+"Very sorry," he said. "Still, you see, you left me no other means of
+stopping you. Now, is there anything I can do for you?"
+
+A little wry smile crept into Courthorne's face. "Don't worry," he
+said. "I had no wish to wait for the jury, and you can't get at an
+injury that's inside me."
+
+He said nothing more, and it seemed a very long while to Corporal
+Payne and Trooper Hilton, who rejoined him, before a wagon with two
+men in it beside the trooper came jolting up the trail. They got out,
+and one of them, who was busy with Courthorne for some minutes, nodded
+to Payne.
+
+"Any time in the next twelve hours. He may last that long," he said.
+"Nobody's going to worry him now, but I'll see if I can revive him a
+little when we get to Adamson's. It can't be more than a league away."
+
+They lifted Courthorne, who appeared insensible, into the wagon, and
+Payne signed to Trooper Hilton. "Take my horse and tell Colonel
+Barrington. Let him understand there's no time to lose. Then you can
+bring Stimson."
+
+The tired lad hoisted himself into his saddle and groaned a little as
+he rode away, but he did his errand, and late that night Barrington
+and Dane drove up to a lonely homestead. A man led them into a room
+where a limp figure was lying on a bed.
+
+"Been kind of sleeping most of the day, but the doctor has given him
+something that has wakened him," he said.
+
+Barrington returned Payne's greeting and sat down with Dane close
+beside him, while, when the wounded man raised his head, the doctor
+spoke softly to the magistrate from the settlement a league or two
+away.
+
+"I fancy he can talk to you, but you had better be quick if you wish
+to ask him anything," he said.
+
+Courthorne seemed to have heard him, for he smiled a little as he
+glanced at Barrington. "I'm afraid it will hurt you to hear what I
+have to tell this gentleman," he said. "Now, I want you to listen
+carefully, and every word put down. Doctor, a little more brandy."
+
+Barrington apparently would have spoken, but while the doctor held a
+glass to the bloodless lips the magistrate, who took up a strip of
+paper, signed to him.
+
+"We'll have it in due form. Give him that book, doctor," he said.
+"Now, repeat after me, and then we'll take your testimony."
+
+It was done, and a flicker of irony showed in Courthorne's half-closed
+eyes.
+
+"You feel more sure of me after that?" he said, in a voice that was
+very faint and strained. "Still, you see, I could gain nothing by
+deviating from the truth now. Well, I shot Trooper Shannon. You'll
+have the date in the warrant. Don't know if it will seem strange to
+you, but I forget it. I borrowed Farmer Witham's horse and rifle
+without his knowledge, though I had paid him a trifle to personate me
+and draw the troopers off the whisky-runners. That was Witham's only
+complicity. The troopers, who fancied they were chasing him, followed
+me until his horse which I was riding went through the ice; but Witham
+was in Montana at the time, and did not know that I was alive until a
+very little while ago. Now, you can straighten that up and read it out
+to me."
+
+The magistrate's pen scratched noisily in the stillness of the room,
+but before he had finished, Sergeant Stimson, hot and dusty, came in.
+Then he raised his hand, and for a while his voice rose and fell
+monotonously until Courthorne nodded.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "I'll sign."
+
+The doctor raised him a trifle, and moistened his lips with brandy as
+he gave him the pen. It scratched for a moment or two, and then fell
+from his relaxing fingers, while the man who took the paper wrote
+across the foot of it, and then would have handed it to Colonel
+Barrington, but that Dane quietly laid his hand upon it.
+
+"No," he said. "If you want another witness, take me."
+
+Barrington thanked him with a gesture; and Courthorne, looking round,
+saw Stimson.
+
+"You have been very patient, Sergeant, and it's rough on you that the
+one man you can lay your hands upon is slipping away from you," he
+said. "You'll see by my deposition that Witham thought me as dead as
+the rest of you did."
+
+Stimson nodded to the magistrate. "I heard what was read, and it is
+confirmed by the facts I have picked up," he said.
+
+Then Courthorne turned to Barrington. "I sympathize with you, sir," he
+said, "This must be horribly mortifying; but, you see, Witham once
+stopped my horse backing over a bridge into a gully when just to hold
+his hand would have rid him of me. You will not grudge me the one good
+turn I have probably done any man, when I shall assuredly not have the
+chance of doing another."
+
+Barrington winced a little, for he recognized the irony in the failing
+voice; but he rose and moved towards the bed.
+
+"Lance," he said, a trifle hoarsely, "it is not that which makes what
+has happened horrible to me, and I am only glad that you have righted
+this man. Your father had many claims on me, and things might have
+gone differently if, when you came out to Canada, I had done my duty
+by his son."
+
+Courthorne smiled a little, but without bitterness. "It would have
+made no difference, sir; and, after all, I led the life that suited
+me. By and by you will be grateful to me. I sent you a man who will
+bring prosperity to Silverdale."
+
+Then he turned to Stimson, and his voice sank almost beyond hearing as
+he said, "Sergeant, remember Witham fancied I was dead."
+
+He moved his head a trifle, and the doctor, stooping over him, signed
+to the rest, who went out except Barrington.
+
+It was some hours later, and very cold, when Barrington came softly
+into the room where Dane lay half asleep in a big chair. The latter
+glanced at him with a question in his eyes, and the Colonel nodded
+very gravely.
+
+"Yes," he said. "He has slipped out of the troopers' hands and beyond
+our reproaches--but I think the last thing he did will count for a
+little."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+WITHAM RIDES AWAY
+
+
+The first of the snow was driving across the prairie before a bitter
+wind when Maud Barrington stood by a window of the Grange looking out
+into the night. The double casements rattled, the curtains behind her
+moved with the icy draughts, until, growing weary of watching the
+white flakes whirl past, she drew them to and walked slowly towards a
+mirror. Then a faint tinge of pink crept into her cheeks, and a
+softness that became her into her eyes. They, however, grew critical
+as she smoothed back a tress of lustrous hair a trifle from her
+forehead, straightened the laces at neck and wrist, and shook into
+more flowing lines the long black dress. Maud Barrington was not
+unduly vain, but it was some time before she seemed contented, and one
+would have surmised that she desired to appear her best that night.
+
+The result was beyond cavil in its artistic simplicity, for the girl,
+knowing the significance that trifles have at times, had laid aside
+every adornment that might hint at wealth, and the sombre draperies
+alone emphasized the polished whiteness of her face and neck. Still,
+and she did not know whether she was pleased or otherwise at this, the
+mirror had shown the stamp which revealed itself even in passive pose
+and poise of head. It was her birthright, and would not be disguised.
+
+Then she drew a low chair towards the stove, and once more the faint
+colour crept into her face as she took up a note. It was laconic, and
+requested permission to call at the Grange, but Maud Barrington was
+not deceived, and recognized the consideration each word had cost the
+man who wrote it. Afterwards she glanced at her watch, raised it with
+a little gesture of impatience to make sure it had not stopped, and
+sat still, listening to the moaning of the wind, until the door
+opened, and Miss Barrington came in. She glanced at her niece, who
+felt that her eyes had noticed each detail of her somewhat unusual
+dress, but said nothing until the younger woman turned to her.
+
+"They would scarcely come to-night, aunt," she said.
+
+Miss Barrington, listening a moment, heard the wind that whirled the
+snow about the lonely building, but smiled incredulously.
+
+"I fancy you are wrong, and I wish my brother were here," she said.
+"We could not refuse Mr. Witham permission to call, but whatever
+passes between us will have more than its individual significance.
+Anything we tacitly promise the others will agree to, and I feel the
+responsibility of deciding for Silverdale."
+
+Miss Barrington went out; but her niece, who understood her smile and
+that she had received a warning, sat with a strained expression in her
+eyes. The prosperity of Silverdale had been dear to her, but she knew
+she must let something that was dearer still slip away from her, or,
+since they must come from her, trample on her pride as she made the
+first advances. It seemed a very long while before there was a
+knocking at the outer door, and she rose with a little quiver when
+light steps came up the stairway.
+
+In the meanwhile, two men stood beside the stove in the hall until an
+English maid returned to them.
+
+"Colonel Barrington is away, but Miss Barrington and Miss Maud are at
+home," she said. "Will you go forward into the morning-room when you
+have taken off your furs?"
+
+"Did you know Barrington was not here?" asked Witham, when the maid
+moved away.
+
+Dane appeared embarrassed. "The fact is, I did."
+
+"Then," said Witham dryly, "I am a little astonished you did not think
+fit to tell me."
+
+Dane's face flushed, but he laid his hand on his comrade's arm. "No,"
+he said. "I didn't. Now, listen to me for the last time, Witham. I've
+not been blind, you see; and, as I told you, your comrades have
+decided that they wish you to stay. Can't you sink your confounded
+pride and take what is offered you?"
+
+Witham shook his grasp off, and there was weariness in his face. "You
+need not go through it all again. I made my decision a long while
+ago."
+
+"Well," said Dane, with a gesture of hopelessness, "I've done all I
+could and, since you are going on, I'll look at that trace clip while
+you tell Miss Barrington. I mean the younger one."
+
+"The harness can wait," said Witham. "You are coming with me."
+
+A little grim smile crept into Dane's eyes. "I am not. I wouldn't
+raise a finger to help you now," he said, and retreated hastily.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was five minutes later when Witham walked quietly into Maud
+Barrington's presence, and sat down when the girl signed to him. He
+wondered if she guessed how his heart was beating.
+
+"It is very good of you to receive me, but I felt I could not slip
+away without acknowledging the kindness you and Miss Barrington have
+shown me," he said. "I did not know Colonel Barrington was away."
+
+The girl smiled a little. "Or you would not have come? Then we should
+have had no opportunity of congratulating you on your triumphant
+acquittal. You see it must be mentioned."
+
+"I'm afraid there was a miscarriage of justice," said Witham quietly.
+"Still, though it is a difficult subject, the deposition of the man I
+supplanted went a long way, and the police did not seem desirous of
+pressing a charge against me. Perhaps I should have insisted on
+implicating myself, but you would scarcely have looked for that after
+what you now know of me."
+
+Maud Barrington braced herself for an effort, though she was outwardly
+very calm. "No," she said, "no one would have looked for it from any
+man placed as you were, and you are purposing to do more than is
+required of you. Why will you go away?"
+
+"I am a poor man," said Witham. "One must have means to live at
+Silverdale."
+
+"Then," said the girl with a soft laugh which cost her a good deal,
+"it is because you prefer poverty, and you have at least one
+opportunity at Silverdale. Courthorne's land was mine to all intents
+and purposes before it was his, and now it reverts to me. I owe him
+nothing, and he did not give it me. Will you stay and farm it on
+whatever arrangement Dane and Macdonald may consider equitable? My
+uncle's hands are too full for him to attempt it."
+
+"No," said Witham, and his voice trembled a little. "Your friends
+would resent it."
+
+"Then," said the girl, "why have they urged you to stay?"
+
+"A generous impulse. They would repent of it by and by. I am not one
+of them, and they know it now, as I did at the beginning. No doubt
+they would be courteous, but you see a half-contemptuous toleration
+would gall me."
+
+There was a little smile on Maud Barrington's lips, but it was not in
+keeping with the tinge in her cheek and the flash in her eyes.
+
+"I once told you that you were poor at subterfuge, and you know you
+are wronging them," she said. "You also know that even if they were
+hostile to you, you could stay and compel them to acknowledge you. I
+fancy you once admitted as much to me. What has become of this pride
+of the democracy you showed me?"
+
+Witham made a deprecatory gesture. "You must have laughed at me. I had
+not been long at Silverdale then," he said dryly. "I should feel very
+lonely now. One man against long generations. Wouldn't it be a trifle
+unequal?"
+
+Maud Barrington smiled again. "I did not laugh, and this is not
+England, though what you consider prejudices do not count for so much
+as they used to there, while there is, one is told quite frequently,
+no limit to what a man may attain to here, if he dares sufficiently."
+
+A little quiver ran through Witham, and he rose and stood looking down
+on her, with one brown hand clenched on the table and the veins
+showing on his forehead.
+
+"You would have me stay?" he said.
+
+Maud Barrington met his eyes, for the spirit that was in her was the
+equal of his. "I would have you be yourself--what you were when you
+came here in defiance of Colonel Barrington, and again when you sowed
+the last acre of Courthorne's land, while my friends, who are yours
+too, looked on wondering. Then you would stay--if it pleased you.
+Where has your splendid audacity gone?"
+
+Witham slowly straightened himself and the girl noticed the damp the
+struggle had brought there on his forehead, for he understood that if
+he would stretch out his hand and take it what he longed for might be
+his.
+
+"I do not know, any more than I know where it came from, for until I
+met Courthorne I had never made a big venture in my life," he said.
+"It seems it has served its turn and left me--for now there are things
+I am afraid to do."
+
+"So you will go away and forget us?"
+
+Witham stood very still a moment, and the girl, who felt her heart
+beating noticed that his face was drawn. Still, she could go no
+further. Then he said very slowly, "I should be under the shadow
+always if I stay, and my friends would feel it even more deeply than I
+would do. I may win the right to come back again if I go away."
+
+Maud Barrington made no answer, but both knew no further word could be
+spoken on that subject until, if fate ever willed it, the man returned
+again, and it was a relief when Miss Barrington came in with Dane. He
+glanced at his comrade keenly, and then, seeing the grimness in his
+face, quietly declined the white-haired lady's offer of hospitality.
+Five minutes later the farewells were said and Maud Barrington stood
+with the stinging flakes whirling about her in the doorway, while the
+sleigh slid out into the filmy whiteness that drove across the
+prairie. When it vanished she turned back into the warmth and
+brightness with a little shiver and one hand tightly closed.
+
+The great room seemed very lonely when, while the wind moaned outside,
+she and her aunt sat down to dinner. Neither of them appeared
+communicative, and both felt it a relief when the meal was over. Then
+Maud Barrington smiled curiously as she rose and stood with hands
+stretched out towards the stove.
+
+"Aunt," she said, "Twoinette has twice asked me to go back to
+Montreal, and I think I will. The prairie is very dreary in the
+winter."
+
+It was about this time when, as the whitened horses floundered through
+the lee of a bluff where there was shelter from the wind, the men in
+the sleigh found opportunity for speech.
+
+"Now," said Dane quietly, "I know that we have lost you, for a while
+at least. Will you ever come back, Witham?"
+
+Witham nodded. "Yes," he said. "When time has done its work and
+Colonel Barrington asks me, if I can buy land enough to give me a
+standing at Silverdale."
+
+"That," said Dane, "will need a good many dollars, and you insisted on
+flinging those you had away. How are you going to make them?"
+
+"I don't know," said Witham simply. "Still, by some means it will be
+done."
+
+It was next day when he walked into Graham's office at Winnipeg, and
+laughed when the broker who shook hands, passed the cigar box across
+to him.
+
+"We had better understand each other first," he said. "You have heard
+what has happened to me, and will not find me a profitable customer
+to-day."
+
+"These cigars are the best in the city, or I wouldn't ask you to take
+one," said Graham dryly. "You understand me, anyway. Wait until I tell
+my clerk that if anybody comes round I'm busy."
+
+A bell rang, a little window opened and shut again, and Witham smiled
+over his cigar.
+
+"I want to make thirty thousand dollars as soon as I can, and it seems
+to me there are going to be opportunities in this business. Do you
+know anybody who would take me as clerk or salesman?"
+
+Graham did not appear astonished.
+
+"You'll scarcely make them that way if I find you a berth at fifty a
+month," he said.
+
+"No," said Witham. "Still, I wouldn't purpose keeping it for more than
+six months or so. By that time I should know a little about the
+business."
+
+"Got any dollars now?"
+
+"One thousand," said Witham quietly.
+
+Graham nodded. "Smoke that cigar out, and don't worry me. I've got
+some thinking to do."
+
+Witham took up a journal, and laid it down again twenty minutes later.
+"Well," he said, "you think it's too big a thing?"
+
+"No," said Graham. "It depends upon the man, and it might be done.
+Knowing the business goes a good way, and so does having dollars in
+hand, but there's something that's born in one man in a thousand that
+goes a long way further still. I can't tell you what it is, but I know
+it when I see it."
+
+"Then," said Witham, "you have seen this thing in me?"
+
+Graham nodded gravely. "Yes, sir, but you don't want to get proud. You
+had nothing to do with the getting of it. It was given you. Now, we're
+going to have a year that will not be forgotten by those who handle
+wheat and flour, and the men with the long heads will roll the dollars
+in. Well, I've no use for another clerk, and my salesman's good enough
+for me, but if we can agree on the items I'll take you for a partner."
+
+The offer was made and accepted quietly, and when a rough draft of the
+arrangement had been agreed upon, Graham nodded as he lighted another
+cigar.
+
+"You may as well take hold at once, and there's work ready now," he
+said. "You've heard of the old St. Louis mills back on the edge of the
+bush country. Never did any good. Folks who had them were short of
+dollars, and didn't know how they should be run. Well, I and two other
+men have bought them for a song, and while the place is tumbling in,
+the plant seems good. Now, I can get hold of orders for flour when I
+want them, and everybody with dollars to spare will plank them right
+into any concern handling food-stuffs this year. You go down to-morrow
+with an engineer, and, when you've got the mills running and orders
+coming in, we'll sell out to a company if we don't want them."
+
+Witham sat silent a space, turning over a big bundle of plans and
+estimates. Then he said, "You'll have to lay out a pile of dollars."
+
+Graham laughed. "That's going to be your affair. When you want them
+the dollars will be ready, and there's only one condition. Every
+dollar we put down has got to bring another in."
+
+"But," said Witham, "I don't know anything about milling."
+
+"Then," said Graham dryly, "you have got to learn. A good many men
+have got quite rich in this country running things they didn't know
+much about when they took hold of them."
+
+"There's one more point," said Witham. "I must make those thirty
+thousand dollars soon, or they'll be no great use to me, and when I
+have them I may want to leave you."
+
+"That's all right," said Graham. "By the time you've done it, you'll
+have made sixty for me. We'll go out and have some lunch to clinch the
+deal if you're ready."
+
+It might have appeared unusual in England, but it was much less so in
+a country where the specialization of professions is still almost
+unknown, and the man who can adapt himself attains ascendency, and on
+the morrow Witham arrived at a big wooden building beside a
+pine-shrouded river. It appeared falling to pieces, and the engineer
+looked disdainfully at some of the machinery, but, somewhat against
+his wishes, he sat up with his companion most of the night in a little
+log hotel, and orders that occasioned one of Graham's associates
+consternation were mailed to the city next morning. Then machines came
+out by the carload, and men with tools in droves. Some of them
+murmured mutinously when they found they were expected to do as much
+as their leader who was not a tradesman, but these were forthwith sent
+back again, and the rest were willing to stay and earn the premium he
+promised them for rapid work.
+
+Before the frost grew Arctic, the building stood firm and the hammers
+rang inside it night and day until when the ice had bound the dam and
+lead the fires were lighted and the trials under steam again. It cost
+more than water, but buyers with orders from the East were clamouring
+for flour just then. For a fortnight Witham snatched his food in
+mouthfuls, and scarcely closed his eyes, when Graham found him pale
+and almost haggard when he came down with several men from the cities
+in response to a telegram. For an hour they moved up and down,
+watching whirring belt and humming roller, and then, whitened with the
+dust, stood very intent and quiet while one of them dipped up a little
+flour from the delivery hopper. His opinions on, and dealings in that
+product were famous in the land. He said nothing for several minutes,
+and then, brushing the white dust from his hands, turned with a little
+smile to Graham.
+
+"We'll have some baked, but I don't know that there's much use for it.
+This will grade a very good first," he said. "You can book me the
+thousand two eighties for a beginning now."
+
+Witham's fingers trembled, but there was a twinkle in Graham's eyes as
+he brought his hand down on his shoulder.
+
+"Gentlemen," he said, "I was figuring right on this when I brought the
+champagne along. It was all I could do, but Imperial Tokay wouldn't be
+good enough to rinse this dust down with, when every speck of it
+that's on you means dollars by the handful rolling in."
+
+It was a very contented and slightly hilarious party that went back to
+the city, but Witham sat down before a shaded lamp with a wet rag
+round his head when they left him, and bent over a sheaf of drawings
+until his eyes grew dim. Then he once more took up a little strip of
+paper that Graham had given him, and leaned forward with his arms upon
+the table. The mill was very silent at last, for of all who toiled in
+it that day one weary man alone sat awake, staring, with aching eyes,
+in front of him. There was, however, a little smile in them, for
+roseate visions floated before them. If the promise that strip of
+paper held out was redeemed, they might be materialized, for those who
+had toiled and wasted their substance that the eastern peoples might
+be fed would that year, at least, not go without their reward. Then he
+stretched out his arms wearily above his head.
+
+"It almost seems that what I have hoped for may be mine," he said.
+"Still, there is a good deal to be done first, and not two hours left
+before I begin it to-morrow."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REINSTATION
+
+
+A year of tireless effort and some anxiety had passed since Witham had
+seen the first load of flour sent to the east, when he and Graham sat
+talking in their Winnipeg office. The products of the St. Louis mills
+were already in growing demand, and Graham appeared quietly contented
+as he turned over the letters before him. When he laid down the last
+one, however, he glanced at his companion somewhat anxiously.
+
+"We have got to fix up something soon," he said. "I have booked all
+the St. Louis can turn out for six months ahead, and the syndicate is
+ready to take the business over, though I don't know quite whether it
+would be wise to let them. It seems to me that milling is going to pay
+tolerably well for another year, and if I knew what you were wanting,
+it would suit me better."
+
+"I told you I wanted thirty thousand dollars," said Witham quietly.
+
+"You've got them," said Graham. "When the next balance comes out
+you'll have a good many more. The question is, what you're going to do
+with them now they're yours?"
+
+Witham took out a letter from Dane and passed it across to Graham.
+"I'm sorry to tell you the Colonel is getting no better," it ran. "The
+specialist we brought in seems to think he will never be quite himself
+again, and now he has let the reins go, things are falling to pieces
+at Silverdale. Somebody left Atterly a pile of money, and he is going
+back to the old country, Carshalton is going, too; and, as they can't
+sell out to any one we don't approve of, the rest insisted on my
+seeing you. I purpose starting to-morrow."
+
+"What happened to Colonel Barrington?" asked Graham.
+
+"His sleigh turned over," said Witham. "Horse trampled on him, and it
+was an hour or two before his hired man could get him under shelter."
+
+"You would be content to turn farmer again?"
+
+"I think I would," said Witham. "At least, at Silverdale."
+
+Graham made a little grimace. "Well," he said resignedly, "I guess
+it's human nature; but I'm thankful now and then there's nothing about
+me but my dollars that would take the eye of any young woman. I figure
+they're kind of useful to wake up a man so he'll stir round looking
+for something to offer one of them, but he is apt to find his business
+must go second when she has got it and him, and he has to waste on
+house fixings what would give a man a fair start in life. Still, it's
+no use talking. What have you told him?"
+
+Witham laughed a little. "Nothing," he said. "I will let him come, and
+you shall have my decision when I've been to Silverdale."
+
+It was next day when Dane arrived at Winnipeg, and Witham listened
+gravely to all he had to tell him.
+
+"I have two questions to ask," he said. "Would the others be unanimous
+in receiving me, and does Colonel Barrington know of your mission?"
+
+"Yes to both," said Dane. "We haven't a man there who would not hold
+out his hand to you, and Barrington has been worrying and talking a
+good deal about you lately. He seems to fancy nothing has gone right
+at Silverdale since you left it, and others share his opinion. The
+fact is, the old man is losing his grip tolerably rapidly."
+
+"Then," said Witham quietly, "I'll go down with you, but I can make no
+promise until I have heard the others."
+
+Dane smiled a little. "That is all I want. I don't know whether I told
+you that Maud Barrington is there. Would to-morrow suit you?"
+
+"No," said Witham. "I will come to-day."
+
+It was early next morning when they stepped out of the stove-warmed
+car into the stinging cold of the prairie. Fur-clad figures, showing
+shapeless in the creeping light, clustered about them, and Witham felt
+himself thumped on the shoulders by mittened hands, while Alfreton's
+young voice broke through the murmurs of welcome.
+
+"Let him alone while he's hungry," he said. "It's the first time in
+its history they've had breakfast ready at this hour in the hotel, and
+it would not have been accomplished if I hadn't spent most of
+yesterday playing cards with the man who keeps it and making love to
+the young women!"
+
+"That's quite right," said another lad. "When he takes his cap off
+you'll see how one of them rewarded him. But come along, Witham.
+It--is--ready."
+
+The greetings might, of course, have been expressed differently, but
+Witham also was not addicted to displaying all he felt, and the little
+ring in the lads' voices was enough for him. As they moved towards the
+hotel he saw that Dane was looking at him.
+
+"Well?" said the latter, "you see, they want you."
+
+That was probably the most hilarious breakfast that had ever been held
+in the wooden hotel; and before it was over, three of his companions
+had said to Witham, "Of course, you'll drive in with me!"
+
+"Boys," he said, as they put their furs on, and his voice shook a
+trifle, "I can't ride in with everybody who has asked me unless you
+dismember me."
+
+Finally, Alfreton, who was a trifle too quick for the others, got him
+into his sleigh, and they swept out behind a splendid team into the
+frozen stillness of the prairie. The white leagues rolled behind them,
+the cold grew intense; but while Witham was for the most part silent
+and apparently preoccupied, Alfreton talked almost incessantly, and
+only once looked grave. That happened when Witham asked about Colonel
+Barrington.
+
+The lad shook his head. "I scarcely think he will ever take hold
+again," he said. "You will understand me better when you see him."
+
+They stopped awhile at mid-day at an outlying farm, but Witham glanced
+inquiringly at Alfreton when one of the sleighs went on. The lad
+smiled at him.
+
+"Yes," he said. "He is going on to tell them we have got you."
+
+"They would have found it out in a few more hours," said Witham.
+
+Alfreton's eyes twinkled. "No doubt they would," he said dryly.
+"Still, you see, somebody was offering two to one that Dane couldn't
+bring you, and you know we're generally keen about any kind of wager."
+
+The explanation, which was not quite out of keeping with the customs
+of the younger men at Silverdale did not content Witham, but he said
+nothing. So far his return had resembled a triumph, and while the
+sincerity of the welcome had its effect on him, he shrank a little
+from what he fancied might be waiting him.
+
+The creeping darkness found them still upon the waste, and the cold
+grew keener when the stars peeped out. Even sound seemed frozen, and
+the faint muffled beat of hoofs unreal and out of place in the icy
+stillness of the wilderness. Still, the horses knew they were nearing
+home, and swung into faster pace, while the men drew fur caps down and
+the robes closer round them as the draught their passage made stung
+them with a cold that seemed to sear the skin where there was an inch
+left uncovered on the face. Now and then a clump of willows or a birch
+bluff flitted out of the dimness, grew a trifle blacker, and was left
+behind; but there was still no sign of habitation, and Alfreton, too
+chilled at last to speak, passed the reins to Witham and beat his
+mittened hands. Witham could scarcely grasp them, for he had lived of
+late in the cities, and the cold he had been sheltered from was
+numbing.
+
+For another hour they slid onwards, and then a dim blur crept out of
+the white waste. It rose higher, cutting more blackly against the sky;
+and Witham recognized with a curious little quiver the birch bluff
+that sheltered Silverdale Grange. Then, as they swept through the
+gloom of it, a row of ruddy lights blinked across the snow; and Witham
+felt his heart beat as he watched the homestead grow into form. He had
+first come there an impostor, and had left it an outcast; while now it
+was amidst the acclamations of those who had once looked on him with
+suspicion he was coming back again.
+
+Still, he was almost too cold for any definite feeling but the sting
+of the frost, and it was very stiffly he stood up, shaken by vague
+emotions, when at last the horses stopped. A great door swung open,
+somebody grasped his hand, there was a murmur of voices, and partly
+dazed by the change of temperature he blundered into the warmth of the
+hall. The blaze of light bewildered him, and he was but dimly sensible
+that the men who greeted him were helping him to shake off his furs;
+while the next thing he was sure of was that a little white-haired
+lady was holding out her hand.
+
+"We are all very glad to see you back," she said, with a simplicity
+that yet suggested stateliness. "Your friends insisted on coming over
+to welcome you, and Dane will not let you keep them waiting too long.
+Dinner is almost ready."
+
+Witham could not remember what he answered, but Miss Barrington smiled
+at him as she moved away, for the flush in his face was very eloquent.
+The man was very grateful for that greeting, and what it implied. It
+was a few minutes later when he found himself alone with Dane, who
+laughed softly as he nodded to him.
+
+"You are convinced at last?" he said. "Still there is a little more of
+the same thing to be faced; and, if it would relieve you, I will send
+for Alfreton, who has some taste in that direction, to fix that tie
+for you. You have been five minutes over it, and it evidently does not
+please you. It's the first time I've ever seen you worry about your
+dress."
+
+Witham turned, and a curious smile crept into his face as he laid a
+lean hand that shook a little on the toilet table.
+
+"I also think it's the first time these fingers wouldn't do what I
+wanted them. You can deduce what you please from that," he said.
+
+Dane only nodded, and when they went down together laid a kindly grasp
+upon his comrade's arm as he led him into the great dining-room. Every
+man at Silverdale was apparently there, as were most of the women; and
+Witham stood still a moment, very erect, with shoulders square,
+because the posture enabled him to conceal the tremor that ran through
+him when he saw the smiling faces turned upon him. Then he moved
+slowly down the room towards Maud Barrington, and felt her hand rest
+for a second between his fingers, which he feared were too responsive.
+After that, everybody seemed to speak to him, and he was glad when he
+found himself sitting next to Miss Barrington at the head of the long
+table, with her niece opposite him.
+
+He could not remember what he or the others talked about during the
+meal, but he had a vague notion that there was now and then a silence
+of attention when he answered a question, and that the little lady's
+face grew momentarily grave when, as the voice sank a trifle, he
+turned to her.
+
+"I would have paid my respects to Colonel Barrington, but Dane did not
+consider it advisable," he said.
+
+"No," said Miss Barrington. "He has talked a good deal about you
+during the last two days, but he is sleeping now, and we did not care
+to disturb him. I am afraid you will find a great change in him when
+you see him."
+
+Witham asked no more questions on that topic until later in the
+evening, when he found a place apart from the rest by Miss
+Barrington's side. He fancied this would not have happened without her
+connivance and she seemed graver than usual when he stood by her
+chair.
+
+"I don't wish to pain you, but I surmise that Colonel Barrington is
+scarcely well enough to be consulted about anything of importance just
+now," he said.
+
+Miss Barrington made a little gesture of assent. "We usually pay him
+the compliment, but I am almost afraid he will never make a decision
+of moment again."
+
+"Then," said Witham slowly, "you stand in his place, and I fancy you
+know why I have come back to Silverdale. Will you listen for a very
+few minutes while I tell you about my parents and what my upbringing
+has been? I must return to Winnipeg, for a time, at least, to-morrow."
+
+Miss Barrington signed her willingness, and the man spoke rapidly with
+a faint trace of hoarseness. Then he looked down on her.
+
+"Madam," he said, "I have told you everything, partly from respect for
+those who only by a grim sacrifice did what they could for me, and
+that you may realize the difference between myself and the rest at
+Silverdale. I want to be honest now at least, and I discovered, not
+without bitterness at the time, that the barriers between our castes
+are strong in the old country."
+
+Miss Barrington smiled a little. "Have I ever made you feel it here?"
+
+"No," said Witham gravely. "Still, I am going to put your forbearance
+to a strenuous test. I want your approval. I have a question to ask
+your niece to-night."
+
+"If I withheld it?"
+
+"It would hurt me," said Witham. "Still, I would not be astonished,
+and I could not blame you."
+
+"But it would make no difference?"
+
+"Yes," said Witham gravely. "It would, but it would not cause me to
+desist. Nothing would do that, if Miss Barrington can overlook the
+past."
+
+The little white-haired lady smiled at him. "Then," she said, "if it
+is any comfort to you, you have my good wishes. I do not know what
+Maud's decision will be, but that is the spirit which would have
+induced me to listen in times long gone by!"
+
+She rose and left him, and it may have been by her arranging that
+shortly afterwards Witham found Maud Barrington passing through the
+dimly-lighted hall. He opened the door she moved towards a trifle, and
+then stood facing her, with it in his hand.
+
+"Will you wait a moment, and then you may pass if you wish," he said.
+"I had one great inducement for coming here to-night. I wonder if you
+know what it is?"
+
+The girl stood still and met his gaze, though, dim as the light was,
+the man could see the crimson in her cheeks.
+
+"Yes," she said, very quietly.
+
+"Then," said Witham with a little smile, though the fingers on the
+door quivered visibly, "I think the audacity you once mentioned must
+have returned to me, for I am going to make a very great venture."
+
+For a moment Maud Barrington turned her eyes away. "It is the daring
+venture that most frequently succeeds."
+
+Then she felt the man's hand on her shoulder, and that he was
+compelling her to look up at him.
+
+"It is you I came for," he said quietly. "Still, for you know the
+wrong I have done, I dare not urge you, and have little to offer. It
+is you who must give everything, if you can come down from your
+station and be content with mine."
+
+"One thing," said Maud Barrington, very softly, "is, however,
+necessary."
+
+"That," said Witham, "was yours ever since we spent the night in the
+snow."
+
+The girl felt his grip upon her shoulder grow almost painful, but her
+eyes shone softly when she lifted her head again.
+
+"Then," she said, "what I can give is yours--and it seems you have
+already taken possession."
+
+Witham drew her towards him, and it may have been by Miss Barrington's
+arranging that nobody entered the hall, but at last the girl glanced
+up at the man half-shyly as she said, "Why did you wait so long?"
+
+"It was well worth while," said Witham. "Still, I think you know."
+
+"Yes," said Maud Barrington softly. "Now, at least, I can tell you I
+am glad you went away--but if you had asked me I would have gone with
+you."
+
+It was some little time later when Miss Barrington came in and, after
+a glance at Witham, kissed her niece. Then she turned to the man. "My
+brother is asking for you," she said. "Will you come up with me?"
+
+Witham followed her, and hid his astonishment when he found Colonel
+Barrington lying in a big chair. His face was haggard and pale, his
+form seemed to have grown limp and fragile, and the hand he held out
+trembled.
+
+"Lance," he said, "I am very pleased to have you home again. I hear
+you have done wonders in the city, but you are, I think, the first of
+your family who could ever make money. I have, as you will see, not
+been well lately."
+
+"I am relieved to find you better than I expected, sir," Witham said
+quietly. "Still, I fancy you are forgetting what I told you the night
+I went away."
+
+Barrington nodded, and then made a little impatient gesture. "There
+was something unpleasant, but my memory seems to be going, and my
+sister has forgiven you. I know you did a good deal for us at
+Silverdale, and showed yourself a match for the best of them in the
+city. That pleases me. By and by, you will take hold here after me."
+
+Witham glanced at Miss Barrington, who smiled somewhat sadly.
+
+"I am glad you mentioned that, sir, because I purpose staying at
+Silverdale now," he said. "It leads up to what I have to ask you."
+
+Barrington's perceptions seemed to grow clearer, and he asked a few
+pertinent questions before he nodded approbation.
+
+"Yes," he said, "she is a good girl--a very good girl, and it would be
+a suitable match. I should like somebody to send for her."
+
+Maud Barrington came in softly, with a little glow in her eyes and a
+flush in her face, and Barrington smiled at her.
+
+"My dear, I am very pleased, and I wish you every happiness," he said.
+"Once I would scarcely have trusted you to Lance, but he will forgive
+me, and has shown me that I was wrong. You and he will make Silverdale
+famous, and it is comforting to know, now my rest is very near, that
+you have chosen a man of your own station to follow me. With all our
+faults and blunders, blood is bound to tell."
+
+Witham saw that Miss Barrington's eyes were a trifle misty, and he
+felt his face grow hot, but the girl's fingers touched his arm, and he
+followed, when, while her aunt signed approbation, she led him away.
+Then, when they stood outside she laid her hands upon his face and
+drew it down to her.
+
+"You will forget it, dear, and he is still wrong. If you had been
+Lance Courthorne, I should never have done this," she said.
+
+"No," said the man gravely. "I think there are many ways in which he
+is right, but you can be content with Witham the prairie farmer?"
+
+Maud Barrington drew closer to him with a little smile in her eyes.
+"Yes," she said simply. "There never was a Courthorne who could stand
+beside him."
+
+
+London: Ward, Lock & Co., Ltd.
+
+
+
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