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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61908 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61908)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge, by Edward G.
-(Edward Gheen) Cheyney
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge
-
-
-Author: Edward G. (Edward Gheen) Cheyney
-
-
-
-Release Date: April 23, 2020 [eBook #61908]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive
-(https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 61908-h.htm or 61908-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61908/61908-h/61908-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61908/61908-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/scottburtoninblu00chey
-
-
-
-
-
-SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
- Stories by EDWARD G. CHEYNEY
-
- SCOTT BURTON, FORESTER
- SCOTT BURTON ON THE RANGE
- SCOTT BURTON AND THE TIMBER THIEVES
- SCOTT BURTON, LOGGER
- SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-[Illustration: JIMMY TRIED DESPERATELY TO STAY HIS TEAM.]
-
-
-SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE
-
-by
-
-E. G. CHEYNEY
-
-Author of “Scott Burton, Forester,”
-“Scott Burton, Logger,” etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-D. Appleton and Company
-New York :: 1924 :: London
-
-Copyright, 1924, by
-D. Appleton and Company
-
-Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- I. Off to a New Job
- II. The Mystery of the Two Stores
- III. The Old Man’s Story
- IV. Old Jarred
- V. Hopwood
- VI. Scott Talks with the Agent
- VII. Scott Receives “Aid” from His Boss
- VIII. Scott Loses His Neutrality
- IX. Scott Makes Another Rescue
- X. Scott Meets Jarred
- XI. A Visit to Jarred’s Cabin
- XII. Scott Asks for Bids
- XIII. Foster Wait Demands the Contract
- XIV. Scott Makes a Trip to Washington
- XV. Scott Hears Some Rumblings of the Old Feud
- XVI. Scott Has an Interview with Sewall
- XVII. Hopwood Takes a Trip
- XVIII. Dick Turns Gentleman
- XIX. Hopwood Throws Away His Iron Hat
- XX. An Attempt at Arson
- XXI. Scott Finds the Still
- XXII. Hopwood Gets Jarred’s Promise
- XXIII. A Close Call
- XXIV. Scott Goes after the Marshal
- XXV. Hopwood Sends Foster a Message
- XXVI. Foster Revives the Feud
- XXVII. Scott Arrives at the Village
- XXVIII. The End of the Feud
- XXIX. Jarred and Sewall Meet
-
-
-
-
- SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- OFF TO A NEW JOB
-
-
-The ticking of the old grandfather clock in the neat little New England
-house was the only sound to break the stillness. So still it was that
-any one approaching the house could have heard the clock distinctly and
-would certainly have overlooked the silent figure in the old
-rocking-chair. But a man was sitting there, nevertheless, completely
-absorbed in his own thoughts.
-
-An old gentleman appeared in the doorway and stood there for an instant
-before he saw him. Then his face lighted up.
-
-“Hello, Scott! I thought you had gone out and I wanted to talk to you
-about your new assignment. Mother tells me that you have your sailing
-orders now.”
-
-The son looked at him with a smile, but his face still wore a puzzled
-frown.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “I have my sailing orders, but—”
-
-“Good or bad?” his father interrupted anxiously. “You don’t look
-overjoyed with them.” The old man was really worried.
-
-“I don’t know just what to think of them,” Scott frowned once more and
-opened the letter for the hundredth time. “They have assigned me to a
-timber sales job in the North Carolina mountains.”
-
-“Well, that sounds good enough. They say that is a beautiful country and
-it is a place I have always wanted to see.”
-
-“Oh, the country is all right,” Scott said brightening, “and I am crazy
-to go there, only I had my mind set on going back to my old place in the
-southwest.” And again he frowned. “It is not the country but the job
-that I am afraid of. Sometimes I am almost sorry that I caught those
-range thieves out there in Arizona.”
-
-“Why, Scottie boy! If it had not been for that you would never be where
-you are in the Service to-day,” his father remonstrated proudly.
-
-“Oh, I know that it made me solid with the Forest Service and gave me a
-chance at a supervisor’s job years before I would ordinarily have had
-one, but they have been using me as a sort of detective ever since. I
-was lucky enough to catch those timber thieves in Florida, but I am no
-sleuth and I’ll fall down on that job sooner or later.”
-
-“But, Scott, I don’t believe this is detective work. I expect they have
-heard what a tremendous success you made of your own logging job last
-winter and want you to look after the logging work down there.”
-
-“Yes,” Scott admitted, “I think you are partly right. But why transfer
-me down there when there are local men who understand those methods?
-Logging in New Hampshire and logging in North Carolina are very
-different propositions.”
-
-“Maybe the local men cannot handle it and they know you can,” his father
-suggested proudly.
-
-“Of course that’s what you think, dad,” Scott said affectionately, “and
-it may be what they think, but I am afraid that there is something else
-wrong.”
-
-This rather gloomy conversation was broken up by Mrs. Burton, who had
-come to the doorway unnoticed. “Well, well, why worry over something you
-don’t either of you know anything about? Maybe we do not know what you
-are going to do in North Carolina, but we do know that you have to leave
-us in the morning and we don’t want to waste what time we have left
-worrying. Come on in to supper.”
-
-Scott laughed. “All right, mother, you always say the sensible thing.
-I’ll bet there is nothing wrong with the supper no matter what may be
-the matter with the new job.”
-
-So they went in to supper cheerfully enough and all three spent the
-evening poring very busily over the atlas, and trying to see what they
-could find out about the new country. Caspar, the little town where the
-headquarters were located, was not shown on the old map, but they found
-out a great deal about the country in general, and it was bedtime before
-they knew it.
-
-“There,” Mrs. Burton exclaimed cheerfully as they said good night, “I am
-satisfied. I’d be willing to go to that country on any old kind of a
-job.”
-
-Scott was not ordinarily given to worrying much and by the time his
-train pulled out of the quiet little Massachusetts village the next
-morning he was looking forward eagerly to seeing this new country and
-had forgotten all the imaginary troubles which the new work might bring.
-
-His orders were to report direct to Caspar, but he had half a day
-between trains in Washington and took the opportunity to visit the
-Forest Service offices. He met a few friends and became personally
-acquainted with a number of men who had before that been to him only a
-name attached to the end of an official letter, but he learned nothing
-definite in regard to his new work. The chief of the particular branch
-in which Scott was employed was out of the office and the inspector who
-was to meet him in Caspar had already gone to North Carolina. That
-looked as though there must be something unusual there, but Scott
-resolutely refused to worry about it any more and settled down in the
-car seat to enjoy the scenery of Virginia, which was altogether new to
-him.
-
-The little shanties scattered all through the country and the grinning
-black faces which crowded one end of the platform at every station
-reminded him of Florida, but the country itself was very different.
-Instead of the flat sand-plains covered with dense stands of yellow pine
-the train wound through rolling clay hills and hardwood forests until it
-lost itself in the foothills of the mountains just as the sun went down.
-Scott peered eagerly out of the car window until he could no longer see
-even the telegraph poles beside the track.
-
-Morning found him at a junction point in the heart of the mountains.
-These mountains were not like the Rocky Mountains as he had known them
-in the southwest. There was none of that stark grandeur of the bare
-rocky slopes and flat-top mesas, but there was a peaceful beauty about
-them which reminded him more of the overgrown Massachusetts hills; soft
-green slopes towering above the valley to a surprising height,
-considering the low absolute altitude of the range. There was as much
-difference between the valley and the mountain peak as there usually was
-in the Rockies, but Scott remembered that the valleys in the Rockies
-were as high as many of these peaks.
-
-A little branch line carried him down a narrow valley between what
-appeared to be flat-topped, unbroken ridges clothed in every kind of
-hardwood tree that Scott had ever heard of, and capped with a rim of
-dark green spruce which fitted over it like a black cape. Here and there
-a peak rose conspicuously above the level ridge.
-
-“It must be great in those forests,” Scott thought, “and the views from
-those peaks ought to be worth seeing. I tell you there has got to be a
-lot of trouble in this job if I can’t enjoy myself in this country.”
-
-He was trying to catch a glimpse of a particularly high peak which
-showed itself every now and then above the dark spruce ridge when the
-conductor called, “Caspar,” and Scott had to hurry to get his pack sack
-and suit case off the train at his headquarters.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE MYSTERY OF THE TWO STORES
-
-
-When the dinky little train pulled out and left Scott standing on the
-platform, he realized why he had not seen the town of Caspar from the
-car window. It consisted of a railroad station, two stores, four
-dwelling houses and another large, decrepit-looking building which could
-not easily be classified, and they were all on the other side of the
-railroad track from Scott’s position in the car. From that side of the
-train no one would have suspected the presence of a town anywhere in
-that vicinity. The mountain slope came down almost to the railroad track
-and the forest on that side was almost unbroken.
-
-The station agent seemed quite interested at the sight of a stranger. He
-watched Scott for a minute and seemed to be studying him in his own slow
-way. Finally he seemed to decide that it would be safe to speak.
-
-“Howdy! Stranger in these parts, be ye?” he drawled.
-
-“Yes,” Scott said, “is there a hotel here or any place where a man can
-stay?”
-
-“Reckon you can stay at the hotel. Ain’t no place else you could stay in
-this town and live.”
-
-Scott thought at the time that that was a rather peculiar remark for any
-one to make, but when he found that the station agent also ran the hotel
-he charged it up to professional pride. When he saw the hotel he
-wondered how any one could have any professional pride in it.
-
-The hotel turned out to be the nondescript building which stood, or
-rather sat, apart from the others at the end of the street. It was a
-large, rambling, barn-like structure a story and a half high. Half a
-dozen gables stuck up from the side of the roof. It looked very old and
-its first coat of paint had never been renewed. The ground around it was
-as bare as the weathered clapboarding. There was no sign of any attempt
-at beautifying either grounds or building. A rough picket fence
-separated it from the rest of the village, but just why no one could
-tell, for the ground inside the fence was, if anything, more barren than
-that outside. Altogether it was a forlorn-looking place.
-
-The proprietor led Scott upstairs into a room large enough for a banquet
-hall. It looked even more desolate, if possible, than the outside of the
-house. It contained a bed covered with an old patch-work quilt and two
-boxes—one to serve as a chair and the other as a washstand (you could
-tell which was the washstand by the old tin basin half full of dirty
-water).
-
-Scott looked around the room in dismay, but he had made up his mind that
-he would have to put up with it when he caught a sickening odor, as of a
-dead mouse, that apparently came from the closet. That he could not
-stand. He had heard of the touchiness of these people, and he did not
-want to offend them, especially as he would probably have to make the
-place his headquarters for some time. But he had to get out of there by
-some means.
-
-“You haven’t any bedroom on the first floor, have you?” he asked, trying
-to conceal the disgust he actually felt. “I may be here a long time, and
-there may be a great many people coming to see me, and a ground-floor
-room would be much more convenient.”
-
-“Shore, I reckon we can accommodate you,” the man said, and he led the
-way apathetically downstairs again.
-
-He opened a door off the long back porch and stepped back to let Scott
-enter. It was a palace compared with the upstairs room. The furniture
-was old, but everything was there down to a rag carpet on the floor,
-and, moreover, everything looked clean.
-
-“This will be fine,” Scott said as he glanced quickly about. “What time
-do you have dinner?”
-
-“Twelve o’clock, most times, but there ain’t anything certain about it.”
-He paused at the door on his way out. “It ain’t none of my business, but
-you ain’t a U. S. marshal, be you?”
-
-“No,” Scott laughed, “nothing like that. Why, are there many moonshiners
-around here?”
-
-“I ain’t saying anything about moonshiners,” the man replied in the same
-dull tone. “I was just going to tell you that this was a mighty
-unhealthy country around here for the U. S. marshal.”
-
-Scott did not know whether this was meant as a friendly warning or as a
-threat, and before he could ask anything more about it the man was gone.
-As he was not in any way connected with the United States marshal, he
-thought no more about it.
-
-Left to himself, he began to examine the room more closely. It was clean
-all right, but the general effect of it was most grotesque. The high,
-carved head-board of the old walnut bed might have had a place in a
-medieval museum, but here in this room it looked out of place like
-everything else in it. When Scott’s eyes fell on the wall paper, he
-stood aghast. He counted thirty-seven different patterns, each a small
-square evidently taken from a country storekeeper’s sample book, and
-only a third of the wall was covered. The east window was heavily
-curtained with portières, lace curtains and a shade. Scott peeped out.
-It opened almost into the mountainside and no human habitation was in
-sight. The glass door opening on to the back porch—which was by far the
-most frequented part of the house—was not curtained at all. It was a
-queer place, but Scott had been in worse, and he decided that it would
-have to do.
-
-He had been so interested in finding a place to stay that he had
-forgotten all about the man from the Washington office who was to meet
-him here. He went out to inquire for him. The dining room opened on to
-the porch next to his room and the kitchen was next to that.
-
-The man was nowhere to be seen, but there were three women in the
-kitchen and they were feverishly discussing Scott’s probable business.
-Complete silence fell on them all when he appeared in the doorway.
-
-“Pardon me,” he said. “Do you know whether Mr. Reynolds of the Forest
-Service has been here?”
-
-The women looked at each other as though an important problem had been
-solved before any one answered.
-
-Then one of the women answered with a question: “Are you Mr. Burton?”
-
-“Yes,” Scott said.
-
-“Mr. Reynolds left here this morning. He said that if Mr. Burton, the
-new supervisor, came to tell him he would be back to-night or to-morrow
-morning. I was looking for a much older man,” she added looking at him
-curiously.
-
-“Well,” Scott laughed, “time will correct that.”
-
-Scott noticed that these women were all sizing him up just as the
-station agent had done a little while before. He went back to his room,
-and looked in the glass to see what could be wrong. He could see nothing
-to attract attention. He tried to forget the occurrence and went out to
-see the town and surrounding country.
-
-He wandered down the street, if the road between the two stores could be
-called a street, and wondered why there should be two stores in such a
-place. Judging from the unbroken forests on the mountain slopes he did
-not see where enough people could possibly come from to support any
-store at all.
-
-On the porch of each store there was a small group of idlers holding
-down the dry-goods boxes, and Scott saw that they were sizing him up
-just as the women had done. Moreover, the stare of these men seemed to
-be distinctly unfriendly. It made him feel uneasy. He was glad when he
-had run the gauntlet of unfriendly stares, and was out in the open road
-with only the railroad station and the mountains before him. But he had
-one more examination to stand. The station agent was watching him from
-the corner of the platform. In fact, Scott caught him squatting down to
-get a better view of him even before he came out in the open. He
-resented this officious spying on his movements and turned aside into a
-mountain road which wound its way up a timber-covered slope.
-
-“Heh!” Scott turned to see the man coming towards him at what was an
-unusual gait for him. “Didn’t buy anything at the store, did you?”
-
-Scott looked at him indignantly for an instant, but he remembered again
-that he had to live with these people, probably for a long time, and did
-not want to offend them. “No,” he replied as pleasantly as he could.
-“Why?”
-
-“I just wanted to know,” the man replied frankly. “But if you haven’t
-done it, don’t.” The man had evidently noticed that Scott had resented
-his interference and he walked away with considerable dignity without
-making any further explanation.
-
-Scott started to call him back but changed his mind and continued his
-walk up the road. He wanted to get away from these inquisitive people
-for a while, and try to think things over. Fate, however, seemed to have
-decided otherwise. He had gone a little more than a quarter of a mile up
-the winding road through the heavy hardwood timber when he came to a
-little cabin set back only a few feet from the road behind the
-inevitable picket fence. An old man was sitting on the porch, and he
-sized Scott up with the same all-consuming curiosity, but his gaze
-seemed to be wholly friendly. There was none of that furtive animosity
-he had felt rather than seen in the groups down at the store.
-
-“Howdy, stranger?” the old man greeted him pleasantly. “Be you the new
-supervisor?”
-
-The old man’s manner was so evidently friendly, and his curiosity so
-frank that Scott warmed up to him at once.
-
-“Yes,” he admitted cheerfully, “I’m the new supervisor.”
-
-“Haven’t bought anything at the store yet, have you?” the old man
-continued in his friendly way.
-
-There was that same question about the store and Scott stiffened for an
-instant, but he thought better of it. Maybe he could learn something
-from this old man.
-
-“No,” Scott said, “I have not bought anything from the store. Tell me,
-why does everybody ask me that? I have not been in this town much more
-than half an hour and two people have already asked me if I have bought
-anything at the store. What is the meaning of it?”
-
-The old man looked at him thoughtfully for a minute as though hesitating
-to answer the question. Then he answered slowly as though pronouncing
-final judgment:
-
-“Because when you do buy anything from one of those stores, you might as
-well leave the town for all the good you’ll ever be able to do in this
-country,” and he turned as though to enter the house.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE OLD MAN’S STORY
-
-
-The old man’s statement seemed so ridiculous that Scott hesitated to
-believe it. He thought that the man must be making fun of him, but he
-recalled the station agent’s warning. There must be something in it. The
-whole community could not be conspiring just to play a joke on him.
-Before the old man reached the door he called him back.
-
-“Just a minute, please. You are the second man to warn me not to buy
-anything at that store. Why shouldn’t I? What has buying at the store
-got to do with running a national forest? I can’t see the connection.”
-
-The old man looked at him and smiled sarcastically. “Neither could the
-other two men who came here before you, and they both had to leave.”
-
-Scott’s curiosity was now thoroughly aroused, and he determined to pump
-an explanation out of this man. He smiled winningly. “Then tell me the
-secret so that I shall not have to follow them.”
-
-At his change of tone the old man’s sarcasm disappeared immediately.
-“Well, if that’s the way you look at it,” he said with all his old
-friendliness, “why, maybe I’ll try to tell you. You couldn’t tell those
-other fellows anything.”
-
-“I would certainly appreciate it,” Scott said, as he settled himself
-down on the fence to listen. “I have come here to run this forest, and
-if that store down there has anything to do with it, I want to know
-about it.”
-
-“Come in, come in,” the old man repeated hospitably. “It’s a long story,
-and you might as well sit down to listen to it.”
-
-Scott gladly stepped inside the fence, and took a seat opposite his host
-on the porch. “By the way,” he said, “I thought I saw two stores down
-there in the village. Which one do you mean?”
-
-“That’s just the point. If there was only one store there you could buy
-all you pleased, but if you buy anything from one of those stores now,
-the fellow who owns the other one would sure get you.”
-
-“But can’t a man buy where he pleases in this country?” Scott asked
-indignantly. His spirit rebelled at any one dictating to him the way he
-should run what he considered to be his own business.
-
-“Not and live in peace,” the old man answered sadly. “I’ll tell you the
-story, and then you can do as you please.
-
-“You see the people here in the mountains don’t move around much. When a
-man gets used to these mountains he never wants to live anywhere else.
-The children don’t marry, and go off somewhere else to live; they just
-put up another shanty, and live close to home. The families stick close
-together, and form a kind of settlement. Most everybody in the
-settlement is kin to somebody else.
-
-“The Morgans live in the settlement up on this side of the valley, and
-the Waits over there on the other side. They were good friends and
-getting along fine till the railroad come down the valley. They called
-old Zeb Morgan and old Foster Wait together to decide where the station
-ought to be. They got into a row over it somehow, and before anybody
-could interfere Foster had pulled a gun and shot Zeb through the heart.
-That was forty years ago. Well, it was a murder all right, and no excuse
-for it except Foster’s notorious temper. The sheriff took Foster off to
-jail, and that ought to have ended it. Would have ended it, too, if it
-had not been for Zeb’s half-witted brother Jim. Everybody knew Jim
-wasn’t exactly right in his head, but he worshiped Zeb, and when Zeb was
-shot he went plumb crazy, disappeared and nobody saw or heard of him for
-a week. Next thing anybody knew Jim had turned up in the middle of the
-Wait settlement and shot two of Foster’s brothers.
-
-“Well, they should not have held the Morgans responsible for the actions
-of a crazy man, but they did, and the fight was on. The dead line was
-drawn down the middle of the village street, and every time a Wait
-stepped over that dead line, he had to duck Morgan lead, and the Waits
-were just as quick on the trigger on the other side. Every once in a
-while some one on one side or the other would get drunk and shoot across
-the line.
-
-“It got pretty bad. All the kin folks got mixed up in it, and there was
-a funeral every two or three months. There has not been much shooting
-for the past five years. The Morgans got the worst of the scrap in the
-early days, and there’s only old Jarred and his two sons left of the
-direct descendants of Zeb. Unless you count his little granddaughter
-Vic. She’s the fightenest little wildcat in the whole bunch. Of course
-there are lots of relatives, but they had cooled off pretty much till
-this national forest business came along to stir them up again.
-
-“But I most forgot the store. You see old Tom Wait had a store in the
-village before the trouble began, and it was all that was needed, maybe
-a little more, but of course after the trouble no Morgan would deal
-there. Been shot if he’d tried it. So Jarred’s boys had to start a store
-on the other side. That’s where the two stores come from. Buy anything
-from one of them, and you have all the other side of the mountain down
-on you. Now maybe you can see why I warned you.”
-
-Scott sat in silence for a moment while the old man watched him
-curiously. He was dazed by what seemed to him an impossible situation.
-How could such a horrible state of affairs exist in the heart of a
-civilized country?
-
-“Isn’t there any way of bringing the two families together and stopping
-this senseless fight?” Scott asked earnestly. “Surely they must see how
-it is hurting them both. Has any one ever tried to stop it?”
-
-The old man shook his head sadly. “The Morgan boys might quit if they
-could find any way to do it. They know it is only a question of time
-till they will be killed. Three Morgans can’t hold out forever against a
-dozen Waits, and that is what it means because their kin folk are not
-going to stick by them much longer.”
-
-“It would not be possible to persuade this man Jarred to give up the
-feud?” Scott asked.
-
-The old man smiled sadly. “It’s clear you ain’t seen him, stranger. Old
-Jarred would give away anything he’s got except his pride, but it takes
-only one look at him to see that he’d never give up to an enemy.”
-
-Scott sat for some minutes pondering this extraordinary situation, and
-the old man continued to watch him rather wistfully. Would he try to
-make peace between these warring factions, or would he ignore them, and
-be run out of the country as the other two had been?
-
-When Scott looked up he smiled at the old man gratefully. “I don’t know
-what I can do to stop this thing. It is pitiful to think of that old man
-eaten up by his hatred, and holding out in his pride against the world.
-Maybe I cannot do anything to stop it, but I certainly do not want to do
-anything to stir it up. I can’t tell you how much I appreciate what you
-have told me. To whom am I indebted for this information and advice?”
-
-“My name is Sanders. ‘Old man’ Sanders they call me.”
-
-“And I take it that you are not mixed up in this feud on either side.
-Who else is not in it?”
-
-“The station agent. He has to be neutral.”
-
-“And how did you happen to keep out of it?” Scott asked.
-
-“Because I am a Quaker,” the old man answered proudly, “and do not
-believe in fighting. And now,” he added with the same sad smile Scott
-had noticed several times before, “one of my daughters has married a
-Wait and the other a Morgan.”
-
-Scott rose to go. “Well, Mr. Sanders,” he said earnestly, “I have almost
-as good a reason as you have for keeping neutral. I am certainly obliged
-to you for your advice, and I may need your help again. In the meanwhile
-I shall keep away from those stores, and try not to stir anything up.”
-
-Scott walked slowly on up the mountain road with bent head, and when the
-old man had watched him out of sight he continued to gaze dreamily at
-the turn of the road where the young man had disappeared.
-
-“He’s not a fool like the others, anyway,” he said aloud, “and I think
-he’ll stay here.”
-
-Scott wandered on. He wanted to find a place where he could be alone and
-think.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- OLD JARRED
-
-
-Two miles farther up that same road a little log cabin stood back from
-the road about fifty feet behind its weather-beaten picket fence. The
-little yard, like most of the yards in that section of the country, was
-perfectly bare, and at first glance it seemed to be deserted. But if a
-member of the Wait settlement had tried to enter the yard, he would
-instantly have been aware of a very real presence.
-
-Seated on the doorstep of the cabin, and so motionless that he might
-have been a part of it, was a man clad in a black sateen shirt and
-homespun trousers tucked into heavy Congress boots. Judging from the
-silvery whiteness of his hair he might have been eighty-five, but from
-the strong, stern lines of his thin, smooth-shaven face he might have
-been forty-five. There was no sign of nervousness. Not a finger moved
-and his eyes rested unwaveringly on a small clearing half a mile down
-the mountain where he could catch a glimpse of the road to the village.
-
-A white flag waved for an instant in the clearing and the lines of his
-face relaxed. The sternness had given way to an expression of
-anticipation. The man’s eyes shifted from the clearing to the bend in
-the road just below the cabin. Other than that there was no movement. It
-would have taken a careful student to have discovered that an
-all-consuming curiosity was gnawing at this man’s heart. He seemed to be
-without a care in the world. Certainly no one could have guessed that he
-was suffering from a suspense which was almost unbearable.
-
-Suddenly a slip of a girl, not more than thirteen years old, and small
-for her age, came running around the bend in the road. The brown of her
-sunburned legs twinkled in the patches of sunlight that came through the
-trees, and her blue-checked calico dress fluttered in the wind as she
-ran with unfaltering stride. It was not an impatient burst of speed at
-the end of a journey. She had been running steadily all the way from the
-village, almost two and a half miles away and nearly a thousand feet
-below.
-
-At the sight of her the man arose and stretched his gaunt form to its
-full height. The coming of the child meant much to him, but he showed no
-sign of curiosity. She stopped before him with chest heaving and dark
-eyes aflame.
-
-“He went to Wait’s,” she panted.
-
-The lines in the old man’s face tightened, and he seemed to grow taller,
-but he made no answer.
-
-“That was the man who came yesterday,” she continued furiously. “He
-bought a sack of tobacco at Wait’s this morning, and went up on the
-other mountain. The other one who came this morning didn’t go in
-nowhere. He ain’t much more than a boy.”
-
-“Where is he?” the man asked sternly. “At the hotel?”
-
-“No, he went there, but he only stayed a few minutes. Then he walked
-right through the village and started up this way. I passed him just out
-on the road.”
-
-“Did he see you?”
-
-“No,” she answered contemptuously. “I was in the brush, but he would not
-have seen me if I had run right by him. He was looking at the ground and
-frowning.”
-
-The man turned the news slowly over in his mind before he answered.
-
-“So the new supervisor is a young lad, is he?”
-
-She nodded.
-
-“And he did not go in anywhere,” the man continued meditatively. “What
-sort of looking man is he?”
-
-“He’s two inches shorter than you are, grandpa, but he is heavy and
-strong,” she said confidently, with the air of one who is accustomed to
-gauge the physical builds of men. “He’s wearing one of them uniforms,
-and he’s dark and good looking.”
-
-He gave the girl a quick, searching glance. “Well, don’t make friends
-with him yet, Vic. He has not gone into Wait’s, but he has not been in
-our store either. Let’s wait till we see what he is going to do.”
-
-“Me make friends with one of those government men,” she burst out
-contemptuously. “They all of them side with the Waits. I’d spit in his
-face if he spoke to me.”
-
-Her grandfather smiled approvingly. “Oh, I would not do that, Vic, not
-till he gives you some reason to. This one may turn out to be all
-right.”
-
-“Then let him keep away from the Waits, if I have to be polite to him,”
-she snapped.
-
-The old man took the girl tenderly by the shoulders, and looked at her
-earnestly. “You’re the best Morgan in the bunch, Vic, and we’ll have to
-stick together. The boys may stick by me, but they would give the whole
-thing up if they saw a good way out. You and old Jarred are the only
-ones left to uphold the honor of the family.”
-
-The child shook the mass of black hair back from her face, and looked
-squarely into the old man’s eyes. The concentrated hatred and fury of
-three generations gave her the appearance of a witch. “Don’t you worry,
-grandpa. Let daddy and uncle Bob give up if they want to, but no Wait
-will ever cross the line while I am here to help you.”
-
-Her grandfather patted her head proudly. “That’s the girl. I knew I
-could count on you, Vic. Now go in the house, and get some lunch. Then
-we’ll go down to the village again. I want to get a look at that
-handsome young man myself.”
-
-Vic glared at him angrily. “I had to say that to tell you what he looked
-like. Let him go into the Wait’s store, and I’ll show you what I think
-of his looks.” She tossed her head defiantly and stalked into the house
-with great dignity.
-
-The old man watched her go with a twinkle of pride in his eye and smiled
-affectionately. Then he turned away and looked sadly down into the
-valley. These were indeed sad times when the honor of the Morgans rested
-on a girl of thirteen, and an old man past sixty, but his gaunt frame
-straightened unconsciously at the thought, and his chin set all the
-harder. If the Waits thought that they could walk over him because he
-was old they were surely reckoning without their host.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- HOPWOOD
-
-
-While the old man and the child were pledging their everlasting hatred
-to the Waits, Scott Burton, with puzzled frown, was slowly climbing the
-mountain road to their cabin. He did not know the location of old Jarred
-Morgan’s cabin, and probably would have avoided it if he had, for he
-wanted to think this feud business over before he talked to any of them.
-Ignorant of how close he was to them, he turned into the woods less than
-a quarter of a mile below them and sat down with his back against the
-trunk of a great, wide-spreading beech tree. He was out of sight of the
-road, and he had purposely chosen the spot in the deep woods to be free
-from interruption.
-
-So this was the simple little job which the Service had given him to
-complete before he went back to his old home in the southwest? Why did
-they always pick him out to unravel some mess? He had never had a job
-where he could really show what he could do. Always there had been some
-complication, something outside of the regular line of duty that had
-taken his whole time and attention. Never had he found himself in a
-position where he could devote himself to his technical work and show
-what he knew. Even when he had logged his own land he had found his
-operations hindered by the bully of the country who had tried to ruin
-him. His first impulse now was to write to the Service that he did not
-care to mix up in this mess at all. If they wanted him to go back to his
-old post, all right; otherwise, he would resign. He had made enough to
-live on out of his own logging operations, and he could make more the
-same way. He did not have to worry over these miserable feuds. Two men
-had already lost their reputations on this job and been run out of the
-country and....
-
-Right there Scott lost all interest in that line of thought. Was he
-going to let them run him out of the country? His jaw set at the mere
-thought of it, and he knew that he would never leave till he had been
-completely beaten or was carried out in a wooden box. He dropped all
-idea of giving up the job and settled down to look it squarely in the
-face.
-
-Just what was this problem anyway? The government owned a big tract of
-land here, and there was timber on it that was ready to be cut, and it
-was up to him as supervisor to sell it. It was located on both sides of
-the valley, part in Wait territory and part in Morgan. Two other men had
-already tried it, and had failed utterly before they had ever started
-because they had become involved in this everlasting feud between the
-Waits and the Morgans.
-
-When he really thought about it, it did not seem to be such an
-impossible task. Why should he mix up in this feud at all? It looked as
-though old Foster Wait was to blame for starting it years ago, but it
-did not matter now who was originally to blame, they were both equally
-to blame for keeping it up all these years. He would put it up to them
-squarely that they had to forget the feud, and come together or he would
-have nothing to do with either of them. Just what could they have to do
-with it in any event? He did not think, from what he had seen of the
-country people there, that either family could scrape together enough
-money to buy the timber on a single acre. He did not see how they could
-influence the sale one way or the other, and he was not going to let
-them do it if they could.
-
-When Scott had come to that somewhat Irish decision he felt better. It
-seemed almost as if the problem had been solved and he began to look
-about him. His eyes had been fixed absently on the ground all the time
-and his first upward glance revealed a sight that sent a cold shiver up
-his back.
-
-A man was sitting on a log not six feet from him, and was staring at him
-with bright blue eyes. It was startling enough to find any one sitting
-so close to him when he had thought himself entirely alone, but it was
-really alarming when the man had a gun in his hand and a large piece of
-sheet iron on top of his head. At first Scott thought that he must be
-dreaming, and he blinked his eyes two or three times to try to dispel
-the illusion, but it would not dispel.
-
-This was really a man. He looked much as other men save for a queer,
-dreamy look in his eyes, and he was dressed like other men except for
-his strange head gear. Instead of a hat he was wearing a strange
-contraption of wood and iron. On the bottom of a sheet of heavy iron
-about eighteen inches long and a foot wide he had nailed four pieces of
-wood in the form of a square. This he was wearing on his head like a
-senior’s mortar board.
-
-All during Scott’s astonished examination, the newcomer sat staring at
-him without the slightest expression on his weather-beaten face. He was
-so still that he might have been a statue and his unwavering pose added
-to Scott’s feeling of his unreality. He finally, after several minutes
-of astonished silence, recovered sufficiently from the spell to exclaim
-“Hello.” He said it in a rather startled tone. It did not sound in the
-least like a friendly greeting, but it seemed to be altogether
-satisfactory to his visitor. The man’s face relaxed, and a friendly
-smile lighted it up. Scott was in hopes that he would remove the iron
-hat, but he did not.
-
-“So you are the new supervisor,” the stranger remarked in a low,
-pleasing voice.
-
-“Yes,” Scott replied a little stiffly, for he had not entirely recovered
-from his astonishment, and could not keep his eyes off the iron hat,
-“I’m the new supervisor. And who may you be?”
-
-“I might be almost anybody,” the man smiled, “but I happen to be
-Hopwood.”
-
-“Well, I’m sure I don’t know where you came from, Mr. Hopwood. You just
-seemed to appear on that log as if by magic, but I am glad to know you,
-all the same.”
-
-“Not Mr. Hopwood,” the man said solemnly, “just Hopwood. Hopwood Wait.”
-
-Scott looked at him with a new interest. So this was one of the Waits,
-the first one he had seen, and he wondered if the iron hat were a part
-of the family armor. It might have protected him from an airplane
-attack, but would have been of little use for anything else. He had
-understood that the Waits did not come over on this side of the valley.
-Could this man be scouting in enemy territory or had he come in hope of
-getting a pot shot at a Morgan? He decided to risk a question.
-
-“Aren’t you in dangerous territory here?”
-
-Hopwood shook his head slowly. “No, they all think I am crazy, but I
-have more sense than anybody else in the family. I can eat lunch with
-Jarred Morgan and supper with Foster Wait, and that’s more than anybody
-else can do,” he replied proudly.
-
-“Then you don’t believe in this family feud?” Scott inquired eagerly.
-
-Again Hopwood shook his head. “Why should I? They will all be killed if
-they keep it up. The cemetery is full of them now.”
-
-“Do you think that they would give it up if they had a good chance?”
-
-Hopwood nodded.
-
-“What makes you think so?” This man might be able to give him some
-useful information even if he was crazy.
-
-“Because they are scared,” Hopwood answered promptly. “Every one of them
-is scared except old Jarred and Vic. They don’t pay any attention to me
-and I hear them talk.”
-
-“Then why don’t they give it up?”
-
-“Because they are more scared to quit than they are to go on. If they
-should quit, old Jarred would kill them all, both Morgans and Waits.”
-
-Scott thought for a moment. Old Jarred Morgan seemed to be the key to
-the situation if this man knew what he was talking about.
-
-“Where could I find you if I should need you some time?” Scott asked. He
-thought he could see how this man might be very useful to him.
-
-“Almost anywhere,” was Hopwood’s unsatisfactory answer.
-
-Scott looked thoughtfully off through the woods a moment wondering what
-other useful information he could get out of this man, and when he
-looked back the man was gone.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- SCOTT TALKS WITH THE AGENT
-
-
-The disappearance of Hopwood had been so silent and so unexpected that
-Scott hardly knew whether it had not been a dream after all. He sat
-still for a moment to see whether he would come back, but, when he did
-not, he arose leisurely, and began to glance cautiously about him. He
-did not want to search because he thought that Hopwood must be behind a
-tree somewhere waiting to have the laugh on him. After all what
-difference did it make what had become of Hopwood? Scott felt that he
-had learned all that he could get out of him just now, and he had made
-up his mind what he wanted to do.
-
-He glanced at his watch. It was a quarter of twelve, and he would be
-late for his dinner if he did not hurry. He was curious to know how
-Hopwood had disappeared so suddenly and where he had gone, but he struck
-out for the road without looking to the right or the left. Just as he
-reached it he saw the man of the iron hat stroll leisurely around a bend
-a little way up the mountain, apparently unconscious that he had acted
-peculiarly, and without a backward glance. The sight of him reminded
-Scott that he had not found out why this man wore his strange iron hat,
-and he made up his mind to ask some one the first chance he had.
-
-When Scott reached the hotel after again running the gauntlet of stares
-in the village there were no signs of a meal in the very near future.
-The women were talking in the kitchen, but there was no sign of any
-hurry in spite of the fact that it was already fifteen minutes after the
-time they had announced for dinner. He went to his room and found it
-just as he had left it. Either he was expected to make his own bed or
-the women did not make them till afternoon. He decided to wait and see
-what would happen.
-
-When the dinner bell finally rang, it was a quarter past one. Scott
-found himself alone with the station agent. The meal was about the worst
-he had ever seen. Great cubes of salt pork fat three inches square,
-boiled and transparent, that might have made an Eskimo’s mouth water,
-but were impossible for the uninitiated. Corn bread as dry as powder, a
-sickly looking gravy, and some gluey rice. At first Scott thought that
-he could not eat any of it, but what was he going to do? This was
-probably what he would have to eat for several weeks. There was no place
-to look for anything better. With a desperate look around the table to
-make sure that he had not overlooked any possibilities, he resolutely
-helped himself to the rice and the corn bread and waded in. He could
-swallow these things if he had to, but he could not bring himself even
-to try the salt pork.
-
-He had been so disgusted with the meal that he had forgotten all about
-the station agent. Now he recalled that the gentleman had been rather
-offended at his actions in the morning, and that he had better try to
-make his peace with him now.
-
-“Mr. Roberts, you probably thought me very ungrateful this morning, but
-I knew absolutely nothing of this feud here, and could not imagine what
-you meant.”
-
-The agent answered rather stiffly. “None of the government men who have
-been here seem to want to know anything about it, but they all learn
-something about it sooner or later.”
-
-“Well, I want to know all I can about it. Up the road this morning I met
-Mr. Sanders, and when he asked me that same question about buying at the
-stores I asked him to explain. He told me all he could about it, and
-then I realized what you meant. I really appreciate your kindness very
-much, and want to thank you for trying to warn me. I don’t believe there
-are many people around here who would have done it.”
-
-The agent was evidently pleased with the apology and melted immediately.
-“No, I reckon there ain’t,” he said rather proudly. “Old man Sanders and
-I are about the only ones. The others are all in it up to their necks.”
-
-“Now that I know about it, I am not going to get mixed up with either
-side. They will have to give up their feud and work together like other
-people if they want to get in the game.”
-
-“They will never do that as long as old Jarred lives,” the agent
-answered confidently.
-
-That familiar phrase reminded Scott of the strange man with the iron
-hat. “By the way,” he asked, “who is this man Hopwood?”
-
-“He’s Foster Wait’s nephew. Foster’s father is the man who started the
-feud, you know. He had an awful bad temper, and they tell me that, when
-Hopwood was a little kid, old Foster hit him in the head with his cane
-and he’s been crazy as a loon ever since. Did you meet him at Sanders’
-place?”
-
-“No,” Scott replied, “I met him up in the woods.”
-
-“Thought you might have met him at Sanders’,” the agent said. “His
-mother was old Sanders’ daughter. What did you think of his hat?”
-
-“I was just going to ask you why he wears that thing,” Scott said with
-renewed curiosity.
-
-“He thinks it will keep the devil away.” The agent was delighted with
-the opportunity to tell some one of the strange gossip of the country
-that he had collected in his ten years of residence. “You see when he
-grew up he saw that he was not like other people, and they had to give
-him some reason for it, so they told him there was a devil in him. He
-went right out and built that iron hat and has worn it ever since. Says
-he’s going to wear it till they give up the feud.”
-
-“Doesn’t wear it at night, does he?” Scott asked. It was ridiculous, but
-it was so pathetic that he hated to laugh at it.
-
-“No,” the agent answered seriously, “he doesn’t wear it at night, but he
-sleeps on his back with that thing on his chest.”
-
-“He looked queer,” Scott said, “but he seemed to talk reasonably enough.
-He said just as you do that they will never drop the feud as long as old
-Jarred Morgan lives, but he says the others are all scared and would
-drop it if they could.”
-
-“Sometimes I think he isn’t as crazy as they make out. They talk about
-him and in front of him as though he couldn’t understand anything, but
-he can tell you every word that they have said for the past five years.”
-
-Scott thought for a minute. “Do you think it would be safe for me to
-make use of him or would that be considered as taking part with the
-Waits?”
-
-“No, that would not tie you up with the Waits. Everybody talks to him,
-even old Jarred Morgan. They do not seem to consider him as belonging to
-the family, somehow. But you don’t want to be too sure about using him.
-If he happened to take a liking to you he will do anything for you, but
-if he did not like you this morning you’ll probably never see him
-again.”
-
-“I don’t know whether he liked me or not,” Scott said thoughtfully. “He
-appeared on a log in front of me so suddenly that I did not see where he
-came from, and he got away again in the same way.”
-
-“Oh, he moves like a shadow in the woods,” the agent exclaimed
-enthusiastically. “He has any Indian I have ever seen beaten three ways
-for woodcraft. He moves about so fast and so silently that a lot of
-folks around here think he is a spirit.” It was easy to see from the
-agent’s manner that he was not altogether clear on that point himself.
-
-“Well,” Scott said, “I hope he likes me because it looks as though I
-won’t have very many friends around here.”
-
-“You sure will not,” the agent remarked with decision. “You can make
-friends with half the people easy enough, but sure as you do the other
-half will hate you. If you don’t take up with either side, as you are
-planning on doing, likely as not they will all hate you.”
-
-Scott sat for a moment dreamy eyed, considering this disagreeable
-dilemma. When he looked up Hopwood was standing in the doorway, calmly
-looking at him over the agent’s head. For a moment Scott was too
-astonished to speak. He wondered if Hopwood had been outside listening,
-and he thought of what the agent had said about this strange man being a
-spirit.
-
-“Hello, Hopwood!” he exclaimed, and the agent almost jumped out of his
-chair.
-
-Hopwood smiled an answer. “Is that red-headed man who came on the train
-yesterday your boss?” he asked, as though they had been talking for some
-time.
-
-“Yes,” Scott admitted, “he is, in a way.”
-
-“Well, _he’s_ joined the Waits,” Hopwood remarked.
-
-The announcement almost stunned Scott. He stared wildly at Hopwood for
-an instant and then at the agent. “What makes you think so?” he asked
-dully.
-
-There was no answer, and he found Hopwood had disappeared as suddenly as
-he had come.
-
-The agent tiptoed to the door and looked cautiously up and down the
-porch. Hopwood was nowhere to be seen. He looked back at Scott and shook
-his head. “Gone completely. Well, whether he is man or devil, I reckon
-he is a friend of yours all right.”
-
-“I guess he is,” Scott replied with a sickly smile, “but it does not
-look as though my boss thought much of me.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- SCOTT RECEIVES “AID” FROM HIS BOSS
-
-
-Mr. Roberts went back to his office soon after Hopwood’s visit, and was
-evidently glad of the opportunity to get away. He had spoken derisively
-of those who thought that Hopwood was a spirit, but he had looked behind
-him nervously till he was well away from the house.
-
-Scott scarcely noticed that he had gone. He sat with his chin dropped
-dejectedly on his chest, and stared across the table with unseeing eyes.
-If what Hopwood had said was true, his troubles there would be greatly
-increased even if his plans were not completely ruined. It seemed as
-though some evil genius had brought him to this place, and if he had he
-certainly must be laughing at the pickle his victim was in.
-
-Scott was so disappointed that he felt almost ready to cry. With
-considerable difficulty, and the help of old man Sanders and the station
-agent, he had succeeded in posting himself fairly well on the ins and
-outs of this feud. After carefully considering the possibility of an
-alliance with one side or the other he had come to the conclusion that
-the only safe thing to do was to remain absolutely neutral. He felt
-confident that if he could keep away from any entangling alliance with
-either side, he could successfully carry on his work in spite of the
-feud and might even be able to get these old enemies to patch up their
-differences. He had still considered that a possibility even though
-every one said that the feud would never be dropped as long as old
-Jarred Morgan lived.
-
-And now his superior officer had taken sides with the Waits and spoiled
-everything.
-
-Scott determined to find Hopwood, learn where Mr. Reynolds was, and know
-the worst as soon as possible. One of them was right and the other
-wrong. They must at least get together and agree on a common policy.
-
-So Scott started out in search of Hopwood. He felt sure that he could
-tell him where to find Mr. Reynolds. The iron hat was nowhere in sight,
-but Scott felt that he could not be very far away. Surely he would not
-have come to make such a statement as that and then disappear without
-waiting to give any explanation of it. Possibly he had gone to one of
-the stores.
-
-He had started down the village street to investigate when he noticed a
-motionless figure sitting back of a pile of cordwood a little way back
-from the street. He instantly recognized Hopwood. Was he hiding from him
-and would he run away? Scott approached him rather cautiously, but
-Hopwood watched him calmly and showed no sign of retreating. He rather
-appeared to be waiting for him.
-
-“Thanks for the warning you gave me,” Scott said as soon as he was near
-enough to him.
-
-“I thought that you would be looking for me,” Hopwood replied with his
-usual disregard of preliminaries.
-
-“What made you think that I would find you in this out-of-the-way
-place?” Scott laughed. “Why didn’t you stay at the hotel? I would have
-been glad to have had a visit from you.”
-
-“The more people see me with you the less I’ll hear,” Hopwood answered
-cunningly.
-
-Scott started at the flash of wisdom from a half-wit. “I guess you are
-right,” he replied earnestly. “Do you think we are safe here?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” Hopwood replied confidently. “No one can see us here except
-from that one place, and no one else will go along that street for half
-an hour.”
-
-Scott did not waste any time trying to find out how Hopwood knew that.
-There was something else that he was anxious to know. “Then maybe you
-can tell me, Hopwood, what makes you think Mr. Reynolds has joined the
-Waits?”
-
-“He’s been up at the Waits’ nearly all day, and has just about promised
-them that you will give them the logging contract.”
-
-“How do you know he did?” Scott asked incredulously. “You were with me
-part of the morning, and went up the other mountain when you left me,”
-he protested.
-
-Hopwood only smiled.
-
-“Where is he now?” Scott continued. He could not believe that Hopwood
-knew what he was talking about. Maybe he was mistaken. He hoped so.
-
-“He is on his way down the mountain with Foster Wait,” Hopwood replied
-promptly. “He’ll be down here at the store in less than half an hour,”
-he added, as though he had noticed the doubt in Scott’s face.
-
-“Then I guess I’ll wait here till he comes,” Scott said. “I don’t want
-to be seen now traipsing around the country with Foster Wait.
-
-“He’ll have some job to make me give a logging contract to either of
-those gangs,” Scott muttered defiantly. Then, after a minute’s silence,
-“Do you think that either the Morgans or the Waits could carry out a
-logging contract if they did get it, Hopwood? Have they the money to do
-it?”
-
-But there was no answer. Hopwood had disappeared again in his usual
-silent and mysterious fashion. Scott knew better now than to waste his
-time looking for him. He fell to brooding over this phase of the
-problem, and when he looked at his watch it was already ten minutes
-after the time which Hopwood had predicted for Mr. Reynolds’ arrival.
-Scott jumped to his feet and hurried out into the open. He was delighted
-to see Mr. Reynolds coming up the street alone and walked down to meet
-him.
-
-Mr. Reynolds was a rather effeminate-looking man, over neatly dressed in
-the very latest cut of riding suit. He affected a rather bored manner.
-He waved an indolent greeting to Scott.
-
-“Hello, there, Burton! I sure am glad to see you. I thought I was going
-to have to eat another meal in this beastly hole. Now I can probably
-finish up with you in time to catch the afternoon train.”
-
-Scott wished that he had caught the train the day before but he did not
-dare to say so. Instead he said, “Think how long I shall have to eat
-here. Better stay awhile. Misery loves company, you know.”
-
-“Well, I hope you get all the company you want, but it sure will not be
-mine if I can help it.”
-
-“By the way,” Scott asked suddenly, “where did you get that cigarette?”
-
-“Pardon me,” Mr. Reynolds exclaimed, as he fumbled apologetically in his
-pocket for the package, “but I was under the impression that you never
-smoked.”
-
-“I don’t,” Scott replied. “I was only wondering where you bought them.”
-
-“Oh, here at the store. They carry them, but they are a pretty bum
-brand.”
-
-“Which store?” Scott insisted.
-
-“The one on the left there. Hadn’t noticed there were two. What’s the
-big idea? You rooting for one of them?”
-
-Scott knew that it would be useless to argue with this man. He evidently
-had no conception of the situation in the village and Scott did not
-think it worth while to try to explain. “No,” he replied, “I was just
-wondering which one I ought to deal with,” which was true enough.
-
-“Well, if everything they sell is as rotten as their cigarettes you’d
-better try the other one. But come on up to the hotel so that I can go
-over things with you in time to catch that train. I think that I have
-things lined up here for you in pretty good shape.”
-
-“How is that?” Scott asked. In spite of the harm this man had done him
-he could not help smiling at his unbounded conceit.
-
-“Oh, I had a long talk with Foster Wait this afternoon, and fixed it up
-with him so that the Waits will take over the logging contract. There is
-a big family of them and the labor problem will be settled. No use in
-scouring the country the way those other fellows did when it can be
-handled so easily locally.”
-
-“Didn’t sign them up, did you?” Scott asked the question as carelessly
-as he could, but he really waited breathlessly for the answer.
-
-“No,” Mr. Reynolds answered pompously, “I could not very well go into
-all those details because I did not have the necessary forms with me. I
-only smoothed the way for you a little. Now that I have talked to them
-it will be no trick at all for you to get them to sign up and arrange
-all the details.”
-
-“And,” Scott thought, “the details would have to include the hiring of
-an undertaker to sweep up the remains.” But to Mr. Reynolds he said
-nothing. The more he let this man talk the more certain he would be of
-getting rid of him on the afternoon train, and that was Scott’s one
-ambition now—to get rid of this man at the earliest possible moment.
-
-They walked on up to the hotel and when they came out two hours later
-Scott was more than ever anxious to see him go. If this man had had
-anything to do with the business when the two previous supervisors had
-been run out of the country he could understand perfectly well how it
-happened. Scott had listened attentively and talked hardly at all.
-
-As they approached the stores Scott saw a good-sized delegation
-assembled on the porch of each. The Waits looked smilingly elated. The
-Morgans glared angrily from across the way.
-
-“Come on up and I’ll introduce you to these people now if I have the
-time.”
-
-Scott was determined to avoid this but he did now know how to do it. If
-he refused, Mr. Reynolds would undoubtedly start an argument which the
-spectators could not help but understand. Fortunately the train was on
-time, something which rarely happened, and it whistled just in the nick
-of time.
-
-As the train pulled out of the station, Scott watched it with a feeling
-of profound relief, but at the same time he half wished that he was on
-it. He was rid of Mr. Reynolds, but would he ever be able to get out of
-the mess into which this man had drawn him?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- SCOTT LOSES HIS NEUTRALITY
-
-
-When the train had disappeared Scott turned to find the station agent
-close behind him waiting for an opportunity to speak.
-
-“I reckon Hopwood was right,” he said with his slow drawl.
-
-“What makes you think so?” Scott asked, for he knew that Mr. Reynolds
-had not told him.
-
-“Three of the Waits have already told me that they are going to get the
-logging contract,” he replied.
-
-“Oh, they did, did they?” he exclaimed indignantly. Either Mr. Reynolds
-must have talked to a gathering of the whole clan or the news had spread
-like wild fire over the face of the mountain. “Well, they haven’t got it
-yet,” he snapped. “I guess I’ll have something to say about who gets
-that logging contract.”
-
-“I asked them if you had told them and they said no, but your boss had,
-and you would have to do as he said.”
-
-Scott’s teeth came together with a vicious snap. “They’ll see whether I
-have to or not.” He turned abruptly and walked across the tracks toward
-the Wait country. “No pair of whipcord riding breeches is going to tell
-me where to let a logging contract,” he muttered angrily to himself.
-
-He did not know exactly why he had come in that direction. Possibly it
-was his natural tendency to go straight for his enemy. He did not even
-realize where he was going; he only realized that he was mad clear
-through and that he had better walk some of it off before he talked to
-anybody.
-
-The forest came close down to the edge of the valley on this side and
-the road was arched over with the beautiful hardwood trees. Scott would
-have marveled at their size and beauty if he had not been too angry to
-notice them. The quiet solitude of the steep mountain road was well
-fitted to smooth a man’s ruffled temper and make him forget his
-troubles. Everywhere the gray squirrels were chasing each other around
-the trees in a never ending game of tag, and the birds were singing all
-over the woods.
-
-Before Scott had gone very far he met two men riding down the mountain
-on horseback. They wore the regular uniform of that section, rough
-homespun trousers and a black sateen shirt, and carried long
-muzzle-loading rifles balanced across their saddle bows. They both
-grinned condescendingly at Scott and gave him a careless, “Howdy.”
-
-He did not think it strange that he should meet two men, but when he met
-two more a little farther up and they greeted him in the same way he
-began to comprehend. These were the triumphant Waits on their way to
-town to celebrate their victory, and they were all laughing at him,
-laughing because they had overreached him and made terms with the boss
-that he would have to accept.
-
-The thought maddened him, and by the time he had passed eight more he
-was so angry that he could hardly see the big fellow who brought up the
-rear of the last group of four. It would never do to start a row with
-them now before he was really ready, and yet it was all he could do to
-hide his fury and return their greetings casually.
-
-The big fellow who had just passed turned in his saddle and looked at
-him inquiringly. “Weren’t looking for me, were you, sonny?” he called
-insolently in a rather thick voice.
-
-Scott’s blood boiled at the tone and wording of the question. He did not
-dare look at the man and it almost choked him to answer calmly, “Not
-to-day.”
-
-“Well, to-morrow will do,” the man called insolently. “You can find me
-home most any day.” And the others laughed at the retort.
-
-Scott saw red for a minute and half turned, but he caught himself in
-time. He would not make much headway in handling this timber sale if he
-began with a fight in the public road on a somewhat doubtful pretext. If
-he did fight he ought to have a little better cause than that.
-
-He did not meet any more of the offensive Waits and was beginning to
-cool off a little so that he could think calmly. Suddenly he stopped
-with a jerk and turned his startled gaze down the road in the direction
-all the bands had been traveling. What would be the outcome of this
-meeting in the village? He had met twelve men on the road and he had
-noticed eight more at the store when he came by. They were all armed and
-most likely there would be much drinking. Would they take this
-opportunity to wipe out the remnant of the Morgans?
-
-He had never seen old Jarred Morgan nor had he ever spoken to any of the
-family, but right now his sympathy was with them. The picture which old
-man Sanders had drawn of that lonely old man and a slip of a girl
-holding the Morgan fort almost alone appealed to him. But what could
-they do against a gang of twenty? No matter how brave they were, they
-would be helpless.
-
-Scott’s sense of fair play sent his fighting blood bounding through his
-veins. He turned resolutely and hurried down the mountain. He thought
-that he might be able to prevent that crime. He would help to protect
-that plucky pair if he possibly could, and he would not care what
-anybody thought about it. He did not admit it to himself, but probably
-the greatest incentive was the opportunity to fight these insolent
-Waits. He hurried on without a thought of the possible effects it might
-have on his plans. Every minute he half expected to hear the shot which
-would announce the beginning of the fight.
-
-When he came out of the forest at the foot of the mountain, he was
-relieved to see that everything looked peaceful in the village. The
-station agent saw him coming and lounged out to the end of the platform
-to meet him.
-
-“Well, they are all in town to celebrate,” he drawled.
-
-“I guess they are, judging from the procession I met coming down the
-mountain,” Scott growled bitterly. “Do you think there will be any
-trouble?”
-
-The agent looked at him curiously. “Oh, I don’t believe they will bother
-you any now. They think that you are their friend.”
-
-Scott glared at the man indignantly. “I am not talking about myself. Do
-you suppose I care what that gang thinks of me? But it occurred to me
-that they might take this opportunity to catch the Morgans unprepared
-and clean up what is left of them.”
-
-“Oh, you mean that kind of trouble?” and the agent seemed greatly
-relieved to find it out. “There won’t be any fight unless old Jarred
-comes to town.”
-
-“There will not be any at all if I can prevent it,” Scott replied
-resolutely. “If there is any fight it will be a fair one and not a
-murder of one old man by a gang like that. I wish I could find Hopwood.
-You have not seen him, have you?”
-
-The agent looked cautiously behind him and shook his head. “No, I
-haven’t seen him since noon, but that is no reason why he may not be
-sitting right here somewhere staring at us.”
-
-Scott turned away. “Well, maybe I’ll run on to him. He seems to turn up
-somehow when he is wanted.”
-
-He dreaded passing that crowd at the store and yet he would not have
-gone home any other way this afternoon for a hundred dollars. There
-would almost certainly be some impudent remarks and Scott was almost
-afraid to trust himself, but he made up his mind that he would not fight
-with them no matter what happened till he had tried to persuade them to
-drop the feud.
-
-Purposely he kept out of sight behind some trees till he was not more
-than fifty yards from the store. Then bracing himself for the coming
-trial he walked casually out of the shadow. His eye took in the
-situation at a glance, but he could not understand it.
-
-Two lonely men sat silent and sullen on the porch of the Morgan store.
-At least twenty crowded the porch of the store across the street,
-laughing and gibing at a burly giant who was dragging a young girl
-across the street by the hair. The girl’s head was bent down so that
-Scott could not see her face, but he could imagine her expression. She
-was not uttering a sound, but she was fighting with the fury of a
-wildcat.
-
-Scott’s blood boiled at the sight of a man mistreating a girl in this
-way. Moreover, he recognized the man as the big fellow who had spoken to
-him so insolently up on the mountain. Even before he realized what he
-was doing he had covered the short distance and grabbed the man by the
-arm. He had been a boxer all his life and had won the heavyweight
-championship at college. He was calm now, as calm as he had ever been
-when he stepped into the ring. This man was almost twice his size, but
-he did not even notice it.
-
-“Let go of that girl,” Scott commanded, and as he spoke he let go of the
-man’s arm. He had grabbed it only to attract the man’s attention. He
-knew that he could not hold this man in any such way and he was too good
-a fighter to hold on and be jerked off his balance. The steely ring in
-his voice was enough to hold any one’s attention now.
-
-The man turned upon him furiously, but he did not let go of the girl.
-Evidently he had expected to see a Morgan, for when his eyes fell on
-Scott his mouth dropped open for a moment and he stared blankly.
-
-“Did you hear what I said?” Scott insisted with suppressed fury.
-
-A cunning leer came over the man’s sodden face. The spectators at the
-two stores listened breathlessly.
-
-“Quick work to get sweet on her so soon. Get out of the way, sonny, and
-go get the papers ready for that logging contract.”
-
-Quick as a flash Scott caught the big fellow a tremendous blow on the
-jaw with the flat of his hand. If the man had been sober he would have
-hit him with his fist, but he did not want to slug him when he was in
-that helpless condition, much as he deserved it. Even as it was, the
-slap was enough. The big man let go of the girl, stumbled, lost his
-balance and sprawled his length on the ground, where he lay groping
-helplessly for his gun and muttering curses.
-
-The girl shook her long hair from her face and cast a look of furious
-hatred at the fallen foe. Her chest was heaving from the desperate, but
-futile, struggle. Turning slowly she swept a contemptuous glance over
-the spectators on both porches. “Cowards!” she snapped with all the
-concentrated contempt she could muster. She turned and walked slowly
-down the street with all the dignity of a queen.
-
-Much to Scott’s astonishment not a man had moved a hand to interfere
-with him. He looked them over slowly to see if they were going to mob
-him, but nobody moved or spoke. When he had stood there long enough to
-avoid any appearance of running away, he cast a curious glance at the
-retreating figure of the girl who had so completely ignored her rescuer,
-and walked slowly away toward the hotel, trying to figure out what it
-could all mean.
-
-As he turned the corner of the hotel he almost laughed aloud. He was
-thinking what the Waits must think of his friendship now.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- SCOTT MAKES ANOTHER RESCUE
-
-
-When Scott entered the hotel he was still thinking what it could all
-mean. Why were the men of both factions quietly looking on while a big
-burly drunkard dragged a child around the street by the hair? If the
-girl was a Morgan why had the Morgans let such an act go unchallenged?
-If she was a Wait why had not the rest of the gang protected her? He
-started. Perhaps it was the man’s own child. No matter. No man had a
-right to drag his own child around by the hair. Well, when the station
-agent came to supper he could probably explain things.
-
-But the station agent did not come to supper and Scott ate the atrocious
-food in lonely state still trying to solve this mystery. In any event he
-had shown the Waits just how much they could count on his friendship and
-that was worth something. It was also some satisfaction to know that
-they were probably as much troubled as he was.
-
-Alone in his room he pondered the problem for an hour without coming any
-nearer to a solution. Finally the suspense became unbearable. He
-determined to go to old man Sanders and see if he could offer any
-explanation. It was growing dusk when he went out and objects seemed a
-little indistinct in the distance. He glanced toward the place where
-Hopwood had been waiting for him in the afternoon, but there was no
-trace of him now.
-
-Both stores apparently were deserted. Scott had not seen a soul when he
-turned into the road which led up to Sanders’ little cabin. He thought
-that he had never known the woods to be so silent. It seemed as though
-every living thing must have left the country. But there was a light in
-Sanders’ cabin. The full moon peeped at him over the trees behind the
-house. He knocked on the door and heard the old man shuffling across the
-floor to open it.
-
-“Good evening,” Scott said as the door swung wide. “You see I have come
-back to you for advice pretty quick.”
-
-“Come in, come in,” the old man said cordially. “Glad to see you.” He
-motioned Scott to one of the old-fashioned chairs. When they were
-comfortably seated he spoke again.
-
-“You said you came here for advice. Let me give you a little before I
-forget it. It happens to be perfectly safe for any one to knock on my
-door at any time of the day or night, but don’t try it anywhere else.
-You would probably find yourself looking down the barrel of a gun if the
-dogs did not chew you up first. It is the custom in this country to
-stand outside the gate and shout.”
-
-“Thanks,” Scott replied gratefully. “I am very anxious to learn the
-customs of this country. There seem to be some customs here I do not
-understand. That is what brought me up here to-night. What does it mean
-when a big bully of a man hauls a girl around the street by the hair
-while twenty others look on and do nothing?”
-
-The old man straightened up in his chair. “What’s all this?” he asked
-sharply.
-
-Scott explained as fully as he could and the old man listened
-breathlessly to every word. When Scott had finished his story the old
-fellow sank back in his chair with wrinkled brow.
-
-“So that was how it happened,” he muttered to himself. “The girl has
-more sense than I thought she had.” Then he spoke aloud to Scott. “I
-heard a little something of this but I did not know that you had
-anything to do with it. It’s a wonder to me that you are here to tell
-it.”
-
-Scott misunderstood him. “I admit it was a little hasty,” he replied
-with dignity, “but I am not ashamed of it.”
-
-The old man laughed aloud. “No, no, you have nothing to be ashamed of. I
-am only surprised that Foster has not killed you before this. Be on your
-guard, for he will certainly try it.”
-
-“Tell me about it,” Scott said. “What was going on? I could not make
-head or tail of it.”
-
-Mr. Sanders thought for a moment. “Must have seemed queer to you. Would
-to anybody. You see Foster Wait, he was the big fellow, was drunk as he
-usually is when he has any excuse for it at all. He happened to see Vic
-Morgan there in the village and could not help poking some fun at her
-about the logging contract. They all love to tease her just to see her
-spit fire. She flew into a tantrum just as she always does, ran out to
-the middle of the street, which is the dividing line between Morgan and
-Wait territory, and told him what she thought of him and the whole Wait
-tribe. She said herself that she cursed Foster pretty bad.
-
-“You see she felt safe because the Waits never come past the middle of
-the street. But, as I said, Foster was drunk and he reached over the
-line and grabbed her. Probably just wanted to spank the kid for a joke.
-Vic could not see the joke and bit his thumb. Hurt him pretty bad, I
-reckon, and made him mad. He has a terrible temper like his father. He
-grabbed her by the hair for a safe hold and then you came along.”
-
-“But how could those men there at the Morgan store see a Wait treat a
-member of their family in any such way as that?” Scott protested.
-
-“Because Jim don’t believe in keeping up the feud, and it makes him mad
-every time Vic stirs things up that way. Probably thought it served her
-right.”
-
-“So that child is Vic. And she is the only supporter old Jarred has. Who
-is she, anyway?” Scott asked.
-
-“She is the daughter of Jim Morgan there at the store, but she spends
-most of her time up on the mountain with her grandfather. She and the
-old man are great chums.”
-
-“Just one more question,” Scott said, “or rather two more and then I’ll
-let you go to bed. Why didn’t any of the Waits interfere when I knocked
-their leader down? I did not know who he was or I might have been
-scared.”
-
-“Because they don’t like him. He is a regular bully, and they were
-probably glad to see somebody stand up to him. Besides, they are
-expecting a good deal from you.”
-
-Scott ignored the last remark. “And my last question. How did you find
-out about it so quickly?”
-
-The old man hesitated an instant. “That is the part that puzzled me. Vic
-stopped in here and told me about it herself. That would not have
-surprised me because she usually tells me everything, but she asked me
-not to let her grandfather hear about it if I could help it. That is
-what astonished me. Ordinarily she would have gone to her grandfather on
-the run and wanted him to kill the whole tribe. He’ll try to do it too
-if he ever hears about this and his own tribe, too, for letting it
-happen. I think Vic must have realized that. Didn’t know the kid had so
-much judgment. She did not say anything about your rescuing her,
-either,” he mused.
-
-Scott was thoughtful a minute. “Well, I certainly appreciate your help,
-Mr. Sanders. I think I understand it a little better now, but,” he added
-slowly, “I don’t think I shall ever understand how a father could sit
-still and see a drunken man treat his daughter like that.” And he arose
-to take his leave.
-
-“Old Jarred wouldn’t understand it, either,” Mr. Sanders said, as he
-rose to show his guest to the door. “I wish you would help me to keep
-him from finding it out. The kid does not want him to know, and I like
-her.”
-
-“So do I,” Scott replied. “She fought like a wildcat. I admire nerve in
-anybody. I admire the old man, too, for holding out alone against that
-big gang, and I am going to protect him all I can.”
-
-He was out on the porch now, and the old man was standing in the
-doorway. “Good night, and thank you again.”
-
-“Good night, and be careful,” the old man warned him. “Foster Wait is a
-dangerous man and he’ll never be satisfied till he gets his revenge for
-this insult. He won’t stop at anything and you must be on your guard all
-the time.”
-
-“I’ll try to watch him,” Scott replied simply.
-
-“Do that,” the old man called. “I’ve taken a fancy to you and I don’t
-want to see you shot for nothing.”
-
-The door closed before Scott could reply and left him alone in the
-moonlight. He felt his loneliness then in that unfriendly country and
-was grateful to the old man for his help and his friendship. With a sigh
-he turned down the mountain road pondering on the strange story he had
-heard. He could see how the news of this encounter might mean the
-disruption of the whole Morgan faction if it were ever revealed to old
-Jarred, and the girl must have seen it too.
-
-He was walking along slowly in this thoughtful mood when he was startled
-by the sight of an old white horse standing in a patch of moonlight in
-the middle of the road. He wore a bridle but no saddle, and his head was
-hanging low as though he were exhausted from hard riding.
-
-Scott’s mind flashed to the old man’s warning against Foster Wait and he
-jumped behind a point in the bank beside the road. He was not a coward
-but he did not mean to be shot down by a madman without a struggle. He
-peeped cautiously through the bushes. At first he could see nothing, but
-as his eyes became more accustomed to the uncertain light he thought he
-recognized the body of a person lying under the horse’s muzzle. He
-watched it carefully for a moment. There was no sign of motion. Surely
-any one lying in wait for him would not have chosen such a peculiar form
-of strategy. He threw his caution to the winds and stepped out into the
-road.
-
-The old horse raised his head and nickered. The raising of the horse’s
-head let the moonlight fall on the figure in the road and Scott clearly
-recognized it as a woman. He ran forward and there was Vic Morgan lying
-unconscious in the road. A small bundle of clothes lay beside her.
-Evidently she had fallen from the horse, but Scott could not tell how it
-happened. The faithful old horse was standing guard over her unconscious
-form; it would hardly have been his fault.
-
-Scott felt her pulse. She wasn’t dead. One leg was twisted under her in
-an unnatural position. He straightened it out and the bone did not seem
-to be broken. He was uncertain whether to take her back to Sanders’
-cabin or home to her father. It was not much farther to the village and
-he decided to take her there. He tied the bundle of clothes on his belt
-and led the horse over to the bank where he could get on.
-
-When he started to pick the girl up she groaned and moved uneasily. He
-gathered the slight form in his arms and carried her over to the bank.
-Just as he slipped on to the back of the docile old horse with his
-clumsy burden the girl opened her eyes. She looked at him sleepily at
-first, but as consciousness came to her she started up with a violent
-jerk and stared at him wildly. She evidently did not realize what had
-happened or just where she was.
-
-“Let go of me,” she commanded sternly, and before Scott realized what
-she was doing she had boxed his ears till they rang.
-
-He held the wildly struggling little figure as best he could and tried
-to explain. “Listen, I found you unconscious in the road and I’m only
-trying to take you home.”
-
-“Don’t you dare hold me,” she snapped angrily, and redoubled her
-struggles. “I don’t want you to take me home. I’d rather die here than
-have you touch me.”
-
-Scott was so taken back and so indignant that he felt like dropping her
-in the road and leaving her, but he could not do that. He gritted his
-teeth and held her the more firmly. “Well, I am going to take you home,
-young lady, whether you like it or not, so you might as well stop
-struggling. You can go back in the road and die afterwards if you want
-to.”
-
-After an even more violent struggle than before the child’s form
-suddenly collapsed, and she began to cry. This worried Scott far more
-than her struggles.
-
-“Don’t cry,” he begged her. “Where are you hurt and how did it happen?”
-
-For a while she was silent save for her sobbing and when she spoke it
-was not to answer his question. “If you’ve got to take me somewhere,”
-she said in an uncertain voice, “take me to grandpa.”
-
-Scott stopped the horse and looked at her doubtfully. “Why?” he asked.
-
-“Because I ran away from home and never want to see my father again,”
-she retorted defiantly. “And it’s none of your business,” she added
-promptly.
-
-Scott hesitated but he remembered what Mr. Sanders had said about her
-spending most of her time with her grandfather, and after the events of
-the afternoon he did not blame her for wanting to run away from her
-father. “Where does your grandfather live?” he asked.
-
-“Up the mountain,” she replied.
-
-Scott turned the old horse around and he plodded slowly upward. The
-light was already out when they passed Mr. Sanders’ cabin and all was
-still. The girl did not deign to speak and Scott maintained a dignified
-silence. They had traveled almost a mile when the girl spoke suddenly.
-
-“If you say anything to granddad about that fight this afternoon, I’ll
-kill you.”
-
-Scott had already promised Mr. Sanders not to tell but there was
-something he wanted to know. “How were you hurt this evening?” he asked
-again.
-
-“None of your business,” the child snapped.
-
-“Then it may not be my business to keep your secret,” he retorted.
-
-She was silent for a moment as though thinking it over. “The horse shied
-at a hound on the bank and I fell off,” she replied reluctantly.
-
-“How did it hurt you?” Scott insisted.
-
-Again there was a pause as though she was struggling with herself. “I
-have a knot on my head and my leg hurts,” she answered grudgingly.
-
-Scott had found out what he wanted to know. “I promise not to tell,” he
-said.
-
-She did not thank him. A hound barked on the left-hand side of the road.
-The horse stopped. She called to the hound and he stopped barking
-instantly.
-
-“Let me down from here,” she commanded.
-
-Scott could see no reason for holding her longer. He balanced her on the
-horse’s withers and slipped to the ground. He reached up to help her.
-She tried to avoid him but he caught her and it was well that he did,
-for when her foot touched the ground she uttered a sharp gasp and sank
-limply. He thought for a second that she had fainted.
-
-“Call granddad,” she commanded in a voice pinched with pain.
-
-“Hello, there,” Scott called.
-
-There was a noise as of some one cautiously opening a door.
-
-“Grandpa,” the child called weakly.
-
-The door swung wide and the old man strode hurriedly across the yard.
-Scott was about to meet old Jarred Morgan.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- SCOTT MEETS JARRED
-
-
-Scott let the girl sit on the ground with her back against his knees and
-watched the famous old man coming to protect his own. He presented a
-striking figure striding along through the moonlight with hurried
-dignity. His tall, gaunt form was as erect as that of a man of twenty,
-and his step as springy. His ever present rifle hung comfortably across
-the hollow of his arm. He cast one keen glance of suspicion at Scott and
-knelt beside the girl.
-
-“What is it, Vic?” he asked tenderly.
-
-“I fell off old Dan,” she confessed sheepishly.
-
-“Are you hurt?” he insisted anxiously.
-
-“I have a knot on my head, and I twisted my leg,” she said.
-
-“How under the sun did you come to fall off old Dan?” her grandfather
-asked, as he laid down his long rifle and gathered her tenderly in his
-arms. Scott stepped back a pace or two out of earshot.
-
-“I was sitting on him sideways and he shied at a hound on top of the
-bank down below Sanders’.”
-
-“And this gentleman?” he asked, looking Scott squarely in the eye.
-
-“He found me in the road and brought me home,” she replied shortly.
-
-The old man straightened up with his burden and bowed solemnly to Scott.
-“I thank you, sir.”
-
-“I certainly am glad to have been of service to you,” Scott replied
-cordially. “I hope to have the pleasure of calling on you in a day or so
-if I may, so I will not intrude on you any longer at present.”
-
-Jarred frankly looked him over from head to foot. “If you will be so
-kind as to wait till I have taken the girl in the house I would like to
-speak to you for a moment.”
-
-“Certainly,” Scott answered politely. He liked the old man’s frank,
-straightforward gaze, but it did not seem to him that steady eye looked
-on him with much favor. Perhaps he was no more grateful than his
-granddaughter. In less than five minutes he came out again to join
-Scott. He came straight to the point.
-
-“Sir, I am sorry that I could not invite you in, and I regret that I
-have to appear discourteous to a man who has rendered me the service you
-have.” Scott listened in silent astonishment and the old man continued.
-“I owe you a debt which I can never repay for the kindness you have
-shown my grandchild, but any man who aids my enemies can never be more
-to me than a creditor, as much as I would like to have it otherwise.”
-
-Scott was astonished at the old man’s courtly manner and fine English.
-He did not learn till later that many of these mountaineers were
-descendants of the old Huguenot families who were driven out of France
-and had retained a wonderful purity of speech. He answered as earnestly
-as he could.
-
-“I do not know what you mean, Mr. Morgan, unless you refer to the rumor
-that I am going to let the logging contract to the Waits.”
-
-“You call it a rumor,” Jarred replied a little doubtfully. “It was
-reported to me as a fact, apparently a very widely known fact,” he added
-bitterly.
-
-“I assure you that it is nothing more than a rumor and a false rumor at
-that. I have not spoken more than half a dozen words to a Wait since I
-came here.”
-
-“That may all be true enough but did not your superior officer make the
-promise for you?” Jarred asked with a slight sneer.
-
-The sneer angered Scott but he knew that it was justified under the
-circumstances.
-
-“I, too, Mr. Morgan, have heard that Mr. Reynolds very rashly made some
-informal promises to the Waits in regard to that contract. All I can say
-is that he did it without conferring with me. I am entirely responsible
-for letting that contract and I do not feel myself in any way bound by
-what he may have said. I can assure you that there will be no contract
-let to either the Waits or the Morgans unless they will agree to forget
-their feud and take the contract together.”
-
-Old Jarred looked him squarely in the eye for a minute before he
-replied. Then he held out his hand. “I beg your pardon,” he said with
-dignity. “You must charge my discourtesy to a mistake. I appreciate your
-frankness and I want to be equally frank. Under those conditions there
-will be no logging contract let here. Won’t you come in, sir?”
-
-Scott had grasped the proffered hand eagerly. “Thank you, sir. I will
-not come in now because it is late and you will be busy with the little
-girl, but I would like to come up and talk things over with you
-to-morrow.”
-
-“We’ll be glad to see you any time,” Jarred answered cordially.
-
-“Good night, sir. I hope the little girl’s injuries are not serious.”
-
-“She’ll be all right to-morrow, I think. And thank you again for helping
-her. Good night, sir.”
-
-Scott turned down the mountain and left the old man standing in the
-moonlight looking after him. He liked old Jarred; he was a man and a
-gentleman. He did not wonder that he held the Waits at bay almost
-unaided. One man like that could overawe a whole tribe of cowards such
-as the Waits appeared to be.
-
-And when Scott paused outside the hotel for a moment before going in, he
-glanced admiringly up at the silvered mountainside where that staunch
-old man was nursing his hate with such undaunted courage.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- A VISIT TO JARRED’S CABIN
-
-
-After breakfast the next morning Scott started back up the mountain. It
-was a beautiful morning. A light haze still lay like a blanket over the
-valley but the mountain ridges glistened in the sunshine. The woods
-seemed alive with birds everywhere he looked and many of them were new
-to him. It was the kind of morning that made a man feel as though he
-would never get tired, and Scott walked with a light step. The gloom of
-the night before had left him and everything seemed as bright as the
-mountain tops. He felt as though everything must come out all right.
-
-As he passed the Sanders’ cabin the old man was sweeping off his little
-front porch. “Morning,” he called cheerfully, “going up to beard the
-lion in his den, are you?”
-
-“Yes,” Scott said, “and I am not a bit scared either. I met him last
-night and I liked him. He seems like a real man.”
-
-“Last night?” the old man repeated doubtfully.
-
-“Yes, your little friend Vic fell off her horse down below here and hurt
-herself a little and I took her home.”
-
-“Oh!” Mr. Sanders exclaimed as though some mystery had been solved.
-“That’s how it happened. I was wondering how you got into old Jarred’s
-house at night. Vic was not hurt bad, was she?”
-
-“Not so bad but what she almost tore me up before I got her home,” Scott
-replied. And he told the old man what had happened.
-
-“Sounds like Vic. So she was running away from home, was she? She’ll
-never go back either. I thought something would come of that row
-yesterday.”
-
-Scott was puzzled. “How is that?” he asked.
-
-“Jim let Foster grab her. She’ll never forgive him for that.”
-
-“I see,” Scott said. “I can’t say that I blame her much, either.”
-
-“Well,” the old man sighed, “it may be wrong to back the girl against
-her father, but I like Vic and there is no denying she is twice the man
-Jim is. She is just like her grandfather.”
-
-“I liked him,” Scott exclaimed. “He told me right away last night that
-he never would give up the feud, but I liked him all the same.”
-
-The old man opened his mouth as though to speak but changed his mind and
-closed it again. Then after a pause, “Well, stop in when you come down
-and tell me how Vic is. I’ll be anxious about her.”
-
-Scott hurried on. At the Morgan gate he remembered Mr. Sanders’ advice
-and shouted before he entered. Old Jarred appeared almost instantly in
-the doorway. When he saw who it was, he stood the long rifle against the
-corner beside the door and called to Scott to come in. He met him
-halfway to the gate with extended hand.
-
-“Come in, sir, come in, sir,” he repeated hospitably. “Vic is a little
-shy but I reckon she’ll be glad to see you.”
-
-“She seemed anything but glad to see me when I picked her up last
-night,” Scott laughed. “I thought she was going to tear me up before I
-could get her home.”
-
-Old Jarred chuckled. “Vic’s a fighter, she is. You see she had heard
-that rumor about the logging contract and she hates the Waits worse than
-I do. She feels right ashamed of herself this morning.”
-
-“Well, she needn’t,” Scott said. “I understood why it was and admired
-her nerve.”
-
-“If the Morgan men had half Vic’s nerve this feud might end,” old Jarred
-remarked bitterly.
-
-“Why not drop it, anyway?” Scott asked. “I’ll wager there is not one of
-your worst enemies who would not admit that you did not do it because
-you were afraid. It seems such a pity to have it go on. It can end in
-only one way some day.”
-
-Old Jarred stopped in the doorway and looked at him for a moment. Scott
-had not intended to broach the subject so suddenly and he half expected
-a burst of anger, but it did not come.
-
-“Yes,” the old man answered sadly, “it can have only one ending. They
-will get me some day. But as I told you last night I shall never give it
-up; so let’s not discuss it.” He saw the disappointment in Scott’s face
-and laid a friendly hand on his shoulder. “I am sorry, my boy, for I
-know that you mean well. I suppose it does look to you like a wholly
-unreasonable thing, but you don’t know all the story. You are asking
-something that it is utterly impossible for me to do. So it is better to
-drop it.”
-
-Scott could not hide his disappointment but he bowed his respect for the
-old man’s request. “I hope Vic was not badly hurt last night?” he asked.
-
-Jarred smiled his gratitude. “No, no. Sprained her knee a little, but
-she is hobbling around this morning and will be all right in a day or
-so.”
-
-The cabin into which Jarred led the way was a plain oblong structure
-built of logs. There was but one room which served as bedroom, dining
-room, living room and kitchen, but it was clean and everything seemed to
-be in order.
-
-“Pretty neat for an old man’s den,” Jarred chuckled with evident pride.
-“Vic did that for me this morning in spite of her crippled knee.”
-
-There was an uncertain thump on the back step and Scott turned to see
-Vic hopping in on one foot. She certainly looked like a different girl
-from the one he had struggled with the night before. She hopped toward
-him without embarrassment and held out her hand.
-
-“I am sorry I acted so badly last night,” she said frankly. “I hope that
-you will forget it. I would have been in a pickle without you.”
-
-Could this be the little wildcat he had picked up in the road the night
-before? Scott stared at her open-mouthed for a moment before he could
-find his tongue.
-
-“I could not very well expect anything else when I picked you up and
-carried you off against your will,” he laughed, when he had finally
-recovered from his astonishment.
-
-“She says she is going to stay with me now,” Jarred said. “Says she has
-had a row with her father and is not going back. I don’t know what the
-trouble is and I’m afraid to look it up for fear I might have to send
-her back.”
-
-He put his arm affectionately around the child and it was plain to see
-where he would put the blame. She cast an apprehensive glance at Scott
-and he knew she was worrying about the promise she had extracted from
-him the night before. He relieved her mind at once.
-
-“There are one or two things I would like to know before I go on with
-this timber sale, Mr. Morgan, and I think you can probably answer my
-questions better than any one else if you will.”
-
-Jarred nodded. “I’ll be glad to help you all I can.”
-
-“I have already told you,” Scott proceeded, “that I am not willing to
-give the contract to either the Waits or the Morgans unless they will
-take it jointly. I have heard—and heard it so often that I think it must
-be true—that Mr. Reynolds promised this contract to the Waits. Of course
-either of you has a right to bid on it if you want to, and I can’t stop
-you. I could turn either of you down even though you were the high
-bidder, but you can easily see in what a disagreeable position that
-would place me and I don’t want to do it.”
-
-Jarred nodded his comprehension.
-
-“Could either faction put up a bond of fifty thousand dollars as a
-guaranty?” Scott asked.
-
-Jarred smiled sourly. “Five thousand would strain either of us
-considerable.”
-
-“Then it will be simple enough,” Scott said. “The law requires that
-guaranty. But I want to be perfectly certain that it cannot be met.”
-
-“You need not worry about that,” Jarred replied. “It would be altogether
-impossible.”
-
-Scott felt relieved. Here would be an easy way to get out of the promise
-Mr. Reynolds had made the Waits. Probably he had not told them anything
-about the necessity for a bond.
-
-“Then my next question, Mr. Morgan, is this. If an outsider takes that
-contract will the Waits and the Morgans work for him on the same job?”
-
-“They will not,” Jarred replied decisively, and Vic bristled visibly at
-the mere thought of it. “Moreover,” Jarred continued, “no outsider will
-take the contract.”
-
-“Why not?” Scott asked sharply. He had taken this as a threat and it
-made him bristle a little on his own part.
-
-“Because none of them will touch it for fear of getting mixed up in this
-feud. They have tried that and no one would risk it.”
-
-“It’s a wonder Mr. Reynolds would not tell me about that!” Scott
-exclaimed indignantly.
-
-“You would not need to know it if you had followed his plan,” Jarred
-remarked ironically.
-
-“Then I have one last question. Would the people here interfere with an
-outsider if he brought his own crew in here?”
-
-“I would not,” Jarred replied promptly, “and I don’t think any of our
-people would. I can’t answer for the others.”
-
-Scott rose to go. “I certainly appreciate your help, Mr. Morgan, and I
-feel that I can rely on what you say.”
-
-“Don’t leave a man much chance to do anything,” Jarred said
-sympathetically.
-
-“Not much,” Scott admitted, “but I am going to get that stuff logged if
-I have to do it myself.”
-
-“Maybe you won’t always have this trouble,” Jarred said with a twinkle
-in his cold gray eye and a wink toward the child. “When I’m gone the
-rest of them will all let the feud drop.”
-
-The child straightened suddenly and the blood rushed to her cheeks, but
-she caught sight of the twinkle and subsided again with exactly the same
-twinkle in her own.
-
-Scott took his leave and when he rounded the turn in the road that shut
-off the view of the Morgan cabin the old man was still standing at the
-gate with his arm around the girl’s shoulders. To Scott they represented
-the last link which was holding the old feud together.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- SCOTT ASKS FOR BIDS
-
-
-The next morning a wave of astonishment quickly followed by another of
-indignation spread over the west mountain with almost incredible
-rapidity, and a corresponding feeling of relief and satisfaction settled
-on the family of the Morgans. Quite the reverse of the situation of the
-day before.
-
-The sole cause of this momentous change was a small sign posted on the
-village bulletin board. It was couched in somewhat intricate legal
-language, but it said in effect that bids were now open for the logging
-contract and any one desiring to submit one must place it in the hands
-of the supervisor, along with a bond for fifty thousand dollars, within
-ten days. No one had seen either a Wait or a Morgan read it, but their
-knowledge of it was universal.
-
-Single horsemen threaded their way along by-roads and paths on the west
-slope to meet others at cabins scattered here and there over the
-mountainside, and all these little groups finally assembled at the home
-of Foster Wait. That worthy gentleman was half intoxicated, as usual,
-and greeted each sullen new arrival with a detailed blustering account
-of what he was going to do to the man who had double-crossed him. They
-did not seem to take much stock in what he said (it looked as though
-they had perhaps heard that same kind of bluster from him many times
-before) and their apparent indifference drove him to wilder boasts.
-
-Hopwood sat on the corner of the porch whittling a stick and apparently
-oblivious to all that was going on around him. He glanced occasionally
-from one of the group to another but the blank expression on his face
-never changed. The others paid no attention to him at all except when
-they wanted to know something. They seemed to be strangely inconsistent.
-They treated him as an idiot except when they wanted news, but they put
-implicit confidence in what he said.
-
-“Where did you find this out, Hop?” one of the newcomers asked. It was
-Sewall Wait, the real leader of the Wait faction. Foster was the nominal
-ruler by inheritance, but Sewall furnished the brains which Foster
-lacked. He had to repeat the question before Hopwood seemed to
-understand.
-
-“It is on the bulletin board in the village,” Hopwood answered in an
-expressionless tone.
-
-“What did it say?”
-
-Hopwood repeated the gist of the notice.
-
-“Who read it to you?”
-
-Hopwood seemed offended at the string of questions. He did not answer at
-once but seemed to think better of it. “Mr. Roberts,” he answered in the
-same dull tone.
-
-Sewall turned towards Foster but came back again to Hopwood. “Where’s
-that man Reynolds?” he asked.
-
-“Left on the train yesterday,” Hopwood answered promptly.
-
-Sewall walked over to where Foster was raving for the benefit of two
-late comers. “What’s the use of bawling like a spanked kid?” he asked in
-a disgusted tone. “That is a formal request for bids posted in regular
-form by the U. S. Government, and if Hopwood has the lingo right it’s
-according to law. That man Reynolds is the fellow who made a sucker of
-you and he went home yesterday. I’m going home myself.”
-
-“Going home?” Foster raved. “And let that little squirt of a supervisor
-rob us of the contract and probably give it to old Jarred Morgan? No,
-sir, we’ll go down there and teach him that he can’t trifle with the
-Waits. That contract is ours and I am going to make him give it to us.”
-
-“And get your ears boxed for your trouble,” Sewall sneered as he walked
-to his horse. “Fighting the Morgans is one thing, but fighting the U. S.
-Government is something else.”
-
-Foster was furious at the reference to his boxed ears and started after
-him with waving fists, but Sewall rode slowly out of the yard without so
-much as looking at him, and his three sons followed him.
-
-Foster bawled threats and objurgations after them till they were far out
-of earshot and then returned to rail at the others. “Hopwood!” he
-shouted.
-
-They all looked at the place where Hopwood had been sitting. It was
-vacant. Hopwood had disappeared in his usual sudden manner.
-
-One by one the others tired of Foster’s futile raving and rode away till
-the hereditary leader of the family was left alone. The frenzy into
-which he had worked himself had sobered him and he looked after the last
-of his departing followers with anxious humiliation. He knew the
-trouble; it had happened before. He had talked too much and done too
-little. He would have to do something to reinstate himself and he owed
-the supervisor something anyway. This would be a good chance to kill two
-birds with one stone. He would have preferred some company but there was
-no chance of that now, and he prepared to go alone.
-
-In the meanwhile Scott was sitting down in the hotel waiting. He knew
-that nothing could come of this advertisement either on the bulletin
-board or in the local papers where he had sent it, and he wanted to be
-about his business. He knew what he was going to do now and he was
-anxious to be at it, but he knew what a hubbub the news would make among
-the Waits and he did not want to appear to run away. He had to wait at
-least till he had seen Foster Wait. It would never do for them to come
-down and find that he had left the country as soon as he had posted the
-notice. His duty did not require him to stay there, but his pride did.
-
-He sat on the front porch, from which point of vantage he could bring
-the whole village under his surveillance at once. He could see the
-little white square of his posted notice on the bulletin board at the
-other end of the street, and he watched it curiously to see if any one
-would read it. He saw two or three from the east slope stop there, and
-come on to the Morgan store in apparent good humor. No one at all came
-down from the Wait territory, and Scott was disappointed because they
-were the ones on whom he was anxious to note the effect.
-
-One hour crawled slowly after another and he patiently watched the
-lights and shadows creeping over the mountain slopes as the sun rose
-higher in the heavens. It was after ten o’clock when Scott happened to
-glance to his right and started to find Hopwood sitting in an
-inconspicuous place on the end of the porch.
-
-“Where under the sun did you come from, Hopwood?” he exclaimed.
-
-Hopwood spread his hands in both directions as he always did to indicate
-that he came from everywhere.
-
-“Foster is pretty mad,” he remarked casually.
-
-“Have you seen him?” Scott asked anxiously.
-
-Hopwood nodded. “I saw them all.”
-
-“I suppose they were holding a big family powwow over it and will all be
-swarming down here after a while to find out what it means.” Scott
-chuckled at the discomfiture he was causing the Waits, for he had taken
-a distinct dislike to the whole tribe with the exception of Hopwood.
-
-“No,” Hopwood remarked quietly, “they are not coming, but maybe Foster
-will get up the nerve to come down alone. He’ll pretty near have to or
-he will be done for.”
-
-“What do you mean?” Scott asked. “I thought they always went in a gang.”
-
-Hopwood shook his head. “Sewall would not back him up.”
-
-“Who is Sewall?” Scott had never heard of him and he had gathered from
-what he had heard that Foster was the leader of the Waits.
-
-“He’s the only Wait who has any brains,” Hopwood answered, and added
-naïvely, “except me.”
-
-Scott glanced at him keenly but saw only the usual blank expression. “By
-George, Hopwood!” he exclaimed, “I believe you really have more brains
-than any of them. But what do you mean by saying that Foster will have
-to come?”
-
-“He’s been saying so much about what he is going to do to you that he
-will have to do it or they will quit him,” Hopwood explained.
-
-Scott rubbed his hands with satisfaction at the prospect of a meeting
-with Foster Wait alone.
-
-“Are you sure he will come, Hopwood?”
-
-Hopwood was silent a moment as though waiting for a message. “Yes,” he
-said confidently. “He’ll be here in about an hour. Don’t let him scare
-you. He’s a coward.”
-
-“Going to try to scare me into it, is he?” Scott asked, but Hopwood had
-disappeared and left him to plan alone for his meeting with Foster Wait.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- FOSTER WAIT DEMANDS THE CONTRACT
-
-
-The news that Foster Wait had been boasting among his followers of the
-terrible things he was going to do to the supervisor and the possibility
-of his coming down alone to make good his threats gave Scott a new
-interest in the meeting. He had taken an instinctive dislike to the man
-at first sight, and everything he had seen and heard of him since had
-only served to intensify that feeling.
-
-Foster was a much larger man than Scott, but Scott had not needed
-Hopwood’s warning to tell him that the giant was a coward. He had seen
-it and felt it. Probably his followers knew it, too, and maybe that was
-the reason they had refused to back him up. That was one of the things
-he had wanted to ask Hopwood, but the man of the iron hat always
-disappeared before he found out half that he wanted to know.
-
-A man appeared suddenly at the end of the village and Scott watched him
-eagerly, but it proved to be only the mail carrier who had stopped to
-read the notice. A new notice on the Caspar bulletin board was in itself
-an event. The time dragged slowly by and still the expected visitor did
-not arrive. Could Hopwood have failed in his prophecy? He had the
-reputation of being infallible.
-
-Things always happen when they are least expected, and Foster Wait had
-ridden his white horse halfway up the village street before Scott saw
-him. But even then the suspense was not over for the rider stopped at
-the store instead of coming straight to the hotel as Scott had hoped.
-Probably he had dropped in there to bolster up his nerve with a little
-more bragging, Scott thought. If so, he must have had a great deal of
-bragging to do, for ten minutes elapsed and he had not come out.
-
-Finally some one came out of the store and started for the hotel. Scott
-was disappointed to see that it was not Foster but one of the boys who
-stayed at the store. The boy shuffled along slowly looking everywhere
-except at Scott, and plainly showing that his errand was not to his
-liking. He headed for the corner of the house as though he were going
-around to the back door but changed his course suddenly and edged along
-the front of the porch. His actions were so peculiar that Scott watched
-him keenly.
-
-The boy finally came to a halt about ten feet away and looked the front
-of the house over carefully as though he had come to estimate the cost
-of a new coat of paint.
-
-“Foster says he wants to see you at the store right away,” the boy
-gulped suddenly without looking at Scott.
-
-Scott was so amused at the boy’s embarrassment that he almost forgot to
-be indignant at Foster’s message, but he stiffened a little as he
-realized the impertinence of the command.
-
-“Tell Mr. Wait that I am at the hotel and will be glad to see him any
-time he cares to come,” Scott said with forced dignity.
-
-“That’s what I told him,” the boy said, as he looked at Scott for the
-first time. And he seemed very much relieved. He hopped out of the gate
-and whistled all the way to the store.
-
-Scott waited anxiously for the result of his message. He did not have to
-wait so long this time. Foster’s angry roar when he heard the boy’s
-message reached Scott at the hotel, and the next minute Foster lunged
-out of the door. Three men followed him out on to the store porch, but
-they stopped there and watched him clamber on to his big white horse.
-Another small group gathered in front of the Morgan store to see the
-show.
-
-It was not over seventy yards from the store to the hotel and it would
-have been easier for Foster to walk, but he was not used to walking and
-he felt that he would be more impressive on his horse. He started from
-the store at a gallop but before he had covered the short distance he
-had slowed down to a walk. He drew up at the gate and scowled at Scott
-fiercely.
-
-“When I tell people to come to me they come,” he blustered. He knew when
-he said it that it was the wrong thing to say but he could not help it.
-
-Scott looked at him calmly. “It must be very convenient to have them so
-well trained,” he remarked.
-
-“You will be trained, too, before I am through with you,” Foster
-blustered. “That’s what I came for.”
-
-“Then maybe you better come in and have a seat, for it will probably
-take some time.” Scott pushed forward a chair and smiled at him
-tauntingly.
-
-Foster hesitated. He felt that he was decidedly getting the worst of it
-and he was uncertain just how to proceed. He might force him down to the
-store at the point of his rifle, but he was a coward at heart and he
-feared the consequences. He slowly dismounted and swaggered up to the
-porch with all the braggadocio he could muster. Scott rose to meet him.
-Foster climbed the two steps to the porch and glared down at Scott from
-his superior height.
-
-“I want to know what you mean by not giving us that logging contract?”
-he blustered fiercely.
-
-“Won’t you be seated?” Scott said quietly, as he offered him a chair.
-
-“I did not come here to sit down,” Foster growled angrily. “I came here
-to find out why you did not give us that logging contract.”
-
-“Oh,” Scott said as though puzzled, “I understood you to say that you
-came to train me to come when you called.”
-
-“I’ll do that, too, before I’m through with you,” Foster exclaimed,
-furiously. “Are you going to answer my question or will I have to beat
-it out of you?”
-
-Scott looked him calmly in the eye a moment and smiled contemptuously.
-“You want to know why I did not give this contract to ‘us’? Just whom do
-you mean? Who is ‘us’? You forget that you are a stranger to me.”
-
-Foster stared at him open-mouthed. Then the blood rushed to his already
-purple face, his neck swelled and his whole frame shook with the fury of
-his passion. His words were almost inarticulate. “You know me, you
-insolent hound. Everybody knows Foster Wait and a lot of ’em to their
-sorrow. Answer that question before I send you after old Jarred Morgan.
-I’ll teach you to insult a Wait!”
-
-Scott knew of Foster’s furious temper and he had been doing his best to
-arouse it. He wanted him to fight and he knew that he would not do it
-except in a fit of passion. He knew his danger and he watched the man’s
-every move as he gave his temper one more prod.
-
-“Talk sense, Mr. Wait, if you want an answer from me,” he sneered.
-“Threats do not scare me any more than they do old Jarred Morgan.”
-
-Foster gave a roar of rage and threw forward his long rifle. He would
-undoubtedly have shot Scott as he had shot several other men when worked
-up to an uncontrollable passion, but Scott had been watching for just
-such a move.
-
-He had already grasped hold of a short piece of pipe which he had leaned
-up against a pillar of the porch in case of emergency, and when Foster
-threw forward his rifle he struck the barrel with all his might. The
-unexpected blow knocked the weapon out of Foster’s hands, and the bullet
-went through the roof of the porch.
-
-The suddenness of it all bewildered Foster for a moment and before he
-had fully recovered, Scott struck him a crushing blow on the jaw. The
-blow staggered him, but he quickly recovered his balance and threw
-himself upon Scott with the fury of a wild animal. He was usually a
-coward but now he was a crazy man, blinded by his passion, and did not
-realize what he was doing.
-
-His enormous size and great reach gave him a decided advantage in one
-way but it was partially offset by Scott’s skill and coolness. If he
-should succeed in landing one of his terrific but wild swings or in
-grappling his opponent the fight could have but one ending. Scott’s only
-chance was to keep out of his reach and hammer him into submission.
-Foster fought with all the wild fury of a madman; Scott, with the
-coolness of a boxing master.
-
-Again and again Scott landed blows which would have felled a smaller
-man. Some of them staggered this giant a little but most of them seemed
-to have no effect at all. Scott was handicapped by the necessity of
-keeping entirely out of his reach. A grazing blow on the side of his
-head warned him that if one of them should land squarely he would be
-done for.
-
-In attempting to avoid one of Foster’s mad rushes Scott stepped off the
-edge of the porch and fell on his back on the ground. Instantly Foster
-jumped for his head with both hobnailed boots. For the fraction of a
-second Scott, stunned by the fall, saw this demon hovering over him, and
-the sight almost sickened him. But he recovered just in time to roll
-suddenly over out of reach and spring to his feet. Foster, dazed by the
-escape of his victim, tripped and fell. Scott could have jumped on the
-lumbering giant there on the ground but he had been taught to play the
-game fair. Moreover, he did not want this man to have any excuse. He
-wanted to thrash him as he had never been thrashed before and make him
-acknowledge it.
-
-The men from both stores had edged up to the fence and almost forgotten
-the dead line in their excitement.
-
-Scott let the giant scramble to his feet unmolested, and paid dear for
-his chivalry. He had counted on this man’s dissipation sapping his
-endurance. It was beginning to tell on him. His breath was coming in
-great choking gasps but his mountain training had made him tough.
-Moreover, he realized that his strength was waning, and with that
-knowledge his blind fury gave way to craft.
-
-Scott had always boxed according to the rules of the ring, and he was
-taken entirely off his guard when Foster suddenly sprang some lumberjack
-tactics and landed his hobnailed boot squarely in his stomach. For a
-second everything turned black before him and he staggered like a
-drunken man. As in a haze he saw the giant spring forward to finish him
-off. With the instinct of the fighter, he side-stepped and the instant’s
-reprieve brought back his wandering senses and his wind.
-
-When he saw the slight effect of his blows earlier in the fight he had
-devoted himself almost entirely to defense and saved his strength till
-Foster should be tired out. Now he took the offensive with all his
-power. He rained blow after blow on the gasping giant with bewildering
-rapidity and finally, seeing the man was almost exhausted, he threw
-every ounce of strength into a blow square on the point of his chin.
-
-The big fellow staggered an instant and sank limply in a lifeless heap.
-Scott leaned panting against the fence. He was almost exhausted. Foster
-moved uneasily and raised himself groaning on one elbow.
-
-“Are you through training me to come when you call?” Scott asked between
-his gasps for breath.
-
-Foster rose slowly and wobbled towards the gate without a word. Not a
-word of sympathy came from his friends and they watched him clamber
-painfully on to his horse without offering any assistance. He rode
-slowly down the village street with drooping head, a thoroughly beaten
-man.
-
-The two groups of men walked silently back to the stores and left Scott
-still leaning against the fence, weak and sick, but filled with a
-feeling of intense satisfaction.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- SCOTT MAKES A TRIP TO WASHINGTON
-
-
-Scott leaned wearily on the picket fence for a long time after the old
-white horse had carried Foster out of sight up the mountain road. He did
-not bear any trace of the fight on his face, but his body was sore and
-he was very nearly exhausted. He could not but smile as he stood there
-with heaving chest to think how far he had departed from the policy of
-strict neutrality which he had laid down for himself. But from the
-remarks which Hopwood had dropped that morning he doubted whether it
-would make very much difference to the Waits.
-
-Well, it was done now, anyway, no matter what the Waits might think. He
-had shown them that he had no intention of running away, and he felt
-that he could now go about his own business without running the risk of
-being called a coward. As he turned toward the hotel he saw Hopwood
-leaning on the corner of the fence.
-
-“Well, Hopwood, did you see the big fight?” he asked smilingly.
-
-“That was a good job,” Hopwood replied soberly.
-
-“Shall I have to fight all of the rest of the Waits now, Hopwood?” Scott
-asked a little anxiously. He did not want to waste any more time waiting
-for these people or fighting them.
-
-Hopwood shook his head. “Sewall told him he would get his ears boxed
-again. They will be glad of it.”
-
-“Listen, Hopwood. Is Sewall going to try to take the contract?” Scott
-asked earnestly.
-
-“No,” Hopwood replied emphatically. “How could he? There is not that
-much money in the whole country.”
-
-“I did not think there was myself but I wanted to make sure of it. Could
-you deliver a message for me, Hopwood?”
-
-Hopwood looked up eagerly. Collecting news and carrying messages were
-things he liked best to do. He did not have to speak. Scott could see
-that he was more than willing.
-
-“I have some business I want to attend to, Hopwood,” Scott continued,
-“and I’ll have to go away for a couple of days. If I go now it will look
-as though I have thrashed Foster and then run away. I want you to tell
-Foster Wait, or maybe it would be better to tell Sewall, if he is the
-real head of the family, that I am going away for three days but will be
-back here Saturday. You can tell the same thing to Jarred, too, so that
-they will all know it. Do you think that you have it straight now?”
-
-Hopwood nodded gravely. “I always get messages straight,” he replied
-proudly. “You are sure you will be back Saturday?” He had taken a
-strange liking to this man who had treated him like a rational being and
-thrashed his surly uncle.
-
-“Yes, Hopwood, I’ll certainly be here Saturday without fail, and,” he
-added, for he could see how the friendship pleased Hopwood, “I would
-like to see you again pretty soon after I get back.”
-
-He might as well have saved himself the trouble, for Hopwood had gone to
-deliver his precious message. Scott sighed when he saw that the man was
-gone. He could not get used to his unexpected movements. He wasted no
-more thoughts on it now. The dinner bell rang, on time for once, and the
-station agent came in the gate.
-
-“Hear you beat up Foster Wait,” he grinned.
-
-“Yes,” Scott admitted. “He forced it on me but I was glad of the
-opportunity. Who told you?”
-
-“One of the Wait boys told me, but that would have been unnecessary
-after I saw Foster.”
-
-“I wonder what the Waits will think of it?” Scott asked. He was anxious
-to have some one back up Hopwood’s opinion.
-
-“They are as tickled as you are,” the agent answered confidently. “He is
-always bragging, and none of them like him. He’ll probably have to quit
-the country after this.”
-
-Scott was glad to hear it. That would leave him free to carry out his
-plans. He told the agent of the trip he was going to make, and spent the
-afternoon busily working over a bunch of legal-looking papers. Four
-o’clock found him on the afternoon train headed north, an impatient
-traveler.
-
-Scott had not told any one where he was going. If he had said that he
-was going to Washington, they would have thought that he was running
-away as the other fellows had done. But he was going to Washington, and
-when he got there he lost no time in going to the Forest Service office
-and to the chief of his division.
-
-Mr. Johns seemed very much surprised to see him back so soon. “Well,
-Burton,” he laughed, “I didn’t think that they could put the run on you,
-not so soon, anyway.” He laughed, but at the same time it was plain that
-he was disappointed.
-
-“Well, they have,” Scott replied, “but I am going back.”
-
-Mr Johns brightened at once. “That sounds better,” he said heartily.
-
-“There are one or two things about that logging contract I want to make
-sure of,” Scott said. “As I understand it, those logs have been sold and
-we have contracted to have them delivered at a certain time.”
-
-“That’s right,” Mr. Johns agreed. “It is rather an unusual thing to do,
-but we were forced to it in this instance or we could not have bought
-that piece of land for the forest at all.”
-
-“And now,” Scott continued, “we are responsible for the delivery, and no
-one will take the logging contract.”
-
-Mr. Johns frowned. “I thought that man Reynolds told me that he had
-arranged for the logging contract before he left.”
-
-“Maybe he thought he had,” Scott replied bitterly, “but he hadn’t.”
-
-“Don’t be bashful in saying what you think about him,” Mr. Johns urged.
-“He was a man we took on temporarily, and we’ve let him out again.”
-
-“It is a good thing,” Scott said. “I think I should have killed him
-myself if he had stayed there. Do you know the situation down there, Mr.
-Johns?”
-
-“No,” Mr. Johns replied, “I am beginning to think that I do not. Two men
-were sent there before you were. Both of them seemed to be getting along
-fine according to their reports, but one suddenly resigned and the other
-asked for a transfer. Neither of them gave a very satisfactory reason.”
-
-Scott grinned. “I can tell you the reason. There is an A1 feud down
-there. Those fellows tied up with one party, and the other one ran them
-out of the country.”
-
-Mr. Johns was intensely interested and insisted on knowing all the
-details. “But why not ignore both factions and give the contract to an
-outsider? That is altogether possible.”
-
-“That’s what I thought,” Scott said, “but everybody knows of that feud,
-and no one will touch the contract for fear of getting mixed up in it.”
-
-Mr. Johns rubbed his forehead in perplexity. “And unless we can deliver
-those logs on time we’ll lose our option on that piece of land. What are
-you going to do about it?” He looked at Scott helplessly.
-
-“Resign like the rest of them,” Scott grinned.
-
-“Oh, come now, Burton,” Mr. Johns remonstrated. “I did not expect that
-of you. You have the reputation of being resourceful and a fighter. You
-are not going to resign and let yourself be run out of the country at
-the first sign of trouble, are you?”
-
-“Yes,” Scott replied firmly, “I’m going to resign but I’m not going to
-be run out of the country. I want to resign and take that logging
-contract myself.”
-
-Mr. Johns looked at him a moment in open-mouthed astonishment. “Do you
-mean that?” he asked eagerly.
-
-Scott nodded. “If it will be all right with you. I am going to put in my
-bid. I had some experience logging my own timber last winter, you know,
-and I’d be willing to spend my last dollar to beat that feud down
-there.”
-
-His chief thought a moment. “It’s a bit irregular, and I’ll have to take
-it up with the forester, but under the circumstances I believe it can be
-done.”
-
-The upshot of the matter was that Scott started back for North Carolina
-the next day with the assurance that if no one else made a satisfactory
-bid, his resignation would be accepted and he would be awarded the
-contract.
-
-Three days before he had been hoping for some one to bid on that same
-contract; now he was praying with all his heart that no one would.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- SCOTT HEARS SOME RUMBLINGS OF THE OLD FEUD
-
-
-Scott stopped for a day in Asheville to make some business arrangements
-for starting the logging operations in case he was awarded the contract
-and then hurried back to Caspar. He found Hopwood, who had constituted
-himself his faithful follower, waiting for him in the corner of the
-hotel yard.
-
-“I knew you’d come back,” Hopwood remarked in a tone of extreme
-satisfaction.
-
-“Why?” Scott asked. “Did any one think that I was not coming back?”
-
-Hopwood nodded. “They all said you had run away like all the others, and
-Foster has been taking most of the credit for it.”
-
-Scott ground his teeth. “I suppose that will set him up in business
-again with the rest of the family.”
-
-“A lot of them believed it, but now that you have come back he will
-probably have to leave the country himself. None of them will believe
-him now.”
-
-“Well, tell them that I have come back, Hopwood, and I’ve come back to
-stay. They will find out before I am through that I am not very badly
-scared after all.”
-
-“Has any one taken the logging contract?” Hopwood asked eagerly. “It
-would help me if I could predict it right,” he added wistfully.
-
-Scott looked at him curiously a moment. The more he saw of Hopwood the
-harder it was for him to believe him an idiot. In any event it was
-perfectly clear that he was devoted to him and he decided to make him
-his confidant. It could not do him much harm if the man of the iron hat
-did not keep faith in this and it might make him a closer friend.
-
-“Yes, Hopwood, some one has bid on it. You can safely predict that the
-logging will begin in ten days, for—but you must not publish this part
-of it—if no one else takes the job I am going to resign and take it
-myself.”
-
-“Oh!” Hopwood exclaimed with a gasp of satisfaction. “I won’t tell them
-but you don’t know how much good it will do me to know that.” And
-without waiting to make his usual mysterious disappearance he walked
-quickly into the woods to carry the news of Scott’s return.
-
-Scott was not surprised to find that no one had responded to his call
-for bids. He had found out in Asheville that there was practically no
-chance of any one showing any interest in it. He hoped no one would. He
-had to confide his plans to the station agent because he had to send a
-number of telegrams. Probably Caspar had never done such a business in
-telegrams before in all its existence, even when the feud was at its
-height.
-
-For the next week Scott devoted all his time to a careful study of the
-area which was to be logged. From breakfast till supper-time every day
-he hiked over the mountains, running out the boundary lines, sketching
-the topography and tentatively locating the logging roads. This work led
-him through the territory and by the cabins of many of the Waits but he
-did not see any of them. They seemed to be sulking in their tents.
-
-It seemed to Scott to be a strange country. Long straight slopes
-stretched unbroken to the high, level ridges. They were grooved every
-quarter mile or less with shallow draws and not far below the ridge in
-these draws were springs which sent tiny, crystal-clear streams of
-ice-cold water trickling down into the valley. The low places and also
-many of the higher slopes were covered with a solid mat of rhododendron
-and laurel, so thick that a man was obliged to break or cut his way
-through it. It was the densest growth he had ever seen outside of the
-cane brakes of Florida. The great masses of white flowers made a
-wonderful sight, but after he had tried to run a line through the stuff
-for a couple of days he could no longer see the flowers.
-
-But the ridges were the strangest of all. They were narrow but straight
-and level, so level that the old Indian trails followed them rather than
-the valleys. And the big red oaks came right up to the top. Only at long
-intervals did the ridges dip to a low pass; otherwise, they stretched
-for miles as level as the floor and were clear of underbrush.
-
-It was on one of these level, open trails that Scott had the scare of
-his life. He had been familiar with razorback hogs in Florida. He had
-seen one tear a hound to pieces one day and had learned to fear the
-animals as he feared nothing else in the forest. Tall, thin and capable
-of great speed, they were entirely different from any hogs he had ever
-seen at home. Their heads were half as long as their bodies, with large
-tusks and powerful jaws, and they were fearless. Once they had made up
-their minds to charge, nothing would turn them. One had to kill them or
-get out of the way.
-
-One morning as Scott was going out to work he saw an old sow with a
-litter of very small pigs in a clump of bushes beside the trail, and he
-gave her a wide berth. That evening on the way home he had forgotten all
-about her. He was absorbed in his plans for the logging job and wholly
-oblivious of his surroundings. The razorback never entered his head.
-
-A large red oak three feet in diameter had fallen across the trail and
-Scott vaulted it mechanically, hardly knowing what he was doing. His
-feet had scarcely struck the ground when he heard a vicious “woof,” and
-the old sow darted out from under the other end of the log headed
-straight for him under a full head of steam.
-
-Scott was frightened as he had never been frightened before. With one
-terrified spring he vaulted back over the log. That would have been
-sufficient protection from an ordinary pig, but a fallen tree meant
-nothing to a razorback. She cleared the tree without the slightest
-hesitation and was close behind him.
-
-This unexpected jump so terrified Scott that he bolted like a frightened
-horse. He had never been a very fast runner but now he turned straight
-down the side of the mountain and made a new life record. It seemed to
-him that his feet were hitting the ground only about every thirty feet.
-Below him he saw a stream with high, steep banks, and at one point a
-tree had fallen across it. He made madly for that spot, somehow managed
-to stay on the log, tripped and fell in a heap on the other side. He
-scrambled to his feet expecting to find those ugly tusks at his very
-throat only to find instead that the old sow was fully satisfied with
-his retreat and was already trotting back up the slope to her babies.
-
-Scott could not help laughing as he thought what a great show it would
-have been for a spectator. The conqueror of Foster Wait breaking the
-world’s record in his endeavors to get away from an angry pig. And yet
-it might have been serious, and he knew that he would run as fast or
-faster next time.
-
-He was getting himself together for the climb back up the ridge when he
-noticed a deeply worn trail along the edge of the little creek. He
-thought at first that it was made by the razorbacks and the cattle which
-roamed around the mountains in considerable numbers, but he was
-surprised to find that the tracks were made by men, and some of them
-very recently.
-
-Where could such a well-worn path as that lead to away up there on the
-mountainside? It might be a short cut over the ridge into the Tennessee
-valley, but why should so many people be traveling that way on foot?
-These people always rode horseback whenever they were going any
-considerable distance. He determined to follow it up and find out for
-himself. It was on the forest and it was his business to know about it.
-
-The trail run obliquely upward across the face of the mountain and in
-the next draw it ducked into a dense patch of rhododendron. There it was
-very evident that the trail had been built for a purpose. It was cut out
-clear two feet wide and had been used so long that the stubs had all
-been worn down smooth.
-
-While he was examining it he was startled by the sound of approaching
-voices, raised high in argument if not in an actual quarrel. At first
-the voices were too distant for the words to be distinguished. Scott had
-no reason to avoid these people whoever they might be, and it never
-occurred to him to hide till he caught a sentence distinctly.
-
-“I tell you, Foster, it won’t do. You were licked and you are done for,
-and that is all there is about it.”
-
-Scott did not recognize the voice, but he had every reason to believe
-that they were talking about him and he wanted to hear the rest of it.
-He slipped back of a big oak tree beside the trail and listened. The
-voices came nearer till he could distinguish both sides of the
-conversation.
-
-“I know it would work.” It was Foster speaking now, and his voice was
-thick and sullen. “Why wouldn’t it work? If I started a fight, the
-Morgans would have to fight; and if they fought, the Waits would have to
-fight, and then we would clean them up. It’s time they were cleaned up.
-They kept us from getting that logging contract and they’ll keep us from
-getting anything else. I’m for cleaning them up, I tell you.”
-
-“And I’m telling you that it won’t work,” the other voice answered
-curtly.
-
-“Why won’t it?” Foster persisted. “Are you afraid of them?”
-
-“Afraid of them?” the other exclaimed contemptuously. “No, but I am not
-fool enough to fall for your scheme. And neither will the others. You’re
-down and out. You know it and you think you can get back on your feet by
-starting a fight. Well, you can’t.”
-
-Scott peeped around the tree and saw them standing at the entrance of
-the tunnel into the rhododendron. One, as he already knew, was Foster
-Wait. The other was a short man of medium build, and rather clean-cut
-features. He seemed wide awake and altogether different from the other
-Waits he had seen. Instinctively he felt from what Hopwood had said that
-this man must be Sewall Wait, the brains of the family.
-
-The smaller man was staring silently at Foster with a manner showing
-both domination and disgust. Foster shifted uneasily from one foot to
-the other and looked uncertainly about him. He was unable to look Sewall
-steadily in the eye, but his braggart habit finally came to his rescue.
-
-“Well, it doesn’t matter so much what you think. It is up to me to
-decide and if I say fight, you will have to fight,” and he swaggered off
-down the trail up which Scott had come.
-
-Sewall looked after him contemptuously for a moment, shrugged his
-shoulders, and turned into a faint trail which led straight down the
-mountain.
-
-When they were both out of sight Scott came out of his hiding place. He
-decided to investigate the trail at some other time, and climbed back to
-the ridge. What he had just heard gave him something to think about. He
-knew now that there was nothing neutral about him. His sympathies were
-all with old Jarred and he hurried home to warn him of his danger.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- SCOTT HAS AN INTERVIEW WITH SEWALL
-
-
-The next day Scott was still worrying over what he had overheard on the
-mountain the evening before. He did not know what to do. At first he had
-determined to carry a warning straight to old Jarred Morgan, but what
-good would that do? Jarred could not stop the Waits from starting a
-fight even if he tried, and no one had ever heard of his trying.
-
-He wanted to see Hopwood and ask his advice but for once Hopwood did not
-show up when he was wanted. He wasted all the forenoon watching for him.
-Then he suddenly remembered what Hopwood had said about Sewall being the
-real leader of the Waits and determined to go and see him at once. He
-had two reasons for going. He wanted to see where he stood on the
-question of the feud, and he wanted to know if it was he who was talking
-to Foster the day before.
-
-Immediately after lunch he started for the cabin which the agent pointed
-out to him as a speck up on the mountainside. On the way up he saw
-Foster approaching on his white horse, but Foster evidently did not care
-to meet the man who had given him such a thrashing and turned off into
-the woods. He had his rifle with him and Scott did not feel comfortable
-till he was well past the spot. He half expected to hear a shot and had
-an uncomfortable feeling that some one was aiming at a spot between his
-shoulder blades.
-
-When he came in sight of the cabin he was surprised at its appearance.
-All the Wait cabins he had seen were slovenly and seedy-looking, as
-though no one had taken any interest whatever in them since they were
-first built. This one was very different. The inevitable picket fence,
-which Scott had now learned was to keep out the wandering razorbacks,
-was neatly whitewashed. The house was newly painted and the roof had
-recently been shingled. There was real sod in the yard and there was a
-bed of gorgeous flowers beside the porch.
-
-Scott stopped at the gate and shouted. A middle-aged woman came to the
-door and looked surprised at the sight of a stranger. Scott’s surprise
-was even greater. Instead of the regulation Mother Hubbard which all the
-women in that country seemed to wear, this woman was neatly dressed in a
-blue house dress and a white apron. She quickly recovered from her
-surprise and smiled pleasantly.
-
-“Won’t you come in?” she said sweetly. “This is one house,” she
-explained, “where you don’t have to stand outside and shout.”
-
-Scott thought at first that she was criticizing his manners, but he saw
-from the way she said it that she was stating this only as a matter of
-pride.
-
-“I am glad to know there is one such place,” Scott said. “I was told
-that it is always safer to shout, and they did not tell me that there
-were any exceptions. Does Mr. Sewall Wait live here?”
-
-“Yes,” she replied offering him a chair. “Please have a seat and I’ll
-call him. It is such a beautiful day that I am sure you will find it
-pleasanter here on the porch than inside.”
-
-Scott was a little disappointed for he would have liked to see what the
-inside of this house was like, but he thanked her and took the offered
-chair. He did not have long to wait. He heard quick footsteps inside the
-house, and the man he had seen with Foster stepped briskly out on to the
-porch.
-
-Scott arose. “Mr. Wait, my name is Burton, and I am the new supervisor
-at Caspar.”
-
-Sewall had sized him up at a single glance and extended his hand. “Glad
-to know you, Mr. Burton,” he smiled mischievously. “I have heard of you
-before from my cousin Foster.”
-
-Scott blushed like a schoolgirl. “I regret that I was forced into a
-quarrel with your cousin, but I assure you, Mr. Wait, that it was not of
-my seeking.”
-
-“Pshaw!” Sewall exclaimed heartily. “Don’t let that worry you. Everybody
-around here knows Foster, and I for one am glad that you thrashed him.”
-
-“I am glad that the rest of you feel that way,” Scott said. “But it was
-a shame that I had to do it when I was trying so hard to be absolutely
-neutral. When I heard of this feud, Mr. Wait, I determined not to get
-mixed up in it as the others had done. Unfortunately, Mr. Reynolds was
-ignorant of both the feud and the regulations, and he made promises to
-your family which the law would not permit me to keep. It is illegal to
-let a contract without submitting it to bids and requiring a bond. I
-admit frankly that I was glad of it, because I did not want to see
-either party get it as long as this feud exists.”
-
-“I don’t blame you,” Sewall agreed sadly. “It would just add to the mess
-that already exists.”
-
-“That is the reason I came to see you, Mr. Wait,” Scott exclaimed
-quickly. “It seems to me a pity for this feud to continue indefinitely.
-I heard that you had some influence with your family and I want to see
-if we can’t figure out some way to bring it to an end.”
-
-Sewall shook his head sadly. “Did you ever see old Jarred Morgan?” he
-asked hopelessly.
-
-“Yes,” Scott said. “I have met him and I admit that he turned my
-proposition down cold.”
-
-“That’s the trouble,” Sewall interrupted a little impatiently. “He will
-never give up. He and that little vixen of a Vic nurse the feud like an
-only child.”
-
-“That’s true enough,” Scott admitted. “But they are in the minority and
-I cannot blame them much. I cannot help but admire the old man’s
-gameness in a way. I thought possibly the larger party could afford to
-make the overture. You are an educated man, Mr. Wait, and you must see
-the futility of it.”
-
-“See it? Why, of course, I see it,” Sewall exclaimed bitterly. “I am the
-only one of the Waits who had the ambition to drag myself out of the
-Middle Ages in which the rest of them are living, and I’d make them drop
-that feud to-morrow if I could. Foster is the only one on this side who
-wants to keep it up. The rest would drop it quick enough if old Jarred
-would let them, but as long as he holds out, their pride will not let
-them give it up. And what would be the use of our quitting if Jarred did
-not?”
-
-“That’s true,” Scott sighed, “but I have not given up hope if you are
-willing. I want to try again to persuade Jarred.”
-
-“Go to it,” Sewall replied gloomily, “but you will not succeed.”
-
-“Maybe not,” Scott said, “but I want to try. Can I count on you to avoid
-any new outbreaks while I am trying?”
-
-“There will never be any more outbreaks if I can prevent it, Mr. Burton.
-And,” he added confidently, “I can prevent it unless Foster runs wild,
-and I doubt if he has the courage for that.”
-
-“Well,” Scott said, as he rose to go, “I certainly shall appreciate your
-help, and if I can ever be of any service to you, please let me know.”
-
-He left with the feeling that there was at least one man in the Wait
-tribe, and he marveled all the way home to think how this one individual
-had raised himself so far above all the others in spite of his
-surroundings. It made his own accomplishments seem small.
-
-Then he thought of the lonely old man on the other mountain, just as
-good a man and just as intelligent as Sewall. With the leadership in the
-hands of two such men there surely ought to be a reasonable way out. He
-determined to try once more in spite of the old man’s request not to
-mention it.
-
-When he came to the Morgan cabin it was unnecessary to shout. Jarred was
-sitting on the front steps and rose to welcome him. He even came part
-way to the gate.
-
-“Well,” he said with a smile, “I see you found a way to keep the
-contract out of the hands of the feudists even if you had to thrash one
-of them to do it.”
-
-Scott laughed at the old man’s humor. “It does seem like a strange way
-to keep neutral,” he admitted, “but it was forced on me.”
-
-The smile left Jarred’s face and he looked at Scott gravely. “Yes, I
-know it was, and let me give you a warning. Keep your eyes open from now
-on. That fellow will shoot you in the back if he gets a chance.”
-
-“I believe he would,” Scott agreed, “but I was talking to one of the
-Waits this morning who seemed to be altogether different.”
-
-“Sewall?” Jarred asked quietly.
-
-“Yes, I heard that he was the brains of the party and I went up to see
-him.”
-
-Jarred nodded. “Yes, Sewall is different. If all the Waits were like
-Sewall there would not be any feud.”
-
-Scott took advantage of the old man’s calm mood. “You asked me not to
-say anything more about dropping the feud, but I want to say something
-about it just once more if you will let me.”
-
-Old Jarred’s face turned dark with sudden anger and Scott saw that he
-was going to be ordered out with little ceremony. But the order did not
-come. For a moment there was intense silence. Then the old man spoke,
-and his voice was quiet and rather sad.
-
-“I know what you would say, but go ahead.”
-
-Scott was so surprised that he could scarcely find the words now that he
-had the opportunity. Then he blurted out his words like a schoolboy.
-
-“It is only this, Mr. Morgan. I could not help thinking when I found out
-what sort of men you two were, what a pity it was for you to hold out as
-a matter of pride till one of you is killed, and Mr. Wait said that he
-would be glad to drop the whole thing if you would. Is there no way out
-of it?”
-
-Again Jarred’s face darkened but the wave of temper passed as the other
-had done.
-
-“I suppose that is the way it looks to a stranger,” he said slowly. “I
-suppose I seem like a stubborn old fool, all pride and nothing to back
-it up, keeping the whole country in arms for the fun of it.”
-
-“No, it’s not quite as bad as that,” Scott interrupted quickly.
-
-“Maybe you would not say it in those words,” Jarred replied quietly,
-“but it must be about what you think. If any one else had tried to tell
-me what you have I would have ordered him off the place, but I like you
-and I am deep in your debt. I am going to tell you something that I have
-not mentioned before in fifteen years.” He paused as though it were a
-great effort to break his prolonged silence. Then he continued with
-enforced calm:
-
-“Foster Wait shot my daughter in cold blood just fifteen years ago, shot
-her just to keep the feud from dying out. He brought it to life again,”
-he concluded grimly. “Now it will live till one of us dies.”
-
-They both sat motionless for a minute staring at the opposite mountain
-in silence. The old man was choked with his own suppressed fury. Scott
-was awed by the significance this statement gave to the conversation
-which he had overheard in the woods the day before. What if this
-cold-blooded murderer should shoot Vic this time to keep the feud alive?
-
-He knew that he dared say nothing more to Jarred. In fact, he could
-think of little more to say. “Thank you for your confidence in me, Mr.
-Morgan,” he said sincerely. “I promise not to mention the matter again.”
-
-Jarred did not seem to hear him. His eyes were still fixed on the
-opposite mountain, and when Scott looked back from the turn in the road
-he had not moved.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- HOPWOOD TAKES A TRIP
-
-
-For the next few days Scott was too busy to think anything of Foster
-Wait’s possible revenge. In fact he almost forgot the feud altogether.
-The time for the return of bids had come and he had been awarded the
-contract. He had wired in his resignation to Washington and was once
-more in the thick of a logging job.
-
-He wired to Asheville where he had already made his preliminary
-arrangements, and in two days carloads of men, lumber and supplies began
-to arrive. He had hired a friend of his old foreman to boss the job,
-another Scotchman, MacAndrews, who knew the country and the logging
-methods. Camp buildings of rough lumber sprang up like mushrooms in the
-valley near the railroad tracks, and the skid roads began to creep
-slowly up the mountain in the shallow draws toward the ridge.
-
-The log chute was of particular interest to Scott because he had never
-seen one. In that particular place there was a small side valley, larger
-than most of the shallow draws, and the log chute was built along the
-little stream in the bottom of it. It consisted of two strings of logs
-laid side by side on short ties and hewed flat on the inside to form a
-rough trough. The logs were peeled and rolled into it far up on the
-mountain and gravity brought them down with the speed of a toboggan.
-
-Near the bottom of it they built a contraption which they called a bear
-trap to break the speed of the logs before they came out on to the pile.
-It was a heavy log, one end of which was raised on a tripod over the
-chute while the heavy butt end rested in the chute. Scott never tired of
-watching the great logs rushing down at tremendous speed only to butt
-this big swinging log high in the air and slide gently out of the chute,
-their force all spent.
-
-Every now and then the silence of the valley was broken by a dull boom
-as the long saws chewed their way steadily through the great trunks and
-the majestic monarchs of the forest plunged headlong down the side of
-the mountain over which they had stood guard for centuries. And down the
-steep skid roads in the shallow draws the teams were hauling long trains
-of logs chained end to end.
-
-Everything was running as smoothly as a watch under MacAndrews’
-efficient management, and Scott would have been serenely happy but for
-one thing. He had not seen Hopwood for three weeks. Not since the first
-day of his return from Washington. And he had come to rely on Hopwood
-more than he realized. There was no one else who could keep him posted.
-The agent told him what little he heard, and he visited old man Sanders
-one evening. But without Hopwood they were almost as much in the dark as
-he was.
-
-One evening Sewall came to see him at the hotel which was considered
-neutral ground. He, too, was worrying about Hopwood.
-
-“So you have not seen him, either,” he said, as he was preparing to
-leave. “I do not know what to make of it. He never disappeared this way
-before. I have searched for him everywhere on this side of the mountain
-but no one has seen him. No one has seen him on the other side.”
-
-“Have you any suspicions about it?” Scott asked.
-
-Sewall hesitated a moment. “He seems to have taken quite a shine to you
-and I thought maybe you had sent him on an errand somewhere. I wanted to
-find out before I said anything else.”
-
-“Now what are you going to do?” Scott asked anxiously.
-
-Again Sewall hesitated.
-
-“This is not mere curiosity on my part,” Scott added. “I look upon
-Hopwood as a good friend of mine, and I am as anxious to find him as you
-are. If you have any theory and I can do anything to help I want to do
-it.”
-
-Sewall still hesitated. “I don’t see how you can help me just now and I
-have not told any one my suspicions, but if you are a friend of his I
-might as well tell you what I am thinking. I can’t lower your opinion of
-Foster much. I have no basis for my suspicions, but I can’t help
-wondering if Foster has anything to do with it. He knows that Hopwood
-does not like him and he may have got him out of the way to keep him
-from working against him. I suppose you know how Hopwood came to be
-crazy?”
-
-Scott nodded. “I heard about it,” he said. “But surely Foster would not
-do him any farther injury when he is already responsible for that.”
-
-“Foster is desperate now,” Sewall replied, “and he would do anything. By
-the way, you want to keep on your guard yourself. He’ll never forgive
-you for thrashing him.”
-
-“I am watching him the best I can,” Scott replied. “I wish you would let
-me know what you find out about Hopwood, and I’ll send him right to you
-if I find him.”
-
-Sewall left and Scott sat pondering over the depths of Foster’s
-villainy. It did not seem possible that any one could do such a thing as
-that in cold blood, or that a man who had such a reputation could be
-left at large. He glanced up impatiently and saw Hopwood sitting on a
-chair near the door.
-
-“Why, Hopwood,” Scott exclaimed as he jumped forward joyously to greet
-him, “where have you been all this time?”
-
-Hopwood’s face beamed with pleasure as he recognized the sincerity of
-Scott’s greeting, and he spread out his hands in his old characteristic
-gesture.
-
-“Sewall was just here looking for you. He has searched all that side of
-the mountain, and I have been inquiring for you on this side. You’ve had
-us worried.”
-
-“I saw him,” Hopwood replied laconically.
-
-“Did you tell him where you had been?”
-
-“No,” Hopwood said, “he did not see me.”
-
-“You should have spoken to him, Hopwood. He is putting in all his time
-looking for you.”
-
-“I did not know that he cared that much about me,” Hopwood replied
-rather wistfully. “I’ll go right to him.”
-
-“You should,” Scott urged him earnestly, “for he cares a great deal
-about you, and so do I. You ought not to scare us that way.”
-
-Hopwood looked a little hurt. “I was trying to do something for you.
-That was why I went away.”
-
-“For me!” Scott exclaimed in astonishment. “How is that?”
-
-“Foster will shoot you if he gets a chance,” Hopwood replied
-confidently. “I went over to the county seat to try to get him arrested.
-If he was in jail it would be safer around here. It will never be safe
-while he is here.”
-
-“But you can’t get a man arrested for what you think he is going to do,
-Hopwood,” Scott remonstrated.
-
-“No, not for what he _has_ done, either,” Hopwood replied bitterly. “He
-killed a little girl here years ago, Jarred’s daughter. It was not a
-fight, just plain murder. It was for that I wanted them to arrest him.”
-
-Scott looked at him wonderingly. “What did they say?”
-
-“They laughed at me,” Hopwood replied angrily. “Said they could not
-arrest any one on the word of a crazy man.”
-
-“Did you have on your iron hat?” Scott asked, a little amused in spite
-of himself.
-
-A rare smile came over Hopwood’s face. “There’s where I made my
-mistake,” he replied. “I forgot that I had it on.”
-
-“Why do you wear it, Hopwood?” Scott asked, his curiosity getting the
-better of him.
-
-Hopwood looked at him thoughtfully. “I’ll tell you some day. I’m not
-quite ready yet. What did Sewall think?” he asked shrewdly.
-
-“He thought that I might have sent you on an errand or that Foster might
-have done something to you.”
-
-An angry scowl spread over Hopwood’s brow. It was the first time Scott
-had ever seen such an expression there. “Foster will never do anything
-to me. If I did not have more sense than they think I have, it would be
-I who would do something to Foster.” It did not sound to Scott much like
-the speech of a half-wit.
-
-“Well, you’d better go see Sewall now. It will relieve his mind.”
-
-Hopwood started for the door without comment.
-
-Scott had not expected him to go so suddenly and called after him, “I
-certainly appreciate what you tried to do for me, Hopwood, and I would
-like to see you to-morrow if you get a chance. I have not had any news
-since you left.”
-
-It was pathetic to see how grateful Hopwood was for any appreciation. He
-stopped a moment in confusion. “I’ll be here,” he blurted with evident
-embarrassment and hurried out.
-
-“He may be crazy,” Scott thought, “but if he is, it is a pity that there
-are not more crazy people in the world. If it were not for that iron hat
-I would not believe it for a minute.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- DICK TURNS GENTLEMAN
-
-
-These repeated warnings against Foster Wait began to get on Scott’s
-nerves. And yet there was very little that he could do to protect
-himself. He never carried a gun, and felt that he was safer without one.
-He was obliged to travel around over the forest continuously inspecting
-the logging job, and he could not devote all his time to watching for
-Foster Wait. He tried to forget it and go about his business as though
-Foster did not exist but he could not help thinking how many
-opportunities there were for this man to shoot him down from ambush, and
-it made him nervous. If Foster would only do something and show his
-hand, he could do something himself but till then he could only wait.
-
-A few days later something happened which put him more than ever on his
-guard. He was up near the ridge where they were making up the trains of
-logs for the skid teams. There was an enormous red-oak log forty-five
-inches in diameter lying in the skid road, and Jimmy Barnes, Scott’s
-best teamster, was waiting there with a team of large blacks ready to
-take it down. This particular team was untrained and very nervous. They
-had been assigned to Jimmy because he was the only teamster in camp who
-was willing and able to handle them.
-
-This one big oak log was in itself heavy enough for a load, but they
-never hauled a single log for fear it would roll sideways and become
-unmanageable. They always fastened a small log on behind to serve as a
-rudder. Jimmy was waiting for them to attach the small log. His team was
-getting so restless at the delay that he drove them around and hooked
-the heavy logging tongs to the end of the oak log. Not that he had any
-idea of trying to take it down alone, but just to give the team
-something to do and stop them from fretting.
-
-He had hardly straightened up from hooking on the tongs when the bushes
-beside the team were burst apart with a great commotion and Foster Wait
-jumped down the low bank into the skid road.
-
-The team made one wild lunge which almost jerked Jimmy off his feet and
-stopped trembling. The plunge turned the great log sideways on the
-slope, and it balanced uncertainly for a second on the stub of a small
-bush. Jimmy saw his chance, shouted wildly to the team and slapped them
-with the lines. If he could give that log another jerk before it started
-to roll he might be able to straighten it out. But the team balked. They
-trembled and jerked nervously but they refused to move, in spite of
-Jimmy’s efforts.
-
-Slowly the stub was bent down and the six-ton log was free. It rolled
-slowly down on to the horses. It had not yet gathered much momentum, but
-if it had been a smaller log it would have broken their legs. As it was,
-it just shoved their hind legs out from under them and they suddenly
-found themselves sitting on the revolving log with the heavy tongs and
-the logging chains clanking beside them at every turn of the log.
-
-It was too much for any team to bear. For a few yards they sat on that
-grinding log and ran with their front feet. Then with one mighty,
-terrified effort they succeeded in jumping clear of the log and plunged
-desperately down the skid road. But the tongs still held, and the big
-log rolled sullenly from side to side and held them back. Jimmy tried
-desperately to stay by his team, but an unexpected roll of the log threw
-him into the brush, the lines were jerked out of his hands and the team
-was completely out of control. The next instant the log struck a rock,
-the tongs pulled loose, and the freed team tore wildly down the steep
-skid road at breakneck speed.
-
-Scott took his eyes from the rapidly disappearing team long enough to
-take a glance at Foster and he felt sure that he saw a gleam of
-satisfaction on his face. When the team was out of sight and Jimmy had
-dug himself out of the brush Foster suddenly found himself the object of
-half a dozen pairs of angry eyes. He was frightened by the ugly looks of
-these men, but he succeeded in holding himself in check long enough to
-throw a bluff.
-
-“Some frisky team,” he remarked genially. “Any of you-all see a hound
-dog go by this way?”
-
-“I seen _one_,” MacAndrews exclaimed with an angry glare, “but he ain’t
-gone by yet.”
-
-The others snorted their amusement and Foster turned red. “I’ve lost
-mine,” he mumbled as he apologetically backed into the brush.
-
-“Better keep him away from here,” Mac shouted after him. “We’ll tie a
-can on him pretty quick.”
-
-Before Foster succeeded in breaking through the brush beside the road
-his flush had changed to a deadly pallor.
-
-“Who is that cuss?” MacAndrews demanded with a vicious snap of his jaws.
-
-“That is Foster Wait,” Scott said.
-
-“Well, he is hanging around here more than is good for his health. He
-scared that team on purpose.”
-
-“I thought so, too,” Scott exclaimed, and he added a little anxiously,
-“did you say he had been around here before?”
-
-“Turns up somewhere around the job almost every day. He’ll come once too
-often some day. I expect that team is ruined.”
-
-Scott had been so absorbed in Foster Wait that he had forgotten the team
-for a moment. Now he found that Jimmy had run down the mountain in
-search of them, and he followed as fast as he could run.
-
-Was Foster hanging around the logging operation trying to get a chance
-at him or was he up to some other mischief? It did not seem likely that
-he was looking for him. Why should he come there where there were so
-many people when he could so very easily catch him out in the woods
-alone? No, he must be up to something else. And Scott determined that he
-would make it his business to find out what it was as soon as possible.
-
-He watched all along the road for traces of the runaway team. At each
-turn in the road he expected to find them piled up against a tree or in
-the ditch, but although the road was badly scratched up in places as
-though they had stumbled or slipped badly they had evidently made it.
-
-Some of the men whom he passed told him that the team had passed safely
-at that point and was going strong. When he came in sight of the landing
-beside the railroad track he spied the big blacks standing in a little
-bunch of men. Jimmy was rubbing them down and trying to soothe their
-ruffled nerves.
-
-They were pretty well lathered up from the long run, and one of them had
-an ugly cut in his side but otherwise they seemed to be all right. They
-had left the road on the turn by the skidway and had run between two
-trees. The space had not been wide enough for the double-tree, and the
-sudden jerk had thrown one of the horses. Before they could untangle
-themselves from the broken harness the men had caught them.
-
-“Better take them to the barn, Jimmy,” Scott said, when he had looked
-them over carefully and noticed their violently heaving flanks and
-trembling legs.
-
-“I’ll take them over and doctor that cut and the harness,” Jimmy
-replied, “but I’ll have them out after lunch. If they had a run like
-that every day for a couple of weeks they might get down to where a
-fellow could handle them.” It was the second time they had run away with
-Jimmy, and he was getting a little peevish. He was afraid that they
-might endanger his reputation as the best teamster in the mountains.
-
-Scott knew what was the matter. “Never mind, Jimmy, you are doing fine.
-Nobody else could handle them at all. Once you have trained them they
-will be the best team on the job.”
-
-“They are that now,” Jimmy replied stoutly. “They have the record for
-coming down that mountain, anyway. By the way, did you get that guy who
-scared them?”
-
-“No, we hadn’t any proof that he did it on purpose so we let him go.”
-
-“I don’t need any proof,” Jimmy retorted angrily. “That’s the third time
-he’s tried it, and if I ever catch him around here again I’m going to
-lose a peavey in him.”
-
-Scott did not say anything, but he made a mental note of what Jimmy said
-about it being Foster’s third attempt to scare the big black team. It
-was the first link in the chain of evidence he intended to collect
-against him.
-
-As long as he was down in the valley and it was so near noon Scott
-decided to go in to dinner. He was still staying at the hotel, not
-because he liked it, but it enabled him to keep in touch with local
-gossip through the station agent and he thought it might give him a
-better chance to see Hopwood. He was doubtful whether it would be a good
-thing for Hopwood to come around camp with that strange iron hat. The
-men would undoubtedly tease him, and he did not know how Hopwood would
-take it.
-
-As he passed the bunk house he heard some one singing inside. It was not
-usual for any one to be in the bunk house at that time of day, unless it
-was the bull cook, and it did not sound like him. Scott stepped in and
-found one of the swampers sprawled on a bench and crooning a maudlin
-song. His first thought was that the man might have been hurt in the
-runaway, but certainly some one would have mentioned it if he had.
-
-“Sick, Dick?” Scott asked.
-
-The man looked at him with bleary eyes and arose with a ludicrous
-attempt at dignity. Scott saw at once that the man was drunk.
-
-“No, shur,” the man replied with an elaborate bow which almost upset
-him.
-
-“Then why aren’t you at work?” Scott asked sharply.
-
-“Becaush I don’t have to work for anybody,” Dick replied with another
-deep bow which brought him unexpectedly to his hands and knees on the
-bench in front of him. “I’m a gentleman, I am,” he added as he
-straightened himself with difficulty.
-
-Scott looked at him with disgust. “When Mac comes in tell him I said to
-give you your time,” he exclaimed impatiently and turned to the door.
-
-“Time,” Dick exclaimed. “Give me my time. I’ve got all the time there
-is. I’m a gentleman, I tell you.”
-
-Scott turned back with a new thought. “Where did you get that stuff?” he
-asked sternly.
-
-Dick winked at him slowly and shook his head. “A gentleman would never
-tell,” he replied knowingly.
-
-Scott slammed the door in disgust and left him still explaining his
-gentility to the empty room.
-
-Here was another thing he had to investigate.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- HOPWOOD THROWS AWAY HIS IRON HAT
-
-
-After dinner Scott stopped at the bunk house to see that his orders were
-carried out in regard to Dick. Dick had not delivered the message, but
-he did not have to. MacAndrews had spotted him shortly after Scott had
-discovered him and had started him down the track before dinner.
-
-Scott decided to devote the afternoon to collecting news from his
-friends in the hope that he could find out something which would throw
-some light on Foster’s actions. The station agent had heard nothing and
-he went up to see old man Sanders. The old man greeted him with his
-usual cordiality.
-
-“Come in, come in,” he said. “I hear you have beaten up the ogre and are
-succeeding in getting out the timber without his assistance. How did you
-do it?”
-
-Scott sat down in the proffered chair a little wearily. “Every one seems
-to be more interested in my fighting ability than in anything else. It’s
-a fine reputation for a man who started out to be an angel of peace.
-Things are going pretty well but there is something about it I do not
-like. Foster Wait is hanging around the logging operation all the time,
-and I can’t find out what he is up to. Haven’t heard anything about it,
-have you?”
-
-Mr. Sanders shook his head. “No,” he replied, “I have not heard anything
-at all. Hopwood seems to have deserted me, and Vic has not been down the
-mountain since the night you took her home. I can’t get around much
-myself and when those two desert me I don’t know much.”
-
-“I have not seen Hopwood for three or four days myself,” Scott said. “Do
-you suppose he has disappeared again?”
-
-“It is hard to tell what he is up to. The last time I saw him he was
-coming up the road there, but when he saw me he slipped into the woods.
-It was not like him. He never avoided me before.”
-
-Scott saw that there was nothing to be learned from Mr. Sanders and he
-rose to go. “Maybe he was just in a hurry and did not want to be
-delayed. He seems to be very busy on some scheme of his own.”
-
-“Poor fellow!” the old man sighed, “a lot of good his schemes will ever
-do anybody, but I suppose it gives him something to do.”
-
-Scott turned back from the gate. “Just what do you think of Hopwood, Mr.
-Sanders?”
-
-Mr. Sanders looked at him with a little surprise. “I thought I told you
-about him. He has never been right since Foster hit him in the head
-years ago.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” Scott interrupted. “You told me about that, but I have
-been wondering a good deal lately whether he is really as crazy as
-people think.”
-
-Mr. Sanders shook his head sadly. “I wish you were right but there is no
-chance. I have known him too long.”
-
-“Well, I think I’ll take a look for him, anyway. I like him, whatever he
-is.”
-
-Scott crossed the valley and took the road up the other slope towards
-Sewall Wait’s cabin. There were several other cabins along the road and
-as Scott approached one of them he saw a man come out of the gate, stand
-uncertainly for a minute and go back. The funny part of it was that he
-thought he recognized Dick, the man who had been fired from the camp
-that morning, but the distance was too great to be sure of it, and when
-he passed the cabin there was no one in sight. There seldom was any one
-in sight at any of these cabins. The children all ran away and hid at
-the approach of a stranger. Sometimes he caught a glimpse of some one,
-peeping out of the corner of a window, but that was all. It always made
-him feel uneasy to go by one of them.
-
-Sewall was home and glad to see him. Scott told him what Foster had done
-in the morning and how he was continually hanging around the camp.
-
-Sewall only shook his head doubtfully. “I don’t know what it is, but he
-is up to something. He has avoided me for a month. I don’t like the way
-he is chumming with some of the wilder of the young fellows. My boys
-don’t like him any better than I do, and they have tried to find out
-what he is doing but they can’t. I know his game but I can’t figure out
-his next move.”
-
-“Just what is his game?” Scott asked anxiously.
-
-“He knows that the family has pretty much lost confidence in him as a
-leader, and he thinks that if he starts some trouble they will have to
-support him. That much is clear enough, but I can’t see how he can gain
-anything by jimming your logging job.”
-
-“I thought that was probably just revenge for the thrashing I gave him,”
-Scott said. “If that’s all it is I am not worried, for he can’t do very
-much harm, but I was afraid there might be something else back of it.”
-
-Sewall shook his head. “He is too big a coward to risk very much just
-for revenge. To shoot you in the back would be more like his methods. He
-beat up poor Hopwood the other day. That’s about his size,” he added
-bitterly.
-
-“That is what I really came up for,” Scott exclaimed quickly. “To find
-out whether you knew anything about Hopwood. I have not seen him for
-three or four days.”
-
-“I saw him this morning. Foster went after him with a club day before
-yesterday, and if it had not been for that old iron hat I think he would
-have killed him.”
-
-“The big bully. What was it about?” Scott asked eagerly.
-
-“He would not tell me, but I thought from the way he talked that it had
-something to do with you.”
-
-“Where is he?” Scott asked. If Hopwood had taken up his fight he wanted
-to know what it was so that he could take it up himself.
-
-“He is up in his cabin. I tried to bring him down here, but he would not
-come. He’s funny that way. I have never known him to sleep in anybody
-else’s cabin. If he can’t get home he sleeps out-of-doors.”
-
-“Where is his cabin?” Scott asked. “I must go and see him.”
-
-Sewall hesitated. “He does not usually like to have people come to his
-cabin.”
-
-“But can’t you see that if he got into this trouble on my account I must
-see him at once.”
-
-“Well,” Sewall admitted reluctantly. “I reckon he would not mind seeing
-you. His cabin is away up there on top of Jones’ Knob. The trail turns
-off this road about a half mile above here. It’s not very plain but I
-guess you can find it.”
-
-Scott took a hasty leave of Sewall and started in search of the trail.
-Sewall told the truth when he said that it was not very plain. Scott
-looked for it closely, but he passed it and had to come back in his
-search. He finally found a faint trace and followed it up over little
-ridges and down into the draws for an hour, always drawing a little
-closer to the peak. When he came out in the little flat opening on the
-top there was no cabin to be seen. He had never been there before but he
-knew that this was Jones’ Knob, and yet there was no cabin.
-
-Scott looked carefully around him and there on the edge of the clearing
-he discovered a tiny cabin nestled back in the edge of the spruce
-thicket. He hurried over to it and looked eagerly in the open door.
-There was a man lying on the bed, but at first Scott did not recognize
-him as Hopwood till he saw the iron hat lying on his chest. He appeared
-to be asleep.
-
-It was the first time Scott had ever seen Hopwood without his iron hat,
-and he took the opportunity to study him carefully. He was amazed at the
-high, well-formed forehead and fine features. The blank expression which
-he always wore when awake was entirely gone now. He seemed to feel that
-some one was staring at him and moved uneasily.
-
-As Scott did not want Hopwood to discover him there and think that he
-had been spying on him he knocked softly.
-
-Hopwood sat up suddenly at the first tap and hurriedly put on his iron
-hat. He was very much displeased at the intrusion, but when he saw who
-it was a radiant smile chased away his frown. Nor did the usual blank
-expression take its accustomed place.
-
-“I went up to see if Sewall knew anything about you,” Scott explained,
-“and he told me that you were hurt.”
-
-Hopwood’s face beamed when he heard that Scott had come in search of
-him, but a shadow of hatred passed over it when his injury was
-mentioned. It seemed as though a struggle were going on within him. The
-next instant he was as calm as usual.
-
-“I am glad you found me,” he said simply.
-
-“Is it true as Sewall said that you were hurt on my account?”
-
-Hopwood hesitated. “Sewall does not know why I was hurt,” he answered
-evasively.
-
-“But can’t you see, Hopwood, that if it had anything to do with me, I
-ought to know about it?”
-
-Still Hopwood was silent.
-
-“Foster has been acting queerly,” Scott continued. “He has been hanging
-around the camp all the time and this morning he scared one of the teams
-and almost ruined it. I am almost sure that he did it on purpose.”
-
-“He did,” Hopwood exclaimed angrily. “That was what my trouble was all
-about. He wanted me to set fire to the camps.”
-
-Scott gasped in astonishment. He had rather expected Foster to attempt
-some personal revenge but it had never occurred to him that his
-cowardice would ever drive him to use such an expedient as that. It was
-a move too degraded for Scott to understand.
-
-“When I refused,” Hopwood continued, “he tried to kill me for fear I
-would tell on him.”
-
-Scott was silent a moment. “I don’t suppose that will prevent him from
-getting somebody else to do it,” he said gloomily.
-
-“I doubt it,” Hopwood said. “If it burns now, everybody will know who
-did it.”
-
-“Could we have him arrested for assault?” Scott asked.
-
-Hopwood shook his head. “There were no witnesses except his own family
-and they would swear to anything.”
-
-“Did he hurt you badly, Hopwood?”
-
-“No,” Hopwood answered, “not very, but if it had not been for my iron
-hat he would have killed me. He hammered me with a heavy club, bruised
-my shoulders and cut my face. I’m all right now.”
-
-Scott glanced questioningly at the bed.
-
-“Oh, I don’t have to stay there,” Hopwood replied with a laugh. “But
-since he knocked me crazy the first time I am always careful when I get
-hit on the head.”
-
-Certainly that did not sound like the talk of a crazy man, but Scott did
-not question him.
-
-“Is there anything I can do for you, Hopwood?”
-
-“Oh, no!” Hopwood exclaimed. “I’m all right. Won’t you stay and have
-supper with me?” he asked bashfully.
-
-“I wish I could,” Scott said, “but there are some things I have to
-attend to down at the camp. I hope I can some day. This is a beautiful
-place.”
-
-Hopwood came to the door with him, and they stood for a moment looking
-in silence at the beautiful scene before them, or rather below them.
-
-Jones’ Knob was the highest peak in that section, and they looked down
-upon a number of smaller mountains. The sun, setting rapidly over the
-western ridge, sent ever changing shadows over the eastern slopes. The
-evening mists were beginning to fill the valleys like a rising tide, and
-even as they watched one of the lower peaks was submerged in the sea of
-white.
-
-Scott roused himself. “It will be dark in the valley before I get down
-there if I don’t hurry. Take care of yourself, Hopwood.”
-
-“I’ll be down to-morrow,” Hopwood replied confidently, and as Scott
-disappeared down the winding trail he threw his iron hat far down the
-side of the mountain.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- AN ATTEMPT AT ARSON
-
-
-As Scott had predicted, it grew dark in the valleys long before he
-reached home, and he lost the trail on the open ridge. He did not worry
-because he knew that if he went downhill he would soon come out on a
-road somewhere, but he was impatient of delay. He was anxious to get
-back to the camps since he had heard of Foster’s proposal to burn them
-up. Maybe he was trying it again now.
-
-It was awkward work going through the dense woods and brush in the dark,
-but as he expected it was not so very long before he came out into a
-road. He did not recognize the road at first but he knew that he must
-turn to the left if he would find the road up which he had come.
-
-About a half a mile further down he came upon an unusually large house
-and recognized it instantly as Foster Wait’s. There was a light in the
-room downstairs but the shades were drawn down tight. Scott was looking
-curiously at the house as he walked by when two silhouettes suddenly
-appeared on the white shade. He was not surprised to recognize one of
-them as Foster, but when he recognized the other he stopped short and
-almost cried aloud. It was Dick.
-
-Ordinarily Scott would have considered it dishonorable to eavesdrop, but
-he felt sure that the meeting of these two men had something to do with
-him. What better would Foster want than to get hold of a drunken man who
-was disgruntled over his treatment at the camp! Maybe that was his
-purpose in hanging around there.
-
-Under the circumstances Scott had no scruples about attempting to hear
-the conversation. He determined to crawl up to the window and listen.
-Hardly had he taken a step in that direction when the loud baying of a
-hound told him that it was hopeless. As much as he wanted to hear that
-conversation he beat a hasty retreat. And he was none too soon. The echo
-of the dog’s bark had hardly died away when he heard the door open and a
-voice roughly scolding the hound.
-
-Scott hurried down the road while his imagination ran riot in vain
-attempts to solve Foster’s plans. Foster Wait was not the man to take in
-a drunken lumberjack unless he intended to make use of him, and Scott
-felt sure that those plans had something to do with him. At one time he
-thought of going to Sewall for help, but his pride prevented him. He had
-protected himself before from smarter men than Foster and he would do it
-again.
-
-It was long after supper-time when Scott reached the camp; in fact, many
-of the men had already gone to bed. Fortunately the cook was up making
-bread, and he went into the cook shack to get a handout. Scott was a
-favorite with all the crew, and when the cook saw who it was he denied
-himself the grouch he usually enjoyed when any one intruded into his
-castle, and hunted up some coffee, ham, doughnuts and cookies—the
-unvarying lumberjack handout—as though he enjoyed it.
-
-Scott was absorbed in his own thoughts and let the cook do most of the
-talking, but as he was leaving a thought occurred to him. “By the way,
-Ben, if Dick should come back here for a handout any time, keep him here
-and send for me. I want to talk to him.”
-
-He went out through the bunk house and motioned to Mac to follow him.
-When the foreman came out he led him over to a log a little way from the
-bunk house and sat down.
-
-“Mac, I have seen and heard a couple of things to-day which have me
-pretty badly worried.”
-
-Mac looked at him keenly in the dim starlight. “I’ll bet it’s got
-something to do with that guy who scared the team this morning.”
-
-“You guessed right the first time.”
-
-“I knew it,” Mac exclaimed. “I’ve been thinking about him all day. What
-is he up to now?”
-
-“Day before yesterday he tried to get a man to set fire to these camps.”
-
-“Set fire to ’em!” Mac almost shouted. “The dirty scoundrel!”
-
-“And to-night,” Scott continued, “I came by his house and happened to
-see him talking to the man you fired this morning.”
-
-Mac gave an angry snort of disgust. “That’s a fine howdy-do. A man who
-wants to find somebody to burn down the camp and a drunken lumberjack I
-fired this morning. Couldn’t find a better combination than that in all
-North Carolina.”
-
-“I came right on down here to warn you, because I thought you would want
-to put on a guard,” Scott said.
-
-“Put on a guard nothing,” Mac exclaimed contemptuously. “We’ll go up
-there and clean them out. The boys would enjoy it and I can have the
-crew out in ten minutes.”
-
-“I know the men could do it, Mac, and would probably enjoy it, but it
-would stir up too much of a row. If it were just those two it might be
-all right, but he is a leader of a big gang and we would have to fight
-all the people on that side of the mountain.”
-
-“Well, we can do that, too,” Mac answered doggedly. “Nobody ever burned
-my camps yet and nobody’s going to.”
-
-“Just the same,” Scott insisted, “we’re not going to fight that gang. We
-might do them up all right, but there would not be much logging done
-around here for the next month or two, and I’m here to get those logs
-out.”
-
-Mac sat for a while in sullen silence. “Well, what are you going to do
-then, let them burn you up?”
-
-“No,” Scott cried impatiently. “I have no more notion of burning up than
-you have, and if you cannot find a man here to keep watch at night I’ll
-do it myself.”
-
-Again Mac sat for a while in silence. His stubborn Scotch blood was slow
-to give in. The last voices had died away in the bunk house and Ben had
-finished his work in the cook shack. There was not a sound save an
-occasional snore and the scream of an owl far up on the mountain.
-
-Mac finally surrendered as he had known he would from the first, and was
-about to speak when a crackling of twigs in the forest behind them
-brought them both bolt upright with nerves a-tingle and eyes and ears
-straining. They could see nothing, but it was evident that some one was
-making his way slowly through the woods towards the bunk house and was
-making a great deal of noise doing it.
-
-“If that fellow is sneaking up on us, he must think we’re dead,” Mac
-whispered.
-
-There was a loud crash as though some one had fallen over a log. They
-heard some mumbling but could not distinguish the words. After a few
-seconds of silence the advance on the bunk house began again. A man
-passed slowly within ten feet of them and made his slow way to the side
-of the bunk house. They could hear him scraping together dead leaves and
-brush.
-
-Scott and Mac crept silently up to where they could see what he was
-doing, and Scott was not at all surprised to recognize Dick. He had
-scraped together a big pile of leaves and heaped them against the side
-of the bunk house. Scott gathered himself for a spring as he saw him
-fumbling in his pocket for a match to set fire to the leaves.
-
-But instead of taking out a match Dick stuck both hands in his pockets
-and swayed back and forth staring curiously at the bunk house.
-
-“Can’t burn that,” he mumbled. “Wouldn’t be gentlemanly to burn the bunk
-house with all those men in it. Can’t get ’em out without wakin’ ’em
-up.”
-
-He scratched his head in perplexity for a minute and then started toward
-the barn. Scott punched Mac in the ribs and they both followed. At the
-barn Dick repeated the performance. When his leaves were all piled he
-remembered the horses. Again he stopped and scratched his head. “No
-gentleman would burn a horse,” he mumbled.
-
-For a moment he stared helplessly about him. Then he seemed to get an
-idea. He made his way uncertainly to the door of the barn and
-disappeared inside. They watched to see that he did not strike a match,
-but did not interfere with him. After a considerable time he stumbled
-out leading two sleepy horses. He turned them loose outside and went
-back for two more. The first pair, finding themselves free and having no
-desire to go to work at that time of the night went back into the barn.
-Dick stopped and looked at them wonderingly as he led out two more.
-
-Scott and Mac were almost in hysterics. “Let me handle him,” Scott
-whispered.
-
-“Hello, Dick!” Scott exclaimed, suddenly, “what are you doing out here
-at this time of night?”
-
-Dick dropped the halters of the horses he was leading and braced himself
-as though he expected somebody to jump on him.
-
-“Why don’t you come inside and go to bed? It’s late,” Scott continued.
-
-Dick relaxed when he saw he was in no immediate danger of attack, and
-winked at them knowingly. “Didn’t you give me my time?” he asked.
-
-“Give you your time!” Scott exclaimed. “Certainly we gave you your time,
-but you were drunk then. You’re sober now. Why don’t you let Foster Wait
-get somebody else to do his dirty work for him? No gentleman would want
-to burn another man’s buildings.”
-
-Dick looked at him uncertainly for a minute and then straightened up
-with painful dignity.
-
-“That’s right,” he said. “That’s what I was going to tell him. No
-gentleman would burn a horse.”
-
-“Of course not,” Scott agreed. “Come on in.”
-
-He took Dick by the arm and led him into the bunk house. “There’s your
-bunk. Crawl in.”
-
-Dick obeyed without a word but as he rolled over they heard him mumble,
-“I’ll show him he can’t give me an ungentlemanly job.”
-
-“Going to call up the sheriff?” Mac asked when they were outside.
-
-“No,” Scott replied emphatically. “Arrest him, and when he gets out
-he’ll join Foster again. Put him to work in the morning and he’ll be all
-right.”
-
-“Reckon you’re right,” Mac admitted. “Good night.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- SCOTT FINDS THE STILL
-
-
-Dick went cheerfully to work with the other men in the morning and
-seemed to have forgotten all his troubles. Mac put on a guard to watch
-the buildings at night and he kept a sharp lookout for Foster in the
-daytime, but that gentleman seemed to have realized his danger and kept
-out of sight.
-
-Scott had begun to think that Foster must have left the country when he
-spied him one day sneaking through the woods a short distance from the
-camp. But Foster evidently saw him and immediately disappeared in the
-brush.
-
-Everything at the camp was in good working order now. The four felling
-crews were hard at it, each one working up a narrow strip from the
-valley to the ridge. Their progress was marked by the steady booming of
-the falling trees. The skid teams followed each other in an almost
-continuous procession with their train of logs, and the big steam jammer
-loaded them on to the cars on the siding as fast as they came down.
-
-Over in the main draw other felling crews were cutting logs for the
-chute and they were popping down so steadily that the old bear trap was
-playing a regular tune.
-
-Scott used to stand on the railroad track or the hotel porch and look up
-at the slope with pride. For he had marked that timber for cutting when
-he was still supervisor and he had done it well. Instead of the barren,
-blackened hillside which the logger usually leaves behind him there was
-enough small timber left standing to make it look almost like a virgin
-forest. Some one could log there again before so very many years.
-
-It looked as though the feud were practically dead. Sewall could report
-no new developments. Hopwood had not shown up with any news for a long
-time, not since Scott had visited him in his cabin, but he had sent him
-word occasionally by Sewall. Scott thought that he was avoiding the
-camps.
-
-One day Scott’s peace was rudely shattered. He had stayed at home that
-morning to finish up some correspondence. Just before noon MacAndrews
-came bursting into the room. He was so mad that there were tears in his
-eyes and he was almost inarticulate. He strode up and down the full
-length of the room twice, waving his arms wildly, before he could get a
-word out of himself.
-
-Scott was pale with apprehension. “What under the sun is the matter,
-Mac?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“Drunk,” Mac shouted savagely. “The whole blame crew’s drunk.”
-
-“Drunk?” Scott echoed in his astonishment, while Mac continued to walk
-the floor.
-
-“Dead drunk,” Mac repeated in disgust. “In the middle of the morning,
-and not a lick of work to be got out of any of them.”
-
-“Where did they get it?” Scott asked, for both he and Mac had exerted
-every possible effort to keep whisky out of the camp.
-
-“Yes,” Mac roared, “that is the question. Where did they get it? I’ve
-asked them all and beaten up half of them and not a word have I got out
-of any one. Show me the man who brought it in, that’s all I ask.”
-
-Suddenly a new thought occurred to Scott. “Where are they, Mac?”
-
-“Lying all over the woods.”
-
-“I thought so. Round them up into the bunk house, Mac. This is something
-that I think I can solve.”
-
-“You mean to say that you are not going to fire them?” Mac shouted in
-amazement.
-
-“Certainly not,” Scott answered with decision. “Do you think I want the
-whole crew added to Foster Wait’s gang? If I am not mistaken, that was
-the purpose in getting them drunk. Round them up in the bunk house where
-they can’t get any more, and I’ll see what I can do. Isn’t there any one
-sober enough to help you?”
-
-“Ben and the bull cook seem to have been overlooked,” Mac growled.
-
-“They were in camp, that’s the reason. Get them to help you,” Scott
-ordered, as he took his hat and started for the door.
-
-Mac, growling like a polar bear, went back to camp to carry out Scott’s
-orders. He wanted to fire the whole crew and it went against his grain
-to have to act as nursemaid to such a bunch, but orders were orders with
-him, and he would carry them out to the letter.
-
-Scott started straight for the opposite mountain growling almost as
-savagely as Mac at his own stupidity. Why hadn’t he guessed where Dick
-had obtained his whisky? And why hadn’t he guessed why Foster had been
-hanging around the camp? And why hadn’t it occurred to him what was at
-the end of that well-beaten trail up there on the mountains? He had
-certainly been a bonehead, but now he was determined to get to the
-bottom of it, and the first thing to do was to follow out that trail.
-
-He was walking rapidly up the road, still grumbling at his stupidity,
-when he saw a stranger sitting on a stump beside the road. He had almost
-passed him when he realized with a start that it was Hopwood. His iron
-hat was replaced with a soft felt such as all the mountaineers wore and
-it changed his appearance completely. He laughed when he saw Scott’s
-amazement.
-
-“I thought you must be coming this way,” he said in his usual quiet and
-rather mysterious manner.
-
-“But what does this mean, Hopwood?” Scott asked in bewilderment. “I
-heard that you had taken an oath to wear your iron hat till this feud
-was settled.”
-
-Hopwood was serious at once. “I don’t need that old hunk of iron any
-more. I’ll explain it to you soon, but I haven’t time now. Where are you
-going?”
-
-“I suppose you know what has happened. I am going up there to find that
-still. I ought to have done it long ago. I found the trail one day and I
-don’t know why it never dawned on me what it was. I had heard there was
-a big one somewhere, too. Of course, Foster gave those fellows that
-whisky, didn’t he?”
-
-Hopwood nodded. “Yes, and I was just coming down to warn you to keep out
-of his way. He has been celebrating his success and he’s crazy. He would
-shoot you on sight.”
-
-“Where is he?” Scott asked sullenly. He did not like this business of
-running away from a man, and yet he knew it was the only wise thing to
-do.
-
-“He was up at the house a little while ago. Keep your eyes open and take
-to the woods if you see him. I’ll come down to see you to-morrow if I
-don’t have to go away for a day or two.”
-
-“I may have to go away for a day or two myself,” Scott replied. “By the
-way, where have you been? I have not seen you for a long time.”
-
-“I’ve been too busy,” Hopwood replied lightly and disappeared in the
-woods with a backward smile.
-
-Scott did not understand Hopwood. Some mysterious change seemed to have
-come over him. But he did not have time to figure it out now. He was too
-anxious to see that still. He had Hopwood’s assurance that it was there,
-but he wanted to see it for himself.
-
-He did not know where the trail started so there was nothing for him to
-do but to go up on the ridge to the place where the old pig had scared
-him so badly. He found the place without any difficulty and looked
-around a little nervously to make sure that the old sow was not still on
-guard. She was nowhere in sight and he dropped down the slope unmolested
-in search of the trail. He was surprised to see how far down it was.
-
-When he came to the tunnel into the laurel he found some fresh tracks
-and listened anxiously. He was determined to see the still, but he did
-not want any one to see him, partly because he knew that these men would
-not hesitate to shoot any one they found spying around their still, and
-partly because he did not want any one to know that he had found it.
-
-He could see nothing. He looked down the trail and made a careful survey
-of the woods behind him. There was no one there who might cut off his
-retreat. Everything seemed safe enough and he cautiously entered the
-narrow tunnel. It was longer than he had imagined and the turns in it
-gave him an uncomfortable feeling of being shut in. He stopped every two
-feet to listen and then crawled slowly forward again. It seemed as
-though he would never get to the end of it.
-
-When he did get to the end he saw something that astonished him even
-more than the length of the tunnel. He found himself in a small opening
-about four rods across, and in the middle of it was a tiny log cabin. He
-had covered over half the distance to the cabin when a noise inside made
-his heart stand still.
-
-Some one was fumbling with the latch on the inside. After the first
-instant of paralysis Scott took in the situation at a glance. If he
-tried to return to the tunnel he would be in direct line with the door
-and would be in sight for some distance even after he had entered the
-tunnel. This all passed through his mind like a flash. His only chance
-was to hide around the corner of the cabin. He did not know how many
-people there were in there or whether there were windows in the end, or
-possibly another door, but it was his best chance. In two jumps he was
-around the corner.
-
-The latch clicked up almost the instant he started, and long before he
-reached the corner he heard the door swinging open on its rusty hinges.
-A glance showed him that there were no windows in that end of the cabin.
-He was hidden for the moment unless he had been discovered before he
-reached there.
-
-He turned and peeped anxiously through a crack between the ends of the
-logs. For what seemed to Scott like an age no one appeared. He looked
-nervously behind him and half expected to see a rifle pointing at him
-from the other corner of the cabin. But there was no one there.
-
-He was beginning to wonder whether he had really heard anything at all,
-or just imagined it, when there was a knock against the log wall that
-made him jump almost out of his skin, and Foster Wait staggered out of
-the door with a big earthenware jug in one hand and his long rifle in
-the other. He swayed uncertainly and took a step or two in Scott’s
-direction. Scott shrank back against the wall and prepared to sneak
-around the cabin, but Foster changed his course back toward the cabin
-door.
-
-He stood there mumbling for an instant and seemed to be talking to some
-one inside, but there was no answer. He laboriously turned again and
-started for the tunnel. He had considerable trouble in getting the jug
-and the rifle both into the opening, but finally succeeded. “They’ll
-never do it, they’ll never do it,” he called back angrily over his
-shoulder.
-
-Scott was sure then that there was some one else in the cabin. He had
-visions of hiding there behind that corner till dark, for the door had
-been left open and he would not dare try to sneak out in front of it. He
-could still hear Foster fumbling and mumbling his way through the
-tunnel, but he had not caught any sound from within.
-
-He placed his ear against the log wall and listened. The gnawing of a
-mouse on the other side sounded to him like some one tearing off the
-roof, and would have drowned out any other noises there might have been.
-The mouse stopped and he held his breath to hear better. There was not a
-sound. Minute after minute passed and still no sound. The mouse began
-again.
-
-“Better be shot than have that mouse scare me to death,” Scott muttered
-to himself, and he determined to have a look in the door. First he went
-back to make sure that there was no door in the rear. There was only a
-little square window on that side. Slowly he came back to his corner and
-listened once more. All was still.
-
-With a glance at the tunnel he crawled cautiously toward the door. Inch
-by inch he made his slow advance with his eyes glued on the opening and
-his mind made up to jump on any one who might come out—for there was no
-chance to escape now.
-
-At the very edge of the door he stopped to listen and peeped cautiously
-around the doorframe. Just then a noise behind him brought him to his
-feet with a bound, and he saw a man step out of the tunnel.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- HOPWOOD GETS JARRED’S PROMISE
-
-
-In the meanwhile MacAndrews had carried out his distasteful duty of
-rounding up the crew in the bunk house. Most of them were too far gone
-to offer much resistance and went to bed without protest. He left Ben
-and the bull cook to keep guard and see that no one escaped and no
-outsiders came in. Then he went up in the woods to see if he could catch
-any one looking for the men up there.
-
-He made his way to the top of one of the skid roads where he had found a
-group of the swampers and road monkeys. If any attempt were made to
-bring the men more whisky it would probably be there where the largest
-group had been. He selected a well sheltered spot in the edge of the
-brush and sat down on a log to wait.
-
-He did not have long to wait. Hardly five minutes had passed when the
-bushes on the opposite side of the road were parted cautiously and a
-boy’s face peeped out. It was Foster Wait’s son. Not seeing any one, he
-came slowly out into the skid road and began peering about. He was
-evidently disappointed and very nervous. It was like Foster to send his
-son where he was afraid to go himself.
-
-Mac could not wait any longer. He was curious to see what the boy would
-do but his desire to get his hands on him was too strong for him. He
-tore from his hiding place and made a dive at the boy. But he was no
-match for the badly scared boy. He eluded Mac’s grasp and sprang into
-the brush like a rabbit. Mac tried to follow him, but he might as well
-have tried to follow a weasel in a haystack. He soon gave it up and came
-back to see if the boy had left anything behind him. As he expected he
-found a large stone jug in the brush where the boy had first appeared.
-
-With a grunt of satisfaction Mac dumped the contents on the ground.
-“Enough there to paralyze the whole crew for a week,” he mumbled. He
-raised the big jug over his head and was about to smash it on a rock,
-but his Scotch thrift stayed his arm and he took the jug back to camp.
-
-Mac felt that he had a victory in capturing the jug, but it would have
-been far better if he had stayed in camp, for the boy was on his way
-home to tell his father that he had been seen and probably recognized.
-
-Hopwood could easily have caught the boy for Mac. After his meeting with
-Scott he had headed straight for the works to see if the men had been
-taken in out of harm’s way. He had been close enough to hear the
-crashing of the brush and the boy had passed within a few feet of him.
-But what would have been the use? They could not do anything with the
-boy after they had caught him, and it did not fit into his own plans to
-line up openly against his family just yet.
-
-He followed Mac almost to camp to make sure that all the men were in,
-but he did not go in himself. He turned into the brush without making
-his presence known to Mac at all. A half hour later he turned in at the
-gate of Jarred Morgan’s cottage.
-
-When Hopwood entered the cabin old Jarred sprang from his chair with the
-agility of a cat.
-
-“You fooled me that time, Hopwood,” he admitted frankly. “It is a long
-time since I have seen you without that iron hat. What is the meaning of
-it? Is the feud ended, then?” he asked with a wry smile.
-
-Hopwood cast a quick glance around the cabin.
-
-Jarred answered the unspoken question. “She went out to the orchard.”
-
-“No,” Hopwood said soberly, “the feud is not exactly ended, but I think
-I am beginning to see the end of it.”
-
-“You think I am going to cash in, do you?”
-
-“I am hoping that it will not end that way,” Hopwood replied earnestly.
-
-“There is only one other way that it can end,” Jarred answered, and his
-jaw clenched tight.
-
-“That’s why I have come to see you. Would you drop this feud if Foster
-were put out of the way for good?” Hopwood spoke with the tone of a man
-exacting an oath.
-
-“I have never made a contract for a murder,” Jarred answered coldly,
-“and I am too old to begin it now.”
-
-“Look at me, Jarred,” and Hopwood squared himself around in front of the
-old man. “Do I look like a crazy man?”
-
-Jarred’s frown melted into an affectionate smile. “No, Hopwood, your old
-iron hat has not fooled me for many years.”
-
-“Then listen to me,” Hopwood replied with a strange tone of confident
-authority. “I am no more likely to take the contract for murdering a man
-than you are. You have always said that you would not give up the feud
-while Foster lived. Now I want to know if you would give it up if he
-were otherwise disposed of so that he would never return to this
-country?”
-
-Jarred walked to the door and gazed out across at the opposite mountain
-in silence. It was five minutes before he turned back to Hopwood and his
-face was haggard.
-
-“I could do it, Hopwood,” he said sadly. “I hate to think of that
-scoundrel escaping my vengeance, but I could do it, and—would,” he added
-after a short struggle. “But I was thinking of Vic. Would she? I have
-trained her all her life to hate the Waits, and Vic is a good hater.
-Would she give it up, or would she think me a traitor?”
-
-“I think she would give it up,” Hopwood replied confidently.
-
-Jarred turned quietly and faced him. “What makes you think so?” he asked
-sharply.
-
-Hopwood blushed like a schoolgirl. He was silent a moment and then
-looked Jarred squarely in the eye. “You know what I think of Vic and I
-think she likes me. She never seems to think of me as being a Wait, but
-if we should marry some day, it would end all thought of the feud.”
-
-Jarred looked at him thoughtfully. “If I thought that could be true, I
-would agree to anything,” he said slowly. “I have been wondering lately
-what would become of Vic. I am not as strong as I was and I cannot last
-forever. She won’t give me any reason, but she says she will never go
-back to her father, and I think she means it. She’ll be terribly alone
-in the world when I am gone.”
-
-“I know why she won’t go back and I think she is right,” Hopwood replied
-with a dark frown. “Would that be satisfactory to you then?” he asked
-wistfully.
-
-Jarred placed his hand affectionately on Hopwood’s shoulder. “Hopwood,
-as far as I know there are only two men in the world to whom I am
-indebted—you and Mr. Burton. You have done me innumerable good services,
-and he brought Vic to me the night she fell off her horse. Both of you
-want me to give it up. I am going to do it and pay a part of both
-debts.”
-
-Hopwood jumped to his feet and grasped the old man’s hand. “Now I can go
-about my business. We’ll speak of the other some other time,” he added
-with a blush.
-
-“No need to put it off,” Jarred said. “All I ask is that you wait till
-Vic has grown up. If she will have you then, there is nothing in all the
-world that would please me more.”
-
-Hopwood wrung his hand once more and ran out of the house.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- A CLOSE CALL
-
-
-When Scott turned his head and saw that man standing just at the end of
-the tunnel a great lump rose in his throat and his knees almost gave way
-under him. He wanted to run but he could not move. The next instant he
-recognized Hopwood and the reaction was so great that he sat down limply
-in his tracks and stared helplessly.
-
-“You might as well kill a fellow as scare him to death, Hopwood,” he
-exclaimed when he had recovered his breath.
-
-“And you might as well be dead as to be caught here,” Hopwood retorted.
-“Did Foster see you? I just met him coming out and he was crazy drunk.”
-
-“Not quite,” Scott replied with a nervous laugh, “but I thought so for a
-minute when I saw you,” and he explained to Hopwood what a narrow escape
-he had had, and how he was trying to find out whether there really was
-any one else in the cabin.
-
-“You should have asked me to bring you here,” Hopwood scolded. “Then you
-would not have run such a risk.”
-
-“I’ll let somebody bring me next time,” Scott answered with a grin. “I
-have done about all the exploring I want to do around here alone.”
-
-He had completely recovered now, and he got up to have a peek into the
-cabin. So strong had been his impression that there was somebody in
-there that he now peeped cautiously around the corner of the doorframe.
-The little mouse scurried across a rafter and down the opposite wall.
-There was no other sign of life.
-
-In the center of the opposite wall of the cabin was a crude clay
-fireplace and in it there was a large copper retort shaped like an
-immense pear. From the top of it a long goose-neck extended far out into
-the room. Three barrels were sitting along the wall at the end of the
-cabin. In another barrel, on which there was a tin lid, there was a sack
-of corn.
-
-Scott looked the things over curiously. It was the first moonshine
-outfit he had ever seen. When his curiosity was satisfied he turned
-suddenly to Hopwood. “Will you swear that Foster Wait runs this thing?”
-he asked.
-
-Hopwood started at the question. “Why?” he asked in some confusion.
-“What are you going to do?”
-
-Scott thought that he had asked too much of Hopwood in asking him to
-give evidence against his relative, much as he knew he hated him. But it
-was too late to back out now.
-
-“Because I am going to get the United States marshal and have him
-arrested,” Scott answered doggedly.
-
-“But that is just what I was going to do myself,” Hopwood answered with
-disappointment. “You better let me do it. I know more about it than you
-do,” he pleaded.
-
-“No, Hopwood,” Scott replied firmly, “this is my problem and I must
-settle it myself.”
-
-“Why do you call it your problem when I have been working on it for
-years before you ever heard of it?” Hopwood remonstrated with some
-spirit.
-
-Scott saw that line of argument would not work and changed his tactics.
-“But, Hopwood, I need you here. There is no use in my staying here if
-you go away. I can’t find anything about what is going on if you are not
-here to tell me. I could not tell whether Foster was getting ready to
-burn down the camps or murder us all. If you stay here while I am away
-and will keep MacAndrews posted, he can take care of things all right.”
-
-Hopwood scratched his head doubtfully for a minute and frowned his
-disappointment.
-
-“I am not the only one who depends on you, you know,” Scott urged. “All
-the people on the other mountain over there depend on you for the news.”
-
-That was the deciding argument. Hopwood had told Jarred that he was
-going to put Foster out of the way and he wanted the glory of doing it,
-but he had been doing things for other people all his life and he knew
-that there was some truth in what Scott said.
-
-“Very well,” he said quietly. “I suppose I’d better stay, but I do wish
-that I could go. Some day I am going to do something I want to.”
-
-It seemed so pathetic to any one who knew the history of Hopwood’s life
-that Scott was almost tempted to let him go. But he was afraid that
-Hopwood might fail in the mission through his limited knowledge of the
-world.
-
-“Then if you will take a message to Mac Andrews that I am going and for
-him to put the crew to work in the morning as usual, I am going to start
-right away,” Scott said resolutely. The sooner he accomplished his
-purpose the safer he would be.
-
-Hopwood agreed without a word of protest and led the way into the
-tunnel. They were halfway through it when they were startled by a
-crashing in the brush ahead. Hopwood crouched and listened an instant
-and then motioned frantically for Scott to go back. Scott needed no
-second warning. The scare Hopwood had given him had shaken his nerves a
-little and he ran back through the tunnel like a rabbit. Hopwood was
-close on his heels.
-
-“What is it?” Scott asked anxiously.
-
-“Foster coming back.” Hopwood replied briefly. “Come.” He ran lightly to
-the wall of laurel beside the cabin and slowly pushed his way into it.
-Scott followed as close as he could but found himself no match for
-Hopwood at this game. Hopwood did not go far. He did not have to. A few
-feet in that thicket and they were completely hidden, but they could see
-out fairly well.
-
-They were scarcely settled in their retreat when Foster lunged out of
-the tunnel into the little clearing. He was apparently in a towering
-rage and was mumbling savagely to himself. He looked keenly around the
-clearing and strode over to the cabin. From the length of time he was
-inside he must have made a very thorough examination. When he came out
-he was examining the ground for tracks. Scott thanked his stars that he
-was wearing tennis shoes.
-
-Whatever the tracks were that Foster was following so carefully they led
-him out to the tunnel again. The two refugees breathed more freely when
-he was gone, but their troubles were not over. Foster was not making the
-noise he did when he came in and they could not tell where he was. Had
-he gone away or was he still in the tunnel?
-
-They had waited five minutes and no sound came from the tunnel. The
-suspense was beginning to tell on them.
-
-“I’ll sneak out and see,” Scott whispered.
-
-“No,” Hopwood remonstrated. “Let me go. He would shoot you on sight. He
-would not shoot me.”
-
-“He tried to kill you a while ago, didn’t he?” Scott asked indignantly.
-“He will not shoot me on sight because he is not going to see me, not if
-I can help it,” he mumbled to himself.
-
-He did not wait for Hopwood to answer, but slipped as quickly and
-silently as he could out into the clearing. He listened intently but
-could hear no sound. Slowly he crawled to the tunnel and peeped into it.
-There was no one in sight. With one more attempt to pick up a sound he
-crawled cautiously in.
-
-It was far more nerve racking than it had been when he crawled in. Then
-he did not have much fear of any one being there. Now he knew that some
-one had been there and was not at all certain that he had left. His
-progress was painfully slow. He listened after every step. He remembered
-where he had been hiding a minute before and glanced nervously at the
-wall of rhododendron on either side. He was almost tempted to run the
-rest of the way and have it over with.
-
-It was well that he did not act on that impulse. A few feet more brought
-him in sight of the outer end of the tunnel, and there was Foster
-sitting in the entrance with his long rifle across his lap and his eyes
-glued on the mountain trail.
-
-Noiselessly Scott backed out of sight and beat a cautious but rapid
-retreat. He made his way back to Hopwood in the rhododendron and told
-him what he had seen. “Looks as though he was posted there for the
-night,” Scott growled.
-
-“He probably is,” Hopwood replied quietly. “I reckon it’s up to us to
-get out through the rhododendron.”
-
-That possibility had entirely slipped Scott’s mind. It had never
-occurred to him that you could go through that rhododendron. He had been
-too fascinated by the tunnel and that mumbling man at the end of it with
-a long rifle.
-
-“Then let’s go,” he said.
-
-Hopwood glanced about him to get his bearings and glided through the
-dense brush like a snake, and as silently. Scott was put to it to keep
-up with him, and try as he would he could not move as silently. It was
-slow going at the best, for the course Hopwood had chosen led them down
-into a draw and up on to the next ridge.
-
-They had almost reached the edge of the rhododendron when they stumbled
-on to a covey of ruffed grouse. The frightened birds went up with a
-tremendous rush and crashed through the brush out into the open.
-
-“It is a good thing we did not strike them down by the clearing,”
-Hopwood whispered. “We would have had Foster on us in an instant. Here
-we are safe because he can’t very well follow us fast enough through
-there to do him any good.”
-
-They came out of the brush on to the open ridge and it seemed almost
-like coming out of a cave. Scott climbed up on a point of rock to get
-his bearings.
-
-Scarcely had he straightened up when his hat flew from his head and the
-ping of a rifle sounded from the opposite ridge. Scott fell from the
-rock in a heap.
-
-Hopwood ran to him. “Did he get you?” he asked anxiously.
-
-Scott felt his head and there was blood on his fingers. “Must have
-grazed me,” he said, “but it does not amount to anything.”
-
-Hopwood examined it and found a half-inch cut in his scalp. “That’s what
-those partridges did for us,” Hopwood said. “I am sorry he saw us but it
-can’t be helped now. Now, we’ll have to get out of here.”
-
-Scott scrambled to his feet and recovered his punctured hat. He examined
-it with a little shudder and started up the ridge.
-
-“Not that way,” Hopwood exclaimed. “That’s the way he will come.”
-
-So Hopwood led the way once more across a brush-filled draw on to the
-next ridge. Up this they made their way very cautiously, taking good
-care to keep out of sight. They were almost up to the main ridge when
-Hopwood hid behind a ledge of rock and motioned Scott to do the same.
-
-“We can see the other ridge from here,” he whispered, “and we better
-wait till we see Foster go down. We might meet him up there on the
-ridge.”
-
-After what seemed like an age they caught a glimpse of Foster making his
-way cautiously down the opposite ridge. He had seen Scott fall from the
-ledge and was on his way down to make sure of him. When he was out of
-sight they crawled out of their hiding place and struck for the main
-ridge.
-
-“I wonder what aroused his suspicion,” Hopwood said.
-
-“I don’t know,” Scott said, “and it does not make any difference. He
-can’t head us off now.”
-
-Hopwood shook his head doubtfully. “Maybe not, but I wish he did not
-know anything about it. He may guess what we are going to do, and if he
-does it may drive him to something desperate.”
-
-They were on the open trail now and stopped for a moment. “Well,” Scott
-said, “don’t let’s worry about it. You take the message to Mac and keep
-your eye on Foster the best you can. I’ll take the trail over the
-mountain.”
-
-They had hardly disappeared when Foster ran back on to the trail. He was
-raging like a madman. He knew that something, he could not tell just
-what, was in the wind, and it was driving him mad.
-
-A squirrel chattered at him from a big oak tree, and he shot it with an
-oath.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- SCOTT GOES AFTER THE MARSHAL
-
-
-Scott did not lose any time on the trail to the town where the United
-States marshal made his headquarters, but it was a long day’s hike and
-he had not started much before the middle of the afternoon. Night caught
-him while he was still on the mountain trails. The sky was cloudy, and
-down in the dense woods it was black as a pocket. He knew that he would
-save time and effort by camping out for the night and getting an early
-start in the morning. He was not gaining anything by feeling his way
-along inch by inch in the dark. He stumbled into an ice-cold trout
-stream and gave it up.
-
-The nights were cold there in the mountains, and he was feeling around
-for some firewood when he saw a light glimmering through the trees far
-down the trail. As his feet were already wet he waded across the stream
-and made his way slowly toward the light.
-
-It proved to be a lamp in a small logging camp. It was a comparatively
-small cabin with the cook stove and dining table in one end of it. The
-walls of the rest of the room were lined with double-decked bunks. Every
-one seemed to be in bed except an old woman who was reading at the
-dining table. She looked up indifferently when Scott knocked at the
-door.
-
-“Good evening,” he said. “Night caught me up here on the trail. Is there
-any place here where I can get a bed?”
-
-The woman looked at him suspiciously for a minute and seemed to be
-undecided whether or not to call her husband. Then she pointed to an
-empty bed in the corner.
-
-“I don’t want to crowd you here,” Scott apologized.
-
-“You won’t bother nobody,” the woman replied without looking up from her
-book.
-
-Scott did not think much of his reception. He had not had anything to
-eat since morning, but the looks of the place did not encourage him to
-ask for anything. It would be better than sleeping out in the cold
-without blankets even if he were hungry. He walked over to the bunk and
-crawled in without any further ceremony than taking off his shoes.
-
-For a few minutes he lay there and marveled at the tremendous chorus of
-snores which seemed to be coming from all parts of the little cabin, but
-he soon fell asleep in spite of the music and his hunger. In the morning
-Scott was astonished to see the number of people who rolled out of those
-bunks—men, women and children. It was evidently a big family, but he was
-not sure he had seen them all.
-
-After the way he had been received the night before, Scott intended to
-thank them for the lodging and depart without breakfast, but the man
-would not have it so.
-
-“Where did you get supper?” he asked.
-
-“I did not have any,” Scott replied a little spitefully.
-
-The man was very much put out and insisted on Scott’s staying to
-breakfast. Scott accepted, but before he was through he was sorry he had
-not stuck to his original purpose of going away hungry. When the man
-learned he was running the logging job on the other side of the
-mountain, he became so interested that Scott had a hard time getting
-away from him. If he had seen one of the boys slip around the house and
-run off up the trail in the direction from which he had come the night
-before, he might have been suspicious of so many questions.
-
-It was seven o’clock before he got away from these people and started
-for the town. Even at that the marshal was not up when he arrived. He
-had recovered from his logging camp breakfast sufficiently to eat
-another at the little hotel while he was waiting for the marshal.
-
-Scott had never heard anything but curses for the United States marshal
-from the mountaineers and had formed a picture of him that was rudely
-shattered when he saw the reality. Instead of the shiftless, cringing
-old man he expected to see, he found a keen, alert, energetic man of
-about forty-five. He had been a sharpshooter in the Spanish War and was
-every inch a man.
-
-“Now what can I do for you?” he asked briskly, when Scott had introduced
-himself.
-
-“I am running a logging job on the other side of the mountain,” Scott
-explained, “and there is a moonshine still over there that is causing me
-all kinds of trouble. I thought maybe I could get you to clean it up for
-me. The man who is running it is an incendiary and a murderer as well as
-a moonshiner.”
-
-“Sounds as though it might be Foster Wait,” the marshal said with a
-frown.
-
-“It is,” Scott said.
-
-“Then you may be able to get him in the courts for arson or murder if
-you can produce the evidence, but I am afraid I can’t help you much. I
-have put in days looking for that still, have searched every square inch
-of his place, but have never been able to find a trace of it. That has
-been a sore spot with me for several years.”
-
-“But the still isn’t on his place,” Scott said.
-
-“Do you mean to say that you know where it is?” the marshal cried
-eagerly.
-
-“Yes,” Scott said, “I stumbled on to it in the woods one day.”
-
-“But if it is not on his place, can you prove that it is his?” the
-marshal asked doubtfully.
-
-“Yes,” Scott said. “I know a man who is familiar with it and will swear
-to it.”
-
-“Good!” the marshal exclaimed, jumping enthusiastically to his feet.
-“Come on over to the judge and we’ll swear out a warrant for this bird.
-Didn’t see anybody on the way over here, did you?”
-
-“Yes,” Scott said. “Foster saw me just before I started,” and he
-explained his experience.
-
-“Still that was a long way from here and he may not have guessed where
-you were going. See anybody else?”
-
-“I spent the night at a little logging camp up here on the mountain a
-ways,” Scott admitted, “but they seemed too dumb to know anything.”
-
-“Yes, they seem dumb enough, but they have notified Foster long ago that
-you came this way. I doubt if we can get him now, but I’ll fix that
-still for you.”
-
-The judge was as interested as the marshal. “I’d like to get that
-fellow,” he exclaimed. “There was a crazy man in a big iron hat down
-here some weeks ago who wanted me to arrest him for something he had not
-yet done, but we have never been able to get any real charge against him
-that any one would support.”
-
-“I’ll support this one,” Scott said doggedly. “He’s the key man in that
-feud over there and I am going to put him in the penitentiary if it
-takes me all summer.”
-
-“All right, then, let’s go,” the marshal exclaimed. “Did you hoof it
-over here?”
-
-“Yes,” Scott said. “I didn’t have a horse handy, and, anyway, I thought
-I could make better time over these mountain trails on foot.”
-
-“Well, you couldn’t if you had my horse, but I’ll walk with you this
-time. We’ll be off the trail a good deal and I don’t want to be too
-conspicuous.”
-
-They went back by another trail which the marshal knew to avoid the
-logging camp and any one who might be looking for them. When the marshal
-started out anywhere, it was usually well heralded all over the
-mountain.
-
-They were walking rapidly up a steep mountain trail when the marshal
-suddenly stopped and held up his hand. Scott peeped through the bushes
-and was surprised to see that they were in sight of the trail on the
-main ridge just above the still. He followed the direction of the
-marshal’s pointing finger and saw one of Foster’s boys earnestly
-watching the trail Scott had gone down the day before.
-
-They made a detour and crossed the main ridge trail back of the boy.
-Just as they started down the slope toward the still, three rifle shots
-rang out in the valley below.
-
-“There is something doing down there,” the marshal whispered. “Sounds as
-though we ought to have brought the sheriff and a bunch of deputies.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
- HOPWOOD SENDS FOSTER A MESSAGE
-
-
-Hopwood did not go immediately back to camp to carry the message to
-MacAndrews. There would be plenty of time for that after dark. He
-thought it better to hang around and try to find out something of
-Foster’s plans. Instead of going down the trail he hid in the brush and
-watched, for he felt sure that Foster would come back that way when he
-found he had missed his mark.
-
-He saw Foster come out of the woods and judged his state of mind pretty
-well from his looks. When he saw him shoot the squirrel he was convinced
-of his savage rage. In such a condition as that he might do anything. He
-thought of old Jarred and little Vic up there on the opposite mountain
-and wondered what form his rage would take.
-
-Just then Foster could not have told him himself. He only knew that he
-had lost his opportunity in a game that he did not very clearly
-understand. Why had Scott gone to the still and not touched it? If he
-had destroyed the still and the supply of whisky in those barrels he
-could have understood that. He would have been trying to protect himself
-and his crew. But he had not destroyed it.
-
-Then a new thought occurred to him. Perhaps Scott had gone there to
-destroy things but had been interrupted before he had a chance to carry
-out his purpose. Perhaps he had destroyed it after he himself had been
-there. There had been quite an interval between the time he had looked
-in the cabin and the time he discovered Scott on the opposite ridge. He
-decided to see; it would at least give him something to do.
-
-He started toward the still again and Hopwood, who had been able almost
-to read his thoughts, followed as close as he dared. Foster went
-straight to the still and Hopwood waited outside the tunnel. Foster was
-not reasoning, he was just grasping wildly for some clue in this blind
-puzzle. He hurried to the cabin. Everything was just as he had left it.
-
-He came out and examined the edge of the clearing. He easily found the
-trail leading into the laurel. He really did not see the tracks of
-Scott’s tennis shoes, but he had not seen Hopwood and mistook his boots
-for Scott’s. He realized now that he had trapped Scott in there when he
-came back, and ground his teeth in his disappointment. As much puzzled
-as ever he paced nervously up and down the little clearing. Then he
-determined to go home and send his boy to find out where Scott had gone.
-
-Hopwood followed Foster home and saw the boy start down the road toward
-the village. He did not think it likely that Foster would leave the
-house again that night and decided to overtake the boy. Possibly he
-could pump some of Foster’s plans out of him. He was a favorite with all
-the young people on both sides of the mountain. For some reason they
-seemed to look on him as an old man, although in reality he was little
-older than they were, except in mental capacity.
-
-He kept to the woods till he was out of sight from the house. But he was
-so used to the woods that he lost little time by that and once in the
-road he soon overtook the boy.
-
-“Hello, Bill!” he called. “Dad out of chewing tobacco?”
-
-“No,” Bill growled. “He ain’t even got that excuse.” The boy did not
-seem to be any too pleased with his errand, whatever it was and spoke
-sullenly.
-
-“What then?” Hopwood persisted. “Just out for your health?”
-
-“Out for his health, I reckon,” the boy replied spitefully. “He wants me
-to find out where that logging boss is.”
-
-“Who, MacAndrews?” Hopwood asked innocently.
-
-“No, Burton,” Bill growled.
-
-“That ought to be easy,” Hopwood said teasingly. “MacAndrews can
-probably tell you where he is.”
-
-“Might if I asked him,” the boy replied doggedly, “but MacAndrews isn’t
-going to see me.”
-
-“What’s the matter? Been stealing stuff from the cook shack?” Hopwood
-went on.
-
-“No,” Bill protested, “but he pretty near caught me this morning when I
-went over to take some whisky to the men.”
-
-Hopwood whistled. “No wonder you don’t want him to see you. Then how are
-you going to find out?”
-
-“Ask Mr. Roberts, I reckon.”
-
-For some reason or other the station agent had never lost his title with
-these people. He was still “Mr.” Roberts after years of residence in
-close touch with them.
-
-Hopwood thought a moment. Mr. Roberts might know where Scott had gone,
-and if he did, he might tell Bill, and that would not do at all.
-
-“Maybe I can find out for you from MacAndrews,” he volunteered.
-
-Bill cheered up at once. “Gee, will you, Hop? Dad seems to want to know
-awful bad, and if I don’t find out I’ll be afraid to go home.”
-
-“All right,” Hopwood agreed. “I’ll ask MacAndrews for you.”
-
-They walked on for a while in silence. Bill’s troubles had been
-unexpectedly lifted from his shoulders and Hopwood had found out what he
-wanted to know. Foster did not know where Scott had gone, and he would
-not find out from this boy if Hopwood could help it. And he thought that
-he could.
-
-When they came within sight of the camp it was growing dark, but they
-could still see dusky figures moving about.
-
-“I’ll wait here,” Bill said, and the tone of his voice indicated that
-nothing on earth could persuade him to go any nearer.
-
-“All right,” Hopwood agreed. “I’ll be back in a few minutes.”
-
-He strolled on down to the bunk house. The men had just straggled out
-from supper and they were a sorry-looking lot. Some had gone straight to
-bed. Others were lolling around a bonfire outside. They looked at
-Hopwood curiously but none of them had ever seen him before, and they
-were too woebegone even to speak to him.
-
-He was just going into the bunk house when he saw MacAndrews coming out
-of the cook shack. Hopwood walked straight up to him and came out
-frankly with his message. “Mr. MacAndrews, Mr. Burton asked me to tell
-you to put the men to work in the morning as usual and that he would be
-back to-morrow.”
-
-Mac had been staring hard at him trying to recognize him in the dusk.
-“Who are you?” he asked gruffly.
-
-“My name is Hopwood,” Hopwood replied wisely leaving off his last name.
-
-“Come into the cook shack,” Mac growled, “where I can have a good look
-at you. I am suspicious of visitors since this morning.”
-
-Hopwood followed him obediently into the cook shack and looked him
-squarely in the eye. “He also told me that I was to keep in touch with
-you while he was away and let you know what Foster Wait was doing.”
-
-“He did, did he?” Mac grunted, as he looked him over suspiciously from
-head to foot. “Where has he gone?”
-
-Hopwood looked around and lowered his voice. “He went over the mountain
-to see the United States marshal.”
-
-Mac grunted his satisfaction but his suspicion was not completely
-allayed. “Who the deuce are you?” he asked again. “You look like one of
-these pesky mountaineers to me.”
-
-“I am,” Hopwood replied bluntly, “but I am a friend of Mr. Burton’s and
-I don’t like Foster Wait as well as you do. That ought to be enough to
-satisfy you.”
-
-“Well,” Mac said grudgingly, “if you are a liar you are a mighty slick
-one. I’ll take a chance on you, anyway. What’s that man Wait up to now?”
-
-“He was in the house when I came by there a while ago. He’s not likely
-to come out again to-night, and I’ll watch him in the morning and let
-you know if he’s up to anything.”
-
-“Very well,” Mac replied. “I’ll be watching for you, and—for him,” he
-added grimly.
-
-Hopwood started for the door. “Don’t you want a handout?” Mac called
-after him hospitably.
-
-As Hopwood had not had anything to eat since morning, he gladly accepted
-the invitation. While he was eating Mac plied him with all kinds of
-questions about Foster Wait. It was evident that it would be a bad day
-for Foster if he ever fell into Mac’s hands.
-
-When he had finished the generous meal which Ben had given him he walked
-out to find Bill. The boy was sitting on the stump waiting patiently.
-Waiting was one of the best things Bill did.
-
-“You ought to have come with me,” Hopwood said. “The cook gave me a
-great handout.”
-
-“You can have mine in there,” Bill replied with a wry face. “What did he
-say about his boss?”
-
-“He said he was out on the works to-day and would be back in camp
-to-night,” Hopwood lied glibly.
-
-It was enough for the boy to have a satisfactory answer to take home. He
-did not question the truth of it. “Thanks,” he said, and started back up
-the mountain.
-
-“Wait a while and I’ll walk up with you,” Hopwood volunteered.
-
-“I gotta be getting home,” the boy said. “He’ll be mad enough now
-without keeping him waiting any longer.”
-
-Hopwood watched him out of sight in the darkness. “Well, give him that
-information,” he mumbled maliciously to himself. “It may quiet his
-nerves.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
- FOSTER REVIVES THE FEUD
-
-
-No one knew where Hopwood spent the night. He did not accept Mac’s
-invitation to stay at the camp, but early morning found him on the road
-again on his way up to scout around Foster’s cabin. He had an uneasy
-feeling that something would happen if Foster found out where Scott had
-gone. He chuckled to think that he probably would not find it out now.
-He had sounded out Mr. Roberts and found that he did not know.
-
-It was an hour after he had taken up his watch in a little patch of
-woods across the road from the house before he noticed any signs of
-life. A thin wisp of smoke curled up from the kitchen chimney. Every now
-and then he caught a roar from the rear of the house but no other sound
-of voices, a pretty good indication that Foster was in no better mood
-than he had been the night before.
-
-A half hour later Bill came running around the house with head ducked
-low. Once safe around the corner he dropped down to a slow shuffle. He
-had been crying, and he looked longingly up at the mountain before he
-turned reluctantly down toward the village.
-
-“He either suspects where Scott has gone or he is planning some new
-devilment as soon as he gets back,” Hopwood mused, as he watched Bill
-crawling slowly on his snail-like way. “Well, Foster is not likely to go
-out till Bill gets back and that can’t be for two hours at the rate he
-is moving.”
-
-He had almost decided to go on another errand while he was waiting for
-Bill to come back when a movement caught his eye and he saw a barefoot
-boy turn in at Foster’s gate. Hopwood groaned with disappointment and
-apprehension, for he knew that boy was bearing one of two messages:
-either that Scott had passed the logging camp on the way down, or that
-the marshal had left town on the way up. Probably it was the former,
-because the marshal would know enough to avoid that camp. Hopwood blamed
-himself for not having warned Scott to keep away from it. Well, it could
-not be helped now.
-
-“There will be something doing pretty soon now,” he thought.
-
-He was not mistaken. The arrival of the boy at the Wait cabin was like
-the spark on a fuse running into a powder magazine. Foster roared like a
-wounded lion, and everything seemed to be in great commotion. A little
-girl darted out of the house and tore down the road toward the village.
-
-“After Bill,” Hopwood mused. “I wonder what the game is?”
-
-The commotion in the back of the house continued.
-
-In a few minutes the girl and Bill came trotting back together. His
-reluctance to go had made his recall easy. Hopwood kept a close lookout
-now. He did not want anything to escape him, for much might depend on
-what he saw now. He saw Bill slip out of the side gate and take a short
-cut up the mountain carrying a long rifle.
-
-Hopwood knew what that meant. The boy was to keep watch and fire his
-rifle as a signal if he saw the marshal coming that way. That was an old
-trick that he had seen worked many times before, but he had never had
-the interest in it that he had now. The boy from the logging camp
-followed close behind Bill.
-
-These things did not worry Hopwood. A warning of the marshal’s approach
-would not do any harm. He had expected that. But when he saw two of the
-younger children scamper off on the trails which led to the cabins of
-other members of the family, and saw Foster run hurriedly to the barn to
-get his white horse, he began to get excited.
-
-If this were Sewall, he would know that he was assembling the clan to
-resist the marshal. But he knew that they would not protect Foster, and
-Foster knew it himself.
-
-“There is only one way,” Hopwood thought, “that Foster could get the
-support of the others, and that would be to start a fight with the
-Morgans.” If that were the plan he did not have much time to do it. No
-wonder he was in a hurry, with the marshal probably already on his way
-over the mountain.
-
-So firmly did this idea take hold of Hopwood that he could stand it no
-longer. Foster galloped away furiously in the direction of the village,
-and Hopwood, breaking cover like a rabbit, darted across the road and
-straight through the woods on a bee line for the opposite mountain.
-
-A little farther down he came into a trail and ducked out of it again
-just in time to miss another Wait who was hurrying toward the village.
-As soon as the rider was out of sight he broke into the trail again and
-ran panting on his way.
-
-He crossed the railroad track below the village and ran gasping up the
-steep slope with his eyes glued on a little clearing far up on the
-mountainside. Every instant he dreaded that he would see Foster’s white
-horse flash across that clearing. Would he be in time?
-
-It was this thought that drove him on and urged him to almost superhuman
-efforts, while every breath he drew tore at his lungs like a rusty
-knife. Stumbling like a drunken man he tottered out into the road in
-front of Jarred’s cabin.
-
-The white horse was nowhere in sight. He had won the race. No matter how
-fast they came now Jarred would have his warning. He did not have the
-breath to shout at the gate. He ran across the yard and into the cabin
-without ceremony.
-
-The minutes dragged slowly by and Hopwood did not come out. An unnatural
-silence seemed to surround the place. Not a single bird note broke the
-weird stillness, and even the little brook which usually tinkled so
-musically over the stones by the house seemed to be gliding softly now.
-Only the ticking of the old cuckoo clock within the cabin boomed out
-like the blows of a hammer.
-
-The slow minutes passed: ten, fifteen, twenty, and Hopwood came slowly
-out. He looked weary and disheartened. Even the sound of a rifle shot
-from the valley below did not arouse him. He stood with his arms folded
-on top of the fence and looked listlessly across at the opposite
-mountain. There was another shot fired in the valley and a scattering
-volley answered it, but he did not seem to hear them.
-
-Vic appeared in the doorway and called to him. “You must find out what
-that is, Hopwood. Are they fighting us or the logging camp?”
-
-Hopwood started as though he had been awakened from a dream. With a wave
-of the hand to Vic he vaulted the fence and ran down the slope. When he
-came to the railroad track he hesitated a moment and then turned up the
-track toward the village.
-
-He found Mr. Roberts sitting on the end of the station platform watching
-the fight as calmly as though watching a game from a grand stand.
-
-“Just what happened?” Hopwood asked.
-
-Shots were still being fired spasmodically from both sides of the
-street.
-
-“Foster rode up to the store like a madman and shot across at Morgan’s
-wife without any warning,” Mr. Roberts replied, without taking his eyes
-off the fight.
-
-“Did he hit her?” Hopwood asked with a hard unnatural ring in his voice.
-
-“Couldn’t miss her, just across the street,” Mr. Roberts replied.
-
-A cold steely glint came into Hopwood’s soft blue eyes and his jaw set
-tight. “Kill her?” he persisted.
-
-“Couldn’t tell,” Mr. Roberts replied calmly. “They hauled her inside.”
-
-Hopwood did not wait to hear any more. With a growl of rage he jumped
-across the railroad track and ran up the western slope with all the
-speed his tired legs could muster.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
- SCOTT ARRIVES AT THE VILLAGE
-
-
-Scott and the marshal started down the mountain in the direction of the
-firing. “Where is that still?” the marshal asked. “We might as well have
-a look at it if it is up this way.”
-
-“It won’t be much out of the way,” Scott said. “We are about there now.”
-He was so anxious to get to the village that he would not have consented
-to stop at all except that he thought he might find Hopwood at the
-still, and he was crazy to know what was going on. He led the marshal
-down the mountain at a run.
-
-“Here’s the trail to it,” he exclaimed.
-
-When they came to the tunnel the marshal slipped ahead with his revolver
-in his hand. “Let me pack this gun in there ahead,” he whispered. “Not
-likely to be any one there, but if there should be, he might be
-peevish.”
-
-They made their way cautiously through the rhododendron and paused at
-the other end to watch and listen. There was no evidence of any one and
-the marshal ran quickly across the clearing to the cabin. Scott was
-close at his heels. There was no one there.
-
-“This is a fine outfit,” the marshal exclaimed enthusiastically. “Big
-enough to supply the county. No wonder I could not find it. They are a
-foxy bunch. Put it on government land, too.”
-
-One glance had shown Scott that Hopwood was not there and he was anxious
-to be off. “Come on,” he exclaimed, “you can destroy this thing any
-time. I’ve got to see what is happening down there. That may be my crew
-fighting.”
-
-“Just the same, I am going to fix this thing before I go,” the marshal
-replied coolly. “Any one who is slick enough to put this thing in here
-might be pretty clever in getting it out. I’ll take no chances.”
-
-With a few blows of his hatchet he cut the copper retort to ribbons and
-knocked the heads out of the barrels. “Now they can have it,” he cried
-with a chuckle of satisfaction.
-
-Scott was already halfway out of the tunnel. As soon as he emerged on
-the open trail he saw Hopwood coming, exhausted but determined.
-
-“What is going on, Hopwood?” he called anxiously.
-
-“They’re at it,” Hopwood panted as he sank on a log.
-
-“What started it?” Scott asked.
-
-“The boy from the logging camp reported that you had gone over the
-mountain,” Hopwood gasped. “And Foster shot Vic’s mother in cold blood.”
-
-Scott was horror struck. “Why, that is what Sewall predicted,” he said,
-“but I didn’t believe it possible.”
-
-“It was murder,” Hopwood replied coldly.
-
-“Jarred isn’t hurt, is he?” Scott persisted.
-
-Hopwood’s answer was so low that Scott had to lean over him to hear it
-at all. A look of keen disappointment passed over Scott’s face.
-
-“How did that happen?” he asked.
-
-Again Hopwood’s answer was so low that he could hardly hear it.
-
-Scott straightened suddenly. His anger was choking him, and the hot
-blood leaping through his veins almost blinded him.
-
-Hopwood, still panting from his exertions, jumped from the log and
-started straight down through the woods.
-
-“Where are you going?” Scott called sharply.
-
-“Down to fight on the side of the Morgans,” he answered without even
-turning his head.
-
-“So am I,” Scott exclaimed savagely, “and so is all my logging crew
-unless this feud is dropped now and forever.”
-
-“What’s going on?” the marshal asked.
-
-But Scott did not seem to hear him. He strode down the mountain slope in
-the direction Hopwood had taken. His eyes were searching the woods for
-any signs of the Waits, and his ears were straining to catch any
-significant sounds from the valley below, but his mind was far away in
-the little cabin up on the opposite mountain.
-
-When they came to a little clearing on a knoll which overlooked the
-village they stopped to reconnoiter. At first they could see nothing out
-of the ordinary. The village seemed as quiet and deserted as ever. Mr.
-Roberts was still sitting calmly on the end of the station platform and
-two women were peeping from an upstairs window of the hotel.
-
-They were almost directly in the rear of the Waits’ position, and
-gradually they began to distinguish them. First, one here, crouching
-behind the corner of the store, then another one behind the lumber pile.
-Twenty-two they counted and all armed.
-
-One man seemed to be holding himself in reserve for an emergency. He
-stood apart from the others, his arms folded across the end of the
-barrel of his long rifle, and his chin resting on his arms. He did not
-seem to be taking any active part. He must have been in plain sight of
-both parties but none of them seemed to molest him.
-
-Every now and then the vicious ping of a high-power rifle rang out from
-the Morgan store and was answered by a scattering volley from the men in
-hiding before them.
-
-They saw Hopwood slip across the railroad back of the hotel and glide
-around through the woods to the back of the Morgan store.
-
-The marshal had been examining the scene minutely through his field
-glasses. Suddenly he grasped Scott’s elbow.
-
-“There’s my man,” he whispered.
-
-Scott followed the direction of the pointing finger. Farthest away from
-the store and securely hidden behind a long pile of cordwood was Foster
-Wait.
-
-“The farthest away and the best hidden of them all,” Scott sneered. “The
-coward!”
-
-Over in the other direction, opposite the hotel, on a knoll very similar
-to their own, was the whole logging crew.
-
-“I’m going over there to give a message to my foreman,” Scott said.
-“Then I am going down to put an end to this row.”
-
-“Better keep out of it,” the marshal advised. “Let the sheriff take care
-of it. The peacemaker always gets the worst of it.”
-
-But Scott shook his head and started toward his crew. Mac had seen him
-coming and met him halfway.
-
-“Some show,” Mac exclaimed cheerfully. “They have not bothered us yet
-and I reckon maybe they know enough to let us alone.”
-
-“I am going down there to try to stop it, Mac. If anything interferes
-with me it will be these fellows on this side. If they do, clean them
-up.”
-
-“We’ll do that,” Mac exclaimed enthusiastically. “But why not let us
-clean them up first? It would be safer?”
-
-“No,” Scott replied firmly, “that would not do. I don’t think they will
-bother me and I don’t want you to mix in the thing at all unless they
-do.”
-
-A fresh burst of shots rattled around the buildings on both sides of the
-street. “They haven’t hit anybody yet,” Mac growled sarcastically, “but
-they may hurt somebody if they keep on.”
-
-When Scott got back to the knoll, the marshal was nowhere in sight. He
-did not stop to look for him. He had made up his mind what he was going
-to do and he was anxious to be about it. He picked his way diagonally
-across the slope, back of the Waits’ position to where the station agent
-was sitting on the platform.
-
-He talked earnestly to Mr. Roberts for a moment and started up the road
-toward the village.
-
-“Better keep out of it,” Mr. Roberts called after him pleadingly.
-
-But Scott neither turned back nor answered him.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
- THE END OF THE FEUD
-
-
-Scott walked rapidly up the road toward the store. He felt a shiver run
-up his back as he passed the woodpile where Foster was hiding, but he
-held his course steadily and looked neither to the right nor the left.
-
-Astonishment and wonder held the men on both sides motionless. It seemed
-to Scott as though he were walking all alone through a great desert with
-a row of mines on either side of him. He could almost hear the
-sputtering of the fuses. He had never felt so lonely in all his life.
-
-He heard a voice on the Morgan side shouting to him to keep back, and he
-recognized it as Hopwood’s.
-
-Only when he came to a spot squarely between the two stores did he stop.
-There he held his hand solemnly up over his head and called out in a
-voice that all could hear.
-
-“I have a message for all of you and I call upon you all as men to come
-out here and listen to it.”
-
-He called in a loud voice, but so tense was the stillness that a whisper
-could have been heard as well. And the silence continued after he had
-spoken. He did not repeat it but stood there with hand uplifted. The
-suspense was nerve racking. At last it was broken.
-
-“Say what you have to say and get out of the road,” called a sullen
-voice from the Morgan store.
-
-“Very well,” Scott agreed solemnly, “if it must be that way, listen.”
-
-He saw Sewall standing up there apart from the others and rightly
-guessed that he was not in sympathy with what was being done. He glanced
-at him occasionally for reassurance, for he did not feel at all sure
-that his plan would be a success.
-
-“If you knew why you were fighting here to-day, you would never have
-come,” he began.
-
-“If that’s all you have to say, we’ve heard enough,” the same sullen
-voice interrupted.
-
-Scott paid no attention to it, but continued in an impressive voice.
-“You think you are fighting for the old feud which has kept you
-neighbors enemies for forty years, but you are not. You are fighting
-because there is a coward in your midst who felt his influence slipping
-and shot an innocent woman to make it appear that you were being
-attacked. It worked, and you are fighting here to protect a murderer.”
-
-There was a dead silence as they strove to realize the significance of
-what he had said. He had seen Sewall bring his rifle into a more
-convenient position when he began to talk. Now he suddenly threw it up
-to his shoulder and aimed at the woodpile.
-
-There were two shots almost at the same instant, and a bullet plowed up
-the ground at Scott’s feet and covered him with dust.
-
-“There is the proof of what I say,” Scott shouted. “He is attempting
-another murder to cover up the first.” He pointed scornfully toward the
-woodpile and was as much astonished as the others at what he saw.
-
-Foster was crouching on the ground with his hands held high above his
-head while the marshal stood over him with his smoking revolver in his
-hand. It was his shot that had spoiled Foster’s aim just in the nick of
-time. Sewall had been too late.
-
-There was a murmur of resentment among the Waits at the sight of the
-marshal, whom they all regarded as their common enemy, arresting one of
-their members in their very midst. Scott saw that he was in danger of
-losing out.
-
-“I brought the marshal here after that man because I could not get the
-sheriff. He is wanted for the cold-blooded murder of two women. Do you
-want to support such a man as that?”
-
-There was silence again. Scott saw that he had them with him.
-
-“Let me talk to your real leaders,” he shouted. “Come down here,
-Sewall.”
-
-Sewall walked slowly forward, and men on both sides stepped out of their
-hiding places to see him come, and crowded slowly in around the two.
-
-“Where is Jarred Morgan?” Scott asked, when Sewall stepped out into the
-road.
-
-“Probably in the store there,” one of the Waits suggested.
-
-“He is not,” Scott replied loudly enough for all to hear. “He is up at
-his cabin dying of pneumonia.”
-
-There was a murmur of surprise and incredulity. Sewall’s face showed
-genuine regret.
-
-“And do you want to know what gave him the pneumonia?” Scott persisted,
-addressing himself directly to Sewall. “Because he jumped into the pool
-to save your child from drowning.”
-
-“What?” Sewall gasped. “Did Jarred do that? She said it was a strange
-girl.”
-
-“Vic took care of her,” Scott replied quietly, “but Jarred got her out
-and this morning he was dying as the result of it.”
-
-There was a hushed silence over the whole village.
-
-Scott was determined to hold his advantage. “Jarred promised that he
-would drop the feud if Foster was out of the way, and Foster is going to
-a place from which he will not return. Are you willing to drop it?”
-
-“I am more than willing,” Sewall said, “and have been for some time.
-Certainly, I personally can never fight with Jarred’s people again,” and
-his voice shook with emotion.
-
-“How about the rest of you?” Scott asked looking at the rest of the
-assembled family.
-
-They all agreed eagerly. They were afraid of Jarred and if he would stop
-fighting they were willing enough.
-
-“Are you willing to stand by Jarred’s promise?” Scott asked, turning to
-the Morgans.
-
-They were as eager as the Waits.
-
-“Then shake hands on it,” Scott said, and he pulled Sewall and Ben
-Morgan towards each other.
-
-They shook hands solemnly and in five minutes both families had almost
-forgotten that a feud had ever existed. They had all completely
-forgotten Foster.
-
-Scott suddenly remembered him and hurried over to the woodpile, but the
-marshal had taken advantage of his opportunity and spirited him away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
- JARRED AND SEWALL MEET
-
-
-As soon as Scott was sure that the marshal had made good his get-away
-with Foster he looked for Hopwood, but Hopwood had also disappeared. He
-could see nothing further that he could do there and turned down the
-road away from the village. He had not gone far when he heard some one
-walking fast behind him. It was Sewall.
-
-“Where are you going?” Sewall asked.
-
-“Up to Jarred’s” Scott replied.
-
-“So am I,” Sewall said.
-
-They walked in silence, each occupied with his own thoughts. Scott was
-wondering where the marshal had gone with his prisoner and whether they
-would have any trouble in convicting him. Sewall was deeply moved by his
-walk up that road which was to him almost like a foreign country. His
-thoughts finally took the form of words.
-
-“Do you know that I have been over this road only once before in thirty
-years, and that at night?”
-
-Scott looked at him in astonishment. “Do you know Jarred?” he asked
-suddenly.
-
-“Only by sight. I’ve seen him in the village once or twice, and once
-three years ago when he came up on our mountain,” Sewall said
-thoughtfully.
-
-“What did they have, a conference?” Scott asked.
-
-“No, one of Foster’s boys threw a stone across the street and hurt Vic.
-Jarred rode straight up here after him and horsewhipped him in his own
-yard.”
-
-“I should not think he would have dared,” Scott exclaimed. “Where was
-Foster?”
-
-“In the house,” Sewall chuckled, “and he stayed there. Jarred did not
-even look to see if he was in sight. He just licked the kid, turned his
-back on the house and rode away. From all I have heard, Jarred was never
-much afraid of anything.”
-
-“I have always admired him,” Scott said.
-
-“So have I,” Sewall confessed simply.
-
-Again they walked in silence. When they came to Jarred’s gate, Scott
-called softly and Hopwood appeared in the doorway.
-
-“How did you get here?” Scott asked in surprise. He never got used to
-Hopwood’s unexpected movements.
-
-“I hurried up here to tell Vic that her mother was not seriously hurt,”
-Hopwood exclaimed.
-
-“How is Jarred?” Scott asked anxiously.
-
-Hopwood’s face brightened. “He seems much better. I believe he is going
-to get well.”
-
-“Can we see him?” Scott asked eagerly.
-
-“If you don’t make him talk too much,” Hopwood consented reluctantly. He
-felt that it would be better not, but he could not refuse this man who
-had successfully accomplished what he had been trying in vain for years
-to do. He stepped aside to let them enter.
-
-They walked into the little cabin stepping softly. Vic was hovering
-protectingly around the bed. The old man was very weak, but his pride
-kept him from looking ill even now. A pleased light came into his eyes
-when he saw Scott. He started slightly at the unexpected sight of
-Sewall. Scott noticed it.
-
-“Sewall could not wait for Foster and the marshal to get out of sight to
-come up to thank you for saving his child,” he explained.
-
-Sewall knelt appealingly beside the bed.
-
-Jarred smiled and feebly stretched out his hand. “I can easily be
-friends with Sewall,” he whispered.
-
-“I have always been your friend,” Sewall replied earnestly, “and I am
-coming to see you often if I may.”
-
-“With Foster in the penitentiary and you for my friend I can die in
-peace, but”—Jarred added with a faint smile—“I am not going to do it
-yet.”
-
-At a sign from Vic they left him as softly as they had come. Hopwood was
-waiting for them outside the door.
-
-“He is lots better,” Hopwood exclaimed, “but Vic wants to keep him
-quiet.”
-
-“She is right,” Scott said. “Are you going down with us?”
-
-Hopwood blushed a little. “No, I am going to stay here and see if I can
-be of any help to Vic.”
-
-“Do you want me to send for a doctor?” Scott asked. “I would be glad to
-get one from Asheville for Jarred.”
-
-Hopwood shook his head. “Jarred would not like it.”
-
-So they left Hopwood standing contentedly on call beside the door, and
-started slowly for the village.
-
-“Tell me,” Scott exclaimed, “why did Hopwood wear that iron hat? I have
-been wondering about it ever since I came and he has always told me he
-would tell me later.”
-
-“He wanted to make his family think he was crazy,” Sewall explained.
-“Did he fool you?”
-
-“At first,” Scott admitted, “but not for long.”
-
-Sewall laughed. “He has more brains than anybody else in the family. He
-was crazy for a while after Foster struck him that time, and he began
-wearing the iron hat for protection. He soon got all right, but he was
-shrewd enough to see that he could hear a lot more and go wherever he
-pleased if they thought he was crazy.
-
-“Of course you know how crazy he is about Vic and Jarred. Well, he kept
-right on pretending to be crazy, and he did it so well that he fooled
-them all completely. All the time, he was working tooth and nail to help
-Jarred.”
-
-“And you knew that all the time?” Scott asked.
-
-“Certainly. Jarred was in the right, and Foster has been wrong always,”
-Sewall exclaimed.
-
-As they approached old man Sanders’ cabin they saw him waiting for them
-at the gate.
-
-“How is Jarred?” he called, as soon as they were near enough to hear
-him.
-
-“Lots better,” Scott said.
-
-“And is it true that Foster has gone to the penitentiary for life?” he
-asked eagerly.
-
-“He’s gone to the penitentiary, all right,” Scott said, “and we hope it
-will be for life.”
-
-“Good!” the old man exclaimed enthusiastically. “I congratulate you,
-young man, on the way you kept neutral,” he added with a grin.
-
-“Well, it worked, anyway,” Scott retorted. He had noticed that Mr.
-Sanders had hardly spoken to Sewall, and he had thought that he would be
-surprised to see him.
-
-“You surely know Mr. Sewall Wait, don’t you, Mr. Sanders?” he asked.
-
-“Reckon I do,” Mr. Sanders laughed. “He licked me at cribbage here last
-night.”
-
-Scott looked at Sewall indignantly. “I thought you told me that you had
-not been up this road for thirty years.”
-
-“That was above here,” Sewall laughed. “I sneak over here in the evening
-every once in a while to play cribbage with Mr. Sanders.”
-
-Scott was beginning to see what a hollow thing that feud really was, and
-yet it had killed several people, wounded many more and ruined the
-community for years.
-
-“Did Jarred know it?” he asked.
-
-Sewall nodded. “Sure. I have sat on the fence there and talked over the
-feud with Vic by the hour.”
-
-“Do you think Vic will give it up?” he asked again.
-
-“Sure she will,” Sewall replied confidently. “She’ll marry Hopwood some
-day and forget there ever was a feud unless Foster comes back. She’ll
-never forgive him, and she’ll never forgive her father.”
-
-They left Mr. Sanders and went down to the logging camp. There Scott
-gave directions to MacAndrews to go on with the logging in the morning
-as usual, and told him that if he were short of help he could hire
-anybody around there.
-
-At the station he sent a telegram to his old boss in the forest service:
-
-“Feud ended. Place now foolproof for supervisors.”
-
-And when Mr. Roberts came home to supper that evening he brought the
-reply:
-
-“Good work. We are going to appoint you the next fool.”
-
-But Scott did not want that job till he had finished the one he had. He
-was deaf to the letters from Washington. A few days later, Mr. Johns
-arrived on the scene to plead with him in person. He listened with
-interest to Scott’s account of the struggle.
-
-“Well,” he said admiringly when Scott had finished his story, “you
-certainly turned the trick, all right. You pulled the Service out of a
-nasty hole and everybody appreciates it. Now we want you back as
-supervisor. It ought to be a peaceful enough job now, thanks to you.”
-
-But Scott still shook his head. “Not till the last log is in here,” he
-said, waving his hand toward the mountain slope.
-
-“Pshaw,” Mr. Johns exclaimed impatiently, “anybody can run this logging
-outfit now.”
-
-“That’s just it,” Scott replied quietly. “It has been hard enough work
-to get it to run smoothly, and now I am going to have the benefit of it.
-I am going to make a bunch of money off that contract, low as the bid
-was. When it is all over I will take back the job if you want me to; but
-I would rather go back to my old horse in Arizona.”
-
-“Well, we might even arrange that in time,” Mr. Johns said, “or maybe we
-could bring the horse here.”
-
-“That would be better,” came a quiet voice behind them, and they both
-started to find Hopwood looking at Scott reproachfully.
-
-“You are right, Hopwood,” Scott replied gently. “I had forgotten you. I
-will at least come back when you and Vic are married. Let’s all go up to
-see Jarred and tell him the news.”
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE***
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="header title">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge, by Edward G.
-(Edward Gheen) Cheyney</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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
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-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
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-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge</p>
-<p>Author: Edward G. (Edward Gheen) Cheyney</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 23, 2020 [eBook #61908]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="credit">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/scottburtoninblu00chey">
- https://archive.org/details/scottburtoninblu00chey</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='section'>
-<h1>SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div>Stories by EDWARD G. CHEYNEY</div>
-</div>
-<div style='text-align:center; margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em'>
-<div style='display:inline-block; text-align:left;'>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON, FORESTER</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON ON THE RANGE</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON AND THE TIMBER THIEVES</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON, LOGGER</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:80%; max-width:471px;'>
-<img src='images/frontis.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-<p class='caption'>JIMMY TRIED DESPERATELY TO STAY HIS TEAM.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>SCOTT BURTON</div>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>IN THE BLUE RIDGE</div>
-<div style='margin-top:1em;'>BY</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>E. G. CHEYNEY</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>AUTHOR OF “SCOTT BURTON, FORESTER,”</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>“SCOTT BURTON, LOGGER,” ETC.</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em;'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</div>
-<div>NEW YORK :: 1924 :: LONDON</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY </div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY </div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em;'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<table class='toc tcenter' summary="" style='margin-bottom:3em'>
-<thead>
-<tr>
-<th colspan='2' style='font-weight:normal;padding-bottom:1em;'>CONTENTS</th>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr><td class='c1'>I.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chI'>Off to a New Job</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>II.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chII'>The Mystery of the Two Stores</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>III.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIII'>The Old Man’s Story</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIV'>Old Jarred</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>V.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chV'>Hopwood</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVI'>Scott Talks with the Agent</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVII'>Scott Receives “Aid” from His Boss</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVIII'>Scott Loses His Neutrality</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIX'>Scott Makes Another Rescue</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>X.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chX'>Scott Meets Jarred</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXI'>A Visit to Jarred’s Cabin</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXII'>Scott Asks for Bids</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIII'>Foster Wait Demands the Contract</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XIV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIV'>Scott Makes a Trip to Washington</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXV'>Scott Hears Some Rumblings of the Old Feud</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XVI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXVI'>Scott Has an Interview with Sewall</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XVII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXVII'>Hopwood Takes a Trip</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XVIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXVIII'>Dick Turns Gentleman</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XIX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIX'>Hopwood Throws Away His Iron Hat</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXX'>An Attempt at Arson</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXI'>Scott Finds the Still</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXII'>Hopwood Gets Jarred’s Promise</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXIII'>A Close Call</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXIV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXIV'>Scott Goes after the Marshal</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXV'>Hopwood Sends Foster a Message</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXVI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXVI'>Foster Revives the Feud</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXVII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXVII'>Scott Arrives at the Village</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXVIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXVIII'>The End of the Feud</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXIX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXIX'>Jarred and Sewall Meet</a></td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE</div>
-</div>
-<h2 id='chI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER I</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>OFF TO A NEW JOB</span></h2>
-<p>The ticking of the old grandfather clock in the neat little New England
-house was the only sound to break the stillness. So still it was that
-any one approaching the house could have heard the clock distinctly and
-would certainly have overlooked the silent figure in the old
-rocking-chair. But a man was sitting there, nevertheless, completely
-absorbed in his own thoughts.</p>
-<p>An old gentleman appeared in the doorway and stood there for an instant
-before he saw him. Then his face lighted up.</p>
-<p>“Hello, Scott! I thought you had gone out and I wanted to talk to you
-about your new assignment. Mother tells me that you have your sailing
-orders now.”</p>
-<p>The son looked at him with a smile, but his face still wore a puzzled
-frown.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” he said, “I have my sailing orders, but—”</p>
-<p>“Good or bad?” his father interrupted anxiously. “You don’t look
-overjoyed with them.” The old man was really worried.</p>
-<p>“I don’t know just what to think of them,” Scott frowned once more and
-opened the letter for the hundredth time. “They have assigned me to a
-timber sales job in the North Carolina mountains.”</p>
-<p>“Well, that sounds good enough. They say that is a beautiful country and
-it is a place I have always wanted to see.”</p>
-<p>“Oh, the country is all right,” Scott said brightening, “and I am crazy
-to go there, only I had my mind set on going back to my old place in the
-southwest.” And again he frowned. “It is not the country but the job
-that I am afraid of. Sometimes I am almost sorry that I caught those
-range thieves out there in Arizona.”</p>
-<p>“Why, Scottie boy! If it had not been for that you would never be where
-you are in the Service to-day,” his father remonstrated proudly.</p>
-<p>“Oh, I know that it made me solid with the Forest Service and gave me a
-chance at a supervisor’s job years before I would ordinarily have had
-one, but they have been using me as a sort of detective ever since. I
-was lucky enough to catch those timber thieves in Florida, but I am no
-sleuth and I’ll fall down on that job sooner or later.”</p>
-<p>“But, Scott, I don’t believe this is detective work. I expect they have
-heard what a tremendous success you made of your own logging job last
-winter and want you to look after the logging work down there.”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott admitted, “I think you are partly right. But why transfer
-me down there when there are local men who understand those methods?
-Logging in New Hampshire and logging in North Carolina are very
-different propositions.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe the local men cannot handle it and they know you can,” his father
-suggested proudly.</p>
-<p>“Of course that’s what you think, dad,” Scott said affectionately, “and
-it may be what they think, but I am afraid that there is something else
-wrong.”</p>
-<p>This rather gloomy conversation was broken up by Mrs. Burton, who had
-come to the doorway unnoticed. “Well, well, why worry over something you
-don’t either of you know anything about? Maybe we do not know what you
-are going to do in North Carolina, but we do know that you have to leave
-us in the morning and we don’t want to waste what time we have left
-worrying. Come on in to supper.”</p>
-<p>Scott laughed. “All right, mother, you always say the sensible thing.
-I’ll bet there is nothing wrong with the supper no matter what may be
-the matter with the new job.”</p>
-<p>So they went in to supper cheerfully enough and all three spent the
-evening poring very busily over the atlas, and trying to see what they
-could find out about the new country. Caspar, the little town where the
-headquarters were located, was not shown on the old map, but they found
-out a great deal about the country in general, and it was bedtime before
-they knew it.</p>
-<p>“There,” Mrs. Burton exclaimed cheerfully as they said good night, “I am
-satisfied. I’d be willing to go to that country on any old kind of a
-job.”</p>
-<p>Scott was not ordinarily given to worrying much and by the time his
-train pulled out of the quiet little Massachusetts village the next
-morning he was looking forward eagerly to seeing this new country and
-had forgotten all the imaginary troubles which the new work might bring.</p>
-<p>His orders were to report direct to Caspar, but he had half a day
-between trains in Washington and took the opportunity to visit the
-Forest Service offices. He met a few friends and became personally
-acquainted with a number of men who had before that been to him only a
-name attached to the end of an official letter, but he learned nothing
-definite in regard to his new work. The chief of the particular branch
-in which Scott was employed was out of the office and the inspector who
-was to meet him in Caspar had already gone to North Carolina. That
-looked as though there must be something unusual there, but Scott
-resolutely refused to worry about it any more and settled down in the
-car seat to enjoy the scenery of Virginia, which was altogether new to
-him.</p>
-<p>The little shanties scattered all through the country and the grinning
-black faces which crowded one end of the platform at every station
-reminded him of Florida, but the country itself was very different.
-Instead of the flat sand-plains covered with dense stands of yellow pine
-the train wound through rolling clay hills and hardwood forests until it
-lost itself in the foothills of the mountains just as the sun went down.
-Scott peered eagerly out of the car window until he could no longer see
-even the telegraph poles beside the track.</p>
-<p>Morning found him at a junction point in the heart of the mountains.
-These mountains were not like the Rocky Mountains as he had known them
-in the southwest. There was none of that stark grandeur of the bare
-rocky slopes and flat-top mesas, but there was a peaceful beauty about
-them which reminded him more of the overgrown Massachusetts hills; soft
-green slopes towering above the valley to a surprising height,
-considering the low absolute altitude of the range. There was as much
-difference between the valley and the mountain peak as there usually was
-in the Rockies, but Scott remembered that the valleys in the Rockies
-were as high as many of these peaks.</p>
-<p>A little branch line carried him down a narrow valley between what
-appeared to be flat-topped, unbroken ridges clothed in every kind of
-hardwood tree that Scott had ever heard of, and capped with a rim of
-dark green spruce which fitted over it like a black cape. Here and there
-a peak rose conspicuously above the level ridge.</p>
-<p>“It must be great in those forests,” Scott thought, “and the views from
-those peaks ought to be worth seeing. I tell you there has got to be a
-lot of trouble in this job if I can’t enjoy myself in this country.”</p>
-<p>He was trying to catch a glimpse of a particularly high peak which
-showed itself every now and then above the dark spruce ridge when the
-conductor called, “Caspar,” and Scott had to hurry to get his pack sack
-and suit case off the train at his headquarters.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER II</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>THE MYSTERY OF THE TWO STORES</span></h2>
-<p>When the dinky little train pulled out and left Scott standing on the
-platform, he realized why he had not seen the town of Caspar from the
-car window. It consisted of a railroad station, two stores, four
-dwelling houses and another large, decrepit-looking building which could
-not easily be classified, and they were all on the other side of the
-railroad track from Scott’s position in the car. From that side of the
-train no one would have suspected the presence of a town anywhere in
-that vicinity. The mountain slope came down almost to the railroad track
-and the forest on that side was almost unbroken.</p>
-<p>The station agent seemed quite interested at the sight of a stranger. He
-watched Scott for a minute and seemed to be studying him in his own slow
-way. Finally he seemed to decide that it would be safe to speak.</p>
-<p>“Howdy! Stranger in these parts, be ye?” he drawled.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said, “is there a hotel here or any place where a man can
-stay?”</p>
-<p>“Reckon you can stay at the hotel. Ain’t no place else you could stay in
-this town and live.”</p>
-<p>Scott thought at the time that that was a rather peculiar remark for any
-one to make, but when he found that the station agent also ran the hotel
-he charged it up to professional pride. When he saw the hotel he
-wondered how any one could have any professional pride in it.</p>
-<p>The hotel turned out to be the nondescript building which stood, or
-rather sat, apart from the others at the end of the street. It was a
-large, rambling, barn-like structure a story and a half high. Half a
-dozen gables stuck up from the side of the roof. It looked very old and
-its first coat of paint had never been renewed. The ground around it was
-as bare as the weathered clapboarding. There was no sign of any attempt
-at beautifying either grounds or building. A rough picket fence
-separated it from the rest of the village, but just why no one could
-tell, for the ground inside the fence was, if anything, more barren than
-that outside. Altogether it was a forlorn-looking place.</p>
-<p>The proprietor led Scott upstairs into a room large enough for a banquet
-hall. It looked even more desolate, if possible, than the outside of the
-house. It contained a bed covered with an old patch-work quilt and two
-boxes—one to serve as a chair and the other as a washstand (you could
-tell which was the washstand by the old tin basin half full of dirty
-water).</p>
-<p>Scott looked around the room in dismay, but he had made up his mind that
-he would have to put up with it when he caught a sickening odor, as of a
-dead mouse, that apparently came from the closet. That he could not
-stand. He had heard of the touchiness of these people, and he did not
-want to offend them, especially as he would probably have to make the
-place his headquarters for some time. But he had to get out of there by
-some means.</p>
-<p>“You haven’t any bedroom on the first floor, have you?” he asked, trying
-to conceal the disgust he actually felt. “I may be here a long time, and
-there may be a great many people coming to see me, and a ground-floor
-room would be much more convenient.”</p>
-<p>“Shore, I reckon we can accommodate you,” the man said, and he led the
-way apathetically downstairs again.</p>
-<p>He opened a door off the long back porch and stepped back to let Scott
-enter. It was a palace compared with the upstairs room. The furniture
-was old, but everything was there down to a rag carpet on the floor,
-and, moreover, everything looked clean.</p>
-<p>“This will be fine,” Scott said as he glanced quickly about. “What time
-do you have dinner?”</p>
-<p>“Twelve o’clock, most times, but there ain’t anything certain about it.”
-He paused at the door on his way out. “It ain’t none of my business, but
-you ain’t a U. S. marshal, be you?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Scott laughed, “nothing like that. Why, are there many moonshiners
-around here?”</p>
-<p>“I ain’t saying anything about moonshiners,” the man replied in the same
-dull tone. “I was just going to tell you that this was a mighty
-unhealthy country around here for the U. S. marshal.”</p>
-<p>Scott did not know whether this was meant as a friendly warning or as a
-threat, and before he could ask anything more about it the man was gone.
-As he was not in any way connected with the United States marshal, he
-thought no more about it.</p>
-<p>Left to himself, he began to examine the room more closely. It was clean
-all right, but the general effect of it was most grotesque. The high,
-carved head-board of the old walnut bed might have had a place in a
-medieval museum, but here in this room it looked out of place like
-everything else in it. When Scott’s eyes fell on the wall paper, he
-stood aghast. He counted thirty-seven different patterns, each a small
-square evidently taken from a country storekeeper’s sample book, and
-only a third of the wall was covered. The east window was heavily
-curtained with portières, lace curtains and a shade. Scott peeped out.
-It opened almost into the mountainside and no human habitation was in
-sight. The glass door opening on to the back porch—which was by far the
-most frequented part of the house—was not curtained at all. It was a
-queer place, but Scott had been in worse, and he decided that it would
-have to do.</p>
-<p>He had been so interested in finding a place to stay that he had
-forgotten all about the man from the Washington office who was to meet
-him here. He went out to inquire for him. The dining room opened on to
-the porch next to his room and the kitchen was next to that.</p>
-<p>The man was nowhere to be seen, but there were three women in the
-kitchen and they were feverishly discussing Scott’s probable business.
-Complete silence fell on them all when he appeared in the doorway.</p>
-<p>“Pardon me,” he said. “Do you know whether Mr. Reynolds of the Forest
-Service has been here?”</p>
-<p>The women looked at each other as though an important problem had been
-solved before any one answered.</p>
-<p>Then one of the women answered with a question: “Are you Mr. Burton?”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“Mr. Reynolds left here this morning. He said that if Mr. Burton, the
-new supervisor, came to tell him he would be back to-night or to-morrow
-morning. I was looking for a much older man,” she added looking at him
-curiously.</p>
-<p>“Well,” Scott laughed, “time will correct that.”</p>
-<p>Scott noticed that these women were all sizing him up just as the
-station agent had done a little while before. He went back to his room,
-and looked in the glass to see what could be wrong. He could see nothing
-to attract attention. He tried to forget the occurrence and went out to
-see the town and surrounding country.</p>
-<p>He wandered down the street, if the road between the two stores could be
-called a street, and wondered why there should be two stores in such a
-place. Judging from the unbroken forests on the mountain slopes he did
-not see where enough people could possibly come from to support any
-store at all.</p>
-<p>On the porch of each store there was a small group of idlers holding
-down the dry-goods boxes, and Scott saw that they were sizing him up
-just as the women had done. Moreover, the stare of these men seemed to
-be distinctly unfriendly. It made him feel uneasy. He was glad when he
-had run the gauntlet of unfriendly stares, and was out in the open road
-with only the railroad station and the mountains before him. But he had
-one more examination to stand. The station agent was watching him from
-the corner of the platform. In fact, Scott caught him squatting down to
-get a better view of him even before he came out in the open. He
-resented this officious spying on his movements and turned aside into a
-mountain road which wound its way up a timber-covered slope.</p>
-<p>“Heh!” Scott turned to see the man coming towards him at what was an
-unusual gait for him. “Didn’t buy anything at the store, did you?”</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him indignantly for an instant, but he remembered again
-that he had to live with these people, probably for a long time, and did
-not want to offend them. “No,” he replied as pleasantly as he could.
-“Why?”</p>
-<p>“I just wanted to know,” the man replied frankly. “But if you haven’t
-done it, don’t.” The man had evidently noticed that Scott had resented
-his interference and he walked away with considerable dignity without
-making any further explanation.</p>
-<p>Scott started to call him back but changed his mind and continued his
-walk up the road. He wanted to get away from these inquisitive people
-for a while, and try to think things over. Fate, however, seemed to have
-decided otherwise. He had gone a little more than a quarter of a mile up
-the winding road through the heavy hardwood timber when he came to a
-little cabin set back only a few feet from the road behind the
-inevitable picket fence. An old man was sitting on the porch, and he
-sized Scott up with the same all-consuming curiosity, but his gaze
-seemed to be wholly friendly. There was none of that furtive animosity
-he had felt rather than seen in the groups down at the store.</p>
-<p>“Howdy, stranger?” the old man greeted him pleasantly. “Be you the new
-supervisor?”</p>
-<p>The old man’s manner was so evidently friendly, and his curiosity so
-frank that Scott warmed up to him at once.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” he admitted cheerfully, “I’m the new supervisor.”</p>
-<p>“Haven’t bought anything at the store yet, have you?” the old man
-continued in his friendly way.</p>
-<p>There was that same question about the store and Scott stiffened for an
-instant, but he thought better of it. Maybe he could learn something
-from this old man.</p>
-<p>“No,” Scott said, “I have not bought anything from the store. Tell me,
-why does everybody ask me that? I have not been in this town much more
-than half an hour and two people have already asked me if I have bought
-anything at the store. What is the meaning of it?”</p>
-<p>The old man looked at him thoughtfully for a minute as though hesitating
-to answer the question. Then he answered slowly as though pronouncing
-final judgment:</p>
-<p>“Because when you do buy anything from one of those stores, you might as
-well leave the town for all the good you’ll ever be able to do in this
-country,” and he turned as though to enter the house.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER III</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>THE OLD MAN’S STORY</span></h2>
-<p>The old man’s statement seemed so ridiculous that Scott hesitated to
-believe it. He thought that the man must be making fun of him, but he
-recalled the station agent’s warning. There must be something in it. The
-whole community could not be conspiring just to play a joke on him.
-Before the old man reached the door he called him back.</p>
-<p>“Just a minute, please. You are the second man to warn me not to buy
-anything at that store. Why shouldn’t I? What has buying at the store
-got to do with running a national forest? I can’t see the connection.”</p>
-<p>The old man looked at him and smiled sarcastically. “Neither could the
-other two men who came here before you, and they both had to leave.”</p>
-<p>Scott’s curiosity was now thoroughly aroused, and he determined to pump
-an explanation out of this man. He smiled winningly. “Then tell me the
-secret so that I shall not have to follow them.”</p>
-<p>At his change of tone the old man’s sarcasm disappeared immediately.
-“Well, if that’s the way you look at it,” he said with all his old
-friendliness, “why, maybe I’ll try to tell you. You couldn’t tell those
-other fellows anything.”</p>
-<p>“I would certainly appreciate it,” Scott said, as he settled himself
-down on the fence to listen. “I have come here to run this forest, and
-if that store down there has anything to do with it, I want to know
-about it.”</p>
-<p>“Come in, come in,” the old man repeated hospitably. “It’s a long story,
-and you might as well sit down to listen to it.”</p>
-<p>Scott gladly stepped inside the fence, and took a seat opposite his host
-on the porch. “By the way,” he said, “I thought I saw two stores down
-there in the village. Which one do you mean?”</p>
-<p>“That’s just the point. If there was only one store there you could buy
-all you pleased, but if you buy anything from one of those stores now,
-the fellow who owns the other one would sure get you.”</p>
-<p>“But can’t a man buy where he pleases in this country?” Scott asked
-indignantly. His spirit rebelled at any one dictating to him the way he
-should run what he considered to be his own business.</p>
-<p>“Not and live in peace,” the old man answered sadly. “I’ll tell you the
-story, and then you can do as you please.</p>
-<p>“You see the people here in the mountains don’t move around much. When a
-man gets used to these mountains he never wants to live anywhere else.
-The children don’t marry, and go off somewhere else to live; they just
-put up another shanty, and live close to home. The families stick close
-together, and form a kind of settlement. Most everybody in the
-settlement is kin to somebody else.</p>
-<p>“The Morgans live in the settlement up on this side of the valley, and
-the Waits over there on the other side. They were good friends and
-getting along fine till the railroad come down the valley. They called
-old Zeb Morgan and old Foster Wait together to decide where the station
-ought to be. They got into a row over it somehow, and before anybody
-could interfere Foster had pulled a gun and shot Zeb through the heart.
-That was forty years ago. Well, it was a murder all right, and no excuse
-for it except Foster’s notorious temper. The sheriff took Foster off to
-jail, and that ought to have ended it. Would have ended it, too, if it
-had not been for Zeb’s half-witted brother Jim. Everybody knew Jim
-wasn’t exactly right in his head, but he worshiped Zeb, and when Zeb was
-shot he went plumb crazy, disappeared and nobody saw or heard of him for
-a week. Next thing anybody knew Jim had turned up in the middle of the
-Wait settlement and shot two of Foster’s brothers.</p>
-<p>“Well, they should not have held the Morgans responsible for the actions
-of a crazy man, but they did, and the fight was on. The dead line was
-drawn down the middle of the village street, and every time a Wait
-stepped over that dead line, he had to duck Morgan lead, and the Waits
-were just as quick on the trigger on the other side. Every once in a
-while some one on one side or the other would get drunk and shoot across
-the line.</p>
-<p>“It got pretty bad. All the kin folks got mixed up in it, and there was
-a funeral every two or three months. There has not been much shooting
-for the past five years. The Morgans got the worst of the scrap in the
-early days, and there’s only old Jarred and his two sons left of the
-direct descendants of Zeb. Unless you count his little granddaughter
-Vic. She’s the fightenest little wildcat in the whole bunch. Of course
-there are lots of relatives, but they had cooled off pretty much till
-this national forest business came along to stir them up again.</p>
-<p>“But I most forgot the store. You see old Tom Wait had a store in the
-village before the trouble began, and it was all that was needed, maybe
-a little more, but of course after the trouble no Morgan would deal
-there. Been shot if he’d tried it. So Jarred’s boys had to start a store
-on the other side. That’s where the two stores come from. Buy anything
-from one of them, and you have all the other side of the mountain down
-on you. Now maybe you can see why I warned you.”</p>
-<p>Scott sat in silence for a moment while the old man watched him
-curiously. He was dazed by what seemed to him an impossible situation.
-How could such a horrible state of affairs exist in the heart of a
-civilized country?</p>
-<p>“Isn’t there any way of bringing the two families together and stopping
-this senseless fight?” Scott asked earnestly. “Surely they must see how
-it is hurting them both. Has any one ever tried to stop it?”</p>
-<p>The old man shook his head sadly. “The Morgan boys might quit if they
-could find any way to do it. They know it is only a question of time
-till they will be killed. Three Morgans can’t hold out forever against a
-dozen Waits, and that is what it means because their kin folk are not
-going to stick by them much longer.”</p>
-<p>“It would not be possible to persuade this man Jarred to give up the
-feud?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>The old man smiled sadly. “It’s clear you ain’t seen him, stranger. Old
-Jarred would give away anything he’s got except his pride, but it takes
-only one look at him to see that he’d never give up to an enemy.”</p>
-<p>Scott sat for some minutes pondering this extraordinary situation, and
-the old man continued to watch him rather wistfully. Would he try to
-make peace between these warring factions, or would he ignore them, and
-be run out of the country as the other two had been?</p>
-<p>When Scott looked up he smiled at the old man gratefully. “I don’t know
-what I can do to stop this thing. It is pitiful to think of that old man
-eaten up by his hatred, and holding out in his pride against the world.
-Maybe I cannot do anything to stop it, but I certainly do not want to do
-anything to stir it up. I can’t tell you how much I appreciate what you
-have told me. To whom am I indebted for this information and advice?”</p>
-<p>“My name is Sanders. ‘Old man’ Sanders they call me.”</p>
-<p>“And I take it that you are not mixed up in this feud on either side.
-Who else is not in it?”</p>
-<p>“The station agent. He has to be neutral.”</p>
-<p>“And how did you happen to keep out of it?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>“Because I am a Quaker,” the old man answered proudly, “and do not
-believe in fighting. And now,” he added with the same sad smile Scott
-had noticed several times before, “one of my daughters has married a
-Wait and the other a Morgan.”</p>
-<p>Scott rose to go. “Well, Mr. Sanders,” he said earnestly, “I have almost
-as good a reason as you have for keeping neutral. I am certainly obliged
-to you for your advice, and I may need your help again. In the meanwhile
-I shall keep away from those stores, and try not to stir anything up.”</p>
-<p>Scott walked slowly on up the mountain road with bent head, and when the
-old man had watched him out of sight he continued to gaze dreamily at
-the turn of the road where the young man had disappeared.</p>
-<p>“He’s not a fool like the others, anyway,” he said aloud, “and I think
-he’ll stay here.”</p>
-<p>Scott wandered on. He wanted to find a place where he could be alone and
-think.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>OLD JARRED</span></h2>
-<p>Two miles farther up that same road a little log cabin stood back from
-the road about fifty feet behind its weather-beaten picket fence. The
-little yard, like most of the yards in that section of the country, was
-perfectly bare, and at first glance it seemed to be deserted. But if a
-member of the Wait settlement had tried to enter the yard, he would
-instantly have been aware of a very real presence.</p>
-<p>Seated on the doorstep of the cabin, and so motionless that he might
-have been a part of it, was a man clad in a black sateen shirt and
-homespun trousers tucked into heavy Congress boots. Judging from the
-silvery whiteness of his hair he might have been eighty-five, but from
-the strong, stern lines of his thin, smooth-shaven face he might have
-been forty-five. There was no sign of nervousness. Not a finger moved
-and his eyes rested unwaveringly on a small clearing half a mile down
-the mountain where he could catch a glimpse of the road to the village.</p>
-<p>A white flag waved for an instant in the clearing and the lines of his
-face relaxed. The sternness had given way to an expression of
-anticipation. The man’s eyes shifted from the clearing to the bend in
-the road just below the cabin. Other than that there was no movement. It
-would have taken a careful student to have discovered that an
-all-consuming curiosity was gnawing at this man’s heart. He seemed to be
-without a care in the world. Certainly no one could have guessed that he
-was suffering from a suspense which was almost unbearable.</p>
-<p>Suddenly a slip of a girl, not more than thirteen years old, and small
-for her age, came running around the bend in the road. The brown of her
-sunburned legs twinkled in the patches of sunlight that came through the
-trees, and her blue-checked calico dress fluttered in the wind as she
-ran with unfaltering stride. It was not an impatient burst of speed at
-the end of a journey. She had been running steadily all the way from the
-village, almost two and a half miles away and nearly a thousand feet
-below.</p>
-<p>At the sight of her the man arose and stretched his gaunt form to its
-full height. The coming of the child meant much to him, but he showed no
-sign of curiosity. She stopped before him with chest heaving and dark
-eyes aflame.</p>
-<p>“He went to Wait’s,” she panted.</p>
-<p>The lines in the old man’s face tightened, and he seemed to grow taller,
-but he made no answer.</p>
-<p>“That was the man who came yesterday,” she continued furiously. “He
-bought a sack of tobacco at Wait’s this morning, and went up on the
-other mountain. The other one who came this morning didn’t go in
-nowhere. He ain’t much more than a boy.”</p>
-<p>“Where is he?” the man asked sternly. “At the hotel?”</p>
-<p>“No, he went there, but he only stayed a few minutes. Then he walked
-right through the village and started up this way. I passed him just out
-on the road.”</p>
-<p>“Did he see you?”</p>
-<p>“No,” she answered contemptuously. “I was in the brush, but he would not
-have seen me if I had run right by him. He was looking at the ground and
-frowning.”</p>
-<p>The man turned the news slowly over in his mind before he answered.</p>
-<p>“So the new supervisor is a young lad, is he?”</p>
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-<p>“And he did not go in anywhere,” the man continued meditatively. “What
-sort of looking man is he?”</p>
-<p>“He’s two inches shorter than you are, grandpa, but he is heavy and
-strong,” she said confidently, with the air of one who is accustomed to
-gauge the physical builds of men. “He’s wearing one of them uniforms,
-and he’s dark and good looking.”</p>
-<p>He gave the girl a quick, searching glance. “Well, don’t make friends
-with him yet, Vic. He has not gone into Wait’s, but he has not been in
-our store either. Let’s wait till we see what he is going to do.”</p>
-<p>“Me make friends with one of those government men,” she burst out
-contemptuously. “They all of them side with the Waits. I’d spit in his
-face if he spoke to me.”</p>
-<p>Her grandfather smiled approvingly. “Oh, I would not do that, Vic, not
-till he gives you some reason to. This one may turn out to be all
-right.”</p>
-<p>“Then let him keep away from the Waits, if I have to be polite to him,”
-she snapped.</p>
-<p>The old man took the girl tenderly by the shoulders, and looked at her
-earnestly. “You’re the best Morgan in the bunch, Vic, and we’ll have to
-stick together. The boys may stick by me, but they would give the whole
-thing up if they saw a good way out. You and old Jarred are the only
-ones left to uphold the honor of the family.”</p>
-<p>The child shook the mass of black hair back from her face, and looked
-squarely into the old man’s eyes. The concentrated hatred and fury of
-three generations gave her the appearance of a witch. “Don’t you worry,
-grandpa. Let daddy and uncle Bob give up if they want to, but no Wait
-will ever cross the line while I am here to help you.”</p>
-<p>Her grandfather patted her head proudly. “That’s the girl. I knew I
-could count on you, Vic. Now go in the house, and get some lunch. Then
-we’ll go down to the village again. I want to get a look at that
-handsome young man myself.”</p>
-<p>Vic glared at him angrily. “I had to say that to tell you what he looked
-like. Let him go into the Wait’s store, and I’ll show you what I think
-of his looks.” She tossed her head defiantly and stalked into the house
-with great dignity.</p>
-<p>The old man watched her go with a twinkle of pride in his eye and smiled
-affectionately. Then he turned away and looked sadly down into the
-valley. These were indeed sad times when the honor of the Morgans rested
-on a girl of thirteen, and an old man past sixty, but his gaunt frame
-straightened unconsciously at the thought, and his chin set all the
-harder. If the Waits thought that they could walk over him because he
-was old they were surely reckoning without their host.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER V</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD</span></h2>
-<p>While the old man and the child were pledging their everlasting hatred
-to the Waits, Scott Burton, with puzzled frown, was slowly climbing the
-mountain road to their cabin. He did not know the location of old Jarred
-Morgan’s cabin, and probably would have avoided it if he had, for he
-wanted to think this feud business over before he talked to any of them.
-Ignorant of how close he was to them, he turned into the woods less than
-a quarter of a mile below them and sat down with his back against the
-trunk of a great, wide-spreading beech tree. He was out of sight of the
-road, and he had purposely chosen the spot in the deep woods to be free
-from interruption.</p>
-<p>So this was the simple little job which the Service had given him to
-complete before he went back to his old home in the southwest? Why did
-they always pick him out to unravel some mess? He had never had a job
-where he could really show what he could do. Always there had been some
-complication, something outside of the regular line of duty that had
-taken his whole time and attention. Never had he found himself in a
-position where he could devote himself to his technical work and show
-what he knew. Even when he had logged his own land he had found his
-operations hindered by the bully of the country who had tried to ruin
-him. His first impulse now was to write to the Service that he did not
-care to mix up in this mess at all. If they wanted him to go back to his
-old post, all right; otherwise, he would resign. He had made enough to
-live on out of his own logging operations, and he could make more the
-same way. He did not have to worry over these miserable feuds. Two men
-had already lost their reputations on this job and been run out of the
-country and....</p>
-<p>Right there Scott lost all interest in that line of thought. Was he
-going to let them run him out of the country? His jaw set at the mere
-thought of it, and he knew that he would never leave till he had been
-completely beaten or was carried out in a wooden box. He dropped all
-idea of giving up the job and settled down to look it squarely in the
-face.</p>
-<p>Just what was this problem anyway? The government owned a big tract of
-land here, and there was timber on it that was ready to be cut, and it
-was up to him as supervisor to sell it. It was located on both sides of
-the valley, part in Wait territory and part in Morgan. Two other men had
-already tried it, and had failed utterly before they had ever started
-because they had become involved in this everlasting feud between the
-Waits and the Morgans.</p>
-<p>When he really thought about it, it did not seem to be such an
-impossible task. Why should he mix up in this feud at all? It looked as
-though old Foster Wait was to blame for starting it years ago, but it
-did not matter now who was originally to blame, they were both equally
-to blame for keeping it up all these years. He would put it up to them
-squarely that they had to forget the feud, and come together or he would
-have nothing to do with either of them. Just what could they have to do
-with it in any event? He did not think, from what he had seen of the
-country people there, that either family could scrape together enough
-money to buy the timber on a single acre. He did not see how they could
-influence the sale one way or the other, and he was not going to let
-them do it if they could.</p>
-<p>When Scott had come to that somewhat Irish decision he felt better. It
-seemed almost as if the problem had been solved and he began to look
-about him. His eyes had been fixed absently on the ground all the time
-and his first upward glance revealed a sight that sent a cold shiver up
-his back.</p>
-<p>A man was sitting on a log not six feet from him, and was staring at him
-with bright blue eyes. It was startling enough to find any one sitting
-so close to him when he had thought himself entirely alone, but it was
-really alarming when the man had a gun in his hand and a large piece of
-sheet iron on top of his head. At first Scott thought that he must be
-dreaming, and he blinked his eyes two or three times to try to dispel
-the illusion, but it would not dispel.</p>
-<p>This was really a man. He looked much as other men save for a queer,
-dreamy look in his eyes, and he was dressed like other men except for
-his strange head gear. Instead of a hat he was wearing a strange
-contraption of wood and iron. On the bottom of a sheet of heavy iron
-about eighteen inches long and a foot wide he had nailed four pieces of
-wood in the form of a square. This he was wearing on his head like a
-senior’s mortar board.</p>
-<p>All during Scott’s astonished examination, the newcomer sat staring at
-him without the slightest expression on his weather-beaten face. He was
-so still that he might have been a statue and his unwavering pose added
-to Scott’s feeling of his unreality. He finally, after several minutes
-of astonished silence, recovered sufficiently from the spell to exclaim
-“Hello.” He said it in a rather startled tone. It did not sound in the
-least like a friendly greeting, but it seemed to be altogether
-satisfactory to his visitor. The man’s face relaxed, and a friendly
-smile lighted it up. Scott was in hopes that he would remove the iron
-hat, but he did not.</p>
-<p>“So you are the new supervisor,” the stranger remarked in a low,
-pleasing voice.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott replied a little stiffly, for he had not entirely recovered
-from his astonishment, and could not keep his eyes off the iron hat,
-“I’m the new supervisor. And who may you be?”</p>
-<p>“I might be almost anybody,” the man smiled, “but I happen to be
-Hopwood.”</p>
-<p>“Well, I’m sure I don’t know where you came from, Mr. Hopwood. You just
-seemed to appear on that log as if by magic, but I am glad to know you,
-all the same.”</p>
-<p>“Not Mr. Hopwood,” the man said solemnly, “just Hopwood. Hopwood Wait.”</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him with a new interest. So this was one of the Waits,
-the first one he had seen, and he wondered if the iron hat were a part
-of the family armor. It might have protected him from an airplane
-attack, but would have been of little use for anything else. He had
-understood that the Waits did not come over on this side of the valley.
-Could this man be scouting in enemy territory or had he come in hope of
-getting a pot shot at a Morgan? He decided to risk a question.</p>
-<p>“Aren’t you in dangerous territory here?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head slowly. “No, they all think I am crazy, but I
-have more sense than anybody else in the family. I can eat lunch with
-Jarred Morgan and supper with Foster Wait, and that’s more than anybody
-else can do,” he replied proudly.</p>
-<p>“Then you don’t believe in this family feud?” Scott inquired eagerly.</p>
-<p>Again Hopwood shook his head. “Why should I? They will all be killed if
-they keep it up. The cemetery is full of them now.”</p>
-<p>“Do you think that they would give it up if they had a good chance?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded.</p>
-<p>“What makes you think so?” This man might be able to give him some
-useful information even if he was crazy.</p>
-<p>“Because they are scared,” Hopwood answered promptly. “Every one of them
-is scared except old Jarred and Vic. They don’t pay any attention to me
-and I hear them talk.”</p>
-<p>“Then why don’t they give it up?”</p>
-<p>“Because they are more scared to quit than they are to go on. If they
-should quit, old Jarred would kill them all, both Morgans and Waits.”</p>
-<p>Scott thought for a moment. Old Jarred Morgan seemed to be the key to
-the situation if this man knew what he was talking about.</p>
-<p>“Where could I find you if I should need you some time?” Scott asked. He
-thought he could see how this man might be very useful to him.</p>
-<p>“Almost anywhere,” was Hopwood’s unsatisfactory answer.</p>
-<p>Scott looked thoughtfully off through the woods a moment wondering what
-other useful information he could get out of this man, and when he
-looked back the man was gone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT TALKS WITH THE AGENT</span></h2>
-<p>The disappearance of Hopwood had been so silent and so unexpected that
-Scott hardly knew whether it had not been a dream after all. He sat
-still for a moment to see whether he would come back, but, when he did
-not, he arose leisurely, and began to glance cautiously about him. He
-did not want to search because he thought that Hopwood must be behind a
-tree somewhere waiting to have the laugh on him. After all what
-difference did it make what had become of Hopwood? Scott felt that he
-had learned all that he could get out of him just now, and he had made
-up his mind what he wanted to do.</p>
-<p>He glanced at his watch. It was a quarter of twelve, and he would be
-late for his dinner if he did not hurry. He was curious to know how
-Hopwood had disappeared so suddenly and where he had gone, but he struck
-out for the road without looking to the right or the left. Just as he
-reached it he saw the man of the iron hat stroll leisurely around a bend
-a little way up the mountain, apparently unconscious that he had acted
-peculiarly, and without a backward glance. The sight of him reminded
-Scott that he had not found out why this man wore his strange iron hat,
-and he made up his mind to ask some one the first chance he had.</p>
-<p>When Scott reached the hotel after again running the gauntlet of stares
-in the village there were no signs of a meal in the very near future.
-The women were talking in the kitchen, but there was no sign of any
-hurry in spite of the fact that it was already fifteen minutes after the
-time they had announced for dinner. He went to his room and found it
-just as he had left it. Either he was expected to make his own bed or
-the women did not make them till afternoon. He decided to wait and see
-what would happen.</p>
-<p>When the dinner bell finally rang, it was a quarter past one. Scott
-found himself alone with the station agent. The meal was about the worst
-he had ever seen. Great cubes of salt pork fat three inches square,
-boiled and transparent, that might have made an Eskimo’s mouth water,
-but were impossible for the uninitiated. Corn bread as dry as powder, a
-sickly looking gravy, and some gluey rice. At first Scott thought that
-he could not eat any of it, but what was he going to do? This was
-probably what he would have to eat for several weeks. There was no place
-to look for anything better. With a desperate look around the table to
-make sure that he had not overlooked any possibilities, he resolutely
-helped himself to the rice and the corn bread and waded in. He could
-swallow these things if he had to, but he could not bring himself even
-to try the salt pork.</p>
-<p>He had been so disgusted with the meal that he had forgotten all about
-the station agent. Now he recalled that the gentleman had been rather
-offended at his actions in the morning, and that he had better try to
-make his peace with him now.</p>
-<p>“Mr. Roberts, you probably thought me very ungrateful this morning, but
-I knew absolutely nothing of this feud here, and could not imagine what
-you meant.”</p>
-<p>The agent answered rather stiffly. “None of the government men who have
-been here seem to want to know anything about it, but they all learn
-something about it sooner or later.”</p>
-<p>“Well, I want to know all I can about it. Up the road this morning I met
-Mr. Sanders, and when he asked me that same question about buying at the
-stores I asked him to explain. He told me all he could about it, and
-then I realized what you meant. I really appreciate your kindness very
-much, and want to thank you for trying to warn me. I don’t believe there
-are many people around here who would have done it.”</p>
-<p>The agent was evidently pleased with the apology and melted immediately.
-“No, I reckon there ain’t,” he said rather proudly. “Old man Sanders and
-I are about the only ones. The others are all in it up to their necks.”</p>
-<p>“Now that I know about it, I am not going to get mixed up with either
-side. They will have to give up their feud and work together like other
-people if they want to get in the game.”</p>
-<p>“They will never do that as long as old Jarred lives,” the agent
-answered confidently.</p>
-<p>That familiar phrase reminded Scott of the strange man with the iron
-hat. “By the way,” he asked, “who is this man Hopwood?”</p>
-<p>“He’s Foster Wait’s nephew. Foster’s father is the man who started the
-feud, you know. He had an awful bad temper, and they tell me that, when
-Hopwood was a little kid, old Foster hit him in the head with his cane
-and he’s been crazy as a loon ever since. Did you meet him at Sanders’
-place?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Scott replied, “I met him up in the woods.”</p>
-<p>“Thought you might have met him at Sanders’,” the agent said. “His
-mother was old Sanders’ daughter. What did you think of his hat?”</p>
-<p>“I was just going to ask you why he wears that thing,” Scott said with
-renewed curiosity.</p>
-<p>“He thinks it will keep the devil away.” The agent was delighted with
-the opportunity to tell some one of the strange gossip of the country
-that he had collected in his ten years of residence. “You see when he
-grew up he saw that he was not like other people, and they had to give
-him some reason for it, so they told him there was a devil in him. He
-went right out and built that iron hat and has worn it ever since. Says
-he’s going to wear it till they give up the feud.”</p>
-<p>“Doesn’t wear it at night, does he?” Scott asked. It was ridiculous, but
-it was so pathetic that he hated to laugh at it.</p>
-<p>“No,” the agent answered seriously, “he doesn’t wear it at night, but he
-sleeps on his back with that thing on his chest.”</p>
-<p>“He looked queer,” Scott said, “but he seemed to talk reasonably enough.
-He said just as you do that they will never drop the feud as long as old
-Jarred Morgan lives, but he says the others are all scared and would
-drop it if they could.”</p>
-<p>“Sometimes I think he isn’t as crazy as they make out. They talk about
-him and in front of him as though he couldn’t understand anything, but
-he can tell you every word that they have said for the past five years.”</p>
-<p>Scott thought for a minute. “Do you think it would be safe for me to
-make use of him or would that be considered as taking part with the
-Waits?”</p>
-<p>“No, that would not tie you up with the Waits. Everybody talks to him,
-even old Jarred Morgan. They do not seem to consider him as belonging to
-the family, somehow. But you don’t want to be too sure about using him.
-If he happened to take a liking to you he will do anything for you, but
-if he did not like you this morning you’ll probably never see him
-again.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t know whether he liked me or not,” Scott said thoughtfully. “He
-appeared on a log in front of me so suddenly that I did not see where he
-came from, and he got away again in the same way.”</p>
-<p>“Oh, he moves like a shadow in the woods,” the agent exclaimed
-enthusiastically. “He has any Indian I have ever seen beaten three ways
-for woodcraft. He moves about so fast and so silently that a lot of
-folks around here think he is a spirit.” It was easy to see from the
-agent’s manner that he was not altogether clear on that point himself.</p>
-<p>“Well,” Scott said, “I hope he likes me because it looks as though I
-won’t have very many friends around here.”</p>
-<p>“You sure will not,” the agent remarked with decision. “You can make
-friends with half the people easy enough, but sure as you do the other
-half will hate you. If you don’t take up with either side, as you are
-planning on doing, likely as not they will all hate you.”</p>
-<p>Scott sat for a moment dreamy eyed, considering this disagreeable
-dilemma. When he looked up Hopwood was standing in the doorway, calmly
-looking at him over the agent’s head. For a moment Scott was too
-astonished to speak. He wondered if Hopwood had been outside listening,
-and he thought of what the agent had said about this strange man being a
-spirit.</p>
-<p>“Hello, Hopwood!” he exclaimed, and the agent almost jumped out of his
-chair.</p>
-<p>Hopwood smiled an answer. “Is that red-headed man who came on the train
-yesterday your boss?” he asked, as though they had been talking for some
-time.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott admitted, “he is, in a way.”</p>
-<p>“Well, <i>he’s</i> joined the Waits,” Hopwood remarked.</p>
-<p>The announcement almost stunned Scott. He stared wildly at Hopwood for
-an instant and then at the agent. “What makes you think so?” he asked
-dully.</p>
-<p>There was no answer, and he found Hopwood had disappeared as suddenly as
-he had come.</p>
-<p>The agent tiptoed to the door and looked cautiously up and down the
-porch. Hopwood was nowhere to be seen. He looked back at Scott and shook
-his head. “Gone completely. Well, whether he is man or devil, I reckon
-he is a friend of yours all right.”</p>
-<p>“I guess he is,” Scott replied with a sickly smile, “but it does not
-look as though my boss thought much of me.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT RECEIVES “AID” FROM HIS BOSS</span></h2>
-<p>Mr. Roberts went back to his office soon after Hopwood’s visit, and was
-evidently glad of the opportunity to get away. He had spoken derisively
-of those who thought that Hopwood was a spirit, but he had looked behind
-him nervously till he was well away from the house.</p>
-<p>Scott scarcely noticed that he had gone. He sat with his chin dropped
-dejectedly on his chest, and stared across the table with unseeing eyes.
-If what Hopwood had said was true, his troubles there would be greatly
-increased even if his plans were not completely ruined. It seemed as
-though some evil genius had brought him to this place, and if he had he
-certainly must be laughing at the pickle his victim was in.</p>
-<p>Scott was so disappointed that he felt almost ready to cry. With
-considerable difficulty, and the help of old man Sanders and the station
-agent, he had succeeded in posting himself fairly well on the ins and
-outs of this feud. After carefully considering the possibility of an
-alliance with one side or the other he had come to the conclusion that
-the only safe thing to do was to remain absolutely neutral. He felt
-confident that if he could keep away from any entangling alliance with
-either side, he could successfully carry on his work in spite of the
-feud and might even be able to get these old enemies to patch up their
-differences. He had still considered that a possibility even though
-every one said that the feud would never be dropped as long as old
-Jarred Morgan lived.</p>
-<p>And now his superior officer had taken sides with the Waits and spoiled
-everything.</p>
-<p>Scott determined to find Hopwood, learn where Mr. Reynolds was, and know
-the worst as soon as possible. One of them was right and the other
-wrong. They must at least get together and agree on a common policy.</p>
-<p>So Scott started out in search of Hopwood. He felt sure that he could
-tell him where to find Mr. Reynolds. The iron hat was nowhere in sight,
-but Scott felt that he could not be very far away. Surely he would not
-have come to make such a statement as that and then disappear without
-waiting to give any explanation of it. Possibly he had gone to one of
-the stores.</p>
-<p>He had started down the village street to investigate when he noticed a
-motionless figure sitting back of a pile of cordwood a little way back
-from the street. He instantly recognized Hopwood. Was he hiding from him
-and would he run away? Scott approached him rather cautiously, but
-Hopwood watched him calmly and showed no sign of retreating. He rather
-appeared to be waiting for him.</p>
-<p>“Thanks for the warning you gave me,” Scott said as soon as he was near
-enough to him.</p>
-<p>“I thought that you would be looking for me,” Hopwood replied with his
-usual disregard of preliminaries.</p>
-<p>“What made you think that I would find you in this out-of-the-way
-place?” Scott laughed. “Why didn’t you stay at the hotel? I would have
-been glad to have had a visit from you.”</p>
-<p>“The more people see me with you the less I’ll hear,” Hopwood answered
-cunningly.</p>
-<p>Scott started at the flash of wisdom from a half-wit. “I guess you are
-right,” he replied earnestly. “Do you think we are safe here?”</p>
-<p>“Oh, yes,” Hopwood replied confidently. “No one can see us here except
-from that one place, and no one else will go along that street for half
-an hour.”</p>
-<p>Scott did not waste any time trying to find out how Hopwood knew that.
-There was something else that he was anxious to know. “Then maybe you
-can tell me, Hopwood, what makes you think Mr. Reynolds has joined the
-Waits?”</p>
-<p>“He’s been up at the Waits’ nearly all day, and has just about promised
-them that you will give them the logging contract.”</p>
-<p>“How do you know he did?” Scott asked incredulously. “You were with me
-part of the morning, and went up the other mountain when you left me,”
-he protested.</p>
-<p>Hopwood only smiled.</p>
-<p>“Where is he now?” Scott continued. He could not believe that Hopwood
-knew what he was talking about. Maybe he was mistaken. He hoped so.</p>
-<p>“He is on his way down the mountain with Foster Wait,” Hopwood replied
-promptly. “He’ll be down here at the store in less than half an hour,”
-he added, as though he had noticed the doubt in Scott’s face.</p>
-<p>“Then I guess I’ll wait here till he comes,” Scott said. “I don’t want
-to be seen now traipsing around the country with Foster Wait.</p>
-<p>“He’ll have some job to make me give a logging contract to either of
-those gangs,” Scott muttered defiantly. Then, after a minute’s silence,
-“Do you think that either the Morgans or the Waits could carry out a
-logging contract if they did get it, Hopwood? Have they the money to do
-it?”</p>
-<p>But there was no answer. Hopwood had disappeared again in his usual
-silent and mysterious fashion. Scott knew better now than to waste his
-time looking for him. He fell to brooding over this phase of the
-problem, and when he looked at his watch it was already ten minutes
-after the time which Hopwood had predicted for Mr. Reynolds’ arrival.
-Scott jumped to his feet and hurried out into the open. He was delighted
-to see Mr. Reynolds coming up the street alone and walked down to meet
-him.</p>
-<p>Mr. Reynolds was a rather effeminate-looking man, over neatly dressed in
-the very latest cut of riding suit. He affected a rather bored manner.
-He waved an indolent greeting to Scott.</p>
-<p>“Hello, there, Burton! I sure am glad to see you. I thought I was going
-to have to eat another meal in this beastly hole. Now I can probably
-finish up with you in time to catch the afternoon train.”</p>
-<p>Scott wished that he had caught the train the day before but he did not
-dare to say so. Instead he said, “Think how long I shall have to eat
-here. Better stay awhile. Misery loves company, you know.”</p>
-<p>“Well, I hope you get all the company you want, but it sure will not be
-mine if I can help it.”</p>
-<p>“By the way,” Scott asked suddenly, “where did you get that cigarette?”</p>
-<p>“Pardon me,” Mr. Reynolds exclaimed, as he fumbled apologetically in his
-pocket for the package, “but I was under the impression that you never
-smoked.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t,” Scott replied. “I was only wondering where you bought them.”</p>
-<p>“Oh, here at the store. They carry them, but they are a pretty bum
-brand.”</p>
-<p>“Which store?” Scott insisted.</p>
-<p>“The one on the left there. Hadn’t noticed there were two. What’s the
-big idea? You rooting for one of them?”</p>
-<p>Scott knew that it would be useless to argue with this man. He evidently
-had no conception of the situation in the village and Scott did not
-think it worth while to try to explain. “No,” he replied, “I was just
-wondering which one I ought to deal with,” which was true enough.</p>
-<p>“Well, if everything they sell is as rotten as their cigarettes you’d
-better try the other one. But come on up to the hotel so that I can go
-over things with you in time to catch that train. I think that I have
-things lined up here for you in pretty good shape.”</p>
-<p>“How is that?” Scott asked. In spite of the harm this man had done him
-he could not help smiling at his unbounded conceit.</p>
-<p>“Oh, I had a long talk with Foster Wait this afternoon, and fixed it up
-with him so that the Waits will take over the logging contract. There is
-a big family of them and the labor problem will be settled. No use in
-scouring the country the way those other fellows did when it can be
-handled so easily locally.”</p>
-<p>“Didn’t sign them up, did you?” Scott asked the question as carelessly
-as he could, but he really waited breathlessly for the answer.</p>
-<p>“No,” Mr. Reynolds answered pompously, “I could not very well go into
-all those details because I did not have the necessary forms with me. I
-only smoothed the way for you a little. Now that I have talked to them
-it will be no trick at all for you to get them to sign up and arrange
-all the details.”</p>
-<p>“And,” Scott thought, “the details would have to include the hiring of
-an undertaker to sweep up the remains.” But to Mr. Reynolds he said
-nothing. The more he let this man talk the more certain he would be of
-getting rid of him on the afternoon train, and that was Scott’s one
-ambition now—to get rid of this man at the earliest possible moment.</p>
-<p>They walked on up to the hotel and when they came out two hours later
-Scott was more than ever anxious to see him go. If this man had had
-anything to do with the business when the two previous supervisors had
-been run out of the country he could understand perfectly well how it
-happened. Scott had listened attentively and talked hardly at all.</p>
-<p>As they approached the stores Scott saw a good-sized delegation
-assembled on the porch of each. The Waits looked smilingly elated. The
-Morgans glared angrily from across the way.</p>
-<p>“Come on up and I’ll introduce you to these people now if I have the
-time.”</p>
-<p>Scott was determined to avoid this but he did now know how to do it. If
-he refused, Mr. Reynolds would undoubtedly start an argument which the
-spectators could not help but understand. Fortunately the train was on
-time, something which rarely happened, and it whistled just in the nick
-of time.</p>
-<p>As the train pulled out of the station, Scott watched it with a feeling
-of profound relief, but at the same time he half wished that he was on
-it. He was rid of Mr. Reynolds, but would he ever be able to get out of
-the mess into which this man had drawn him?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT LOSES HIS NEUTRALITY</span></h2>
-<p>When the train had disappeared Scott turned to find the station agent
-close behind him waiting for an opportunity to speak.</p>
-<p>“I reckon Hopwood was right,” he said with his slow drawl.</p>
-<p>“What makes you think so?” Scott asked, for he knew that Mr. Reynolds
-had not told him.</p>
-<p>“Three of the Waits have already told me that they are going to get the
-logging contract,” he replied.</p>
-<p>“Oh, they did, did they?” he exclaimed indignantly. Either Mr. Reynolds
-must have talked to a gathering of the whole clan or the news had spread
-like wild fire over the face of the mountain. “Well, they haven’t got it
-yet,” he snapped. “I guess I’ll have something to say about who gets
-that logging contract.”</p>
-<p>“I asked them if you had told them and they said no, but your boss had,
-and you would have to do as he said.”</p>
-<p>Scott’s teeth came together with a vicious snap. “They’ll see whether I
-have to or not.” He turned abruptly and walked across the tracks toward
-the Wait country. “No pair of whipcord riding breeches is going to tell
-me where to let a logging contract,” he muttered angrily to himself.</p>
-<p>He did not know exactly why he had come in that direction. Possibly it
-was his natural tendency to go straight for his enemy. He did not even
-realize where he was going; he only realized that he was mad clear
-through and that he had better walk some of it off before he talked to
-anybody.</p>
-<p>The forest came close down to the edge of the valley on this side and
-the road was arched over with the beautiful hardwood trees. Scott would
-have marveled at their size and beauty if he had not been too angry to
-notice them. The quiet solitude of the steep mountain road was well
-fitted to smooth a man’s ruffled temper and make him forget his
-troubles. Everywhere the gray squirrels were chasing each other around
-the trees in a never ending game of tag, and the birds were singing all
-over the woods.</p>
-<p>Before Scott had gone very far he met two men riding down the mountain
-on horseback. They wore the regular uniform of that section, rough
-homespun trousers and a black sateen shirt, and carried long
-muzzle-loading rifles balanced across their saddle bows. They both
-grinned condescendingly at Scott and gave him a careless, “Howdy.”</p>
-<p>He did not think it strange that he should meet two men, but when he met
-two more a little farther up and they greeted him in the same way he
-began to comprehend. These were the triumphant Waits on their way to
-town to celebrate their victory, and they were all laughing at him,
-laughing because they had overreached him and made terms with the boss
-that he would have to accept.</p>
-<p>The thought maddened him, and by the time he had passed eight more he
-was so angry that he could hardly see the big fellow who brought up the
-rear of the last group of four. It would never do to start a row with
-them now before he was really ready, and yet it was all he could do to
-hide his fury and return their greetings casually.</p>
-<p>The big fellow who had just passed turned in his saddle and looked at
-him inquiringly. “Weren’t looking for me, were you, sonny?” he called
-insolently in a rather thick voice.</p>
-<p>Scott’s blood boiled at the tone and wording of the question. He did not
-dare look at the man and it almost choked him to answer calmly, “Not
-to-day.”</p>
-<p>“Well, to-morrow will do,” the man called insolently. “You can find me
-home most any day.” And the others laughed at the retort.</p>
-<p>Scott saw red for a minute and half turned, but he caught himself in
-time. He would not make much headway in handling this timber sale if he
-began with a fight in the public road on a somewhat doubtful pretext. If
-he did fight he ought to have a little better cause than that.</p>
-<p>He did not meet any more of the offensive Waits and was beginning to
-cool off a little so that he could think calmly. Suddenly he stopped
-with a jerk and turned his startled gaze down the road in the direction
-all the bands had been traveling. What would be the outcome of this
-meeting in the village? He had met twelve men on the road and he had
-noticed eight more at the store when he came by. They were all armed and
-most likely there would be much drinking. Would they take this
-opportunity to wipe out the remnant of the Morgans?</p>
-<p>He had never seen old Jarred Morgan nor had he ever spoken to any of the
-family, but right now his sympathy was with them. The picture which old
-man Sanders had drawn of that lonely old man and a slip of a girl
-holding the Morgan fort almost alone appealed to him. But what could
-they do against a gang of twenty? No matter how brave they were, they
-would be helpless.</p>
-<p>Scott’s sense of fair play sent his fighting blood bounding through his
-veins. He turned resolutely and hurried down the mountain. He thought
-that he might be able to prevent that crime. He would help to protect
-that plucky pair if he possibly could, and he would not care what
-anybody thought about it. He did not admit it to himself, but probably
-the greatest incentive was the opportunity to fight these insolent
-Waits. He hurried on without a thought of the possible effects it might
-have on his plans. Every minute he half expected to hear the shot which
-would announce the beginning of the fight.</p>
-<p>When he came out of the forest at the foot of the mountain, he was
-relieved to see that everything looked peaceful in the village. The
-station agent saw him coming and lounged out to the end of the platform
-to meet him.</p>
-<p>“Well, they are all in town to celebrate,” he drawled.</p>
-<p>“I guess they are, judging from the procession I met coming down the
-mountain,” Scott growled bitterly. “Do you think there will be any
-trouble?”</p>
-<p>The agent looked at him curiously. “Oh, I don’t believe they will bother
-you any now. They think that you are their friend.”</p>
-<p>Scott glared at the man indignantly. “I am not talking about myself. Do
-you suppose I care what that gang thinks of me? But it occurred to me
-that they might take this opportunity to catch the Morgans unprepared
-and clean up what is left of them.”</p>
-<p>“Oh, you mean that kind of trouble?” and the agent seemed greatly
-relieved to find it out. “There won’t be any fight unless old Jarred
-comes to town.”</p>
-<p>“There will not be any at all if I can prevent it,” Scott replied
-resolutely. “If there is any fight it will be a fair one and not a
-murder of one old man by a gang like that. I wish I could find Hopwood.
-You have not seen him, have you?”</p>
-<p>The agent looked cautiously behind him and shook his head. “No, I
-haven’t seen him since noon, but that is no reason why he may not be
-sitting right here somewhere staring at us.”</p>
-<p>Scott turned away. “Well, maybe I’ll run on to him. He seems to turn up
-somehow when he is wanted.”</p>
-<p>He dreaded passing that crowd at the store and yet he would not have
-gone home any other way this afternoon for a hundred dollars. There
-would almost certainly be some impudent remarks and Scott was almost
-afraid to trust himself, but he made up his mind that he would not fight
-with them no matter what happened till he had tried to persuade them to
-drop the feud.</p>
-<p>Purposely he kept out of sight behind some trees till he was not more
-than fifty yards from the store. Then bracing himself for the coming
-trial he walked casually out of the shadow. His eye took in the
-situation at a glance, but he could not understand it.</p>
-<p>Two lonely men sat silent and sullen on the porch of the Morgan store.
-At least twenty crowded the porch of the store across the street,
-laughing and gibing at a burly giant who was dragging a young girl
-across the street by the hair. The girl’s head was bent down so that
-Scott could not see her face, but he could imagine her expression. She
-was not uttering a sound, but she was fighting with the fury of a
-wildcat.</p>
-<p>Scott’s blood boiled at the sight of a man mistreating a girl in this
-way. Moreover, he recognized the man as the big fellow who had spoken to
-him so insolently up on the mountain. Even before he realized what he
-was doing he had covered the short distance and grabbed the man by the
-arm. He had been a boxer all his life and had won the heavyweight
-championship at college. He was calm now, as calm as he had ever been
-when he stepped into the ring. This man was almost twice his size, but
-he did not even notice it.</p>
-<p>“Let go of that girl,” Scott commanded, and as he spoke he let go of the
-man’s arm. He had grabbed it only to attract the man’s attention. He
-knew that he could not hold this man in any such way and he was too good
-a fighter to hold on and be jerked off his balance. The steely ring in
-his voice was enough to hold any one’s attention now.</p>
-<p>The man turned upon him furiously, but he did not let go of the girl.
-Evidently he had expected to see a Morgan, for when his eyes fell on
-Scott his mouth dropped open for a moment and he stared blankly.</p>
-<p>“Did you hear what I said?” Scott insisted with suppressed fury.</p>
-<p>A cunning leer came over the man’s sodden face. The spectators at the
-two stores listened breathlessly.</p>
-<p>“Quick work to get sweet on her so soon. Get out of the way, sonny, and
-go get the papers ready for that logging contract.”</p>
-<p>Quick as a flash Scott caught the big fellow a tremendous blow on the
-jaw with the flat of his hand. If the man had been sober he would have
-hit him with his fist, but he did not want to slug him when he was in
-that helpless condition, much as he deserved it. Even as it was, the
-slap was enough. The big man let go of the girl, stumbled, lost his
-balance and sprawled his length on the ground, where he lay groping
-helplessly for his gun and muttering curses.</p>
-<p>The girl shook her long hair from her face and cast a look of furious
-hatred at the fallen foe. Her chest was heaving from the desperate, but
-futile, struggle. Turning slowly she swept a contemptuous glance over
-the spectators on both porches. “Cowards!” she snapped with all the
-concentrated contempt she could muster. She turned and walked slowly
-down the street with all the dignity of a queen.</p>
-<p>Much to Scott’s astonishment not a man had moved a hand to interfere
-with him. He looked them over slowly to see if they were going to mob
-him, but nobody moved or spoke. When he had stood there long enough to
-avoid any appearance of running away, he cast a curious glance at the
-retreating figure of the girl who had so completely ignored her rescuer,
-and walked slowly away toward the hotel, trying to figure out what it
-could all mean.</p>
-<p>As he turned the corner of the hotel he almost laughed aloud. He was
-thinking what the Waits must think of his friendship now.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT MAKES ANOTHER RESCUE</span></h2>
-<p>When Scott entered the hotel he was still thinking what it could all
-mean. Why were the men of both factions quietly looking on while a big
-burly drunkard dragged a child around the street by the hair? If the
-girl was a Morgan why had the Morgans let such an act go unchallenged?
-If she was a Wait why had not the rest of the gang protected her? He
-started. Perhaps it was the man’s own child. No matter. No man had a
-right to drag his own child around by the hair. Well, when the station
-agent came to supper he could probably explain things.</p>
-<p>But the station agent did not come to supper and Scott ate the atrocious
-food in lonely state still trying to solve this mystery. In any event he
-had shown the Waits just how much they could count on his friendship and
-that was worth something. It was also some satisfaction to know that
-they were probably as much troubled as he was.</p>
-<p>Alone in his room he pondered the problem for an hour without coming any
-nearer to a solution. Finally the suspense became unbearable. He
-determined to go to old man Sanders and see if he could offer any
-explanation. It was growing dusk when he went out and objects seemed a
-little indistinct in the distance. He glanced toward the place where
-Hopwood had been waiting for him in the afternoon, but there was no
-trace of him now.</p>
-<p>Both stores apparently were deserted. Scott had not seen a soul when he
-turned into the road which led up to Sanders’ little cabin. He thought
-that he had never known the woods to be so silent. It seemed as though
-every living thing must have left the country. But there was a light in
-Sanders’ cabin. The full moon peeped at him over the trees behind the
-house. He knocked on the door and heard the old man shuffling across the
-floor to open it.</p>
-<p>“Good evening,” Scott said as the door swung wide. “You see I have come
-back to you for advice pretty quick.”</p>
-<p>“Come in, come in,” the old man said cordially. “Glad to see you.” He
-motioned Scott to one of the old-fashioned chairs. When they were
-comfortably seated he spoke again.</p>
-<p>“You said you came here for advice. Let me give you a little before I
-forget it. It happens to be perfectly safe for any one to knock on my
-door at any time of the day or night, but don’t try it anywhere else.
-You would probably find yourself looking down the barrel of a gun if the
-dogs did not chew you up first. It is the custom in this country to
-stand outside the gate and shout.”</p>
-<p>“Thanks,” Scott replied gratefully. “I am very anxious to learn the
-customs of this country. There seem to be some customs here I do not
-understand. That is what brought me up here to-night. What does it mean
-when a big bully of a man hauls a girl around the street by the hair
-while twenty others look on and do nothing?”</p>
-<p>The old man straightened up in his chair. “What’s all this?” he asked
-sharply.</p>
-<p>Scott explained as fully as he could and the old man listened
-breathlessly to every word. When Scott had finished his story the old
-fellow sank back in his chair with wrinkled brow.</p>
-<p>“So that was how it happened,” he muttered to himself. “The girl has
-more sense than I thought she had.” Then he spoke aloud to Scott. “I
-heard a little something of this but I did not know that you had
-anything to do with it. It’s a wonder to me that you are here to tell
-it.”</p>
-<p>Scott misunderstood him. “I admit it was a little hasty,” he replied
-with dignity, “but I am not ashamed of it.”</p>
-<p>The old man laughed aloud. “No, no, you have nothing to be ashamed of. I
-am only surprised that Foster has not killed you before this. Be on your
-guard, for he will certainly try it.”</p>
-<p>“Tell me about it,” Scott said. “What was going on? I could not make
-head or tail of it.”</p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders thought for a moment. “Must have seemed queer to you. Would
-to anybody. You see Foster Wait, he was the big fellow, was drunk as he
-usually is when he has any excuse for it at all. He happened to see Vic
-Morgan there in the village and could not help poking some fun at her
-about the logging contract. They all love to tease her just to see her
-spit fire. She flew into a tantrum just as she always does, ran out to
-the middle of the street, which is the dividing line between Morgan and
-Wait territory, and told him what she thought of him and the whole Wait
-tribe. She said herself that she cursed Foster pretty bad.</p>
-<p>“You see she felt safe because the Waits never come past the middle of
-the street. But, as I said, Foster was drunk and he reached over the
-line and grabbed her. Probably just wanted to spank the kid for a joke.
-Vic could not see the joke and bit his thumb. Hurt him pretty bad, I
-reckon, and made him mad. He has a terrible temper like his father. He
-grabbed her by the hair for a safe hold and then you came along.”</p>
-<p>“But how could those men there at the Morgan store see a Wait treat a
-member of their family in any such way as that?” Scott protested.</p>
-<p>“Because Jim don’t believe in keeping up the feud, and it makes him mad
-every time Vic stirs things up that way. Probably thought it served her
-right.”</p>
-<p>“So that child is Vic. And she is the only supporter old Jarred has. Who
-is she, anyway?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>“She is the daughter of Jim Morgan there at the store, but she spends
-most of her time up on the mountain with her grandfather. She and the
-old man are great chums.”</p>
-<p>“Just one more question,” Scott said, “or rather two more and then I’ll
-let you go to bed. Why didn’t any of the Waits interfere when I knocked
-their leader down? I did not know who he was or I might have been
-scared.”</p>
-<p>“Because they don’t like him. He is a regular bully, and they were
-probably glad to see somebody stand up to him. Besides, they are
-expecting a good deal from you.”</p>
-<p>Scott ignored the last remark. “And my last question. How did you find
-out about it so quickly?”</p>
-<p>The old man hesitated an instant. “That is the part that puzzled me. Vic
-stopped in here and told me about it herself. That would not have
-surprised me because she usually tells me everything, but she asked me
-not to let her grandfather hear about it if I could help it. That is
-what astonished me. Ordinarily she would have gone to her grandfather on
-the run and wanted him to kill the whole tribe. He’ll try to do it too
-if he ever hears about this and his own tribe, too, for letting it
-happen. I think Vic must have realized that. Didn’t know the kid had so
-much judgment. She did not say anything about your rescuing her,
-either,” he mused.</p>
-<p>Scott was thoughtful a minute. “Well, I certainly appreciate your help,
-Mr. Sanders. I think I understand it a little better now, but,” he added
-slowly, “I don’t think I shall ever understand how a father could sit
-still and see a drunken man treat his daughter like that.” And he arose
-to take his leave.</p>
-<p>“Old Jarred wouldn’t understand it, either,” Mr. Sanders said, as he
-rose to show his guest to the door. “I wish you would help me to keep
-him from finding it out. The kid does not want him to know, and I like
-her.”</p>
-<p>“So do I,” Scott replied. “She fought like a wildcat. I admire nerve in
-anybody. I admire the old man, too, for holding out alone against that
-big gang, and I am going to protect him all I can.”</p>
-<p>He was out on the porch now, and the old man was standing in the
-doorway. “Good night, and thank you again.”</p>
-<p>“Good night, and be careful,” the old man warned him. “Foster Wait is a
-dangerous man and he’ll never be satisfied till he gets his revenge for
-this insult. He won’t stop at anything and you must be on your guard all
-the time.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll try to watch him,” Scott replied simply.</p>
-<p>“Do that,” the old man called. “I’ve taken a fancy to you and I don’t
-want to see you shot for nothing.”</p>
-<p>The door closed before Scott could reply and left him alone in the
-moonlight. He felt his loneliness then in that unfriendly country and
-was grateful to the old man for his help and his friendship. With a sigh
-he turned down the mountain road pondering on the strange story he had
-heard. He could see how the news of this encounter might mean the
-disruption of the whole Morgan faction if it were ever revealed to old
-Jarred, and the girl must have seen it too.</p>
-<p>He was walking along slowly in this thoughtful mood when he was startled
-by the sight of an old white horse standing in a patch of moonlight in
-the middle of the road. He wore a bridle but no saddle, and his head was
-hanging low as though he were exhausted from hard riding.</p>
-<p>Scott’s mind flashed to the old man’s warning against Foster Wait and he
-jumped behind a point in the bank beside the road. He was not a coward
-but he did not mean to be shot down by a madman without a struggle. He
-peeped cautiously through the bushes. At first he could see nothing, but
-as his eyes became more accustomed to the uncertain light he thought he
-recognized the body of a person lying under the horse’s muzzle. He
-watched it carefully for a moment. There was no sign of motion. Surely
-any one lying in wait for him would not have chosen such a peculiar form
-of strategy. He threw his caution to the winds and stepped out into the
-road.</p>
-<p>The old horse raised his head and nickered. The raising of the horse’s
-head let the moonlight fall on the figure in the road and Scott clearly
-recognized it as a woman. He ran forward and there was Vic Morgan lying
-unconscious in the road. A small bundle of clothes lay beside her.
-Evidently she had fallen from the horse, but Scott could not tell how it
-happened. The faithful old horse was standing guard over her unconscious
-form; it would hardly have been his fault.</p>
-<p>Scott felt her pulse. She wasn’t dead. One leg was twisted under her in
-an unnatural position. He straightened it out and the bone did not seem
-to be broken. He was uncertain whether to take her back to Sanders’
-cabin or home to her father. It was not much farther to the village and
-he decided to take her there. He tied the bundle of clothes on his belt
-and led the horse over to the bank where he could get on.</p>
-<p>When he started to pick the girl up she groaned and moved uneasily. He
-gathered the slight form in his arms and carried her over to the bank.
-Just as he slipped on to the back of the docile old horse with his
-clumsy burden the girl opened her eyes. She looked at him sleepily at
-first, but as consciousness came to her she started up with a violent
-jerk and stared at him wildly. She evidently did not realize what had
-happened or just where she was.</p>
-<p>“Let go of me,” she commanded sternly, and before Scott realized what
-she was doing she had boxed his ears till they rang.</p>
-<p>He held the wildly struggling little figure as best he could and tried
-to explain. “Listen, I found you unconscious in the road and I’m only
-trying to take you home.”</p>
-<p>“Don’t you dare hold me,” she snapped angrily, and redoubled her
-struggles. “I don’t want you to take me home. I’d rather die here than
-have you touch me.”</p>
-<p>Scott was so taken back and so indignant that he felt like dropping her
-in the road and leaving her, but he could not do that. He gritted his
-teeth and held her the more firmly. “Well, I am going to take you home,
-young lady, whether you like it or not, so you might as well stop
-struggling. You can go back in the road and die afterwards if you want
-to.”</p>
-<p>After an even more violent struggle than before the child’s form
-suddenly collapsed, and she began to cry. This worried Scott far more
-than her struggles.</p>
-<p>“Don’t cry,” he begged her. “Where are you hurt and how did it happen?”</p>
-<p>For a while she was silent save for her sobbing and when she spoke it
-was not to answer his question. “If you’ve got to take me somewhere,”
-she said in an uncertain voice, “take me to grandpa.”</p>
-<p>Scott stopped the horse and looked at her doubtfully. “Why?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Because I ran away from home and never want to see my father again,”
-she retorted defiantly. “And it’s none of your business,” she added
-promptly.</p>
-<p>Scott hesitated but he remembered what Mr. Sanders had said about her
-spending most of her time with her grandfather, and after the events of
-the afternoon he did not blame her for wanting to run away from her
-father. “Where does your grandfather live?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Up the mountain,” she replied.</p>
-<p>Scott turned the old horse around and he plodded slowly upward. The
-light was already out when they passed Mr. Sanders’ cabin and all was
-still. The girl did not deign to speak and Scott maintained a dignified
-silence. They had traveled almost a mile when the girl spoke suddenly.</p>
-<p>“If you say anything to granddad about that fight this afternoon, I’ll
-kill you.”</p>
-<p>Scott had already promised Mr. Sanders not to tell but there was
-something he wanted to know. “How were you hurt this evening?” he asked
-again.</p>
-<p>“None of your business,” the child snapped.</p>
-<p>“Then it may not be my business to keep your secret,” he retorted.</p>
-<p>She was silent for a moment as though thinking it over. “The horse shied
-at a hound on the bank and I fell off,” she replied reluctantly.</p>
-<p>“How did it hurt you?” Scott insisted.</p>
-<p>Again there was a pause as though she was struggling with herself. “I
-have a knot on my head and my leg hurts,” she answered grudgingly.</p>
-<p>Scott had found out what he wanted to know. “I promise not to tell,” he
-said.</p>
-<p>She did not thank him. A hound barked on the left-hand side of the road.
-The horse stopped. She called to the hound and he stopped barking
-instantly.</p>
-<p>“Let me down from here,” she commanded.</p>
-<p>Scott could see no reason for holding her longer. He balanced her on the
-horse’s withers and slipped to the ground. He reached up to help her.
-She tried to avoid him but he caught her and it was well that he did,
-for when her foot touched the ground she uttered a sharp gasp and sank
-limply. He thought for a second that she had fainted.</p>
-<p>“Call granddad,” she commanded in a voice pinched with pain.</p>
-<p>“Hello, there,” Scott called.</p>
-<p>There was a noise as of some one cautiously opening a door.</p>
-<p>“Grandpa,” the child called weakly.</p>
-<p>The door swung wide and the old man strode hurriedly across the yard.
-Scott was about to meet old Jarred Morgan.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER X</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT MEETS JARRED</span></h2>
-<p>Scott let the girl sit on the ground with her back against his knees and
-watched the famous old man coming to protect his own. He presented a
-striking figure striding along through the moonlight with hurried
-dignity. His tall, gaunt form was as erect as that of a man of twenty,
-and his step as springy. His ever present rifle hung comfortably across
-the hollow of his arm. He cast one keen glance of suspicion at Scott and
-knelt beside the girl.</p>
-<p>“What is it, Vic?” he asked tenderly.</p>
-<p>“I fell off old Dan,” she confessed sheepishly.</p>
-<p>“Are you hurt?” he insisted anxiously.</p>
-<p>“I have a knot on my head, and I twisted my leg,” she said.</p>
-<p>“How under the sun did you come to fall off old Dan?” her grandfather
-asked, as he laid down his long rifle and gathered her tenderly in his
-arms. Scott stepped back a pace or two out of earshot.</p>
-<p>“I was sitting on him sideways and he shied at a hound on top of the
-bank down below Sanders’.”</p>
-<p>“And this gentleman?” he asked, looking Scott squarely in the eye.</p>
-<p>“He found me in the road and brought me home,” she replied shortly.</p>
-<p>The old man straightened up with his burden and bowed solemnly to Scott.
-“I thank you, sir.”</p>
-<p>“I certainly am glad to have been of service to you,” Scott replied
-cordially. “I hope to have the pleasure of calling on you in a day or so
-if I may, so I will not intrude on you any longer at present.”</p>
-<p>Jarred frankly looked him over from head to foot. “If you will be so
-kind as to wait till I have taken the girl in the house I would like to
-speak to you for a moment.”</p>
-<p>“Certainly,” Scott answered politely. He liked the old man’s frank,
-straightforward gaze, but it did not seem to him that steady eye looked
-on him with much favor. Perhaps he was no more grateful than his
-granddaughter. In less than five minutes he came out again to join
-Scott. He came straight to the point.</p>
-<p>“Sir, I am sorry that I could not invite you in, and I regret that I
-have to appear discourteous to a man who has rendered me the service you
-have.” Scott listened in silent astonishment and the old man continued.
-“I owe you a debt which I can never repay for the kindness you have
-shown my grandchild, but any man who aids my enemies can never be more
-to me than a creditor, as much as I would like to have it otherwise.”</p>
-<p>Scott was astonished at the old man’s courtly manner and fine English.
-He did not learn till later that many of these mountaineers were
-descendants of the old Huguenot families who were driven out of France
-and had retained a wonderful purity of speech. He answered as earnestly
-as he could.</p>
-<p>“I do not know what you mean, Mr. Morgan, unless you refer to the rumor
-that I am going to let the logging contract to the Waits.”</p>
-<p>“You call it a rumor,” Jarred replied a little doubtfully. “It was
-reported to me as a fact, apparently a very widely known fact,” he added
-bitterly.</p>
-<p>“I assure you that it is nothing more than a rumor and a false rumor at
-that. I have not spoken more than half a dozen words to a Wait since I
-came here.”</p>
-<p>“That may all be true enough but did not your superior officer make the
-promise for you?” Jarred asked with a slight sneer.</p>
-<p>The sneer angered Scott but he knew that it was justified under the
-circumstances.</p>
-<p>“I, too, Mr. Morgan, have heard that Mr. Reynolds very rashly made some
-informal promises to the Waits in regard to that contract. All I can say
-is that he did it without conferring with me. I am entirely responsible
-for letting that contract and I do not feel myself in any way bound by
-what he may have said. I can assure you that there will be no contract
-let to either the Waits or the Morgans unless they will agree to forget
-their feud and take the contract together.”</p>
-<p>Old Jarred looked him squarely in the eye for a minute before he
-replied. Then he held out his hand. “I beg your pardon,” he said with
-dignity. “You must charge my discourtesy to a mistake. I appreciate your
-frankness and I want to be equally frank. Under those conditions there
-will be no logging contract let here. Won’t you come in, sir?”</p>
-<p>Scott had grasped the proffered hand eagerly. “Thank you, sir. I will
-not come in now because it is late and you will be busy with the little
-girl, but I would like to come up and talk things over with you
-to-morrow.”</p>
-<p>“We’ll be glad to see you any time,” Jarred answered cordially.</p>
-<p>“Good night, sir. I hope the little girl’s injuries are not serious.”</p>
-<p>“She’ll be all right to-morrow, I think. And thank you again for helping
-her. Good night, sir.”</p>
-<p>Scott turned down the mountain and left the old man standing in the
-moonlight looking after him. He liked old Jarred; he was a man and a
-gentleman. He did not wonder that he held the Waits at bay almost
-unaided. One man like that could overawe a whole tribe of cowards such
-as the Waits appeared to be.</p>
-<p>And when Scott paused outside the hotel for a moment before going in, he
-glanced admiringly up at the silvered mountainside where that staunch
-old man was nursing his hate with such undaunted courage.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>A VISIT TO JARRED’S CABIN</span></h2>
-<p>After breakfast the next morning Scott started back up the mountain. It
-was a beautiful morning. A light haze still lay like a blanket over the
-valley but the mountain ridges glistened in the sunshine. The woods
-seemed alive with birds everywhere he looked and many of them were new
-to him. It was the kind of morning that made a man feel as though he
-would never get tired, and Scott walked with a light step. The gloom of
-the night before had left him and everything seemed as bright as the
-mountain tops. He felt as though everything must come out all right.</p>
-<p>As he passed the Sanders’ cabin the old man was sweeping off his little
-front porch. “Morning,” he called cheerfully, “going up to beard the
-lion in his den, are you?”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said, “and I am not a bit scared either. I met him last
-night and I liked him. He seems like a real man.”</p>
-<p>“Last night?” the old man repeated doubtfully.</p>
-<p>“Yes, your little friend Vic fell off her horse down below here and hurt
-herself a little and I took her home.”</p>
-<p>“Oh!” Mr. Sanders exclaimed as though some mystery had been solved.
-“That’s how it happened. I was wondering how you got into old Jarred’s
-house at night. Vic was not hurt bad, was she?”</p>
-<p>“Not so bad but what she almost tore me up before I got her home,” Scott
-replied. And he told the old man what had happened.</p>
-<p>“Sounds like Vic. So she was running away from home, was she? She’ll
-never go back either. I thought something would come of that row
-yesterday.”</p>
-<p>Scott was puzzled. “How is that?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Jim let Foster grab her. She’ll never forgive him for that.”</p>
-<p>“I see,” Scott said. “I can’t say that I blame her much, either.”</p>
-<p>“Well,” the old man sighed, “it may be wrong to back the girl against
-her father, but I like Vic and there is no denying she is twice the man
-Jim is. She is just like her grandfather.”</p>
-<p>“I liked him,” Scott exclaimed. “He told me right away last night that
-he never would give up the feud, but I liked him all the same.”</p>
-<p>The old man opened his mouth as though to speak but changed his mind and
-closed it again. Then after a pause, “Well, stop in when you come down
-and tell me how Vic is. I’ll be anxious about her.”</p>
-<p>Scott hurried on. At the Morgan gate he remembered Mr. Sanders’ advice
-and shouted before he entered. Old Jarred appeared almost instantly in
-the doorway. When he saw who it was, he stood the long rifle against the
-corner beside the door and called to Scott to come in. He met him
-halfway to the gate with extended hand.</p>
-<p>“Come in, sir, come in, sir,” he repeated hospitably. “Vic is a little
-shy but I reckon she’ll be glad to see you.”</p>
-<p>“She seemed anything but glad to see me when I picked her up last
-night,” Scott laughed. “I thought she was going to tear me up before I
-could get her home.”</p>
-<p>Old Jarred chuckled. “Vic’s a fighter, she is. You see she had heard
-that rumor about the logging contract and she hates the Waits worse than
-I do. She feels right ashamed of herself this morning.”</p>
-<p>“Well, she needn’t,” Scott said. “I understood why it was and admired
-her nerve.”</p>
-<p>“If the Morgan men had half Vic’s nerve this feud might end,” old Jarred
-remarked bitterly.</p>
-<p>“Why not drop it, anyway?” Scott asked. “I’ll wager there is not one of
-your worst enemies who would not admit that you did not do it because
-you were afraid. It seems such a pity to have it go on. It can end in
-only one way some day.”</p>
-<p>Old Jarred stopped in the doorway and looked at him for a moment. Scott
-had not intended to broach the subject so suddenly and he half expected
-a burst of anger, but it did not come.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” the old man answered sadly, “it can have only one ending. They
-will get me some day. But as I told you last night I shall never give it
-up; so let’s not discuss it.” He saw the disappointment in Scott’s face
-and laid a friendly hand on his shoulder. “I am sorry, my boy, for I
-know that you mean well. I suppose it does look to you like a wholly
-unreasonable thing, but you don’t know all the story. You are asking
-something that it is utterly impossible for me to do. So it is better to
-drop it.”</p>
-<p>Scott could not hide his disappointment but he bowed his respect for the
-old man’s request. “I hope Vic was not badly hurt last night?” he asked.</p>
-<p>Jarred smiled his gratitude. “No, no. Sprained her knee a little, but
-she is hobbling around this morning and will be all right in a day or
-so.”</p>
-<p>The cabin into which Jarred led the way was a plain oblong structure
-built of logs. There was but one room which served as bedroom, dining
-room, living room and kitchen, but it was clean and everything seemed to
-be in order.</p>
-<p>“Pretty neat for an old man’s den,” Jarred chuckled with evident pride.
-“Vic did that for me this morning in spite of her crippled knee.”</p>
-<p>There was an uncertain thump on the back step and Scott turned to see
-Vic hopping in on one foot. She certainly looked like a different girl
-from the one he had struggled with the night before. She hopped toward
-him without embarrassment and held out her hand.</p>
-<p>“I am sorry I acted so badly last night,” she said frankly. “I hope that
-you will forget it. I would have been in a pickle without you.”</p>
-<p>Could this be the little wildcat he had picked up in the road the night
-before? Scott stared at her open-mouthed for a moment before he could
-find his tongue.</p>
-<p>“I could not very well expect anything else when I picked you up and
-carried you off against your will,” he laughed, when he had finally
-recovered from his astonishment.</p>
-<p>“She says she is going to stay with me now,” Jarred said. “Says she has
-had a row with her father and is not going back. I don’t know what the
-trouble is and I’m afraid to look it up for fear I might have to send
-her back.”</p>
-<p>He put his arm affectionately around the child and it was plain to see
-where he would put the blame. She cast an apprehensive glance at Scott
-and he knew she was worrying about the promise she had extracted from
-him the night before. He relieved her mind at once.</p>
-<p>“There are one or two things I would like to know before I go on with
-this timber sale, Mr. Morgan, and I think you can probably answer my
-questions better than any one else if you will.”</p>
-<p>Jarred nodded. “I’ll be glad to help you all I can.”</p>
-<p>“I have already told you,” Scott proceeded, “that I am not willing to
-give the contract to either the Waits or the Morgans unless they will
-take it jointly. I have heard—and heard it so often that I think it must
-be true—that Mr. Reynolds promised this contract to the Waits. Of course
-either of you has a right to bid on it if you want to, and I can’t stop
-you. I could turn either of you down even though you were the high
-bidder, but you can easily see in what a disagreeable position that
-would place me and I don’t want to do it.”</p>
-<p>Jarred nodded his comprehension.</p>
-<p>“Could either faction put up a bond of fifty thousand dollars as a
-guaranty?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>Jarred smiled sourly. “Five thousand would strain either of us
-considerable.”</p>
-<p>“Then it will be simple enough,” Scott said. “The law requires that
-guaranty. But I want to be perfectly certain that it cannot be met.”</p>
-<p>“You need not worry about that,” Jarred replied. “It would be altogether
-impossible.”</p>
-<p>Scott felt relieved. Here would be an easy way to get out of the promise
-Mr. Reynolds had made the Waits. Probably he had not told them anything
-about the necessity for a bond.</p>
-<p>“Then my next question, Mr. Morgan, is this. If an outsider takes that
-contract will the Waits and the Morgans work for him on the same job?”</p>
-<p>“They will not,” Jarred replied decisively, and Vic bristled visibly at
-the mere thought of it. “Moreover,” Jarred continued, “no outsider will
-take the contract.”</p>
-<p>“Why not?” Scott asked sharply. He had taken this as a threat and it
-made him bristle a little on his own part.</p>
-<p>“Because none of them will touch it for fear of getting mixed up in this
-feud. They have tried that and no one would risk it.”</p>
-<p>“It’s a wonder Mr. Reynolds would not tell me about that!” Scott
-exclaimed indignantly.</p>
-<p>“You would not need to know it if you had followed his plan,” Jarred
-remarked ironically.</p>
-<p>“Then I have one last question. Would the people here interfere with an
-outsider if he brought his own crew in here?”</p>
-<p>“I would not,” Jarred replied promptly, “and I don’t think any of our
-people would. I can’t answer for the others.”</p>
-<p>Scott rose to go. “I certainly appreciate your help, Mr. Morgan, and I
-feel that I can rely on what you say.”</p>
-<p>“Don’t leave a man much chance to do anything,” Jarred said
-sympathetically.</p>
-<p>“Not much,” Scott admitted, “but I am going to get that stuff logged if
-I have to do it myself.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe you won’t always have this trouble,” Jarred said with a twinkle
-in his cold gray eye and a wink toward the child. “When I’m gone the
-rest of them will all let the feud drop.”</p>
-<p>The child straightened suddenly and the blood rushed to her cheeks, but
-she caught sight of the twinkle and subsided again with exactly the same
-twinkle in her own.</p>
-<p>Scott took his leave and when he rounded the turn in the road that shut
-off the view of the Morgan cabin the old man was still standing at the
-gate with his arm around the girl’s shoulders. To Scott they represented
-the last link which was holding the old feud together.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT ASKS FOR BIDS</span></h2>
-<p>The next morning a wave of astonishment quickly followed by another of
-indignation spread over the west mountain with almost incredible
-rapidity, and a corresponding feeling of relief and satisfaction settled
-on the family of the Morgans. Quite the reverse of the situation of the
-day before.</p>
-<p>The sole cause of this momentous change was a small sign posted on the
-village bulletin board. It was couched in somewhat intricate legal
-language, but it said in effect that bids were now open for the logging
-contract and any one desiring to submit one must place it in the hands
-of the supervisor, along with a bond for fifty thousand dollars, within
-ten days. No one had seen either a Wait or a Morgan read it, but their
-knowledge of it was universal.</p>
-<p>Single horsemen threaded their way along by-roads and paths on the west
-slope to meet others at cabins scattered here and there over the
-mountainside, and all these little groups finally assembled at the home
-of Foster Wait. That worthy gentleman was half intoxicated, as usual,
-and greeted each sullen new arrival with a detailed blustering account
-of what he was going to do to the man who had double-crossed him. They
-did not seem to take much stock in what he said (it looked as though
-they had perhaps heard that same kind of bluster from him many times
-before) and their apparent indifference drove him to wilder boasts.</p>
-<p>Hopwood sat on the corner of the porch whittling a stick and apparently
-oblivious to all that was going on around him. He glanced occasionally
-from one of the group to another but the blank expression on his face
-never changed. The others paid no attention to him at all except when
-they wanted to know something. They seemed to be strangely inconsistent.
-They treated him as an idiot except when they wanted news, but they put
-implicit confidence in what he said.</p>
-<p>“Where did you find this out, Hop?” one of the newcomers asked. It was
-Sewall Wait, the real leader of the Wait faction. Foster was the nominal
-ruler by inheritance, but Sewall furnished the brains which Foster
-lacked. He had to repeat the question before Hopwood seemed to
-understand.</p>
-<p>“It is on the bulletin board in the village,” Hopwood answered in an
-expressionless tone.</p>
-<p>“What did it say?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood repeated the gist of the notice.</p>
-<p>“Who read it to you?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood seemed offended at the string of questions. He did not answer at
-once but seemed to think better of it. “Mr. Roberts,” he answered in the
-same dull tone.</p>
-<p>Sewall turned towards Foster but came back again to Hopwood. “Where’s
-that man Reynolds?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Left on the train yesterday,” Hopwood answered promptly.</p>
-<p>Sewall walked over to where Foster was raving for the benefit of two
-late comers. “What’s the use of bawling like a spanked kid?” he asked in
-a disgusted tone. “That is a formal request for bids posted in regular
-form by the U. S. Government, and if Hopwood has the lingo right it’s
-according to law. That man Reynolds is the fellow who made a sucker of
-you and he went home yesterday. I’m going home myself.”</p>
-<p>“Going home?” Foster raved. “And let that little squirt of a supervisor
-rob us of the contract and probably give it to old Jarred Morgan? No,
-sir, we’ll go down there and teach him that he can’t trifle with the
-Waits. That contract is ours and I am going to make him give it to us.”</p>
-<p>“And get your ears boxed for your trouble,” Sewall sneered as he walked
-to his horse. “Fighting the Morgans is one thing, but fighting the U. S.
-Government is something else.”</p>
-<p>Foster was furious at the reference to his boxed ears and started after
-him with waving fists, but Sewall rode slowly out of the yard without so
-much as looking at him, and his three sons followed him.</p>
-<p>Foster bawled threats and objurgations after them till they were far out
-of earshot and then returned to rail at the others. “Hopwood!” he
-shouted.</p>
-<p>They all looked at the place where Hopwood had been sitting. It was
-vacant. Hopwood had disappeared in his usual sudden manner.</p>
-<p>One by one the others tired of Foster’s futile raving and rode away till
-the hereditary leader of the family was left alone. The frenzy into
-which he had worked himself had sobered him and he looked after the last
-of his departing followers with anxious humiliation. He knew the
-trouble; it had happened before. He had talked too much and done too
-little. He would have to do something to reinstate himself and he owed
-the supervisor something anyway. This would be a good chance to kill two
-birds with one stone. He would have preferred some company but there was
-no chance of that now, and he prepared to go alone.</p>
-<p>In the meanwhile Scott was sitting down in the hotel waiting. He knew
-that nothing could come of this advertisement either on the bulletin
-board or in the local papers where he had sent it, and he wanted to be
-about his business. He knew what he was going to do now and he was
-anxious to be at it, but he knew what a hubbub the news would make among
-the Waits and he did not want to appear to run away. He had to wait at
-least till he had seen Foster Wait. It would never do for them to come
-down and find that he had left the country as soon as he had posted the
-notice. His duty did not require him to stay there, but his pride did.</p>
-<p>He sat on the front porch, from which point of vantage he could bring
-the whole village under his surveillance at once. He could see the
-little white square of his posted notice on the bulletin board at the
-other end of the street, and he watched it curiously to see if any one
-would read it. He saw two or three from the east slope stop there, and
-come on to the Morgan store in apparent good humor. No one at all came
-down from the Wait territory, and Scott was disappointed because they
-were the ones on whom he was anxious to note the effect.</p>
-<p>One hour crawled slowly after another and he patiently watched the
-lights and shadows creeping over the mountain slopes as the sun rose
-higher in the heavens. It was after ten o’clock when Scott happened to
-glance to his right and started to find Hopwood sitting in an
-inconspicuous place on the end of the porch.</p>
-<p>“Where under the sun did you come from, Hopwood?” he exclaimed.</p>
-<p>Hopwood spread his hands in both directions as he always did to indicate
-that he came from everywhere.</p>
-<p>“Foster is pretty mad,” he remarked casually.</p>
-<p>“Have you seen him?” Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded. “I saw them all.”</p>
-<p>“I suppose they were holding a big family powwow over it and will all be
-swarming down here after a while to find out what it means.” Scott
-chuckled at the discomfiture he was causing the Waits, for he had taken
-a distinct dislike to the whole tribe with the exception of Hopwood.</p>
-<p>“No,” Hopwood remarked quietly, “they are not coming, but maybe Foster
-will get up the nerve to come down alone. He’ll pretty near have to or
-he will be done for.”</p>
-<p>“What do you mean?” Scott asked. “I thought they always went in a gang.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. “Sewall would not back him up.”</p>
-<p>“Who is Sewall?” Scott had never heard of him and he had gathered from
-what he had heard that Foster was the leader of the Waits.</p>
-<p>“He’s the only Wait who has any brains,” Hopwood answered, and added
-naïvely, “except me.”</p>
-<p>Scott glanced at him keenly but saw only the usual blank expression. “By
-George, Hopwood!” he exclaimed, “I believe you really have more brains
-than any of them. But what do you mean by saying that Foster will have
-to come?”</p>
-<p>“He’s been saying so much about what he is going to do to you that he
-will have to do it or they will quit him,” Hopwood explained.</p>
-<p>Scott rubbed his hands with satisfaction at the prospect of a meeting
-with Foster Wait alone.</p>
-<p>“Are you sure he will come, Hopwood?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood was silent a moment as though waiting for a message. “Yes,” he
-said confidently. “He’ll be here in about an hour. Don’t let him scare
-you. He’s a coward.”</p>
-<p>“Going to try to scare me into it, is he?” Scott asked, but Hopwood had
-disappeared and left him to plan alone for his meeting with Foster Wait.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>FOSTER WAIT DEMANDS THE CONTRACT</span></h2>
-<p>The news that Foster Wait had been boasting among his followers of the
-terrible things he was going to do to the supervisor and the possibility
-of his coming down alone to make good his threats gave Scott a new
-interest in the meeting. He had taken an instinctive dislike to the man
-at first sight, and everything he had seen and heard of him since had
-only served to intensify that feeling.</p>
-<p>Foster was a much larger man than Scott, but Scott had not needed
-Hopwood’s warning to tell him that the giant was a coward. He had seen
-it and felt it. Probably his followers knew it, too, and maybe that was
-the reason they had refused to back him up. That was one of the things
-he had wanted to ask Hopwood, but the man of the iron hat always
-disappeared before he found out half that he wanted to know.</p>
-<p>A man appeared suddenly at the end of the village and Scott watched him
-eagerly, but it proved to be only the mail carrier who had stopped to
-read the notice. A new notice on the Caspar bulletin board was in itself
-an event. The time dragged slowly by and still the expected visitor did
-not arrive. Could Hopwood have failed in his prophecy? He had the
-reputation of being infallible.</p>
-<p>Things always happen when they are least expected, and Foster Wait had
-ridden his white horse halfway up the village street before Scott saw
-him. But even then the suspense was not over for the rider stopped at
-the store instead of coming straight to the hotel as Scott had hoped.
-Probably he had dropped in there to bolster up his nerve with a little
-more bragging, Scott thought. If so, he must have had a great deal of
-bragging to do, for ten minutes elapsed and he had not come out.</p>
-<p>Finally some one came out of the store and started for the hotel. Scott
-was disappointed to see that it was not Foster but one of the boys who
-stayed at the store. The boy shuffled along slowly looking everywhere
-except at Scott, and plainly showing that his errand was not to his
-liking. He headed for the corner of the house as though he were going
-around to the back door but changed his course suddenly and edged along
-the front of the porch. His actions were so peculiar that Scott watched
-him keenly.</p>
-<p>The boy finally came to a halt about ten feet away and looked the front
-of the house over carefully as though he had come to estimate the cost
-of a new coat of paint.</p>
-<p>“Foster says he wants to see you at the store right away,” the boy
-gulped suddenly without looking at Scott.</p>
-<p>Scott was so amused at the boy’s embarrassment that he almost forgot to
-be indignant at Foster’s message, but he stiffened a little as he
-realized the impertinence of the command.</p>
-<p>“Tell Mr. Wait that I am at the hotel and will be glad to see him any
-time he cares to come,” Scott said with forced dignity.</p>
-<p>“That’s what I told him,” the boy said, as he looked at Scott for the
-first time. And he seemed very much relieved. He hopped out of the gate
-and whistled all the way to the store.</p>
-<p>Scott waited anxiously for the result of his message. He did not have to
-wait so long this time. Foster’s angry roar when he heard the boy’s
-message reached Scott at the hotel, and the next minute Foster lunged
-out of the door. Three men followed him out on to the store porch, but
-they stopped there and watched him clamber on to his big white horse.
-Another small group gathered in front of the Morgan store to see the
-show.</p>
-<p>It was not over seventy yards from the store to the hotel and it would
-have been easier for Foster to walk, but he was not used to walking and
-he felt that he would be more impressive on his horse. He started from
-the store at a gallop but before he had covered the short distance he
-had slowed down to a walk. He drew up at the gate and scowled at Scott
-fiercely.</p>
-<p>“When I tell people to come to me they come,” he blustered. He knew when
-he said it that it was the wrong thing to say but he could not help it.</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him calmly. “It must be very convenient to have them so
-well trained,” he remarked.</p>
-<p>“You will be trained, too, before I am through with you,” Foster
-blustered. “That’s what I came for.”</p>
-<p>“Then maybe you better come in and have a seat, for it will probably
-take some time.” Scott pushed forward a chair and smiled at him
-tauntingly.</p>
-<p>Foster hesitated. He felt that he was decidedly getting the worst of it
-and he was uncertain just how to proceed. He might force him down to the
-store at the point of his rifle, but he was a coward at heart and he
-feared the consequences. He slowly dismounted and swaggered up to the
-porch with all the braggadocio he could muster. Scott rose to meet him.
-Foster climbed the two steps to the porch and glared down at Scott from
-his superior height.</p>
-<p>“I want to know what you mean by not giving us that logging contract?”
-he blustered fiercely.</p>
-<p>“Won’t you be seated?” Scott said quietly, as he offered him a chair.</p>
-<p>“I did not come here to sit down,” Foster growled angrily. “I came here
-to find out why you did not give us that logging contract.”</p>
-<p>“Oh,” Scott said as though puzzled, “I understood you to say that you
-came to train me to come when you called.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll do that, too, before I’m through with you,” Foster exclaimed,
-furiously. “Are you going to answer my question or will I have to beat
-it out of you?”</p>
-<p>Scott looked him calmly in the eye a moment and smiled contemptuously.
-“You want to know why I did not give this contract to ‘us’? Just whom do
-you mean? Who is ‘us’? You forget that you are a stranger to me.”</p>
-<p>Foster stared at him open-mouthed. Then the blood rushed to his already
-purple face, his neck swelled and his whole frame shook with the fury of
-his passion. His words were almost inarticulate. “You know me, you
-insolent hound. Everybody knows Foster Wait and a lot of ’em to their
-sorrow. Answer that question before I send you after old Jarred Morgan.
-I’ll teach you to insult a Wait!”</p>
-<p>Scott knew of Foster’s furious temper and he had been doing his best to
-arouse it. He wanted him to fight and he knew that he would not do it
-except in a fit of passion. He knew his danger and he watched the man’s
-every move as he gave his temper one more prod.</p>
-<p>“Talk sense, Mr. Wait, if you want an answer from me,” he sneered.
-“Threats do not scare me any more than they do old Jarred Morgan.”</p>
-<p>Foster gave a roar of rage and threw forward his long rifle. He would
-undoubtedly have shot Scott as he had shot several other men when worked
-up to an uncontrollable passion, but Scott had been watching for just
-such a move.</p>
-<p>He had already grasped hold of a short piece of pipe which he had leaned
-up against a pillar of the porch in case of emergency, and when Foster
-threw forward his rifle he struck the barrel with all his might. The
-unexpected blow knocked the weapon out of Foster’s hands, and the bullet
-went through the roof of the porch.</p>
-<p>The suddenness of it all bewildered Foster for a moment and before he
-had fully recovered, Scott struck him a crushing blow on the jaw. The
-blow staggered him, but he quickly recovered his balance and threw
-himself upon Scott with the fury of a wild animal. He was usually a
-coward but now he was a crazy man, blinded by his passion, and did not
-realize what he was doing.</p>
-<p>His enormous size and great reach gave him a decided advantage in one
-way but it was partially offset by Scott’s skill and coolness. If he
-should succeed in landing one of his terrific but wild swings or in
-grappling his opponent the fight could have but one ending. Scott’s only
-chance was to keep out of his reach and hammer him into submission.
-Foster fought with all the wild fury of a madman; Scott, with the
-coolness of a boxing master.</p>
-<p>Again and again Scott landed blows which would have felled a smaller
-man. Some of them staggered this giant a little but most of them seemed
-to have no effect at all. Scott was handicapped by the necessity of
-keeping entirely out of his reach. A grazing blow on the side of his
-head warned him that if one of them should land squarely he would be
-done for.</p>
-<p>In attempting to avoid one of Foster’s mad rushes Scott stepped off the
-edge of the porch and fell on his back on the ground. Instantly Foster
-jumped for his head with both hobnailed boots. For the fraction of a
-second Scott, stunned by the fall, saw this demon hovering over him, and
-the sight almost sickened him. But he recovered just in time to roll
-suddenly over out of reach and spring to his feet. Foster, dazed by the
-escape of his victim, tripped and fell. Scott could have jumped on the
-lumbering giant there on the ground but he had been taught to play the
-game fair. Moreover, he did not want this man to have any excuse. He
-wanted to thrash him as he had never been thrashed before and make him
-acknowledge it.</p>
-<p>The men from both stores had edged up to the fence and almost forgotten
-the dead line in their excitement.</p>
-<p>Scott let the giant scramble to his feet unmolested, and paid dear for
-his chivalry. He had counted on this man’s dissipation sapping his
-endurance. It was beginning to tell on him. His breath was coming in
-great choking gasps but his mountain training had made him tough.
-Moreover, he realized that his strength was waning, and with that
-knowledge his blind fury gave way to craft.</p>
-<p>Scott had always boxed according to the rules of the ring, and he was
-taken entirely off his guard when Foster suddenly sprang some lumberjack
-tactics and landed his hobnailed boot squarely in his stomach. For a
-second everything turned black before him and he staggered like a
-drunken man. As in a haze he saw the giant spring forward to finish him
-off. With the instinct of the fighter, he side-stepped and the instant’s
-reprieve brought back his wandering senses and his wind.</p>
-<p>When he saw the slight effect of his blows earlier in the fight he had
-devoted himself almost entirely to defense and saved his strength till
-Foster should be tired out. Now he took the offensive with all his
-power. He rained blow after blow on the gasping giant with bewildering
-rapidity and finally, seeing the man was almost exhausted, he threw
-every ounce of strength into a blow square on the point of his chin.</p>
-<p>The big fellow staggered an instant and sank limply in a lifeless heap.
-Scott leaned panting against the fence. He was almost exhausted. Foster
-moved uneasily and raised himself groaning on one elbow.</p>
-<p>“Are you through training me to come when you call?” Scott asked between
-his gasps for breath.</p>
-<p>Foster rose slowly and wobbled towards the gate without a word. Not a
-word of sympathy came from his friends and they watched him clamber
-painfully on to his horse without offering any assistance. He rode
-slowly down the village street with drooping head, a thoroughly beaten
-man.</p>
-<p>The two groups of men walked silently back to the stores and left Scott
-still leaning against the fence, weak and sick, but filled with a
-feeling of intense satisfaction.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXIV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT MAKES A TRIP TO WASHINGTON</span></h2>
-<p>Scott leaned wearily on the picket fence for a long time after the old
-white horse had carried Foster out of sight up the mountain road. He did
-not bear any trace of the fight on his face, but his body was sore and
-he was very nearly exhausted. He could not but smile as he stood there
-with heaving chest to think how far he had departed from the policy of
-strict neutrality which he had laid down for himself. But from the
-remarks which Hopwood had dropped that morning he doubted whether it
-would make very much difference to the Waits.</p>
-<p>Well, it was done now, anyway, no matter what the Waits might think. He
-had shown them that he had no intention of running away, and he felt
-that he could now go about his own business without running the risk of
-being called a coward. As he turned toward the hotel he saw Hopwood
-leaning on the corner of the fence.</p>
-<p>“Well, Hopwood, did you see the big fight?” he asked smilingly.</p>
-<p>“That was a good job,” Hopwood replied soberly.</p>
-<p>“Shall I have to fight all of the rest of the Waits now, Hopwood?” Scott
-asked a little anxiously. He did not want to waste any more time waiting
-for these people or fighting them.</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. “Sewall told him he would get his ears boxed
-again. They will be glad of it.”</p>
-<p>“Listen, Hopwood. Is Sewall going to try to take the contract?” Scott
-asked earnestly.</p>
-<p>“No,” Hopwood replied emphatically. “How could he? There is not that
-much money in the whole country.”</p>
-<p>“I did not think there was myself but I wanted to make sure of it. Could
-you deliver a message for me, Hopwood?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood looked up eagerly. Collecting news and carrying messages were
-things he liked best to do. He did not have to speak. Scott could see
-that he was more than willing.</p>
-<p>“I have some business I want to attend to, Hopwood,” Scott continued,
-“and I’ll have to go away for a couple of days. If I go now it will look
-as though I have thrashed Foster and then run away. I want you to tell
-Foster Wait, or maybe it would be better to tell Sewall, if he is the
-real head of the family, that I am going away for three days but will be
-back here Saturday. You can tell the same thing to Jarred, too, so that
-they will all know it. Do you think that you have it straight now?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded gravely. “I always get messages straight,” he replied
-proudly. “You are sure you will be back Saturday?” He had taken a
-strange liking to this man who had treated him like a rational being and
-thrashed his surly uncle.</p>
-<p>“Yes, Hopwood, I’ll certainly be here Saturday without fail, and,” he
-added, for he could see how the friendship pleased Hopwood, “I would
-like to see you again pretty soon after I get back.”</p>
-<p>He might as well have saved himself the trouble, for Hopwood had gone to
-deliver his precious message. Scott sighed when he saw that the man was
-gone. He could not get used to his unexpected movements. He wasted no
-more thoughts on it now. The dinner bell rang, on time for once, and the
-station agent came in the gate.</p>
-<p>“Hear you beat up Foster Wait,” he grinned.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott admitted. “He forced it on me but I was glad of the
-opportunity. Who told you?”</p>
-<p>“One of the Wait boys told me, but that would have been unnecessary
-after I saw Foster.”</p>
-<p>“I wonder what the Waits will think of it?” Scott asked. He was anxious
-to have some one back up Hopwood’s opinion.</p>
-<p>“They are as tickled as you are,” the agent answered confidently. “He is
-always bragging, and none of them like him. He’ll probably have to quit
-the country after this.”</p>
-<p>Scott was glad to hear it. That would leave him free to carry out his
-plans. He told the agent of the trip he was going to make, and spent the
-afternoon busily working over a bunch of legal-looking papers. Four
-o’clock found him on the afternoon train headed north, an impatient
-traveler.</p>
-<p>Scott had not told any one where he was going. If he had said that he
-was going to Washington, they would have thought that he was running
-away as the other fellows had done. But he was going to Washington, and
-when he got there he lost no time in going to the Forest Service office
-and to the chief of his division.</p>
-<p>Mr. Johns seemed very much surprised to see him back so soon. “Well,
-Burton,” he laughed, “I didn’t think that they could put the run on you,
-not so soon, anyway.” He laughed, but at the same time it was plain that
-he was disappointed.</p>
-<p>“Well, they have,” Scott replied, “but I am going back.”</p>
-<p>Mr Johns brightened at once. “That sounds better,” he said heartily.</p>
-<p>“There are one or two things about that logging contract I want to make
-sure of,” Scott said. “As I understand it, those logs have been sold and
-we have contracted to have them delivered at a certain time.”</p>
-<p>“That’s right,” Mr. Johns agreed. “It is rather an unusual thing to do,
-but we were forced to it in this instance or we could not have bought
-that piece of land for the forest at all.”</p>
-<p>“And now,” Scott continued, “we are responsible for the delivery, and no
-one will take the logging contract.”</p>
-<p>Mr. Johns frowned. “I thought that man Reynolds told me that he had
-arranged for the logging contract before he left.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe he thought he had,” Scott replied bitterly, “but he hadn’t.”</p>
-<p>“Don’t be bashful in saying what you think about him,” Mr. Johns urged.
-“He was a man we took on temporarily, and we’ve let him out again.”</p>
-<p>“It is a good thing,” Scott said. “I think I should have killed him
-myself if he had stayed there. Do you know the situation down there, Mr.
-Johns?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Mr. Johns replied, “I am beginning to think that I do not. Two men
-were sent there before you were. Both of them seemed to be getting along
-fine according to their reports, but one suddenly resigned and the other
-asked for a transfer. Neither of them gave a very satisfactory reason.”</p>
-<p>Scott grinned. “I can tell you the reason. There is an A1 feud down
-there. Those fellows tied up with one party, and the other one ran them
-out of the country.”</p>
-<p>Mr. Johns was intensely interested and insisted on knowing all the
-details. “But why not ignore both factions and give the contract to an
-outsider? That is altogether possible.”</p>
-<p>“That’s what I thought,” Scott said, “but everybody knows of that feud,
-and no one will touch the contract for fear of getting mixed up in it.”</p>
-<p>Mr. Johns rubbed his forehead in perplexity. “And unless we can deliver
-those logs on time we’ll lose our option on that piece of land. What are
-you going to do about it?” He looked at Scott helplessly.</p>
-<p>“Resign like the rest of them,” Scott grinned.</p>
-<p>“Oh, come now, Burton,” Mr. Johns remonstrated. “I did not expect that
-of you. You have the reputation of being resourceful and a fighter. You
-are not going to resign and let yourself be run out of the country at
-the first sign of trouble, are you?”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott replied firmly, “I’m going to resign but I’m not going to
-be run out of the country. I want to resign and take that logging
-contract myself.”</p>
-<p>Mr. Johns looked at him a moment in open-mouthed astonishment. “Do you
-mean that?” he asked eagerly.</p>
-<p>Scott nodded. “If it will be all right with you. I am going to put in my
-bid. I had some experience logging my own timber last winter, you know,
-and I’d be willing to spend my last dollar to beat that feud down
-there.”</p>
-<p>His chief thought a moment. “It’s a bit irregular, and I’ll have to take
-it up with the forester, but under the circumstances I believe it can be
-done.”</p>
-<p>The upshot of the matter was that Scott started back for North Carolina
-the next day with the assurance that if no one else made a satisfactory
-bid, his resignation would be accepted and he would be awarded the
-contract.</p>
-<p>Three days before he had been hoping for some one to bid on that same
-contract; now he was praying with all his heart that no one would.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT HEARS SOME RUMBLINGS OF THE OLD FEUD</span></h2>
-<p>Scott stopped for a day in Asheville to make some business arrangements
-for starting the logging operations in case he was awarded the contract
-and then hurried back to Caspar. He found Hopwood, who had constituted
-himself his faithful follower, waiting for him in the corner of the
-hotel yard.</p>
-<p>“I knew you’d come back,” Hopwood remarked in a tone of extreme
-satisfaction.</p>
-<p>“Why?” Scott asked. “Did any one think that I was not coming back?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded. “They all said you had run away like all the others, and
-Foster has been taking most of the credit for it.”</p>
-<p>Scott ground his teeth. “I suppose that will set him up in business
-again with the rest of the family.”</p>
-<p>“A lot of them believed it, but now that you have come back he will
-probably have to leave the country himself. None of them will believe
-him now.”</p>
-<p>“Well, tell them that I have come back, Hopwood, and I’ve come back to
-stay. They will find out before I am through that I am not very badly
-scared after all.”</p>
-<p>“Has any one taken the logging contract?” Hopwood asked eagerly. “It
-would help me if I could predict it right,” he added wistfully.</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him curiously a moment. The more he saw of Hopwood the
-harder it was for him to believe him an idiot. In any event it was
-perfectly clear that he was devoted to him and he decided to make him
-his confidant. It could not do him much harm if the man of the iron hat
-did not keep faith in this and it might make him a closer friend.</p>
-<p>“Yes, Hopwood, some one has bid on it. You can safely predict that the
-logging will begin in ten days, for—but you must not publish this part
-of it—if no one else takes the job I am going to resign and take it
-myself.”</p>
-<p>“Oh!” Hopwood exclaimed with a gasp of satisfaction. “I won’t tell them
-but you don’t know how much good it will do me to know that.” And
-without waiting to make his usual mysterious disappearance he walked
-quickly into the woods to carry the news of Scott’s return.</p>
-<p>Scott was not surprised to find that no one had responded to his call
-for bids. He had found out in Asheville that there was practically no
-chance of any one showing any interest in it. He hoped no one would. He
-had to confide his plans to the station agent because he had to send a
-number of telegrams. Probably Caspar had never done such a business in
-telegrams before in all its existence, even when the feud was at its
-height.</p>
-<p>For the next week Scott devoted all his time to a careful study of the
-area which was to be logged. From breakfast till supper-time every day
-he hiked over the mountains, running out the boundary lines, sketching
-the topography and tentatively locating the logging roads. This work led
-him through the territory and by the cabins of many of the Waits but he
-did not see any of them. They seemed to be sulking in their tents.</p>
-<p>It seemed to Scott to be a strange country. Long straight slopes
-stretched unbroken to the high, level ridges. They were grooved every
-quarter mile or less with shallow draws and not far below the ridge in
-these draws were springs which sent tiny, crystal-clear streams of
-ice-cold water trickling down into the valley. The low places and also
-many of the higher slopes were covered with a solid mat of rhododendron
-and laurel, so thick that a man was obliged to break or cut his way
-through it. It was the densest growth he had ever seen outside of the
-cane brakes of Florida. The great masses of white flowers made a
-wonderful sight, but after he had tried to run a line through the stuff
-for a couple of days he could no longer see the flowers.</p>
-<p>But the ridges were the strangest of all. They were narrow but straight
-and level, so level that the old Indian trails followed them rather than
-the valleys. And the big red oaks came right up to the top. Only at long
-intervals did the ridges dip to a low pass; otherwise, they stretched
-for miles as level as the floor and were clear of underbrush.</p>
-<p>It was on one of these level, open trails that Scott had the scare of
-his life. He had been familiar with razorback hogs in Florida. He had
-seen one tear a hound to pieces one day and had learned to fear the
-animals as he feared nothing else in the forest. Tall, thin and capable
-of great speed, they were entirely different from any hogs he had ever
-seen at home. Their heads were half as long as their bodies, with large
-tusks and powerful jaws, and they were fearless. Once they had made up
-their minds to charge, nothing would turn them. One had to kill them or
-get out of the way.</p>
-<p>One morning as Scott was going out to work he saw an old sow with a
-litter of very small pigs in a clump of bushes beside the trail, and he
-gave her a wide berth. That evening on the way home he had forgotten all
-about her. He was absorbed in his plans for the logging job and wholly
-oblivious of his surroundings. The razorback never entered his head.</p>
-<p>A large red oak three feet in diameter had fallen across the trail and
-Scott vaulted it mechanically, hardly knowing what he was doing. His
-feet had scarcely struck the ground when he heard a vicious “woof,” and
-the old sow darted out from under the other end of the log headed
-straight for him under a full head of steam.</p>
-<p>Scott was frightened as he had never been frightened before. With one
-terrified spring he vaulted back over the log. That would have been
-sufficient protection from an ordinary pig, but a fallen tree meant
-nothing to a razorback. She cleared the tree without the slightest
-hesitation and was close behind him.</p>
-<p>This unexpected jump so terrified Scott that he bolted like a frightened
-horse. He had never been a very fast runner but now he turned straight
-down the side of the mountain and made a new life record. It seemed to
-him that his feet were hitting the ground only about every thirty feet.
-Below him he saw a stream with high, steep banks, and at one point a
-tree had fallen across it. He made madly for that spot, somehow managed
-to stay on the log, tripped and fell in a heap on the other side. He
-scrambled to his feet expecting to find those ugly tusks at his very
-throat only to find instead that the old sow was fully satisfied with
-his retreat and was already trotting back up the slope to her babies.</p>
-<p>Scott could not help laughing as he thought what a great show it would
-have been for a spectator. The conqueror of Foster Wait breaking the
-world’s record in his endeavors to get away from an angry pig. And yet
-it might have been serious, and he knew that he would run as fast or
-faster next time.</p>
-<p>He was getting himself together for the climb back up the ridge when he
-noticed a deeply worn trail along the edge of the little creek. He
-thought at first that it was made by the razorbacks and the cattle which
-roamed around the mountains in considerable numbers, but he was
-surprised to find that the tracks were made by men, and some of them
-very recently.</p>
-<p>Where could such a well-worn path as that lead to away up there on the
-mountainside? It might be a short cut over the ridge into the Tennessee
-valley, but why should so many people be traveling that way on foot?
-These people always rode horseback whenever they were going any
-considerable distance. He determined to follow it up and find out for
-himself. It was on the forest and it was his business to know about it.</p>
-<p>The trail run obliquely upward across the face of the mountain and in
-the next draw it ducked into a dense patch of rhododendron. There it was
-very evident that the trail had been built for a purpose. It was cut out
-clear two feet wide and had been used so long that the stubs had all
-been worn down smooth.</p>
-<p>While he was examining it he was startled by the sound of approaching
-voices, raised high in argument if not in an actual quarrel. At first
-the voices were too distant for the words to be distinguished. Scott had
-no reason to avoid these people whoever they might be, and it never
-occurred to him to hide till he caught a sentence distinctly.</p>
-<p>“I tell you, Foster, it won’t do. You were licked and you are done for,
-and that is all there is about it.”</p>
-<p>Scott did not recognize the voice, but he had every reason to believe
-that they were talking about him and he wanted to hear the rest of it.
-He slipped back of a big oak tree beside the trail and listened. The
-voices came nearer till he could distinguish both sides of the
-conversation.</p>
-<p>“I know it would work.” It was Foster speaking now, and his voice was
-thick and sullen. “Why wouldn’t it work? If I started a fight, the
-Morgans would have to fight; and if they fought, the Waits would have to
-fight, and then we would clean them up. It’s time they were cleaned up.
-They kept us from getting that logging contract and they’ll keep us from
-getting anything else. I’m for cleaning them up, I tell you.”</p>
-<p>“And I’m telling you that it won’t work,” the other voice answered
-curtly.</p>
-<p>“Why won’t it?” Foster persisted. “Are you afraid of them?”</p>
-<p>“Afraid of them?” the other exclaimed contemptuously. “No, but I am not
-fool enough to fall for your scheme. And neither will the others. You’re
-down and out. You know it and you think you can get back on your feet by
-starting a fight. Well, you can’t.”</p>
-<p>Scott peeped around the tree and saw them standing at the entrance of
-the tunnel into the rhododendron. One, as he already knew, was Foster
-Wait. The other was a short man of medium build, and rather clean-cut
-features. He seemed wide awake and altogether different from the other
-Waits he had seen. Instinctively he felt from what Hopwood had said that
-this man must be Sewall Wait, the brains of the family.</p>
-<p>The smaller man was staring silently at Foster with a manner showing
-both domination and disgust. Foster shifted uneasily from one foot to
-the other and looked uncertainly about him. He was unable to look Sewall
-steadily in the eye, but his braggart habit finally came to his rescue.</p>
-<p>“Well, it doesn’t matter so much what you think. It is up to me to
-decide and if I say fight, you will have to fight,” and he swaggered off
-down the trail up which Scott had come.</p>
-<p>Sewall looked after him contemptuously for a moment, shrugged his
-shoulders, and turned into a faint trail which led straight down the
-mountain.</p>
-<p>When they were both out of sight Scott came out of his hiding place. He
-decided to investigate the trail at some other time, and climbed back to
-the ridge. What he had just heard gave him something to think about. He
-knew now that there was nothing neutral about him. His sympathies were
-all with old Jarred and he hurried home to warn him of his danger.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXVI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XVI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT HAS AN INTERVIEW WITH SEWALL</span></h2>
-<p>The next day Scott was still worrying over what he had overheard on the
-mountain the evening before. He did not know what to do. At first he had
-determined to carry a warning straight to old Jarred Morgan, but what
-good would that do? Jarred could not stop the Waits from starting a
-fight even if he tried, and no one had ever heard of his trying.</p>
-<p>He wanted to see Hopwood and ask his advice but for once Hopwood did not
-show up when he was wanted. He wasted all the forenoon watching for him.
-Then he suddenly remembered what Hopwood had said about Sewall being the
-real leader of the Waits and determined to go and see him at once. He
-had two reasons for going. He wanted to see where he stood on the
-question of the feud, and he wanted to know if it was he who was talking
-to Foster the day before.</p>
-<p>Immediately after lunch he started for the cabin which the agent pointed
-out to him as a speck up on the mountainside. On the way up he saw
-Foster approaching on his white horse, but Foster evidently did not care
-to meet the man who had given him such a thrashing and turned off into
-the woods. He had his rifle with him and Scott did not feel comfortable
-till he was well past the spot. He half expected to hear a shot and had
-an uncomfortable feeling that some one was aiming at a spot between his
-shoulder blades.</p>
-<p>When he came in sight of the cabin he was surprised at its appearance.
-All the Wait cabins he had seen were slovenly and seedy-looking, as
-though no one had taken any interest whatever in them since they were
-first built. This one was very different. The inevitable picket fence,
-which Scott had now learned was to keep out the wandering razorbacks,
-was neatly whitewashed. The house was newly painted and the roof had
-recently been shingled. There was real sod in the yard and there was a
-bed of gorgeous flowers beside the porch.</p>
-<p>Scott stopped at the gate and shouted. A middle-aged woman came to the
-door and looked surprised at the sight of a stranger. Scott’s surprise
-was even greater. Instead of the regulation Mother Hubbard which all the
-women in that country seemed to wear, this woman was neatly dressed in a
-blue house dress and a white apron. She quickly recovered from her
-surprise and smiled pleasantly.</p>
-<p>“Won’t you come in?” she said sweetly. “This is one house,” she
-explained, “where you don’t have to stand outside and shout.”</p>
-<p>Scott thought at first that she was criticizing his manners, but he saw
-from the way she said it that she was stating this only as a matter of
-pride.</p>
-<p>“I am glad to know there is one such place,” Scott said. “I was told
-that it is always safer to shout, and they did not tell me that there
-were any exceptions. Does Mr. Sewall Wait live here?”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” she replied offering him a chair. “Please have a seat and I’ll
-call him. It is such a beautiful day that I am sure you will find it
-pleasanter here on the porch than inside.”</p>
-<p>Scott was a little disappointed for he would have liked to see what the
-inside of this house was like, but he thanked her and took the offered
-chair. He did not have long to wait. He heard quick footsteps inside the
-house, and the man he had seen with Foster stepped briskly out on to the
-porch.</p>
-<p>Scott arose. “Mr. Wait, my name is Burton, and I am the new supervisor
-at Caspar.”</p>
-<p>Sewall had sized him up at a single glance and extended his hand. “Glad
-to know you, Mr. Burton,” he smiled mischievously. “I have heard of you
-before from my cousin Foster.”</p>
-<p>Scott blushed like a schoolgirl. “I regret that I was forced into a
-quarrel with your cousin, but I assure you, Mr. Wait, that it was not of
-my seeking.”</p>
-<p>“Pshaw!” Sewall exclaimed heartily. “Don’t let that worry you. Everybody
-around here knows Foster, and I for one am glad that you thrashed him.”</p>
-<p>“I am glad that the rest of you feel that way,” Scott said. “But it was
-a shame that I had to do it when I was trying so hard to be absolutely
-neutral. When I heard of this feud, Mr. Wait, I determined not to get
-mixed up in it as the others had done. Unfortunately, Mr. Reynolds was
-ignorant of both the feud and the regulations, and he made promises to
-your family which the law would not permit me to keep. It is illegal to
-let a contract without submitting it to bids and requiring a bond. I
-admit frankly that I was glad of it, because I did not want to see
-either party get it as long as this feud exists.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t blame you,” Sewall agreed sadly. “It would just add to the mess
-that already exists.”</p>
-<p>“That is the reason I came to see you, Mr. Wait,” Scott exclaimed
-quickly. “It seems to me a pity for this feud to continue indefinitely.
-I heard that you had some influence with your family and I want to see
-if we can’t figure out some way to bring it to an end.”</p>
-<p>Sewall shook his head sadly. “Did you ever see old Jarred Morgan?” he
-asked hopelessly.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said. “I have met him and I admit that he turned my
-proposition down cold.”</p>
-<p>“That’s the trouble,” Sewall interrupted a little impatiently. “He will
-never give up. He and that little vixen of a Vic nurse the feud like an
-only child.”</p>
-<p>“That’s true enough,” Scott admitted. “But they are in the minority and
-I cannot blame them much. I cannot help but admire the old man’s
-gameness in a way. I thought possibly the larger party could afford to
-make the overture. You are an educated man, Mr. Wait, and you must see
-the futility of it.”</p>
-<p>“See it? Why, of course, I see it,” Sewall exclaimed bitterly. “I am the
-only one of the Waits who had the ambition to drag myself out of the
-Middle Ages in which the rest of them are living, and I’d make them drop
-that feud to-morrow if I could. Foster is the only one on this side who
-wants to keep it up. The rest would drop it quick enough if old Jarred
-would let them, but as long as he holds out, their pride will not let
-them give it up. And what would be the use of our quitting if Jarred did
-not?”</p>
-<p>“That’s true,” Scott sighed, “but I have not given up hope if you are
-willing. I want to try again to persuade Jarred.”</p>
-<p>“Go to it,” Sewall replied gloomily, “but you will not succeed.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe not,” Scott said, “but I want to try. Can I count on you to avoid
-any new outbreaks while I am trying?”</p>
-<p>“There will never be any more outbreaks if I can prevent it, Mr. Burton.
-And,” he added confidently, “I can prevent it unless Foster runs wild,
-and I doubt if he has the courage for that.”</p>
-<p>“Well,” Scott said, as he rose to go, “I certainly shall appreciate your
-help, and if I can ever be of any service to you, please let me know.”</p>
-<p>He left with the feeling that there was at least one man in the Wait
-tribe, and he marveled all the way home to think how this one individual
-had raised himself so far above all the others in spite of his
-surroundings. It made his own accomplishments seem small.</p>
-<p>Then he thought of the lonely old man on the other mountain, just as
-good a man and just as intelligent as Sewall. With the leadership in the
-hands of two such men there surely ought to be a reasonable way out. He
-determined to try once more in spite of the old man’s request not to
-mention it.</p>
-<p>When he came to the Morgan cabin it was unnecessary to shout. Jarred was
-sitting on the front steps and rose to welcome him. He even came part
-way to the gate.</p>
-<p>“Well,” he said with a smile, “I see you found a way to keep the
-contract out of the hands of the feudists even if you had to thrash one
-of them to do it.”</p>
-<p>Scott laughed at the old man’s humor. “It does seem like a strange way
-to keep neutral,” he admitted, “but it was forced on me.”</p>
-<p>The smile left Jarred’s face and he looked at Scott gravely. “Yes, I
-know it was, and let me give you a warning. Keep your eyes open from now
-on. That fellow will shoot you in the back if he gets a chance.”</p>
-<p>“I believe he would,” Scott agreed, “but I was talking to one of the
-Waits this morning who seemed to be altogether different.”</p>
-<p>“Sewall?” Jarred asked quietly.</p>
-<p>“Yes, I heard that he was the brains of the party and I went up to see
-him.”</p>
-<p>Jarred nodded. “Yes, Sewall is different. If all the Waits were like
-Sewall there would not be any feud.”</p>
-<p>Scott took advantage of the old man’s calm mood. “You asked me not to
-say anything more about dropping the feud, but I want to say something
-about it just once more if you will let me.”</p>
-<p>Old Jarred’s face turned dark with sudden anger and Scott saw that he
-was going to be ordered out with little ceremony. But the order did not
-come. For a moment there was intense silence. Then the old man spoke,
-and his voice was quiet and rather sad.</p>
-<p>“I know what you would say, but go ahead.”</p>
-<p>Scott was so surprised that he could scarcely find the words now that he
-had the opportunity. Then he blurted out his words like a schoolboy.</p>
-<p>“It is only this, Mr. Morgan. I could not help thinking when I found out
-what sort of men you two were, what a pity it was for you to hold out as
-a matter of pride till one of you is killed, and Mr. Wait said that he
-would be glad to drop the whole thing if you would. Is there no way out
-of it?”</p>
-<p>Again Jarred’s face darkened but the wave of temper passed as the other
-had done.</p>
-<p>“I suppose that is the way it looks to a stranger,” he said slowly. “I
-suppose I seem like a stubborn old fool, all pride and nothing to back
-it up, keeping the whole country in arms for the fun of it.”</p>
-<p>“No, it’s not quite as bad as that,” Scott interrupted quickly.</p>
-<p>“Maybe you would not say it in those words,” Jarred replied quietly,
-“but it must be about what you think. If any one else had tried to tell
-me what you have I would have ordered him off the place, but I like you
-and I am deep in your debt. I am going to tell you something that I have
-not mentioned before in fifteen years.” He paused as though it were a
-great effort to break his prolonged silence. Then he continued with
-enforced calm:</p>
-<p>“Foster Wait shot my daughter in cold blood just fifteen years ago, shot
-her just to keep the feud from dying out. He brought it to life again,”
-he concluded grimly. “Now it will live till one of us dies.”</p>
-<p>They both sat motionless for a minute staring at the opposite mountain
-in silence. The old man was choked with his own suppressed fury. Scott
-was awed by the significance this statement gave to the conversation
-which he had overheard in the woods the day before. What if this
-cold-blooded murderer should shoot Vic this time to keep the feud alive?</p>
-<p>He knew that he dared say nothing more to Jarred. In fact, he could
-think of little more to say. “Thank you for your confidence in me, Mr.
-Morgan,” he said sincerely. “I promise not to mention the matter again.”</p>
-<p>Jarred did not seem to hear him. His eyes were still fixed on the
-opposite mountain, and when Scott looked back from the turn in the road
-he had not moved.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXVII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XVII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD TAKES A TRIP</span></h2>
-<p>For the next few days Scott was too busy to think anything of Foster
-Wait’s possible revenge. In fact he almost forgot the feud altogether.
-The time for the return of bids had come and he had been awarded the
-contract. He had wired in his resignation to Washington and was once
-more in the thick of a logging job.</p>
-<p>He wired to Asheville where he had already made his preliminary
-arrangements, and in two days carloads of men, lumber and supplies began
-to arrive. He had hired a friend of his old foreman to boss the job,
-another Scotchman, MacAndrews, who knew the country and the logging
-methods. Camp buildings of rough lumber sprang up like mushrooms in the
-valley near the railroad tracks, and the skid roads began to creep
-slowly up the mountain in the shallow draws toward the ridge.</p>
-<p>The log chute was of particular interest to Scott because he had never
-seen one. In that particular place there was a small side valley, larger
-than most of the shallow draws, and the log chute was built along the
-little stream in the bottom of it. It consisted of two strings of logs
-laid side by side on short ties and hewed flat on the inside to form a
-rough trough. The logs were peeled and rolled into it far up on the
-mountain and gravity brought them down with the speed of a toboggan.</p>
-<p>Near the bottom of it they built a contraption which they called a bear
-trap to break the speed of the logs before they came out on to the pile.
-It was a heavy log, one end of which was raised on a tripod over the
-chute while the heavy butt end rested in the chute. Scott never tired of
-watching the great logs rushing down at tremendous speed only to butt
-this big swinging log high in the air and slide gently out of the chute,
-their force all spent.</p>
-<p>Every now and then the silence of the valley was broken by a dull boom
-as the long saws chewed their way steadily through the great trunks and
-the majestic monarchs of the forest plunged headlong down the side of
-the mountain over which they had stood guard for centuries. And down the
-steep skid roads in the shallow draws the teams were hauling long trains
-of logs chained end to end.</p>
-<p>Everything was running as smoothly as a watch under MacAndrews’
-efficient management, and Scott would have been serenely happy but for
-one thing. He had not seen Hopwood for three weeks. Not since the first
-day of his return from Washington. And he had come to rely on Hopwood
-more than he realized. There was no one else who could keep him posted.
-The agent told him what little he heard, and he visited old man Sanders
-one evening. But without Hopwood they were almost as much in the dark as
-he was.</p>
-<p>One evening Sewall came to see him at the hotel which was considered
-neutral ground. He, too, was worrying about Hopwood.</p>
-<p>“So you have not seen him, either,” he said, as he was preparing to
-leave. “I do not know what to make of it. He never disappeared this way
-before. I have searched for him everywhere on this side of the mountain
-but no one has seen him. No one has seen him on the other side.”</p>
-<p>“Have you any suspicions about it?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>Sewall hesitated a moment. “He seems to have taken quite a shine to you
-and I thought maybe you had sent him on an errand somewhere. I wanted to
-find out before I said anything else.”</p>
-<p>“Now what are you going to do?” Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Again Sewall hesitated.</p>
-<p>“This is not mere curiosity on my part,” Scott added. “I look upon
-Hopwood as a good friend of mine, and I am as anxious to find him as you
-are. If you have any theory and I can do anything to help I want to do
-it.”</p>
-<p>Sewall still hesitated. “I don’t see how you can help me just now and I
-have not told any one my suspicions, but if you are a friend of his I
-might as well tell you what I am thinking. I can’t lower your opinion of
-Foster much. I have no basis for my suspicions, but I can’t help
-wondering if Foster has anything to do with it. He knows that Hopwood
-does not like him and he may have got him out of the way to keep him
-from working against him. I suppose you know how Hopwood came to be
-crazy?”</p>
-<p>Scott nodded. “I heard about it,” he said. “But surely Foster would not
-do him any farther injury when he is already responsible for that.”</p>
-<p>“Foster is desperate now,” Sewall replied, “and he would do anything. By
-the way, you want to keep on your guard yourself. He’ll never forgive
-you for thrashing him.”</p>
-<p>“I am watching him the best I can,” Scott replied. “I wish you would let
-me know what you find out about Hopwood, and I’ll send him right to you
-if I find him.”</p>
-<p>Sewall left and Scott sat pondering over the depths of Foster’s
-villainy. It did not seem possible that any one could do such a thing as
-that in cold blood, or that a man who had such a reputation could be
-left at large. He glanced up impatiently and saw Hopwood sitting on a
-chair near the door.</p>
-<p>“Why, Hopwood,” Scott exclaimed as he jumped forward joyously to greet
-him, “where have you been all this time?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood’s face beamed with pleasure as he recognized the sincerity of
-Scott’s greeting, and he spread out his hands in his old characteristic
-gesture.</p>
-<p>“Sewall was just here looking for you. He has searched all that side of
-the mountain, and I have been inquiring for you on this side. You’ve had
-us worried.”</p>
-<p>“I saw him,” Hopwood replied laconically.</p>
-<p>“Did you tell him where you had been?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Hopwood said, “he did not see me.”</p>
-<p>“You should have spoken to him, Hopwood. He is putting in all his time
-looking for you.”</p>
-<p>“I did not know that he cared that much about me,” Hopwood replied
-rather wistfully. “I’ll go right to him.”</p>
-<p>“You should,” Scott urged him earnestly, “for he cares a great deal
-about you, and so do I. You ought not to scare us that way.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood looked a little hurt. “I was trying to do something for you.
-That was why I went away.”</p>
-<p>“For me!” Scott exclaimed in astonishment. “How is that?”</p>
-<p>“Foster will shoot you if he gets a chance,” Hopwood replied
-confidently. “I went over to the county seat to try to get him arrested.
-If he was in jail it would be safer around here. It will never be safe
-while he is here.”</p>
-<p>“But you can’t get a man arrested for what you think he is going to do,
-Hopwood,” Scott remonstrated.</p>
-<p>“No, not for what he <i>has</i> done, either,” Hopwood replied bitterly. “He
-killed a little girl here years ago, Jarred’s daughter. It was not a
-fight, just plain murder. It was for that I wanted them to arrest him.”</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him wonderingly. “What did they say?”</p>
-<p>“They laughed at me,” Hopwood replied angrily. “Said they could not
-arrest any one on the word of a crazy man.”</p>
-<p>“Did you have on your iron hat?” Scott asked, a little amused in spite
-of himself.</p>
-<p>A rare smile came over Hopwood’s face. “There’s where I made my
-mistake,” he replied. “I forgot that I had it on.”</p>
-<p>“Why do you wear it, Hopwood?” Scott asked, his curiosity getting the
-better of him.</p>
-<p>Hopwood looked at him thoughtfully. “I’ll tell you some day. I’m not
-quite ready yet. What did Sewall think?” he asked shrewdly.</p>
-<p>“He thought that I might have sent you on an errand or that Foster might
-have done something to you.”</p>
-<p>An angry scowl spread over Hopwood’s brow. It was the first time Scott
-had ever seen such an expression there. “Foster will never do anything
-to me. If I did not have more sense than they think I have, it would be
-I who would do something to Foster.” It did not sound to Scott much like
-the speech of a half-wit.</p>
-<p>“Well, you’d better go see Sewall now. It will relieve his mind.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood started for the door without comment.</p>
-<p>Scott had not expected him to go so suddenly and called after him, “I
-certainly appreciate what you tried to do for me, Hopwood, and I would
-like to see you to-morrow if you get a chance. I have not had any news
-since you left.”</p>
-<p>It was pathetic to see how grateful Hopwood was for any appreciation. He
-stopped a moment in confusion. “I’ll be here,” he blurted with evident
-embarrassment and hurried out.</p>
-<p>“He may be crazy,” Scott thought, “but if he is, it is a pity that there
-are not more crazy people in the world. If it were not for that iron hat
-I would not believe it for a minute.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXVIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XVIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>DICK TURNS GENTLEMAN</span></h2>
-<p>These repeated warnings against Foster Wait began to get on Scott’s
-nerves. And yet there was very little that he could do to protect
-himself. He never carried a gun, and felt that he was safer without one.
-He was obliged to travel around over the forest continuously inspecting
-the logging job, and he could not devote all his time to watching for
-Foster Wait. He tried to forget it and go about his business as though
-Foster did not exist but he could not help thinking how many
-opportunities there were for this man to shoot him down from ambush, and
-it made him nervous. If Foster would only do something and show his
-hand, he could do something himself but till then he could only wait.</p>
-<p>A few days later something happened which put him more than ever on his
-guard. He was up near the ridge where they were making up the trains of
-logs for the skid teams. There was an enormous red-oak log forty-five
-inches in diameter lying in the skid road, and Jimmy Barnes, Scott’s
-best teamster, was waiting there with a team of large blacks ready to
-take it down. This particular team was untrained and very nervous. They
-had been assigned to Jimmy because he was the only teamster in camp who
-was willing and able to handle them.</p>
-<p>This one big oak log was in itself heavy enough for a load, but they
-never hauled a single log for fear it would roll sideways and become
-unmanageable. They always fastened a small log on behind to serve as a
-rudder. Jimmy was waiting for them to attach the small log. His team was
-getting so restless at the delay that he drove them around and hooked
-the heavy logging tongs to the end of the oak log. Not that he had any
-idea of trying to take it down alone, but just to give the team
-something to do and stop them from fretting.</p>
-<p>He had hardly straightened up from hooking on the tongs when the bushes
-beside the team were burst apart with a great commotion and Foster Wait
-jumped down the low bank into the skid road.</p>
-<p>The team made one wild lunge which almost jerked Jimmy off his feet and
-stopped trembling. The plunge turned the great log sideways on the
-slope, and it balanced uncertainly for a second on the stub of a small
-bush. Jimmy saw his chance, shouted wildly to the team and slapped them
-with the lines. If he could give that log another jerk before it started
-to roll he might be able to straighten it out. But the team balked. They
-trembled and jerked nervously but they refused to move, in spite of
-Jimmy’s efforts.</p>
-<p>Slowly the stub was bent down and the six-ton log was free. It rolled
-slowly down on to the horses. It had not yet gathered much momentum, but
-if it had been a smaller log it would have broken their legs. As it was,
-it just shoved their hind legs out from under them and they suddenly
-found themselves sitting on the revolving log with the heavy tongs and
-the logging chains clanking beside them at every turn of the log.</p>
-<p>It was too much for any team to bear. For a few yards they sat on that
-grinding log and ran with their front feet. Then with one mighty,
-terrified effort they succeeded in jumping clear of the log and plunged
-desperately down the skid road. But the tongs still held, and the big
-log rolled sullenly from side to side and held them back. Jimmy tried
-desperately to stay by his team, but an unexpected roll of the log threw
-him into the brush, the lines were jerked out of his hands and the team
-was completely out of control. The next instant the log struck a rock,
-the tongs pulled loose, and the freed team tore wildly down the steep
-skid road at breakneck speed.</p>
-<p>Scott took his eyes from the rapidly disappearing team long enough to
-take a glance at Foster and he felt sure that he saw a gleam of
-satisfaction on his face. When the team was out of sight and Jimmy had
-dug himself out of the brush Foster suddenly found himself the object of
-half a dozen pairs of angry eyes. He was frightened by the ugly looks of
-these men, but he succeeded in holding himself in check long enough to
-throw a bluff.</p>
-<p>“Some frisky team,” he remarked genially. “Any of you-all see a hound
-dog go by this way?”</p>
-<p>“I seen <i>one</i>,” MacAndrews exclaimed with an angry glare, “but he ain’t
-gone by yet.”</p>
-<p>The others snorted their amusement and Foster turned red. “I’ve lost
-mine,” he mumbled as he apologetically backed into the brush.</p>
-<p>“Better keep him away from here,” Mac shouted after him. “We’ll tie a
-can on him pretty quick.”</p>
-<p>Before Foster succeeded in breaking through the brush beside the road
-his flush had changed to a deadly pallor.</p>
-<p>“Who is that cuss?” MacAndrews demanded with a vicious snap of his jaws.</p>
-<p>“That is Foster Wait,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“Well, he is hanging around here more than is good for his health. He
-scared that team on purpose.”</p>
-<p>“I thought so, too,” Scott exclaimed, and he added a little anxiously,
-“did you say he had been around here before?”</p>
-<p>“Turns up somewhere around the job almost every day. He’ll come once too
-often some day. I expect that team is ruined.”</p>
-<p>Scott had been so absorbed in Foster Wait that he had forgotten the team
-for a moment. Now he found that Jimmy had run down the mountain in
-search of them, and he followed as fast as he could run.</p>
-<p>Was Foster hanging around the logging operation trying to get a chance
-at him or was he up to some other mischief? It did not seem likely that
-he was looking for him. Why should he come there where there were so
-many people when he could so very easily catch him out in the woods
-alone? No, he must be up to something else. And Scott determined that he
-would make it his business to find out what it was as soon as possible.</p>
-<p>He watched all along the road for traces of the runaway team. At each
-turn in the road he expected to find them piled up against a tree or in
-the ditch, but although the road was badly scratched up in places as
-though they had stumbled or slipped badly they had evidently made it.</p>
-<p>Some of the men whom he passed told him that the team had passed safely
-at that point and was going strong. When he came in sight of the landing
-beside the railroad track he spied the big blacks standing in a little
-bunch of men. Jimmy was rubbing them down and trying to soothe their
-ruffled nerves.</p>
-<p>They were pretty well lathered up from the long run, and one of them had
-an ugly cut in his side but otherwise they seemed to be all right. They
-had left the road on the turn by the skidway and had run between two
-trees. The space had not been wide enough for the double-tree, and the
-sudden jerk had thrown one of the horses. Before they could untangle
-themselves from the broken harness the men had caught them.</p>
-<p>“Better take them to the barn, Jimmy,” Scott said, when he had looked
-them over carefully and noticed their violently heaving flanks and
-trembling legs.</p>
-<p>“I’ll take them over and doctor that cut and the harness,” Jimmy
-replied, “but I’ll have them out after lunch. If they had a run like
-that every day for a couple of weeks they might get down to where a
-fellow could handle them.” It was the second time they had run away with
-Jimmy, and he was getting a little peevish. He was afraid that they
-might endanger his reputation as the best teamster in the mountains.</p>
-<p>Scott knew what was the matter. “Never mind, Jimmy, you are doing fine.
-Nobody else could handle them at all. Once you have trained them they
-will be the best team on the job.”</p>
-<p>“They are that now,” Jimmy replied stoutly. “They have the record for
-coming down that mountain, anyway. By the way, did you get that guy who
-scared them?”</p>
-<p>“No, we hadn’t any proof that he did it on purpose so we let him go.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t need any proof,” Jimmy retorted angrily. “That’s the third time
-he’s tried it, and if I ever catch him around here again I’m going to
-lose a peavey in him.”</p>
-<p>Scott did not say anything, but he made a mental note of what Jimmy said
-about it being Foster’s third attempt to scare the big black team. It
-was the first link in the chain of evidence he intended to collect
-against him.</p>
-<p>As long as he was down in the valley and it was so near noon Scott
-decided to go in to dinner. He was still staying at the hotel, not
-because he liked it, but it enabled him to keep in touch with local
-gossip through the station agent and he thought it might give him a
-better chance to see Hopwood. He was doubtful whether it would be a good
-thing for Hopwood to come around camp with that strange iron hat. The
-men would undoubtedly tease him, and he did not know how Hopwood would
-take it.</p>
-<p>As he passed the bunk house he heard some one singing inside. It was not
-usual for any one to be in the bunk house at that time of day, unless it
-was the bull cook, and it did not sound like him. Scott stepped in and
-found one of the swampers sprawled on a bench and crooning a maudlin
-song. His first thought was that the man might have been hurt in the
-runaway, but certainly some one would have mentioned it if he had.</p>
-<p>“Sick, Dick?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>The man looked at him with bleary eyes and arose with a ludicrous
-attempt at dignity. Scott saw at once that the man was drunk.</p>
-<p>“No, shur,” the man replied with an elaborate bow which almost upset
-him.</p>
-<p>“Then why aren’t you at work?” Scott asked sharply.</p>
-<p>“Becaush I don’t have to work for anybody,” Dick replied with another
-deep bow which brought him unexpectedly to his hands and knees on the
-bench in front of him. “I’m a gentleman, I am,” he added as he
-straightened himself with difficulty.</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him with disgust. “When Mac comes in tell him I said to
-give you your time,” he exclaimed impatiently and turned to the door.</p>
-<p>“Time,” Dick exclaimed. “Give me my time. I’ve got all the time there
-is. I’m a gentleman, I tell you.”</p>
-<p>Scott turned back with a new thought. “Where did you get that stuff?” he
-asked sternly.</p>
-<p>Dick winked at him slowly and shook his head. “A gentleman would never
-tell,” he replied knowingly.</p>
-<p>Scott slammed the door in disgust and left him still explaining his
-gentility to the empty room.</p>
-<p>Here was another thing he had to investigate.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXIX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD THROWS AWAY HIS IRON HAT</span></h2>
-<p>After dinner Scott stopped at the bunk house to see that his orders were
-carried out in regard to Dick. Dick had not delivered the message, but
-he did not have to. MacAndrews had spotted him shortly after Scott had
-discovered him and had started him down the track before dinner.</p>
-<p>Scott decided to devote the afternoon to collecting news from his
-friends in the hope that he could find out something which would throw
-some light on Foster’s actions. The station agent had heard nothing and
-he went up to see old man Sanders. The old man greeted him with his
-usual cordiality.</p>
-<p>“Come in, come in,” he said. “I hear you have beaten up the ogre and are
-succeeding in getting out the timber without his assistance. How did you
-do it?”</p>
-<p>Scott sat down in the proffered chair a little wearily. “Every one seems
-to be more interested in my fighting ability than in anything else. It’s
-a fine reputation for a man who started out to be an angel of peace.
-Things are going pretty well but there is something about it I do not
-like. Foster Wait is hanging around the logging operation all the time,
-and I can’t find out what he is up to. Haven’t heard anything about it,
-have you?”</p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders shook his head. “No,” he replied, “I have not heard anything
-at all. Hopwood seems to have deserted me, and Vic has not been down the
-mountain since the night you took her home. I can’t get around much
-myself and when those two desert me I don’t know much.”</p>
-<p>“I have not seen Hopwood for three or four days myself,” Scott said. “Do
-you suppose he has disappeared again?”</p>
-<p>“It is hard to tell what he is up to. The last time I saw him he was
-coming up the road there, but when he saw me he slipped into the woods.
-It was not like him. He never avoided me before.”</p>
-<p>Scott saw that there was nothing to be learned from Mr. Sanders and he
-rose to go. “Maybe he was just in a hurry and did not want to be
-delayed. He seems to be very busy on some scheme of his own.”</p>
-<p>“Poor fellow!” the old man sighed, “a lot of good his schemes will ever
-do anybody, but I suppose it gives him something to do.”</p>
-<p>Scott turned back from the gate. “Just what do you think of Hopwood, Mr.
-Sanders?”</p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders looked at him with a little surprise. “I thought I told you
-about him. He has never been right since Foster hit him in the head
-years ago.”</p>
-<p>“Yes, I know,” Scott interrupted. “You told me about that, but I have
-been wondering a good deal lately whether he is really as crazy as
-people think.”</p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders shook his head sadly. “I wish you were right but there is no
-chance. I have known him too long.”</p>
-<p>“Well, I think I’ll take a look for him, anyway. I like him, whatever he
-is.”</p>
-<p>Scott crossed the valley and took the road up the other slope towards
-Sewall Wait’s cabin. There were several other cabins along the road and
-as Scott approached one of them he saw a man come out of the gate, stand
-uncertainly for a minute and go back. The funny part of it was that he
-thought he recognized Dick, the man who had been fired from the camp
-that morning, but the distance was too great to be sure of it, and when
-he passed the cabin there was no one in sight. There seldom was any one
-in sight at any of these cabins. The children all ran away and hid at
-the approach of a stranger. Sometimes he caught a glimpse of some one,
-peeping out of the corner of a window, but that was all. It always made
-him feel uneasy to go by one of them.</p>
-<p>Sewall was home and glad to see him. Scott told him what Foster had done
-in the morning and how he was continually hanging around the camp.</p>
-<p>Sewall only shook his head doubtfully. “I don’t know what it is, but he
-is up to something. He has avoided me for a month. I don’t like the way
-he is chumming with some of the wilder of the young fellows. My boys
-don’t like him any better than I do, and they have tried to find out
-what he is doing but they can’t. I know his game but I can’t figure out
-his next move.”</p>
-<p>“Just what is his game?” Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>“He knows that the family has pretty much lost confidence in him as a
-leader, and he thinks that if he starts some trouble they will have to
-support him. That much is clear enough, but I can’t see how he can gain
-anything by jimming your logging job.”</p>
-<p>“I thought that was probably just revenge for the thrashing I gave him,”
-Scott said. “If that’s all it is I am not worried, for he can’t do very
-much harm, but I was afraid there might be something else back of it.”</p>
-<p>Sewall shook his head. “He is too big a coward to risk very much just
-for revenge. To shoot you in the back would be more like his methods. He
-beat up poor Hopwood the other day. That’s about his size,” he added
-bitterly.</p>
-<p>“That is what I really came up for,” Scott exclaimed quickly. “To find
-out whether you knew anything about Hopwood. I have not seen him for
-three or four days.”</p>
-<p>“I saw him this morning. Foster went after him with a club day before
-yesterday, and if it had not been for that old iron hat I think he would
-have killed him.”</p>
-<p>“The big bully. What was it about?” Scott asked eagerly.</p>
-<p>“He would not tell me, but I thought from the way he talked that it had
-something to do with you.”</p>
-<p>“Where is he?” Scott asked. If Hopwood had taken up his fight he wanted
-to know what it was so that he could take it up himself.</p>
-<p>“He is up in his cabin. I tried to bring him down here, but he would not
-come. He’s funny that way. I have never known him to sleep in anybody
-else’s cabin. If he can’t get home he sleeps out-of-doors.”</p>
-<p>“Where is his cabin?” Scott asked. “I must go and see him.”</p>
-<p>Sewall hesitated. “He does not usually like to have people come to his
-cabin.”</p>
-<p>“But can’t you see that if he got into this trouble on my account I must
-see him at once.”</p>
-<p>“Well,” Sewall admitted reluctantly. “I reckon he would not mind seeing
-you. His cabin is away up there on top of Jones’ Knob. The trail turns
-off this road about a half mile above here. It’s not very plain but I
-guess you can find it.”</p>
-<p>Scott took a hasty leave of Sewall and started in search of the trail.
-Sewall told the truth when he said that it was not very plain. Scott
-looked for it closely, but he passed it and had to come back in his
-search. He finally found a faint trace and followed it up over little
-ridges and down into the draws for an hour, always drawing a little
-closer to the peak. When he came out in the little flat opening on the
-top there was no cabin to be seen. He had never been there before but he
-knew that this was Jones’ Knob, and yet there was no cabin.</p>
-<p>Scott looked carefully around him and there on the edge of the clearing
-he discovered a tiny cabin nestled back in the edge of the spruce
-thicket. He hurried over to it and looked eagerly in the open door.
-There was a man lying on the bed, but at first Scott did not recognize
-him as Hopwood till he saw the iron hat lying on his chest. He appeared
-to be asleep.</p>
-<p>It was the first time Scott had ever seen Hopwood without his iron hat,
-and he took the opportunity to study him carefully. He was amazed at the
-high, well-formed forehead and fine features. The blank expression which
-he always wore when awake was entirely gone now. He seemed to feel that
-some one was staring at him and moved uneasily.</p>
-<p>As Scott did not want Hopwood to discover him there and think that he
-had been spying on him he knocked softly.</p>
-<p>Hopwood sat up suddenly at the first tap and hurriedly put on his iron
-hat. He was very much displeased at the intrusion, but when he saw who
-it was a radiant smile chased away his frown. Nor did the usual blank
-expression take its accustomed place.</p>
-<p>“I went up to see if Sewall knew anything about you,” Scott explained,
-“and he told me that you were hurt.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood’s face beamed when he heard that Scott had come in search of
-him, but a shadow of hatred passed over it when his injury was
-mentioned. It seemed as though a struggle were going on within him. The
-next instant he was as calm as usual.</p>
-<p>“I am glad you found me,” he said simply.</p>
-<p>“Is it true as Sewall said that you were hurt on my account?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood hesitated. “Sewall does not know why I was hurt,” he answered
-evasively.</p>
-<p>“But can’t you see, Hopwood, that if it had anything to do with me, I
-ought to know about it?”</p>
-<p>Still Hopwood was silent.</p>
-<p>“Foster has been acting queerly,” Scott continued. “He has been hanging
-around the camp all the time and this morning he scared one of the teams
-and almost ruined it. I am almost sure that he did it on purpose.”</p>
-<p>“He did,” Hopwood exclaimed angrily. “That was what my trouble was all
-about. He wanted me to set fire to the camps.”</p>
-<p>Scott gasped in astonishment. He had rather expected Foster to attempt
-some personal revenge but it had never occurred to him that his
-cowardice would ever drive him to use such an expedient as that. It was
-a move too degraded for Scott to understand.</p>
-<p>“When I refused,” Hopwood continued, “he tried to kill me for fear I
-would tell on him.”</p>
-<p>Scott was silent a moment. “I don’t suppose that will prevent him from
-getting somebody else to do it,” he said gloomily.</p>
-<p>“I doubt it,” Hopwood said. “If it burns now, everybody will know who
-did it.”</p>
-<p>“Could we have him arrested for assault?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. “There were no witnesses except his own family
-and they would swear to anything.”</p>
-<p>“Did he hurt you badly, Hopwood?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Hopwood answered, “not very, but if it had not been for my iron
-hat he would have killed me. He hammered me with a heavy club, bruised
-my shoulders and cut my face. I’m all right now.”</p>
-<p>Scott glanced questioningly at the bed.</p>
-<p>“Oh, I don’t have to stay there,” Hopwood replied with a laugh. “But
-since he knocked me crazy the first time I am always careful when I get
-hit on the head.”</p>
-<p>Certainly that did not sound like the talk of a crazy man, but Scott did
-not question him.</p>
-<p>“Is there anything I can do for you, Hopwood?”</p>
-<p>“Oh, no!” Hopwood exclaimed. “I’m all right. Won’t you stay and have
-supper with me?” he asked bashfully.</p>
-<p>“I wish I could,” Scott said, “but there are some things I have to
-attend to down at the camp. I hope I can some day. This is a beautiful
-place.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood came to the door with him, and they stood for a moment looking
-in silence at the beautiful scene before them, or rather below them.</p>
-<p>Jones’ Knob was the highest peak in that section, and they looked down
-upon a number of smaller mountains. The sun, setting rapidly over the
-western ridge, sent ever changing shadows over the eastern slopes. The
-evening mists were beginning to fill the valleys like a rising tide, and
-even as they watched one of the lower peaks was submerged in the sea of
-white.</p>
-<p>Scott roused himself. “It will be dark in the valley before I get down
-there if I don’t hurry. Take care of yourself, Hopwood.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll be down to-morrow,” Hopwood replied confidently, and as Scott
-disappeared down the winding trail he threw his iron hat far down the
-side of the mountain.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>AN ATTEMPT AT ARSON</span></h2>
-<p>As Scott had predicted, it grew dark in the valleys long before he
-reached home, and he lost the trail on the open ridge. He did not worry
-because he knew that if he went downhill he would soon come out on a
-road somewhere, but he was impatient of delay. He was anxious to get
-back to the camps since he had heard of Foster’s proposal to burn them
-up. Maybe he was trying it again now.</p>
-<p>It was awkward work going through the dense woods and brush in the dark,
-but as he expected it was not so very long before he came out into a
-road. He did not recognize the road at first but he knew that he must
-turn to the left if he would find the road up which he had come.</p>
-<p>About a half a mile further down he came upon an unusually large house
-and recognized it instantly as Foster Wait’s. There was a light in the
-room downstairs but the shades were drawn down tight. Scott was looking
-curiously at the house as he walked by when two silhouettes suddenly
-appeared on the white shade. He was not surprised to recognize one of
-them as Foster, but when he recognized the other he stopped short and
-almost cried aloud. It was Dick.</p>
-<p>Ordinarily Scott would have considered it dishonorable to eavesdrop, but
-he felt sure that the meeting of these two men had something to do with
-him. What better would Foster want than to get hold of a drunken man who
-was disgruntled over his treatment at the camp! Maybe that was his
-purpose in hanging around there.</p>
-<p>Under the circumstances Scott had no scruples about attempting to hear
-the conversation. He determined to crawl up to the window and listen.
-Hardly had he taken a step in that direction when the loud baying of a
-hound told him that it was hopeless. As much as he wanted to hear that
-conversation he beat a hasty retreat. And he was none too soon. The echo
-of the dog’s bark had hardly died away when he heard the door open and a
-voice roughly scolding the hound.</p>
-<p>Scott hurried down the road while his imagination ran riot in vain
-attempts to solve Foster’s plans. Foster Wait was not the man to take in
-a drunken lumberjack unless he intended to make use of him, and Scott
-felt sure that those plans had something to do with him. At one time he
-thought of going to Sewall for help, but his pride prevented him. He had
-protected himself before from smarter men than Foster and he would do it
-again.</p>
-<p>It was long after supper-time when Scott reached the camp; in fact, many
-of the men had already gone to bed. Fortunately the cook was up making
-bread, and he went into the cook shack to get a handout. Scott was a
-favorite with all the crew, and when the cook saw who it was he denied
-himself the grouch he usually enjoyed when any one intruded into his
-castle, and hunted up some coffee, ham, doughnuts and cookies—the
-unvarying lumberjack handout—as though he enjoyed it.</p>
-<p>Scott was absorbed in his own thoughts and let the cook do most of the
-talking, but as he was leaving a thought occurred to him. “By the way,
-Ben, if Dick should come back here for a handout any time, keep him here
-and send for me. I want to talk to him.”</p>
-<p>He went out through the bunk house and motioned to Mac to follow him.
-When the foreman came out he led him over to a log a little way from the
-bunk house and sat down.</p>
-<p>“Mac, I have seen and heard a couple of things to-day which have me
-pretty badly worried.”</p>
-<p>Mac looked at him keenly in the dim starlight. “I’ll bet it’s got
-something to do with that guy who scared the team this morning.”</p>
-<p>“You guessed right the first time.”</p>
-<p>“I knew it,” Mac exclaimed. “I’ve been thinking about him all day. What
-is he up to now?”</p>
-<p>“Day before yesterday he tried to get a man to set fire to these camps.”</p>
-<p>“Set fire to ’em!” Mac almost shouted. “The dirty scoundrel!”</p>
-<p>“And to-night,” Scott continued, “I came by his house and happened to
-see him talking to the man you fired this morning.”</p>
-<p>Mac gave an angry snort of disgust. “That’s a fine howdy-do. A man who
-wants to find somebody to burn down the camp and a drunken lumberjack I
-fired this morning. Couldn’t find a better combination than that in all
-North Carolina.”</p>
-<p>“I came right on down here to warn you, because I thought you would want
-to put on a guard,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“Put on a guard nothing,” Mac exclaimed contemptuously. “We’ll go up
-there and clean them out. The boys would enjoy it and I can have the
-crew out in ten minutes.”</p>
-<p>“I know the men could do it, Mac, and would probably enjoy it, but it
-would stir up too much of a row. If it were just those two it might be
-all right, but he is a leader of a big gang and we would have to fight
-all the people on that side of the mountain.”</p>
-<p>“Well, we can do that, too,” Mac answered doggedly. “Nobody ever burned
-my camps yet and nobody’s going to.”</p>
-<p>“Just the same,” Scott insisted, “we’re not going to fight that gang. We
-might do them up all right, but there would not be much logging done
-around here for the next month or two, and I’m here to get those logs
-out.”</p>
-<p>Mac sat for a while in sullen silence. “Well, what are you going to do
-then, let them burn you up?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Scott cried impatiently. “I have no more notion of burning up than
-you have, and if you cannot find a man here to keep watch at night I’ll
-do it myself.”</p>
-<p>Again Mac sat for a while in silence. His stubborn Scotch blood was slow
-to give in. The last voices had died away in the bunk house and Ben had
-finished his work in the cook shack. There was not a sound save an
-occasional snore and the scream of an owl far up on the mountain.</p>
-<p>Mac finally surrendered as he had known he would from the first, and was
-about to speak when a crackling of twigs in the forest behind them
-brought them both bolt upright with nerves a-tingle and eyes and ears
-straining. They could see nothing, but it was evident that some one was
-making his way slowly through the woods towards the bunk house and was
-making a great deal of noise doing it.</p>
-<p>“If that fellow is sneaking up on us, he must think we’re dead,” Mac
-whispered.</p>
-<p>There was a loud crash as though some one had fallen over a log. They
-heard some mumbling but could not distinguish the words. After a few
-seconds of silence the advance on the bunk house began again. A man
-passed slowly within ten feet of them and made his slow way to the side
-of the bunk house. They could hear him scraping together dead leaves and
-brush.</p>
-<p>Scott and Mac crept silently up to where they could see what he was
-doing, and Scott was not at all surprised to recognize Dick. He had
-scraped together a big pile of leaves and heaped them against the side
-of the bunk house. Scott gathered himself for a spring as he saw him
-fumbling in his pocket for a match to set fire to the leaves.</p>
-<p>But instead of taking out a match Dick stuck both hands in his pockets
-and swayed back and forth staring curiously at the bunk house.</p>
-<p>“Can’t burn that,” he mumbled. “Wouldn’t be gentlemanly to burn the bunk
-house with all those men in it. Can’t get ’em out without wakin’ ’em
-up.”</p>
-<p>He scratched his head in perplexity for a minute and then started toward
-the barn. Scott punched Mac in the ribs and they both followed. At the
-barn Dick repeated the performance. When his leaves were all piled he
-remembered the horses. Again he stopped and scratched his head. “No
-gentleman would burn a horse,” he mumbled.</p>
-<p>For a moment he stared helplessly about him. Then he seemed to get an
-idea. He made his way uncertainly to the door of the barn and
-disappeared inside. They watched to see that he did not strike a match,
-but did not interfere with him. After a considerable time he stumbled
-out leading two sleepy horses. He turned them loose outside and went
-back for two more. The first pair, finding themselves free and having no
-desire to go to work at that time of the night went back into the barn.
-Dick stopped and looked at them wonderingly as he led out two more.</p>
-<p>Scott and Mac were almost in hysterics. “Let me handle him,” Scott
-whispered.</p>
-<p>“Hello, Dick!” Scott exclaimed, suddenly, “what are you doing out here
-at this time of night?”</p>
-<p>Dick dropped the halters of the horses he was leading and braced himself
-as though he expected somebody to jump on him.</p>
-<p>“Why don’t you come inside and go to bed? It’s late,” Scott continued.</p>
-<p>Dick relaxed when he saw he was in no immediate danger of attack, and
-winked at them knowingly. “Didn’t you give me my time?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Give you your time!” Scott exclaimed. “Certainly we gave you your time,
-but you were drunk then. You’re sober now. Why don’t you let Foster Wait
-get somebody else to do his dirty work for him? No gentleman would want
-to burn another man’s buildings.”</p>
-<p>Dick looked at him uncertainly for a minute and then straightened up
-with painful dignity.</p>
-<p>“That’s right,” he said. “That’s what I was going to tell him. No
-gentleman would burn a horse.”</p>
-<p>“Of course not,” Scott agreed. “Come on in.”</p>
-<p>He took Dick by the arm and led him into the bunk house. “There’s your
-bunk. Crawl in.”</p>
-<p>Dick obeyed without a word but as he rolled over they heard him mumble,
-“I’ll show him he can’t give me an ungentlemanly job.”</p>
-<p>“Going to call up the sheriff?” Mac asked when they were outside.</p>
-<p>“No,” Scott replied emphatically. “Arrest him, and when he gets out
-he’ll join Foster again. Put him to work in the morning and he’ll be all
-right.”</p>
-<p>“Reckon you’re right,” Mac admitted. “Good night.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT FINDS THE STILL</span></h2>
-<p>Dick went cheerfully to work with the other men in the morning and
-seemed to have forgotten all his troubles. Mac put on a guard to watch
-the buildings at night and he kept a sharp lookout for Foster in the
-daytime, but that gentleman seemed to have realized his danger and kept
-out of sight.</p>
-<p>Scott had begun to think that Foster must have left the country when he
-spied him one day sneaking through the woods a short distance from the
-camp. But Foster evidently saw him and immediately disappeared in the
-brush.</p>
-<p>Everything at the camp was in good working order now. The four felling
-crews were hard at it, each one working up a narrow strip from the
-valley to the ridge. Their progress was marked by the steady booming of
-the falling trees. The skid teams followed each other in an almost
-continuous procession with their train of logs, and the big steam jammer
-loaded them on to the cars on the siding as fast as they came down.</p>
-<p>Over in the main draw other felling crews were cutting logs for the
-chute and they were popping down so steadily that the old bear trap was
-playing a regular tune.</p>
-<p>Scott used to stand on the railroad track or the hotel porch and look up
-at the slope with pride. For he had marked that timber for cutting when
-he was still supervisor and he had done it well. Instead of the barren,
-blackened hillside which the logger usually leaves behind him there was
-enough small timber left standing to make it look almost like a virgin
-forest. Some one could log there again before so very many years.</p>
-<p>It looked as though the feud were practically dead. Sewall could report
-no new developments. Hopwood had not shown up with any news for a long
-time, not since Scott had visited him in his cabin, but he had sent him
-word occasionally by Sewall. Scott thought that he was avoiding the
-camps.</p>
-<p>One day Scott’s peace was rudely shattered. He had stayed at home that
-morning to finish up some correspondence. Just before noon MacAndrews
-came bursting into the room. He was so mad that there were tears in his
-eyes and he was almost inarticulate. He strode up and down the full
-length of the room twice, waving his arms wildly, before he could get a
-word out of himself.</p>
-<p>Scott was pale with apprehension. “What under the sun is the matter,
-Mac?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>“Drunk,” Mac shouted savagely. “The whole blame crew’s drunk.”</p>
-<p>“Drunk?” Scott echoed in his astonishment, while Mac continued to walk
-the floor.</p>
-<p>“Dead drunk,” Mac repeated in disgust. “In the middle of the morning,
-and not a lick of work to be got out of any of them.”</p>
-<p>“Where did they get it?” Scott asked, for both he and Mac had exerted
-every possible effort to keep whisky out of the camp.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Mac roared, “that is the question. Where did they get it? I’ve
-asked them all and beaten up half of them and not a word have I got out
-of any one. Show me the man who brought it in, that’s all I ask.”</p>
-<p>Suddenly a new thought occurred to Scott. “Where are they, Mac?”</p>
-<p>“Lying all over the woods.”</p>
-<p>“I thought so. Round them up into the bunk house, Mac. This is something
-that I think I can solve.”</p>
-<p>“You mean to say that you are not going to fire them?” Mac shouted in
-amazement.</p>
-<p>“Certainly not,” Scott answered with decision. “Do you think I want the
-whole crew added to Foster Wait’s gang? If I am not mistaken, that was
-the purpose in getting them drunk. Round them up in the bunk house where
-they can’t get any more, and I’ll see what I can do. Isn’t there any one
-sober enough to help you?”</p>
-<p>“Ben and the bull cook seem to have been overlooked,” Mac growled.</p>
-<p>“They were in camp, that’s the reason. Get them to help you,” Scott
-ordered, as he took his hat and started for the door.</p>
-<p>Mac, growling like a polar bear, went back to camp to carry out Scott’s
-orders. He wanted to fire the whole crew and it went against his grain
-to have to act as nursemaid to such a bunch, but orders were orders with
-him, and he would carry them out to the letter.</p>
-<p>Scott started straight for the opposite mountain growling almost as
-savagely as Mac at his own stupidity. Why hadn’t he guessed where Dick
-had obtained his whisky? And why hadn’t he guessed why Foster had been
-hanging around the camp? And why hadn’t it occurred to him what was at
-the end of that well-beaten trail up there on the mountains? He had
-certainly been a bonehead, but now he was determined to get to the
-bottom of it, and the first thing to do was to follow out that trail.</p>
-<p>He was walking rapidly up the road, still grumbling at his stupidity,
-when he saw a stranger sitting on a stump beside the road. He had almost
-passed him when he realized with a start that it was Hopwood. His iron
-hat was replaced with a soft felt such as all the mountaineers wore and
-it changed his appearance completely. He laughed when he saw Scott’s
-amazement.</p>
-<p>“I thought you must be coming this way,” he said in his usual quiet and
-rather mysterious manner.</p>
-<p>“But what does this mean, Hopwood?” Scott asked in bewilderment. “I
-heard that you had taken an oath to wear your iron hat till this feud
-was settled.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood was serious at once. “I don’t need that old hunk of iron any
-more. I’ll explain it to you soon, but I haven’t time now. Where are you
-going?”</p>
-<p>“I suppose you know what has happened. I am going up there to find that
-still. I ought to have done it long ago. I found the trail one day and I
-don’t know why it never dawned on me what it was. I had heard there was
-a big one somewhere, too. Of course, Foster gave those fellows that
-whisky, didn’t he?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded. “Yes, and I was just coming down to warn you to keep out
-of his way. He has been celebrating his success and he’s crazy. He would
-shoot you on sight.”</p>
-<p>“Where is he?” Scott asked sullenly. He did not like this business of
-running away from a man, and yet he knew it was the only wise thing to
-do.</p>
-<p>“He was up at the house a little while ago. Keep your eyes open and take
-to the woods if you see him. I’ll come down to see you to-morrow if I
-don’t have to go away for a day or two.”</p>
-<p>“I may have to go away for a day or two myself,” Scott replied. “By the
-way, where have you been? I have not seen you for a long time.”</p>
-<p>“I’ve been too busy,” Hopwood replied lightly and disappeared in the
-woods with a backward smile.</p>
-<p>Scott did not understand Hopwood. Some mysterious change seemed to have
-come over him. But he did not have time to figure it out now. He was too
-anxious to see that still. He had Hopwood’s assurance that it was there,
-but he wanted to see it for himself.</p>
-<p>He did not know where the trail started so there was nothing for him to
-do but to go up on the ridge to the place where the old pig had scared
-him so badly. He found the place without any difficulty and looked
-around a little nervously to make sure that the old sow was not still on
-guard. She was nowhere in sight and he dropped down the slope unmolested
-in search of the trail. He was surprised to see how far down it was.</p>
-<p>When he came to the tunnel into the laurel he found some fresh tracks
-and listened anxiously. He was determined to see the still, but he did
-not want any one to see him, partly because he knew that these men would
-not hesitate to shoot any one they found spying around their still, and
-partly because he did not want any one to know that he had found it.</p>
-<p>He could see nothing. He looked down the trail and made a careful survey
-of the woods behind him. There was no one there who might cut off his
-retreat. Everything seemed safe enough and he cautiously entered the
-narrow tunnel. It was longer than he had imagined and the turns in it
-gave him an uncomfortable feeling of being shut in. He stopped every two
-feet to listen and then crawled slowly forward again. It seemed as
-though he would never get to the end of it.</p>
-<p>When he did get to the end he saw something that astonished him even
-more than the length of the tunnel. He found himself in a small opening
-about four rods across, and in the middle of it was a tiny log cabin. He
-had covered over half the distance to the cabin when a noise inside made
-his heart stand still.</p>
-<p>Some one was fumbling with the latch on the inside. After the first
-instant of paralysis Scott took in the situation at a glance. If he
-tried to return to the tunnel he would be in direct line with the door
-and would be in sight for some distance even after he had entered the
-tunnel. This all passed through his mind like a flash. His only chance
-was to hide around the corner of the cabin. He did not know how many
-people there were in there or whether there were windows in the end, or
-possibly another door, but it was his best chance. In two jumps he was
-around the corner.</p>
-<p>The latch clicked up almost the instant he started, and long before he
-reached the corner he heard the door swinging open on its rusty hinges.
-A glance showed him that there were no windows in that end of the cabin.
-He was hidden for the moment unless he had been discovered before he
-reached there.</p>
-<p>He turned and peeped anxiously through a crack between the ends of the
-logs. For what seemed to Scott like an age no one appeared. He looked
-nervously behind him and half expected to see a rifle pointing at him
-from the other corner of the cabin. But there was no one there.</p>
-<p>He was beginning to wonder whether he had really heard anything at all,
-or just imagined it, when there was a knock against the log wall that
-made him jump almost out of his skin, and Foster Wait staggered out of
-the door with a big earthenware jug in one hand and his long rifle in
-the other. He swayed uncertainly and took a step or two in Scott’s
-direction. Scott shrank back against the wall and prepared to sneak
-around the cabin, but Foster changed his course back toward the cabin
-door.</p>
-<p>He stood there mumbling for an instant and seemed to be talking to some
-one inside, but there was no answer. He laboriously turned again and
-started for the tunnel. He had considerable trouble in getting the jug
-and the rifle both into the opening, but finally succeeded. “They’ll
-never do it, they’ll never do it,” he called back angrily over his
-shoulder.</p>
-<p>Scott was sure then that there was some one else in the cabin. He had
-visions of hiding there behind that corner till dark, for the door had
-been left open and he would not dare try to sneak out in front of it. He
-could still hear Foster fumbling and mumbling his way through the
-tunnel, but he had not caught any sound from within.</p>
-<p>He placed his ear against the log wall and listened. The gnawing of a
-mouse on the other side sounded to him like some one tearing off the
-roof, and would have drowned out any other noises there might have been.
-The mouse stopped and he held his breath to hear better. There was not a
-sound. Minute after minute passed and still no sound. The mouse began
-again.</p>
-<p>“Better be shot than have that mouse scare me to death,” Scott muttered
-to himself, and he determined to have a look in the door. First he went
-back to make sure that there was no door in the rear. There was only a
-little square window on that side. Slowly he came back to his corner and
-listened once more. All was still.</p>
-<p>With a glance at the tunnel he crawled cautiously toward the door. Inch
-by inch he made his slow advance with his eyes glued on the opening and
-his mind made up to jump on any one who might come out—for there was no
-chance to escape now.</p>
-<p>At the very edge of the door he stopped to listen and peeped cautiously
-around the doorframe. Just then a noise behind him brought him to his
-feet with a bound, and he saw a man step out of the tunnel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD GETS JARRED’S PROMISE</span></h2>
-<p>In the meanwhile MacAndrews had carried out his distasteful duty of
-rounding up the crew in the bunk house. Most of them were too far gone
-to offer much resistance and went to bed without protest. He left Ben
-and the bull cook to keep guard and see that no one escaped and no
-outsiders came in. Then he went up in the woods to see if he could catch
-any one looking for the men up there.</p>
-<p>He made his way to the top of one of the skid roads where he had found a
-group of the swampers and road monkeys. If any attempt were made to
-bring the men more whisky it would probably be there where the largest
-group had been. He selected a well sheltered spot in the edge of the
-brush and sat down on a log to wait.</p>
-<p>He did not have long to wait. Hardly five minutes had passed when the
-bushes on the opposite side of the road were parted cautiously and a
-boy’s face peeped out. It was Foster Wait’s son. Not seeing any one, he
-came slowly out into the skid road and began peering about. He was
-evidently disappointed and very nervous. It was like Foster to send his
-son where he was afraid to go himself.</p>
-<p>Mac could not wait any longer. He was curious to see what the boy would
-do but his desire to get his hands on him was too strong for him. He
-tore from his hiding place and made a dive at the boy. But he was no
-match for the badly scared boy. He eluded Mac’s grasp and sprang into
-the brush like a rabbit. Mac tried to follow him, but he might as well
-have tried to follow a weasel in a haystack. He soon gave it up and came
-back to see if the boy had left anything behind him. As he expected he
-found a large stone jug in the brush where the boy had first appeared.</p>
-<p>With a grunt of satisfaction Mac dumped the contents on the ground.
-“Enough there to paralyze the whole crew for a week,” he mumbled. He
-raised the big jug over his head and was about to smash it on a rock,
-but his Scotch thrift stayed his arm and he took the jug back to camp.</p>
-<p>Mac felt that he had a victory in capturing the jug, but it would have
-been far better if he had stayed in camp, for the boy was on his way
-home to tell his father that he had been seen and probably recognized.</p>
-<p>Hopwood could easily have caught the boy for Mac. After his meeting with
-Scott he had headed straight for the works to see if the men had been
-taken in out of harm’s way. He had been close enough to hear the
-crashing of the brush and the boy had passed within a few feet of him.
-But what would have been the use? They could not do anything with the
-boy after they had caught him, and it did not fit into his own plans to
-line up openly against his family just yet.</p>
-<p>He followed Mac almost to camp to make sure that all the men were in,
-but he did not go in himself. He turned into the brush without making
-his presence known to Mac at all. A half hour later he turned in at the
-gate of Jarred Morgan’s cottage.</p>
-<p>When Hopwood entered the cabin old Jarred sprang from his chair with the
-agility of a cat.</p>
-<p>“You fooled me that time, Hopwood,” he admitted frankly. “It is a long
-time since I have seen you without that iron hat. What is the meaning of
-it? Is the feud ended, then?” he asked with a wry smile.</p>
-<p>Hopwood cast a quick glance around the cabin.</p>
-<p>Jarred answered the unspoken question. “She went out to the orchard.”</p>
-<p>“No,” Hopwood said soberly, “the feud is not exactly ended, but I think
-I am beginning to see the end of it.”</p>
-<p>“You think I am going to cash in, do you?”</p>
-<p>“I am hoping that it will not end that way,” Hopwood replied earnestly.</p>
-<p>“There is only one other way that it can end,” Jarred answered, and his
-jaw clenched tight.</p>
-<p>“That’s why I have come to see you. Would you drop this feud if Foster
-were put out of the way for good?” Hopwood spoke with the tone of a man
-exacting an oath.</p>
-<p>“I have never made a contract for a murder,” Jarred answered coldly,
-“and I am too old to begin it now.”</p>
-<p>“Look at me, Jarred,” and Hopwood squared himself around in front of the
-old man. “Do I look like a crazy man?”</p>
-<p>Jarred’s frown melted into an affectionate smile. “No, Hopwood, your old
-iron hat has not fooled me for many years.”</p>
-<p>“Then listen to me,” Hopwood replied with a strange tone of confident
-authority. “I am no more likely to take the contract for murdering a man
-than you are. You have always said that you would not give up the feud
-while Foster lived. Now I want to know if you would give it up if he
-were otherwise disposed of so that he would never return to this
-country?”</p>
-<p>Jarred walked to the door and gazed out across at the opposite mountain
-in silence. It was five minutes before he turned back to Hopwood and his
-face was haggard.</p>
-<p>“I could do it, Hopwood,” he said sadly. “I hate to think of that
-scoundrel escaping my vengeance, but I could do it, and—would,” he added
-after a short struggle. “But I was thinking of Vic. Would she? I have
-trained her all her life to hate the Waits, and Vic is a good hater.
-Would she give it up, or would she think me a traitor?”</p>
-<p>“I think she would give it up,” Hopwood replied confidently.</p>
-<p>Jarred turned quietly and faced him. “What makes you think so?” he asked
-sharply.</p>
-<p>Hopwood blushed like a schoolgirl. He was silent a moment and then
-looked Jarred squarely in the eye. “You know what I think of Vic and I
-think she likes me. She never seems to think of me as being a Wait, but
-if we should marry some day, it would end all thought of the feud.”</p>
-<p>Jarred looked at him thoughtfully. “If I thought that could be true, I
-would agree to anything,” he said slowly. “I have been wondering lately
-what would become of Vic. I am not as strong as I was and I cannot last
-forever. She won’t give me any reason, but she says she will never go
-back to her father, and I think she means it. She’ll be terribly alone
-in the world when I am gone.”</p>
-<p>“I know why she won’t go back and I think she is right,” Hopwood replied
-with a dark frown. “Would that be satisfactory to you then?” he asked
-wistfully.</p>
-<p>Jarred placed his hand affectionately on Hopwood’s shoulder. “Hopwood,
-as far as I know there are only two men in the world to whom I am
-indebted—you and Mr. Burton. You have done me innumerable good services,
-and he brought Vic to me the night she fell off her horse. Both of you
-want me to give it up. I am going to do it and pay a part of both
-debts.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood jumped to his feet and grasped the old man’s hand. “Now I can go
-about my business. We’ll speak of the other some other time,” he added
-with a blush.</p>
-<p>“No need to put it off,” Jarred said. “All I ask is that you wait till
-Vic has grown up. If she will have you then, there is nothing in all the
-world that would please me more.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood wrung his hand once more and ran out of the house.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>A CLOSE CALL</span></h2>
-<p>When Scott turned his head and saw that man standing just at the end of
-the tunnel a great lump rose in his throat and his knees almost gave way
-under him. He wanted to run but he could not move. The next instant he
-recognized Hopwood and the reaction was so great that he sat down limply
-in his tracks and stared helplessly.</p>
-<p>“You might as well kill a fellow as scare him to death, Hopwood,” he
-exclaimed when he had recovered his breath.</p>
-<p>“And you might as well be dead as to be caught here,” Hopwood retorted.
-“Did Foster see you? I just met him coming out and he was crazy drunk.”</p>
-<p>“Not quite,” Scott replied with a nervous laugh, “but I thought so for a
-minute when I saw you,” and he explained to Hopwood what a narrow escape
-he had had, and how he was trying to find out whether there really was
-any one else in the cabin.</p>
-<p>“You should have asked me to bring you here,” Hopwood scolded. “Then you
-would not have run such a risk.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll let somebody bring me next time,” Scott answered with a grin. “I
-have done about all the exploring I want to do around here alone.”</p>
-<p>He had completely recovered now, and he got up to have a peek into the
-cabin. So strong had been his impression that there was somebody in
-there that he now peeped cautiously around the corner of the doorframe.
-The little mouse scurried across a rafter and down the opposite wall.
-There was no other sign of life.</p>
-<p>In the center of the opposite wall of the cabin was a crude clay
-fireplace and in it there was a large copper retort shaped like an
-immense pear. From the top of it a long goose-neck extended far out into
-the room. Three barrels were sitting along the wall at the end of the
-cabin. In another barrel, on which there was a tin lid, there was a sack
-of corn.</p>
-<p>Scott looked the things over curiously. It was the first moonshine
-outfit he had ever seen. When his curiosity was satisfied he turned
-suddenly to Hopwood. “Will you swear that Foster Wait runs this thing?”
-he asked.</p>
-<p>Hopwood started at the question. “Why?” he asked in some confusion.
-“What are you going to do?”</p>
-<p>Scott thought that he had asked too much of Hopwood in asking him to
-give evidence against his relative, much as he knew he hated him. But it
-was too late to back out now.</p>
-<p>“Because I am going to get the United States marshal and have him
-arrested,” Scott answered doggedly.</p>
-<p>“But that is just what I was going to do myself,” Hopwood answered with
-disappointment. “You better let me do it. I know more about it than you
-do,” he pleaded.</p>
-<p>“No, Hopwood,” Scott replied firmly, “this is my problem and I must
-settle it myself.”</p>
-<p>“Why do you call it your problem when I have been working on it for
-years before you ever heard of it?” Hopwood remonstrated with some
-spirit.</p>
-<p>Scott saw that line of argument would not work and changed his tactics.
-“But, Hopwood, I need you here. There is no use in my staying here if
-you go away. I can’t find anything about what is going on if you are not
-here to tell me. I could not tell whether Foster was getting ready to
-burn down the camps or murder us all. If you stay here while I am away
-and will keep MacAndrews posted, he can take care of things all right.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood scratched his head doubtfully for a minute and frowned his
-disappointment.</p>
-<p>“I am not the only one who depends on you, you know,” Scott urged. “All
-the people on the other mountain over there depend on you for the news.”</p>
-<p>That was the deciding argument. Hopwood had told Jarred that he was
-going to put Foster out of the way and he wanted the glory of doing it,
-but he had been doing things for other people all his life and he knew
-that there was some truth in what Scott said.</p>
-<p>“Very well,” he said quietly. “I suppose I’d better stay, but I do wish
-that I could go. Some day I am going to do something I want to.”</p>
-<p>It seemed so pathetic to any one who knew the history of Hopwood’s life
-that Scott was almost tempted to let him go. But he was afraid that
-Hopwood might fail in the mission through his limited knowledge of the
-world.</p>
-<p>“Then if you will take a message to Mac Andrews that I am going and for
-him to put the crew to work in the morning as usual, I am going to start
-right away,” Scott said resolutely. The sooner he accomplished his
-purpose the safer he would be.</p>
-<p>Hopwood agreed without a word of protest and led the way into the
-tunnel. They were halfway through it when they were startled by a
-crashing in the brush ahead. Hopwood crouched and listened an instant
-and then motioned frantically for Scott to go back. Scott needed no
-second warning. The scare Hopwood had given him had shaken his nerves a
-little and he ran back through the tunnel like a rabbit. Hopwood was
-close on his heels.</p>
-<p>“What is it?” Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>“Foster coming back.” Hopwood replied briefly. “Come.” He ran lightly to
-the wall of laurel beside the cabin and slowly pushed his way into it.
-Scott followed as close as he could but found himself no match for
-Hopwood at this game. Hopwood did not go far. He did not have to. A few
-feet in that thicket and they were completely hidden, but they could see
-out fairly well.</p>
-<p>They were scarcely settled in their retreat when Foster lunged out of
-the tunnel into the little clearing. He was apparently in a towering
-rage and was mumbling savagely to himself. He looked keenly around the
-clearing and strode over to the cabin. From the length of time he was
-inside he must have made a very thorough examination. When he came out
-he was examining the ground for tracks. Scott thanked his stars that he
-was wearing tennis shoes.</p>
-<p>Whatever the tracks were that Foster was following so carefully they led
-him out to the tunnel again. The two refugees breathed more freely when
-he was gone, but their troubles were not over. Foster was not making the
-noise he did when he came in and they could not tell where he was. Had
-he gone away or was he still in the tunnel?</p>
-<p>They had waited five minutes and no sound came from the tunnel. The
-suspense was beginning to tell on them.</p>
-<p>“I’ll sneak out and see,” Scott whispered.</p>
-<p>“No,” Hopwood remonstrated. “Let me go. He would shoot you on sight. He
-would not shoot me.”</p>
-<p>“He tried to kill you a while ago, didn’t he?” Scott asked indignantly.
-“He will not shoot me on sight because he is not going to see me, not if
-I can help it,” he mumbled to himself.</p>
-<p>He did not wait for Hopwood to answer, but slipped as quickly and
-silently as he could out into the clearing. He listened intently but
-could hear no sound. Slowly he crawled to the tunnel and peeped into it.
-There was no one in sight. With one more attempt to pick up a sound he
-crawled cautiously in.</p>
-<p>It was far more nerve racking than it had been when he crawled in. Then
-he did not have much fear of any one being there. Now he knew that some
-one had been there and was not at all certain that he had left. His
-progress was painfully slow. He listened after every step. He remembered
-where he had been hiding a minute before and glanced nervously at the
-wall of rhododendron on either side. He was almost tempted to run the
-rest of the way and have it over with.</p>
-<p>It was well that he did not act on that impulse. A few feet more brought
-him in sight of the outer end of the tunnel, and there was Foster
-sitting in the entrance with his long rifle across his lap and his eyes
-glued on the mountain trail.</p>
-<p>Noiselessly Scott backed out of sight and beat a cautious but rapid
-retreat. He made his way back to Hopwood in the rhododendron and told
-him what he had seen. “Looks as though he was posted there for the
-night,” Scott growled.</p>
-<p>“He probably is,” Hopwood replied quietly. “I reckon it’s up to us to
-get out through the rhododendron.”</p>
-<p>That possibility had entirely slipped Scott’s mind. It had never
-occurred to him that you could go through that rhododendron. He had been
-too fascinated by the tunnel and that mumbling man at the end of it with
-a long rifle.</p>
-<p>“Then let’s go,” he said.</p>
-<p>Hopwood glanced about him to get his bearings and glided through the
-dense brush like a snake, and as silently. Scott was put to it to keep
-up with him, and try as he would he could not move as silently. It was
-slow going at the best, for the course Hopwood had chosen led them down
-into a draw and up on to the next ridge.</p>
-<p>They had almost reached the edge of the rhododendron when they stumbled
-on to a covey of ruffed grouse. The frightened birds went up with a
-tremendous rush and crashed through the brush out into the open.</p>
-<p>“It is a good thing we did not strike them down by the clearing,”
-Hopwood whispered. “We would have had Foster on us in an instant. Here
-we are safe because he can’t very well follow us fast enough through
-there to do him any good.”</p>
-<p>They came out of the brush on to the open ridge and it seemed almost
-like coming out of a cave. Scott climbed up on a point of rock to get
-his bearings.</p>
-<p>Scarcely had he straightened up when his hat flew from his head and the
-ping of a rifle sounded from the opposite ridge. Scott fell from the
-rock in a heap.</p>
-<p>Hopwood ran to him. “Did he get you?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Scott felt his head and there was blood on his fingers. “Must have
-grazed me,” he said, “but it does not amount to anything.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood examined it and found a half-inch cut in his scalp. “That’s what
-those partridges did for us,” Hopwood said. “I am sorry he saw us but it
-can’t be helped now. Now, we’ll have to get out of here.”</p>
-<p>Scott scrambled to his feet and recovered his punctured hat. He examined
-it with a little shudder and started up the ridge.</p>
-<p>“Not that way,” Hopwood exclaimed. “That’s the way he will come.”</p>
-<p>So Hopwood led the way once more across a brush-filled draw on to the
-next ridge. Up this they made their way very cautiously, taking good
-care to keep out of sight. They were almost up to the main ridge when
-Hopwood hid behind a ledge of rock and motioned Scott to do the same.</p>
-<p>“We can see the other ridge from here,” he whispered, “and we better
-wait till we see Foster go down. We might meet him up there on the
-ridge.”</p>
-<p>After what seemed like an age they caught a glimpse of Foster making his
-way cautiously down the opposite ridge. He had seen Scott fall from the
-ledge and was on his way down to make sure of him. When he was out of
-sight they crawled out of their hiding place and struck for the main
-ridge.</p>
-<p>“I wonder what aroused his suspicion,” Hopwood said.</p>
-<p>“I don’t know,” Scott said, “and it does not make any difference. He
-can’t head us off now.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head doubtfully. “Maybe not, but I wish he did not
-know anything about it. He may guess what we are going to do, and if he
-does it may drive him to something desperate.”</p>
-<p>They were on the open trail now and stopped for a moment. “Well,” Scott
-said, “don’t let’s worry about it. You take the message to Mac and keep
-your eye on Foster the best you can. I’ll take the trail over the
-mountain.”</p>
-<p>They had hardly disappeared when Foster ran back on to the trail. He was
-raging like a madman. He knew that something, he could not tell just
-what, was in the wind, and it was driving him mad.</p>
-<p>A squirrel chattered at him from a big oak tree, and he shot it with an
-oath.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXIV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXIV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT GOES AFTER THE MARSHAL</span></h2>
-<p>Scott did not lose any time on the trail to the town where the United
-States marshal made his headquarters, but it was a long day’s hike and
-he had not started much before the middle of the afternoon. Night caught
-him while he was still on the mountain trails. The sky was cloudy, and
-down in the dense woods it was black as a pocket. He knew that he would
-save time and effort by camping out for the night and getting an early
-start in the morning. He was not gaining anything by feeling his way
-along inch by inch in the dark. He stumbled into an ice-cold trout
-stream and gave it up.</p>
-<p>The nights were cold there in the mountains, and he was feeling around
-for some firewood when he saw a light glimmering through the trees far
-down the trail. As his feet were already wet he waded across the stream
-and made his way slowly toward the light.</p>
-<p>It proved to be a lamp in a small logging camp. It was a comparatively
-small cabin with the cook stove and dining table in one end of it. The
-walls of the rest of the room were lined with double-decked bunks. Every
-one seemed to be in bed except an old woman who was reading at the
-dining table. She looked up indifferently when Scott knocked at the
-door.</p>
-<p>“Good evening,” he said. “Night caught me up here on the trail. Is there
-any place here where I can get a bed?”</p>
-<p>The woman looked at him suspiciously for a minute and seemed to be
-undecided whether or not to call her husband. Then she pointed to an
-empty bed in the corner.</p>
-<p>“I don’t want to crowd you here,” Scott apologized.</p>
-<p>“You won’t bother nobody,” the woman replied without looking up from her
-book.</p>
-<p>Scott did not think much of his reception. He had not had anything to
-eat since morning, but the looks of the place did not encourage him to
-ask for anything. It would be better than sleeping out in the cold
-without blankets even if he were hungry. He walked over to the bunk and
-crawled in without any further ceremony than taking off his shoes.</p>
-<p>For a few minutes he lay there and marveled at the tremendous chorus of
-snores which seemed to be coming from all parts of the little cabin, but
-he soon fell asleep in spite of the music and his hunger. In the morning
-Scott was astonished to see the number of people who rolled out of those
-bunks—men, women and children. It was evidently a big family, but he was
-not sure he had seen them all.</p>
-<p>After the way he had been received the night before, Scott intended to
-thank them for the lodging and depart without breakfast, but the man
-would not have it so.</p>
-<p>“Where did you get supper?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“I did not have any,” Scott replied a little spitefully.</p>
-<p>The man was very much put out and insisted on Scott’s staying to
-breakfast. Scott accepted, but before he was through he was sorry he had
-not stuck to his original purpose of going away hungry. When the man
-learned he was running the logging job on the other side of the
-mountain, he became so interested that Scott had a hard time getting
-away from him. If he had seen one of the boys slip around the house and
-run off up the trail in the direction from which he had come the night
-before, he might have been suspicious of so many questions.</p>
-<p>It was seven o’clock before he got away from these people and started
-for the town. Even at that the marshal was not up when he arrived. He
-had recovered from his logging camp breakfast sufficiently to eat
-another at the little hotel while he was waiting for the marshal.</p>
-<p>Scott had never heard anything but curses for the United States marshal
-from the mountaineers and had formed a picture of him that was rudely
-shattered when he saw the reality. Instead of the shiftless, cringing
-old man he expected to see, he found a keen, alert, energetic man of
-about forty-five. He had been a sharpshooter in the Spanish War and was
-every inch a man.</p>
-<p>“Now what can I do for you?” he asked briskly, when Scott had introduced
-himself.</p>
-<p>“I am running a logging job on the other side of the mountain,” Scott
-explained, “and there is a moonshine still over there that is causing me
-all kinds of trouble. I thought maybe I could get you to clean it up for
-me. The man who is running it is an incendiary and a murderer as well as
-a moonshiner.”</p>
-<p>“Sounds as though it might be Foster Wait,” the marshal said with a
-frown.</p>
-<p>“It is,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“Then you may be able to get him in the courts for arson or murder if
-you can produce the evidence, but I am afraid I can’t help you much. I
-have put in days looking for that still, have searched every square inch
-of his place, but have never been able to find a trace of it. That has
-been a sore spot with me for several years.”</p>
-<p>“But the still isn’t on his place,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“Do you mean to say that you know where it is?” the marshal cried
-eagerly.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said, “I stumbled on to it in the woods one day.”</p>
-<p>“But if it is not on his place, can you prove that it is his?” the
-marshal asked doubtfully.</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said. “I know a man who is familiar with it and will swear
-to it.”</p>
-<p>“Good!” the marshal exclaimed, jumping enthusiastically to his feet.
-“Come on over to the judge and we’ll swear out a warrant for this bird.
-Didn’t see anybody on the way over here, did you?”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said. “Foster saw me just before I started,” and he
-explained his experience.</p>
-<p>“Still that was a long way from here and he may not have guessed where
-you were going. See anybody else?”</p>
-<p>“I spent the night at a little logging camp up here on the mountain a
-ways,” Scott admitted, “but they seemed too dumb to know anything.”</p>
-<p>“Yes, they seem dumb enough, but they have notified Foster long ago that
-you came this way. I doubt if we can get him now, but I’ll fix that
-still for you.”</p>
-<p>The judge was as interested as the marshal. “I’d like to get that
-fellow,” he exclaimed. “There was a crazy man in a big iron hat down
-here some weeks ago who wanted me to arrest him for something he had not
-yet done, but we have never been able to get any real charge against him
-that any one would support.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll support this one,” Scott said doggedly. “He’s the key man in that
-feud over there and I am going to put him in the penitentiary if it
-takes me all summer.”</p>
-<p>“All right, then, let’s go,” the marshal exclaimed. “Did you hoof it
-over here?”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” Scott said. “I didn’t have a horse handy, and, anyway, I thought
-I could make better time over these mountain trails on foot.”</p>
-<p>“Well, you couldn’t if you had my horse, but I’ll walk with you this
-time. We’ll be off the trail a good deal and I don’t want to be too
-conspicuous.”</p>
-<p>They went back by another trail which the marshal knew to avoid the
-logging camp and any one who might be looking for them. When the marshal
-started out anywhere, it was usually well heralded all over the
-mountain.</p>
-<p>They were walking rapidly up a steep mountain trail when the marshal
-suddenly stopped and held up his hand. Scott peeped through the bushes
-and was surprised to see that they were in sight of the trail on the
-main ridge just above the still. He followed the direction of the
-marshal’s pointing finger and saw one of Foster’s boys earnestly
-watching the trail Scott had gone down the day before.</p>
-<p>They made a detour and crossed the main ridge trail back of the boy.
-Just as they started down the slope toward the still, three rifle shots
-rang out in the valley below.</p>
-<p>“There is something doing down there,” the marshal whispered. “Sounds as
-though we ought to have brought the sheriff and a bunch of deputies.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD SENDS FOSTER A MESSAGE</span></h2>
-<p>Hopwood did not go immediately back to camp to carry the message to
-MacAndrews. There would be plenty of time for that after dark. He
-thought it better to hang around and try to find out something of
-Foster’s plans. Instead of going down the trail he hid in the brush and
-watched, for he felt sure that Foster would come back that way when he
-found he had missed his mark.</p>
-<p>He saw Foster come out of the woods and judged his state of mind pretty
-well from his looks. When he saw him shoot the squirrel he was convinced
-of his savage rage. In such a condition as that he might do anything. He
-thought of old Jarred and little Vic up there on the opposite mountain
-and wondered what form his rage would take.</p>
-<p>Just then Foster could not have told him himself. He only knew that he
-had lost his opportunity in a game that he did not very clearly
-understand. Why had Scott gone to the still and not touched it? If he
-had destroyed the still and the supply of whisky in those barrels he
-could have understood that. He would have been trying to protect himself
-and his crew. But he had not destroyed it.</p>
-<p>Then a new thought occurred to him. Perhaps Scott had gone there to
-destroy things but had been interrupted before he had a chance to carry
-out his purpose. Perhaps he had destroyed it after he himself had been
-there. There had been quite an interval between the time he had looked
-in the cabin and the time he discovered Scott on the opposite ridge. He
-decided to see; it would at least give him something to do.</p>
-<p>He started toward the still again and Hopwood, who had been able almost
-to read his thoughts, followed as close as he dared. Foster went
-straight to the still and Hopwood waited outside the tunnel. Foster was
-not reasoning, he was just grasping wildly for some clue in this blind
-puzzle. He hurried to the cabin. Everything was just as he had left it.</p>
-<p>He came out and examined the edge of the clearing. He easily found the
-trail leading into the laurel. He really did not see the tracks of
-Scott’s tennis shoes, but he had not seen Hopwood and mistook his boots
-for Scott’s. He realized now that he had trapped Scott in there when he
-came back, and ground his teeth in his disappointment. As much puzzled
-as ever he paced nervously up and down the little clearing. Then he
-determined to go home and send his boy to find out where Scott had gone.</p>
-<p>Hopwood followed Foster home and saw the boy start down the road toward
-the village. He did not think it likely that Foster would leave the
-house again that night and decided to overtake the boy. Possibly he
-could pump some of Foster’s plans out of him. He was a favorite with all
-the young people on both sides of the mountain. For some reason they
-seemed to look on him as an old man, although in reality he was little
-older than they were, except in mental capacity.</p>
-<p>He kept to the woods till he was out of sight from the house. But he was
-so used to the woods that he lost little time by that and once in the
-road he soon overtook the boy.</p>
-<p>“Hello, Bill!” he called. “Dad out of chewing tobacco?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Bill growled. “He ain’t even got that excuse.” The boy did not
-seem to be any too pleased with his errand, whatever it was and spoke
-sullenly.</p>
-<p>“What then?” Hopwood persisted. “Just out for your health?”</p>
-<p>“Out for his health, I reckon,” the boy replied spitefully. “He wants me
-to find out where that logging boss is.”</p>
-<p>“Who, MacAndrews?” Hopwood asked innocently.</p>
-<p>“No, Burton,” Bill growled.</p>
-<p>“That ought to be easy,” Hopwood said teasingly. “MacAndrews can
-probably tell you where he is.”</p>
-<p>“Might if I asked him,” the boy replied doggedly, “but MacAndrews isn’t
-going to see me.”</p>
-<p>“What’s the matter? Been stealing stuff from the cook shack?” Hopwood
-went on.</p>
-<p>“No,” Bill protested, “but he pretty near caught me this morning when I
-went over to take some whisky to the men.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood whistled. “No wonder you don’t want him to see you. Then how are
-you going to find out?”</p>
-<p>“Ask Mr. Roberts, I reckon.”</p>
-<p>For some reason or other the station agent had never lost his title with
-these people. He was still “Mr.” Roberts after years of residence in
-close touch with them.</p>
-<p>Hopwood thought a moment. Mr. Roberts might know where Scott had gone,
-and if he did, he might tell Bill, and that would not do at all.</p>
-<p>“Maybe I can find out for you from MacAndrews,” he volunteered.</p>
-<p>Bill cheered up at once. “Gee, will you, Hop? Dad seems to want to know
-awful bad, and if I don’t find out I’ll be afraid to go home.”</p>
-<p>“All right,” Hopwood agreed. “I’ll ask MacAndrews for you.”</p>
-<p>They walked on for a while in silence. Bill’s troubles had been
-unexpectedly lifted from his shoulders and Hopwood had found out what he
-wanted to know. Foster did not know where Scott had gone, and he would
-not find out from this boy if Hopwood could help it. And he thought that
-he could.</p>
-<p>When they came within sight of the camp it was growing dark, but they
-could still see dusky figures moving about.</p>
-<p>“I’ll wait here,” Bill said, and the tone of his voice indicated that
-nothing on earth could persuade him to go any nearer.</p>
-<p>“All right,” Hopwood agreed. “I’ll be back in a few minutes.”</p>
-<p>He strolled on down to the bunk house. The men had just straggled out
-from supper and they were a sorry-looking lot. Some had gone straight to
-bed. Others were lolling around a bonfire outside. They looked at
-Hopwood curiously but none of them had ever seen him before, and they
-were too woebegone even to speak to him.</p>
-<p>He was just going into the bunk house when he saw MacAndrews coming out
-of the cook shack. Hopwood walked straight up to him and came out
-frankly with his message. “Mr. MacAndrews, Mr. Burton asked me to tell
-you to put the men to work in the morning as usual and that he would be
-back to-morrow.”</p>
-<p>Mac had been staring hard at him trying to recognize him in the dusk.
-“Who are you?” he asked gruffly.</p>
-<p>“My name is Hopwood,” Hopwood replied wisely leaving off his last name.</p>
-<p>“Come into the cook shack,” Mac growled, “where I can have a good look
-at you. I am suspicious of visitors since this morning.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood followed him obediently into the cook shack and looked him
-squarely in the eye. “He also told me that I was to keep in touch with
-you while he was away and let you know what Foster Wait was doing.”</p>
-<p>“He did, did he?” Mac grunted, as he looked him over suspiciously from
-head to foot. “Where has he gone?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood looked around and lowered his voice. “He went over the mountain
-to see the United States marshal.”</p>
-<p>Mac grunted his satisfaction but his suspicion was not completely
-allayed. “Who the deuce are you?” he asked again. “You look like one of
-these pesky mountaineers to me.”</p>
-<p>“I am,” Hopwood replied bluntly, “but I am a friend of Mr. Burton’s and
-I don’t like Foster Wait as well as you do. That ought to be enough to
-satisfy you.”</p>
-<p>“Well,” Mac said grudgingly, “if you are a liar you are a mighty slick
-one. I’ll take a chance on you, anyway. What’s that man Wait up to now?”</p>
-<p>“He was in the house when I came by there a while ago. He’s not likely
-to come out again to-night, and I’ll watch him in the morning and let
-you know if he’s up to anything.”</p>
-<p>“Very well,” Mac replied. “I’ll be watching for you, and—for him,” he
-added grimly.</p>
-<p>Hopwood started for the door. “Don’t you want a handout?” Mac called
-after him hospitably.</p>
-<p>As Hopwood had not had anything to eat since morning, he gladly accepted
-the invitation. While he was eating Mac plied him with all kinds of
-questions about Foster Wait. It was evident that it would be a bad day
-for Foster if he ever fell into Mac’s hands.</p>
-<p>When he had finished the generous meal which Ben had given him he walked
-out to find Bill. The boy was sitting on the stump waiting patiently.
-Waiting was one of the best things Bill did.</p>
-<p>“You ought to have come with me,” Hopwood said. “The cook gave me a
-great handout.”</p>
-<p>“You can have mine in there,” Bill replied with a wry face. “What did he
-say about his boss?”</p>
-<p>“He said he was out on the works to-day and would be back in camp
-to-night,” Hopwood lied glibly.</p>
-<p>It was enough for the boy to have a satisfactory answer to take home. He
-did not question the truth of it. “Thanks,” he said, and started back up
-the mountain.</p>
-<p>“Wait a while and I’ll walk up with you,” Hopwood volunteered.</p>
-<p>“I gotta be getting home,” the boy said. “He’ll be mad enough now
-without keeping him waiting any longer.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood watched him out of sight in the darkness. “Well, give him that
-information,” he mumbled maliciously to himself. “It may quiet his
-nerves.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXVI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXVI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>FOSTER REVIVES THE FEUD</span></h2>
-<p>No one knew where Hopwood spent the night. He did not accept Mac’s
-invitation to stay at the camp, but early morning found him on the road
-again on his way up to scout around Foster’s cabin. He had an uneasy
-feeling that something would happen if Foster found out where Scott had
-gone. He chuckled to think that he probably would not find it out now.
-He had sounded out Mr. Roberts and found that he did not know.</p>
-<p>It was an hour after he had taken up his watch in a little patch of
-woods across the road from the house before he noticed any signs of
-life. A thin wisp of smoke curled up from the kitchen chimney. Every now
-and then he caught a roar from the rear of the house but no other sound
-of voices, a pretty good indication that Foster was in no better mood
-than he had been the night before.</p>
-<p>A half hour later Bill came running around the house with head ducked
-low. Once safe around the corner he dropped down to a slow shuffle. He
-had been crying, and he looked longingly up at the mountain before he
-turned reluctantly down toward the village.</p>
-<p>“He either suspects where Scott has gone or he is planning some new
-devilment as soon as he gets back,” Hopwood mused, as he watched Bill
-crawling slowly on his snail-like way. “Well, Foster is not likely to go
-out till Bill gets back and that can’t be for two hours at the rate he
-is moving.”</p>
-<p>He had almost decided to go on another errand while he was waiting for
-Bill to come back when a movement caught his eye and he saw a barefoot
-boy turn in at Foster’s gate. Hopwood groaned with disappointment and
-apprehension, for he knew that boy was bearing one of two messages:
-either that Scott had passed the logging camp on the way down, or that
-the marshal had left town on the way up. Probably it was the former,
-because the marshal would know enough to avoid that camp. Hopwood blamed
-himself for not having warned Scott to keep away from it. Well, it could
-not be helped now.</p>
-<p>“There will be something doing pretty soon now,” he thought.</p>
-<p>He was not mistaken. The arrival of the boy at the Wait cabin was like
-the spark on a fuse running into a powder magazine. Foster roared like a
-wounded lion, and everything seemed to be in great commotion. A little
-girl darted out of the house and tore down the road toward the village.</p>
-<p>“After Bill,” Hopwood mused. “I wonder what the game is?”</p>
-<p>The commotion in the back of the house continued.</p>
-<p>In a few minutes the girl and Bill came trotting back together. His
-reluctance to go had made his recall easy. Hopwood kept a close lookout
-now. He did not want anything to escape him, for much might depend on
-what he saw now. He saw Bill slip out of the side gate and take a short
-cut up the mountain carrying a long rifle.</p>
-<p>Hopwood knew what that meant. The boy was to keep watch and fire his
-rifle as a signal if he saw the marshal coming that way. That was an old
-trick that he had seen worked many times before, but he had never had
-the interest in it that he had now. The boy from the logging camp
-followed close behind Bill.</p>
-<p>These things did not worry Hopwood. A warning of the marshal’s approach
-would not do any harm. He had expected that. But when he saw two of the
-younger children scamper off on the trails which led to the cabins of
-other members of the family, and saw Foster run hurriedly to the barn to
-get his white horse, he began to get excited.</p>
-<p>If this were Sewall, he would know that he was assembling the clan to
-resist the marshal. But he knew that they would not protect Foster, and
-Foster knew it himself.</p>
-<p>“There is only one way,” Hopwood thought, “that Foster could get the
-support of the others, and that would be to start a fight with the
-Morgans.” If that were the plan he did not have much time to do it. No
-wonder he was in a hurry, with the marshal probably already on his way
-over the mountain.</p>
-<p>So firmly did this idea take hold of Hopwood that he could stand it no
-longer. Foster galloped away furiously in the direction of the village,
-and Hopwood, breaking cover like a rabbit, darted across the road and
-straight through the woods on a bee line for the opposite mountain.</p>
-<p>A little farther down he came into a trail and ducked out of it again
-just in time to miss another Wait who was hurrying toward the village.
-As soon as the rider was out of sight he broke into the trail again and
-ran panting on his way.</p>
-<p>He crossed the railroad track below the village and ran gasping up the
-steep slope with his eyes glued on a little clearing far up on the
-mountainside. Every instant he dreaded that he would see Foster’s white
-horse flash across that clearing. Would he be in time?</p>
-<p>It was this thought that drove him on and urged him to almost superhuman
-efforts, while every breath he drew tore at his lungs like a rusty
-knife. Stumbling like a drunken man he tottered out into the road in
-front of Jarred’s cabin.</p>
-<p>The white horse was nowhere in sight. He had won the race. No matter how
-fast they came now Jarred would have his warning. He did not have the
-breath to shout at the gate. He ran across the yard and into the cabin
-without ceremony.</p>
-<p>The minutes dragged slowly by and Hopwood did not come out. An unnatural
-silence seemed to surround the place. Not a single bird note broke the
-weird stillness, and even the little brook which usually tinkled so
-musically over the stones by the house seemed to be gliding softly now.
-Only the ticking of the old cuckoo clock within the cabin boomed out
-like the blows of a hammer.</p>
-<p>The slow minutes passed: ten, fifteen, twenty, and Hopwood came slowly
-out. He looked weary and disheartened. Even the sound of a rifle shot
-from the valley below did not arouse him. He stood with his arms folded
-on top of the fence and looked listlessly across at the opposite
-mountain. There was another shot fired in the valley and a scattering
-volley answered it, but he did not seem to hear them.</p>
-<p>Vic appeared in the doorway and called to him. “You must find out what
-that is, Hopwood. Are they fighting us or the logging camp?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood started as though he had been awakened from a dream. With a wave
-of the hand to Vic he vaulted the fence and ran down the slope. When he
-came to the railroad track he hesitated a moment and then turned up the
-track toward the village.</p>
-<p>He found Mr. Roberts sitting on the end of the station platform watching
-the fight as calmly as though watching a game from a grand stand.</p>
-<p>“Just what happened?” Hopwood asked.</p>
-<p>Shots were still being fired spasmodically from both sides of the
-street.</p>
-<p>“Foster rode up to the store like a madman and shot across at Morgan’s
-wife without any warning,” Mr. Roberts replied, without taking his eyes
-off the fight.</p>
-<p>“Did he hit her?” Hopwood asked with a hard unnatural ring in his voice.</p>
-<p>“Couldn’t miss her, just across the street,” Mr. Roberts replied.</p>
-<p>A cold steely glint came into Hopwood’s soft blue eyes and his jaw set
-tight. “Kill her?” he persisted.</p>
-<p>“Couldn’t tell,” Mr. Roberts replied calmly. “They hauled her inside.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood did not wait to hear any more. With a growl of rage he jumped
-across the railroad track and ran up the western slope with all the
-speed his tired legs could muster.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXVII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXVII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT ARRIVES AT THE VILLAGE</span></h2>
-<p>Scott and the marshal started down the mountain in the direction of the
-firing. “Where is that still?” the marshal asked. “We might as well have
-a look at it if it is up this way.”</p>
-<p>“It won’t be much out of the way,” Scott said. “We are about there now.”
-He was so anxious to get to the village that he would not have consented
-to stop at all except that he thought he might find Hopwood at the
-still, and he was crazy to know what was going on. He led the marshal
-down the mountain at a run.</p>
-<p>“Here’s the trail to it,” he exclaimed.</p>
-<p>When they came to the tunnel the marshal slipped ahead with his revolver
-in his hand. “Let me pack this gun in there ahead,” he whispered. “Not
-likely to be any one there, but if there should be, he might be
-peevish.”</p>
-<p>They made their way cautiously through the rhododendron and paused at
-the other end to watch and listen. There was no evidence of any one and
-the marshal ran quickly across the clearing to the cabin. Scott was
-close at his heels. There was no one there.</p>
-<p>“This is a fine outfit,” the marshal exclaimed enthusiastically. “Big
-enough to supply the county. No wonder I could not find it. They are a
-foxy bunch. Put it on government land, too.”</p>
-<p>One glance had shown Scott that Hopwood was not there and he was anxious
-to be off. “Come on,” he exclaimed, “you can destroy this thing any
-time. I’ve got to see what is happening down there. That may be my crew
-fighting.”</p>
-<p>“Just the same, I am going to fix this thing before I go,” the marshal
-replied coolly. “Any one who is slick enough to put this thing in here
-might be pretty clever in getting it out. I’ll take no chances.”</p>
-<p>With a few blows of his hatchet he cut the copper retort to ribbons and
-knocked the heads out of the barrels. “Now they can have it,” he cried
-with a chuckle of satisfaction.</p>
-<p>Scott was already halfway out of the tunnel. As soon as he emerged on
-the open trail he saw Hopwood coming, exhausted but determined.</p>
-<p>“What is going on, Hopwood?” he called anxiously.</p>
-<p>“They’re at it,” Hopwood panted as he sank on a log.</p>
-<p>“What started it?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>“The boy from the logging camp reported that you had gone over the
-mountain,” Hopwood gasped. “And Foster shot Vic’s mother in cold blood.”</p>
-<p>Scott was horror struck. “Why, that is what Sewall predicted,” he said,
-“but I didn’t believe it possible.”</p>
-<p>“It was murder,” Hopwood replied coldly.</p>
-<p>“Jarred isn’t hurt, is he?” Scott persisted.</p>
-<p>Hopwood’s answer was so low that Scott had to lean over him to hear it
-at all. A look of keen disappointment passed over Scott’s face.</p>
-<p>“How did that happen?” he asked.</p>
-<p>Again Hopwood’s answer was so low that he could hardly hear it.</p>
-<p>Scott straightened suddenly. His anger was choking him, and the hot
-blood leaping through his veins almost blinded him.</p>
-<p>Hopwood, still panting from his exertions, jumped from the log and
-started straight down through the woods.</p>
-<p>“Where are you going?” Scott called sharply.</p>
-<p>“Down to fight on the side of the Morgans,” he answered without even
-turning his head.</p>
-<p>“So am I,” Scott exclaimed savagely, “and so is all my logging crew
-unless this feud is dropped now and forever.”</p>
-<p>“What’s going on?” the marshal asked.</p>
-<p>But Scott did not seem to hear him. He strode down the mountain slope in
-the direction Hopwood had taken. His eyes were searching the woods for
-any signs of the Waits, and his ears were straining to catch any
-significant sounds from the valley below, but his mind was far away in
-the little cabin up on the opposite mountain.</p>
-<p>When they came to a little clearing on a knoll which overlooked the
-village they stopped to reconnoiter. At first they could see nothing out
-of the ordinary. The village seemed as quiet and deserted as ever. Mr.
-Roberts was still sitting calmly on the end of the station platform and
-two women were peeping from an upstairs window of the hotel.</p>
-<p>They were almost directly in the rear of the Waits’ position, and
-gradually they began to distinguish them. First, one here, crouching
-behind the corner of the store, then another one behind the lumber pile.
-Twenty-two they counted and all armed.</p>
-<p>One man seemed to be holding himself in reserve for an emergency. He
-stood apart from the others, his arms folded across the end of the
-barrel of his long rifle, and his chin resting on his arms. He did not
-seem to be taking any active part. He must have been in plain sight of
-both parties but none of them seemed to molest him.</p>
-<p>Every now and then the vicious ping of a high-power rifle rang out from
-the Morgan store and was answered by a scattering volley from the men in
-hiding before them.</p>
-<p>They saw Hopwood slip across the railroad back of the hotel and glide
-around through the woods to the back of the Morgan store.</p>
-<p>The marshal had been examining the scene minutely through his field
-glasses. Suddenly he grasped Scott’s elbow.</p>
-<p>“There’s my man,” he whispered.</p>
-<p>Scott followed the direction of the pointing finger. Farthest away from
-the store and securely hidden behind a long pile of cordwood was Foster
-Wait.</p>
-<p>“The farthest away and the best hidden of them all,” Scott sneered. “The
-coward!”</p>
-<p>Over in the other direction, opposite the hotel, on a knoll very similar
-to their own, was the whole logging crew.</p>
-<p>“I’m going over there to give a message to my foreman,” Scott said.
-“Then I am going down to put an end to this row.”</p>
-<p>“Better keep out of it,” the marshal advised. “Let the sheriff take care
-of it. The peacemaker always gets the worst of it.”</p>
-<p>But Scott shook his head and started toward his crew. Mac had seen him
-coming and met him halfway.</p>
-<p>“Some show,” Mac exclaimed cheerfully. “They have not bothered us yet
-and I reckon maybe they know enough to let us alone.”</p>
-<p>“I am going down there to try to stop it, Mac. If anything interferes
-with me it will be these fellows on this side. If they do, clean them
-up.”</p>
-<p>“We’ll do that,” Mac exclaimed enthusiastically. “But why not let us
-clean them up first? It would be safer?”</p>
-<p>“No,” Scott replied firmly, “that would not do. I don’t think they will
-bother me and I don’t want you to mix in the thing at all unless they
-do.”</p>
-<p>A fresh burst of shots rattled around the buildings on both sides of the
-street. “They haven’t hit anybody yet,” Mac growled sarcastically, “but
-they may hurt somebody if they keep on.”</p>
-<p>When Scott got back to the knoll, the marshal was nowhere in sight. He
-did not stop to look for him. He had made up his mind what he was going
-to do and he was anxious to be about it. He picked his way diagonally
-across the slope, back of the Waits’ position to where the station agent
-was sitting on the platform.</p>
-<p>He talked earnestly to Mr. Roberts for a moment and started up the road
-toward the village.</p>
-<p>“Better keep out of it,” Mr. Roberts called after him pleadingly.</p>
-<p>But Scott neither turned back nor answered him.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXVIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXVIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>THE END OF THE FEUD</span></h2>
-<p>Scott walked rapidly up the road toward the store. He felt a shiver run
-up his back as he passed the woodpile where Foster was hiding, but he
-held his course steadily and looked neither to the right nor the left.</p>
-<p>Astonishment and wonder held the men on both sides motionless. It seemed
-to Scott as though he were walking all alone through a great desert with
-a row of mines on either side of him. He could almost hear the
-sputtering of the fuses. He had never felt so lonely in all his life.</p>
-<p>He heard a voice on the Morgan side shouting to him to keep back, and he
-recognized it as Hopwood’s.</p>
-<p>Only when he came to a spot squarely between the two stores did he stop.
-There he held his hand solemnly up over his head and called out in a
-voice that all could hear.</p>
-<p>“I have a message for all of you and I call upon you all as men to come
-out here and listen to it.”</p>
-<p>He called in a loud voice, but so tense was the stillness that a whisper
-could have been heard as well. And the silence continued after he had
-spoken. He did not repeat it but stood there with hand uplifted. The
-suspense was nerve racking. At last it was broken.</p>
-<p>“Say what you have to say and get out of the road,” called a sullen
-voice from the Morgan store.</p>
-<p>“Very well,” Scott agreed solemnly, “if it must be that way, listen.”</p>
-<p>He saw Sewall standing up there apart from the others and rightly
-guessed that he was not in sympathy with what was being done. He glanced
-at him occasionally for reassurance, for he did not feel at all sure
-that his plan would be a success.</p>
-<p>“If you knew why you were fighting here to-day, you would never have
-come,” he began.</p>
-<p>“If that’s all you have to say, we’ve heard enough,” the same sullen
-voice interrupted.</p>
-<p>Scott paid no attention to it, but continued in an impressive voice.
-“You think you are fighting for the old feud which has kept you
-neighbors enemies for forty years, but you are not. You are fighting
-because there is a coward in your midst who felt his influence slipping
-and shot an innocent woman to make it appear that you were being
-attacked. It worked, and you are fighting here to protect a murderer.”</p>
-<p>There was a dead silence as they strove to realize the significance of
-what he had said. He had seen Sewall bring his rifle into a more
-convenient position when he began to talk. Now he suddenly threw it up
-to his shoulder and aimed at the woodpile.</p>
-<p>There were two shots almost at the same instant, and a bullet plowed up
-the ground at Scott’s feet and covered him with dust.</p>
-<p>“There is the proof of what I say,” Scott shouted. “He is attempting
-another murder to cover up the first.” He pointed scornfully toward the
-woodpile and was as much astonished as the others at what he saw.</p>
-<p>Foster was crouching on the ground with his hands held high above his
-head while the marshal stood over him with his smoking revolver in his
-hand. It was his shot that had spoiled Foster’s aim just in the nick of
-time. Sewall had been too late.</p>
-<p>There was a murmur of resentment among the Waits at the sight of the
-marshal, whom they all regarded as their common enemy, arresting one of
-their members in their very midst. Scott saw that he was in danger of
-losing out.</p>
-<p>“I brought the marshal here after that man because I could not get the
-sheriff. He is wanted for the cold-blooded murder of two women. Do you
-want to support such a man as that?”</p>
-<p>There was silence again. Scott saw that he had them with him.</p>
-<p>“Let me talk to your real leaders,” he shouted. “Come down here,
-Sewall.”</p>
-<p>Sewall walked slowly forward, and men on both sides stepped out of their
-hiding places to see him come, and crowded slowly in around the two.</p>
-<p>“Where is Jarred Morgan?” Scott asked, when Sewall stepped out into the
-road.</p>
-<p>“Probably in the store there,” one of the Waits suggested.</p>
-<p>“He is not,” Scott replied loudly enough for all to hear. “He is up at
-his cabin dying of pneumonia.”</p>
-<p>There was a murmur of surprise and incredulity. Sewall’s face showed
-genuine regret.</p>
-<p>“And do you want to know what gave him the pneumonia?” Scott persisted,
-addressing himself directly to Sewall. “Because he jumped into the pool
-to save your child from drowning.”</p>
-<p>“What?” Sewall gasped. “Did Jarred do that? She said it was a strange
-girl.”</p>
-<p>“Vic took care of her,” Scott replied quietly, “but Jarred got her out
-and this morning he was dying as the result of it.”</p>
-<p>There was a hushed silence over the whole village.</p>
-<p>Scott was determined to hold his advantage. “Jarred promised that he
-would drop the feud if Foster was out of the way, and Foster is going to
-a place from which he will not return. Are you willing to drop it?”</p>
-<p>“I am more than willing,” Sewall said, “and have been for some time.
-Certainly, I personally can never fight with Jarred’s people again,” and
-his voice shook with emotion.</p>
-<p>“How about the rest of you?” Scott asked looking at the rest of the
-assembled family.</p>
-<p>They all agreed eagerly. They were afraid of Jarred and if he would stop
-fighting they were willing enough.</p>
-<p>“Are you willing to stand by Jarred’s promise?” Scott asked, turning to
-the Morgans.</p>
-<p>They were as eager as the Waits.</p>
-<p>“Then shake hands on it,” Scott said, and he pulled Sewall and Ben
-Morgan towards each other.</p>
-<p>They shook hands solemnly and in five minutes both families had almost
-forgotten that a feud had ever existed. They had all completely
-forgotten Foster.</p>
-<p>Scott suddenly remembered him and hurried over to the woodpile, but the
-marshal had taken advantage of his opportunity and spirited him away.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXIX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXIX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>JARRED AND SEWALL MEET</span></h2>
-<p>As soon as Scott was sure that the marshal had made good his get-away
-with Foster he looked for Hopwood, but Hopwood had also disappeared. He
-could see nothing further that he could do there and turned down the
-road away from the village. He had not gone far when he heard some one
-walking fast behind him. It was Sewall.</p>
-<p>“Where are you going?” Sewall asked.</p>
-<p>“Up to Jarred’s” Scott replied.</p>
-<p>“So am I,” Sewall said.</p>
-<p>They walked in silence, each occupied with his own thoughts. Scott was
-wondering where the marshal had gone with his prisoner and whether they
-would have any trouble in convicting him. Sewall was deeply moved by his
-walk up that road which was to him almost like a foreign country. His
-thoughts finally took the form of words.</p>
-<p>“Do you know that I have been over this road only once before in thirty
-years, and that at night?”</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him in astonishment. “Do you know Jarred?” he asked
-suddenly.</p>
-<p>“Only by sight. I’ve seen him in the village once or twice, and once
-three years ago when he came up on our mountain,” Sewall said
-thoughtfully.</p>
-<p>“What did they have, a conference?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>“No, one of Foster’s boys threw a stone across the street and hurt Vic.
-Jarred rode straight up here after him and horsewhipped him in his own
-yard.”</p>
-<p>“I should not think he would have dared,” Scott exclaimed. “Where was
-Foster?”</p>
-<p>“In the house,” Sewall chuckled, “and he stayed there. Jarred did not
-even look to see if he was in sight. He just licked the kid, turned his
-back on the house and rode away. From all I have heard, Jarred was never
-much afraid of anything.”</p>
-<p>“I have always admired him,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“So have I,” Sewall confessed simply.</p>
-<p>Again they walked in silence. When they came to Jarred’s gate, Scott
-called softly and Hopwood appeared in the doorway.</p>
-<p>“How did you get here?” Scott asked in surprise. He never got used to
-Hopwood’s unexpected movements.</p>
-<p>“I hurried up here to tell Vic that her mother was not seriously hurt,”
-Hopwood exclaimed.</p>
-<p>“How is Jarred?” Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Hopwood’s face brightened. “He seems much better. I believe he is going
-to get well.”</p>
-<p>“Can we see him?” Scott asked eagerly.</p>
-<p>“If you don’t make him talk too much,” Hopwood consented reluctantly. He
-felt that it would be better not, but he could not refuse this man who
-had successfully accomplished what he had been trying in vain for years
-to do. He stepped aside to let them enter.</p>
-<p>They walked into the little cabin stepping softly. Vic was hovering
-protectingly around the bed. The old man was very weak, but his pride
-kept him from looking ill even now. A pleased light came into his eyes
-when he saw Scott. He started slightly at the unexpected sight of
-Sewall. Scott noticed it.</p>
-<p>“Sewall could not wait for Foster and the marshal to get out of sight to
-come up to thank you for saving his child,” he explained.</p>
-<p>Sewall knelt appealingly beside the bed.</p>
-<p>Jarred smiled and feebly stretched out his hand. “I can easily be
-friends with Sewall,” he whispered.</p>
-<p>“I have always been your friend,” Sewall replied earnestly, “and I am
-coming to see you often if I may.”</p>
-<p>“With Foster in the penitentiary and you for my friend I can die in
-peace, but”—Jarred added with a faint smile—“I am not going to do it
-yet.”</p>
-<p>At a sign from Vic they left him as softly as they had come. Hopwood was
-waiting for them outside the door.</p>
-<p>“He is lots better,” Hopwood exclaimed, “but Vic wants to keep him
-quiet.”</p>
-<p>“She is right,” Scott said. “Are you going down with us?”</p>
-<p>Hopwood blushed a little. “No, I am going to stay here and see if I can
-be of any help to Vic.”</p>
-<p>“Do you want me to send for a doctor?” Scott asked. “I would be glad to
-get one from Asheville for Jarred.”</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. “Jarred would not like it.”</p>
-<p>So they left Hopwood standing contentedly on call beside the door, and
-started slowly for the village.</p>
-<p>“Tell me,” Scott exclaimed, “why did Hopwood wear that iron hat? I have
-been wondering about it ever since I came and he has always told me he
-would tell me later.”</p>
-<p>“He wanted to make his family think he was crazy,” Sewall explained.
-“Did he fool you?”</p>
-<p>“At first,” Scott admitted, “but not for long.”</p>
-<p>Sewall laughed. “He has more brains than anybody else in the family. He
-was crazy for a while after Foster struck him that time, and he began
-wearing the iron hat for protection. He soon got all right, but he was
-shrewd enough to see that he could hear a lot more and go wherever he
-pleased if they thought he was crazy.</p>
-<p>“Of course you know how crazy he is about Vic and Jarred. Well, he kept
-right on pretending to be crazy, and he did it so well that he fooled
-them all completely. All the time, he was working tooth and nail to help
-Jarred.”</p>
-<p>“And you knew that all the time?” Scott asked.</p>
-<p>“Certainly. Jarred was in the right, and Foster has been wrong always,”
-Sewall exclaimed.</p>
-<p>As they approached old man Sanders’ cabin they saw him waiting for them
-at the gate.</p>
-<p>“How is Jarred?” he called, as soon as they were near enough to hear
-him.</p>
-<p>“Lots better,” Scott said.</p>
-<p>“And is it true that Foster has gone to the penitentiary for life?” he
-asked eagerly.</p>
-<p>“He’s gone to the penitentiary, all right,” Scott said, “and we hope it
-will be for life.”</p>
-<p>“Good!” the old man exclaimed enthusiastically. “I congratulate you,
-young man, on the way you kept neutral,” he added with a grin.</p>
-<p>“Well, it worked, anyway,” Scott retorted. He had noticed that Mr.
-Sanders had hardly spoken to Sewall, and he had thought that he would be
-surprised to see him.</p>
-<p>“You surely know Mr. Sewall Wait, don’t you, Mr. Sanders?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Reckon I do,” Mr. Sanders laughed. “He licked me at cribbage here last
-night.”</p>
-<p>Scott looked at Sewall indignantly. “I thought you told me that you had
-not been up this road for thirty years.”</p>
-<p>“That was above here,” Sewall laughed. “I sneak over here in the evening
-every once in a while to play cribbage with Mr. Sanders.”</p>
-<p>Scott was beginning to see what a hollow thing that feud really was, and
-yet it had killed several people, wounded many more and ruined the
-community for years.</p>
-<p>“Did Jarred know it?” he asked.</p>
-<p>Sewall nodded. “Sure. I have sat on the fence there and talked over the
-feud with Vic by the hour.”</p>
-<p>“Do you think Vic will give it up?” he asked again.</p>
-<p>“Sure she will,” Sewall replied confidently. “She’ll marry Hopwood some
-day and forget there ever was a feud unless Foster comes back. She’ll
-never forgive him, and she’ll never forgive her father.”</p>
-<p>They left Mr. Sanders and went down to the logging camp. There Scott
-gave directions to MacAndrews to go on with the logging in the morning
-as usual, and told him that if he were short of help he could hire
-anybody around there.</p>
-<p>At the station he sent a telegram to his old boss in the forest service:</p>
-<p>“Feud ended. Place now foolproof for supervisors.”</p>
-<p>And when Mr. Roberts came home to supper that evening he brought the
-reply:</p>
-<p>“Good work. We are going to appoint you the next fool.”</p>
-<p>But Scott did not want that job till he had finished the one he had. He
-was deaf to the letters from Washington. A few days later, Mr. Johns
-arrived on the scene to plead with him in person. He listened with
-interest to Scott’s account of the struggle.</p>
-<p>“Well,” he said admiringly when Scott had finished his story, “you
-certainly turned the trick, all right. You pulled the Service out of a
-nasty hole and everybody appreciates it. Now we want you back as
-supervisor. It ought to be a peaceful enough job now, thanks to you.”</p>
-<p>But Scott still shook his head. “Not till the last log is in here,” he
-said, waving his hand toward the mountain slope.</p>
-<p>“Pshaw,” Mr. Johns exclaimed impatiently, “anybody can run this logging
-outfit now.”</p>
-<p>“That’s just it,” Scott replied quietly. “It has been hard enough work
-to get it to run smoothly, and now I am going to have the benefit of it.
-I am going to make a bunch of money off that contract, low as the bid
-was. When it is all over I will take back the job if you want me to; but
-I would rather go back to my old horse in Arizona.”</p>
-<p>“Well, we might even arrange that in time,” Mr. Johns said, “or maybe we
-could bring the horse here.”</p>
-<p>“That would be better,” came a quiet voice behind them, and they both
-started to find Hopwood looking at Scott reproachfully.</p>
-<p>“You are right, Hopwood,” Scott replied gently. “I had forgotten you. I
-will at least come back when you and Vic are married. Let’s all go up to
-see Jarred and tell him the news.”</p>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
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-<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge, by Edward G. (Edward Gheen) Cheyney</title>
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="header title">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge, by Edward G.
-(Edward Gheen) Cheyney</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Scott Burton in the Blue Ridge</p>
-<p>Author: Edward G. (Edward Gheen) Cheyney</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 23, 2020 [eBook #61908]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="credit">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/scottburtoninblu00chey">
- https://archive.org/details/scottburtoninblu00chey</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='section'>
-<h1>SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div>Stories by EDWARD G. CHEYNEY</div>
-</div>
-<div style='text-align:center; margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em'>
-<div style='display:inline-block; text-align:left;'>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON, FORESTER</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON ON THE RANGE</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON AND THE TIMBER THIEVES</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON, LOGGER</div>
-<div class='cbline'>SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:80%; max-width:471px;'>
-<img src='images/frontis.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-<p class='caption'>JIMMY TRIED DESPERATELY TO STAY HIS TEAM.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>SCOTT BURTON</div>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>IN THE BLUE RIDGE</div>
-<div style='margin-top:1em;'>BY</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>E. G. CHEYNEY</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>AUTHOR OF <q>SCOTT BURTON, FORESTER,</q></div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'><q>SCOTT BURTON, LOGGER,</q> ETC.</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em;'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</div>
-<div>NEW YORK :: 1924 :: LONDON</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY </div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY </div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em;'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<table class='toc tcenter' summary="" style='margin-bottom:3em'>
-<thead>
-<tr>
-<th colspan='2' style='font-weight:normal;padding-bottom:1em;'>CONTENTS</th>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr><td class='c1'>I.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chI'>Off to a New Job</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>II.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chII'>The Mystery of the Two Stores</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>III.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIII'>The Old Man’s Story</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIV'>Old Jarred</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>V.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chV'>Hopwood</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVI'>Scott Talks with the Agent</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVII'>Scott Receives <q>Aid</q> from His Boss</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVIII'>Scott Loses His Neutrality</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIX'>Scott Makes Another Rescue</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>X.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chX'>Scott Meets Jarred</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXI'>A Visit to Jarred’s Cabin</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXII'>Scott Asks for Bids</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIII'>Foster Wait Demands the Contract</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XIV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIV'>Scott Makes a Trip to Washington</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXV'>Scott Hears Some Rumblings of the Old Feud</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XVI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXVI'>Scott Has an Interview with Sewall</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XVII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXVII'>Hopwood Takes a Trip</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XVIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXVIII'>Dick Turns Gentleman</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XIX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIX'>Hopwood Throws Away His Iron Hat</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXX'>An Attempt at Arson</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXI'>Scott Finds the Still</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXII'>Hopwood Gets Jarred’s Promise</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXIII'>A Close Call</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXIV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXIV'>Scott Goes after the Marshal</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXV'>Hopwood Sends Foster a Message</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXVI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXVI'>Foster Revives the Feud</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXVII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXVII'>Scott Arrives at the Village</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXVIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXVIII'>The End of the Feud</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>XXIX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXXIX'>Jarred and Sewall Meet</a></td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>SCOTT BURTON IN THE BLUE RIDGE</div>
-</div>
-<h2 id='chI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER I</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>OFF TO A NEW JOB</span></h2>
-<p>The ticking of the old grandfather clock in the neat little New England
-house was the only sound to break the stillness. So still it was that
-any one approaching the house could have heard the clock distinctly and
-would certainly have overlooked the silent figure in the old
-rocking-chair. But a man was sitting there, nevertheless, completely
-absorbed in his own thoughts.</p>
-<p>An old gentleman appeared in the doorway and stood there for an instant
-before he saw him. Then his face lighted up.</p>
-<p><q>Hello, Scott! I thought you had gone out and I wanted to talk to you
-about your new assignment. Mother tells me that you have your sailing
-orders now.</q></p>
-<p>The son looked at him with a smile, but his face still wore a puzzled
-frown.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> he said, <q>I have my sailing orders, but—</q></p>
-<p><q>Good or bad?</q> his father interrupted anxiously. <q>You don’t look
-overjoyed with them.</q> The old man was really worried.</p>
-<p><q>I don’t know just what to think of them,</q> Scott frowned once more and
-opened the letter for the hundredth time. <q>They have assigned me to a
-timber sales job in the North Carolina mountains.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, that sounds good enough. They say that is a beautiful country and
-it is a place I have always wanted to see.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh, the country is all right,</q> Scott said brightening, <q>and I am crazy
-to go there, only I had my mind set on going back to my old place in the
-southwest.</q> And again he frowned. <q>It is not the country but the job
-that I am afraid of. Sometimes I am almost sorry that I caught those
-range thieves out there in Arizona.</q></p>
-<p><q>Why, Scottie boy! If it had not been for that you would never be where
-you are in the Service to-day,</q> his father remonstrated proudly.</p>
-<p><q>Oh, I know that it made me solid with the Forest Service and gave me a
-chance at a supervisor’s job years before I would ordinarily have had
-one, but they have been using me as a sort of detective ever since. I
-was lucky enough to catch those timber thieves in Florida, but I am no
-sleuth and I’ll fall down on that job sooner or later.</q></p>
-<p><q>But, Scott, I don’t believe this is detective work. I expect they have
-heard what a tremendous success you made of your own logging job last
-winter and want you to look after the logging work down there.</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott admitted, <q>I think you are partly right. But why transfer
-me down there when there are local men who understand those methods?
-Logging in New Hampshire and logging in North Carolina are very
-different propositions.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe the local men cannot handle it and they know you can,</q> his father
-suggested proudly.</p>
-<p><q>Of course that’s what you think, dad,</q> Scott said affectionately, <q>and
-it may be what they think, but I am afraid that there is something else
-wrong.</q></p>
-<p>This rather gloomy conversation was broken up by Mrs. Burton, who had
-come to the doorway unnoticed. <q>Well, well, why worry over something you
-don’t either of you know anything about? Maybe we do not know what you
-are going to do in North Carolina, but we do know that you have to leave
-us in the morning and we don’t want to waste what time we have left
-worrying. Come on in to supper.</q></p>
-<p>Scott laughed. <q>All right, mother, you always say the sensible thing.
-I’ll bet there is nothing wrong with the supper no matter what may be
-the matter with the new job.</q></p>
-<p>So they went in to supper cheerfully enough and all three spent the
-evening poring very busily over the atlas, and trying to see what they
-could find out about the new country. Caspar, the little town where the
-headquarters were located, was not shown on the old map, but they found
-out a great deal about the country in general, and it was bedtime before
-they knew it.</p>
-<p><q>There,</q> Mrs. Burton exclaimed cheerfully as they said good night, <q>I am
-satisfied. I’d be willing to go to that country on any old kind of a
-job.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was not ordinarily given to worrying much and by the time his
-train pulled out of the quiet little Massachusetts village the next
-morning he was looking forward eagerly to seeing this new country and
-had forgotten all the imaginary troubles which the new work might bring.</p>
-<p>His orders were to report direct to Caspar, but he had half a day
-between trains in Washington and took the opportunity to visit the
-Forest Service offices. He met a few friends and became personally
-acquainted with a number of men who had before that been to him only a
-name attached to the end of an official letter, but he learned nothing
-definite in regard to his new work. The chief of the particular branch
-in which Scott was employed was out of the office and the inspector who
-was to meet him in Caspar had already gone to North Carolina. That
-looked as though there must be something unusual there, but Scott
-resolutely refused to worry about it any more and settled down in the
-car seat to enjoy the scenery of Virginia, which was altogether new to
-him.</p>
-<p>The little shanties scattered all through the country and the grinning
-black faces which crowded one end of the platform at every station
-reminded him of Florida, but the country itself was very different.
-Instead of the flat sand-plains covered with dense stands of yellow pine
-the train wound through rolling clay hills and hardwood forests until it
-lost itself in the foothills of the mountains just as the sun went down.
-Scott peered eagerly out of the car window until he could no longer see
-even the telegraph poles beside the track.</p>
-<p>Morning found him at a junction point in the heart of the mountains.
-These mountains were not like the Rocky Mountains as he had known them
-in the southwest. There was none of that stark grandeur of the bare
-rocky slopes and flat-top mesas, but there was a peaceful beauty about
-them which reminded him more of the overgrown Massachusetts hills; soft
-green slopes towering above the valley to a surprising height,
-considering the low absolute altitude of the range. There was as much
-difference between the valley and the mountain peak as there usually was
-in the Rockies, but Scott remembered that the valleys in the Rockies
-were as high as many of these peaks.</p>
-<p>A little branch line carried him down a narrow valley between what
-appeared to be flat-topped, unbroken ridges clothed in every kind of
-hardwood tree that Scott had ever heard of, and capped with a rim of
-dark green spruce which fitted over it like a black cape. Here and there
-a peak rose conspicuously above the level ridge.</p>
-<p><q>It must be great in those forests,</q> Scott thought, <q>and the views from
-those peaks ought to be worth seeing. I tell you there has got to be a
-lot of trouble in this job if I can’t enjoy myself in this country.</q></p>
-<p>He was trying to catch a glimpse of a particularly high peak which
-showed itself every now and then above the dark spruce ridge when the
-conductor called, <q>Caspar,</q> and Scott had to hurry to get his pack sack
-and suit case off the train at his headquarters.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER II</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>THE MYSTERY OF THE TWO STORES</span></h2>
-<p>When the dinky little train pulled out and left Scott standing on the
-platform, he realized why he had not seen the town of Caspar from the
-car window. It consisted of a railroad station, two stores, four
-dwelling houses and another large, decrepit-looking building which could
-not easily be classified, and they were all on the other side of the
-railroad track from Scott’s position in the car. From that side of the
-train no one would have suspected the presence of a town anywhere in
-that vicinity. The mountain slope came down almost to the railroad track
-and the forest on that side was almost unbroken.</p>
-<p>The station agent seemed quite interested at the sight of a stranger. He
-watched Scott for a minute and seemed to be studying him in his own slow
-way. Finally he seemed to decide that it would be safe to speak.</p>
-<p><q>Howdy! Stranger in these parts, be ye?</q> he drawled.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said, <q>is there a hotel here or any place where a man can
-stay?</q></p>
-<p><q>Reckon you can stay at the hotel. Ain’t no place else you could stay in
-this town and live.</q></p>
-<p>Scott thought at the time that that was a rather peculiar remark for any
-one to make, but when he found that the station agent also ran the hotel
-he charged it up to professional pride. When he saw the hotel he
-wondered how any one could have any professional pride in it.</p>
-<p>The hotel turned out to be the nondescript building which stood, or
-rather sat, apart from the others at the end of the street. It was a
-large, rambling, barn-like structure a story and a half high. Half a
-dozen gables stuck up from the side of the roof. It looked very old and
-its first coat of paint had never been renewed. The ground around it was
-as bare as the weathered clapboarding. There was no sign of any attempt
-at beautifying either grounds or building. A rough picket fence
-separated it from the rest of the village, but just why no one could
-tell, for the ground inside the fence was, if anything, more barren than
-that outside. Altogether it was a forlorn-looking place.</p>
-<p>The proprietor led Scott upstairs into a room large enough for a banquet
-hall. It looked even more desolate, if possible, than the outside of the
-house. It contained a bed covered with an old patch-work quilt and two
-boxes—one to serve as a chair and the other as a washstand (you could
-tell which was the washstand by the old tin basin half full of dirty
-water).</p>
-<p>Scott looked around the room in dismay, but he had made up his mind that
-he would have to put up with it when he caught a sickening odor, as of a
-dead mouse, that apparently came from the closet. That he could not
-stand. He had heard of the touchiness of these people, and he did not
-want to offend them, especially as he would probably have to make the
-place his headquarters for some time. But he had to get out of there by
-some means.</p>
-<p><q>You haven’t any bedroom on the first floor, have you?</q> he asked, trying
-to conceal the disgust he actually felt. <q>I may be here a long time, and
-there may be a great many people coming to see me, and a ground-floor
-room would be much more convenient.</q></p>
-<p><q>Shore, I reckon we can accommodate you,</q> the man said, and he led the
-way apathetically downstairs again.</p>
-<p>He opened a door off the long back porch and stepped back to let Scott
-enter. It was a palace compared with the upstairs room. The furniture
-was old, but everything was there down to a rag carpet on the floor,
-and, moreover, everything looked clean.</p>
-<p><q>This will be fine,</q> Scott said as he glanced quickly about. <q>What time
-do you have dinner?</q></p>
-<p><q>Twelve o’clock, most times, but there ain’t anything certain about it.</q>
-He paused at the door on his way out. <q>It ain’t none of my business, but
-you ain’t a U. S. marshal, be you?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Scott laughed, <q>nothing like that. Why, are there many moonshiners
-around here?</q></p>
-<p><q>I ain’t saying anything about moonshiners,</q> the man replied in the same
-dull tone. <q>I was just going to tell you that this was a mighty
-unhealthy country around here for the U. S. marshal.</q></p>
-<p>Scott did not know whether this was meant as a friendly warning or as a
-threat, and before he could ask anything more about it the man was gone.
-As he was not in any way connected with the United States marshal, he
-thought no more about it.</p>
-<p>Left to himself, he began to examine the room more closely. It was clean
-all right, but the general effect of it was most grotesque. The high,
-carved head-board of the old walnut bed might have had a place in a
-medieval museum, but here in this room it looked out of place like
-everything else in it. When Scott’s eyes fell on the wall paper, he
-stood aghast. He counted thirty-seven different patterns, each a small
-square evidently taken from a country storekeeper’s sample book, and
-only a third of the wall was covered. The east window was heavily
-curtained with portières, lace curtains and a shade. Scott peeped out.
-It opened almost into the mountainside and no human habitation was in
-sight. The glass door opening on to the back porch—which was by far the
-most frequented part of the house—was not curtained at all. It was a
-queer place, but Scott had been in worse, and he decided that it would
-have to do.</p>
-<p>He had been so interested in finding a place to stay that he had
-forgotten all about the man from the Washington office who was to meet
-him here. He went out to inquire for him. The dining room opened on to
-the porch next to his room and the kitchen was next to that.</p>
-<p>The man was nowhere to be seen, but there were three women in the
-kitchen and they were feverishly discussing Scott’s probable business.
-Complete silence fell on them all when he appeared in the doorway.</p>
-<p><q>Pardon me,</q> he said. <q>Do you know whether Mr. Reynolds of the Forest
-Service has been here?</q></p>
-<p>The women looked at each other as though an important problem had been
-solved before any one answered.</p>
-<p>Then one of the women answered with a question: <q>Are you Mr. Burton?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>Mr. Reynolds left here this morning. He said that if Mr. Burton, the
-new supervisor, came to tell him he would be back to-night or to-morrow
-morning. I was looking for a much older man,</q> she added looking at him
-curiously.</p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> Scott laughed, <q>time will correct that.</q></p>
-<p>Scott noticed that these women were all sizing him up just as the
-station agent had done a little while before. He went back to his room,
-and looked in the glass to see what could be wrong. He could see nothing
-to attract attention. He tried to forget the occurrence and went out to
-see the town and surrounding country.</p>
-<p>He wandered down the street, if the road between the two stores could be
-called a street, and wondered why there should be two stores in such a
-place. Judging from the unbroken forests on the mountain slopes he did
-not see where enough people could possibly come from to support any
-store at all.</p>
-<p>On the porch of each store there was a small group of idlers holding
-down the dry-goods boxes, and Scott saw that they were sizing him up
-just as the women had done. Moreover, the stare of these men seemed to
-be distinctly unfriendly. It made him feel uneasy. He was glad when he
-had run the gauntlet of unfriendly stares, and was out in the open road
-with only the railroad station and the mountains before him. But he had
-one more examination to stand. The station agent was watching him from
-the corner of the platform. In fact, Scott caught him squatting down to
-get a better view of him even before he came out in the open. He
-resented this officious spying on his movements and turned aside into a
-mountain road which wound its way up a timber-covered slope.</p>
-<p><q>Heh!</q> Scott turned to see the man coming towards him at what was an
-unusual gait for him. <q>Didn’t buy anything at the store, did you?</q></p>
-<p>Scott looked at him indignantly for an instant, but he remembered again
-that he had to live with these people, probably for a long time, and did
-not want to offend them. <q>No,</q> he replied as pleasantly as he could.
-<q>Why?</q></p>
-<p><q>I just wanted to know,</q> the man replied frankly. <q>But if you haven’t
-done it, don’t.</q> The man had evidently noticed that Scott had resented
-his interference and he walked away with considerable dignity without
-making any further explanation.</p>
-<p>Scott started to call him back but changed his mind and continued his
-walk up the road. He wanted to get away from these inquisitive people
-for a while, and try to think things over. Fate, however, seemed to have
-decided otherwise. He had gone a little more than a quarter of a mile up
-the winding road through the heavy hardwood timber when he came to a
-little cabin set back only a few feet from the road behind the
-inevitable picket fence. An old man was sitting on the porch, and he
-sized Scott up with the same all-consuming curiosity, but his gaze
-seemed to be wholly friendly. There was none of that furtive animosity
-he had felt rather than seen in the groups down at the store.</p>
-<p><q>Howdy, stranger?</q> the old man greeted him pleasantly. <q>Be you the new
-supervisor?</q></p>
-<p>The old man’s manner was so evidently friendly, and his curiosity so
-frank that Scott warmed up to him at once.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> he admitted cheerfully, <q>I’m the new supervisor.</q></p>
-<p><q>Haven’t bought anything at the store yet, have you?</q> the old man
-continued in his friendly way.</p>
-<p>There was that same question about the store and Scott stiffened for an
-instant, but he thought better of it. Maybe he could learn something
-from this old man.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Scott said, <q>I have not bought anything from the store. Tell me,
-why does everybody ask me that? I have not been in this town much more
-than half an hour and two people have already asked me if I have bought
-anything at the store. What is the meaning of it?</q></p>
-<p>The old man looked at him thoughtfully for a minute as though hesitating
-to answer the question. Then he answered slowly as though pronouncing
-final judgment:</p>
-<p><q>Because when you do buy anything from one of those stores, you might as
-well leave the town for all the good you’ll ever be able to do in this
-country,</q> and he turned as though to enter the house.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER III</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>THE OLD MAN’S STORY</span></h2>
-<p>The old man’s statement seemed so ridiculous that Scott hesitated to
-believe it. He thought that the man must be making fun of him, but he
-recalled the station agent’s warning. There must be something in it. The
-whole community could not be conspiring just to play a joke on him.
-Before the old man reached the door he called him back.</p>
-<p><q>Just a minute, please. You are the second man to warn me not to buy
-anything at that store. Why shouldn’t I? What has buying at the store
-got to do with running a national forest? I can’t see the connection.</q></p>
-<p>The old man looked at him and smiled sarcastically. <q>Neither could the
-other two men who came here before you, and they both had to leave.</q></p>
-<p>Scott’s curiosity was now thoroughly aroused, and he determined to pump
-an explanation out of this man. He smiled winningly. <q>Then tell me the
-secret so that I shall not have to follow them.</q></p>
-<p>At his change of tone the old man’s sarcasm disappeared immediately.
-<q>Well, if that’s the way you look at it,</q> he said with all his old
-friendliness, <q>why, maybe I’ll try to tell you. You couldn’t tell those
-other fellows anything.</q></p>
-<p><q>I would certainly appreciate it,</q> Scott said, as he settled himself
-down on the fence to listen. <q>I have come here to run this forest, and
-if that store down there has anything to do with it, I want to know
-about it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Come in, come in,</q> the old man repeated hospitably. <q>It’s a long story,
-and you might as well sit down to listen to it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott gladly stepped inside the fence, and took a seat opposite his host
-on the porch. <q>By the way,</q> he said, <q>I thought I saw two stores down
-there in the village. Which one do you mean?</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s just the point. If there was only one store there you could buy
-all you pleased, but if you buy anything from one of those stores now,
-the fellow who owns the other one would sure get you.</q></p>
-<p><q>But can’t a man buy where he pleases in this country?</q> Scott asked
-indignantly. His spirit rebelled at any one dictating to him the way he
-should run what he considered to be his own business.</p>
-<p><q>Not and live in peace,</q> the old man answered sadly. <q class='cq'>I’ll tell you the
-story, and then you can do as you please.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'>You see the people here in the mountains don’t move around much. When a
-man gets used to these mountains he never wants to live anywhere else.
-The children don’t marry, and go off somewhere else to live; they just
-put up another shanty, and live close to home. The families stick close
-together, and form a kind of settlement. Most everybody in the
-settlement is kin to somebody else.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'>The Morgans live in the settlement up on this side of the valley, and
-the Waits over there on the other side. They were good friends and
-getting along fine till the railroad come down the valley. They called
-old Zeb Morgan and old Foster Wait together to decide where the station
-ought to be. They got into a row over it somehow, and before anybody
-could interfere Foster had pulled a gun and shot Zeb through the heart.
-That was forty years ago. Well, it was a murder all right, and no excuse
-for it except Foster’s notorious temper. The sheriff took Foster off to
-jail, and that ought to have ended it. Would have ended it, too, if it
-had not been for Zeb’s half-witted brother Jim. Everybody knew Jim
-wasn’t exactly right in his head, but he worshiped Zeb, and when Zeb was
-shot he went plumb crazy, disappeared and nobody saw or heard of him for
-a week. Next thing anybody knew Jim had turned up in the middle of the
-Wait settlement and shot two of Foster’s brothers.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'>Well, they should not have held the Morgans responsible for the actions
-of a crazy man, but they did, and the fight was on. The dead line was
-drawn down the middle of the village street, and every time a Wait
-stepped over that dead line, he had to duck Morgan lead, and the Waits
-were just as quick on the trigger on the other side. Every once in a
-while some one on one side or the other would get drunk and shoot across
-the line.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'>It got pretty bad. All the kin folks got mixed up in it, and there was
-a funeral every two or three months. There has not been much shooting
-for the past five years. The Morgans got the worst of the scrap in the
-early days, and there’s only old Jarred and his two sons left of the
-direct descendants of Zeb. Unless you count his little granddaughter
-Vic. She’s the fightenest little wildcat in the whole bunch. Of course
-there are lots of relatives, but they had cooled off pretty much till
-this national forest business came along to stir them up again.</q></p>
-<p><q>But I most forgot the store. You see old Tom Wait had a store in the
-village before the trouble began, and it was all that was needed, maybe
-a little more, but of course after the trouble no Morgan would deal
-there. Been shot if he’d tried it. So Jarred’s boys had to start a store
-on the other side. That’s where the two stores come from. Buy anything
-from one of them, and you have all the other side of the mountain down
-on you. Now maybe you can see why I warned you.</q></p>
-<p>Scott sat in silence for a moment while the old man watched him
-curiously. He was dazed by what seemed to him an impossible situation.
-How could such a horrible state of affairs exist in the heart of a
-civilized country?</p>
-<p><q>Isn’t there any way of bringing the two families together and stopping
-this senseless fight?</q> Scott asked earnestly. <q>Surely they must see how
-it is hurting them both. Has any one ever tried to stop it?</q></p>
-<p>The old man shook his head sadly. <q>The Morgan boys might quit if they
-could find any way to do it. They know it is only a question of time
-till they will be killed. Three Morgans can’t hold out forever against a
-dozen Waits, and that is what it means because their kin folk are not
-going to stick by them much longer.</q></p>
-<p><q>It would not be possible to persuade this man Jarred to give up the
-feud?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p>The old man smiled sadly. <q>It’s clear you ain’t seen him, stranger. Old
-Jarred would give away anything he’s got except his pride, but it takes
-only one look at him to see that he’d never give up to an enemy.</q></p>
-<p>Scott sat for some minutes pondering this extraordinary situation, and
-the old man continued to watch him rather wistfully. Would he try to
-make peace between these warring factions, or would he ignore them, and
-be run out of the country as the other two had been?</p>
-<p>When Scott looked up he smiled at the old man gratefully. <q>I don’t know
-what I can do to stop this thing. It is pitiful to think of that old man
-eaten up by his hatred, and holding out in his pride against the world.
-Maybe I cannot do anything to stop it, but I certainly do not want to do
-anything to stir it up. I can’t tell you how much I appreciate what you
-have told me. To whom am I indebted for this information and advice?</q></p>
-<p><q>My name is Sanders. <q>Old man</q> Sanders they call me.</q></p>
-<p><q>And I take it that you are not mixed up in this feud on either side.
-Who else is not in it?</q></p>
-<p><q>The station agent. He has to be neutral.</q></p>
-<p><q>And how did you happen to keep out of it?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p><q>Because I am a Quaker,</q> the old man answered proudly, <q>and do not
-believe in fighting. And now,</q> he added with the same sad smile Scott
-had noticed several times before, <q>one of my daughters has married a
-Wait and the other a Morgan.</q></p>
-<p>Scott rose to go. <q>Well, Mr. Sanders,</q> he said earnestly, <q>I have almost
-as good a reason as you have for keeping neutral. I am certainly obliged
-to you for your advice, and I may need your help again. In the meanwhile
-I shall keep away from those stores, and try not to stir anything up.</q></p>
-<p>Scott walked slowly on up the mountain road with bent head, and when the
-old man had watched him out of sight he continued to gaze dreamily at
-the turn of the road where the young man had disappeared.</p>
-<p><q>He’s not a fool like the others, anyway,</q> he said aloud, <q>and I think
-he’ll stay here.</q></p>
-<p>Scott wandered on. He wanted to find a place where he could be alone and
-think.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>OLD JARRED</span></h2>
-<p>Two miles farther up that same road a little log cabin stood back from
-the road about fifty feet behind its weather-beaten picket fence. The
-little yard, like most of the yards in that section of the country, was
-perfectly bare, and at first glance it seemed to be deserted. But if a
-member of the Wait settlement had tried to enter the yard, he would
-instantly have been aware of a very real presence.</p>
-<p>Seated on the doorstep of the cabin, and so motionless that he might
-have been a part of it, was a man clad in a black sateen shirt and
-homespun trousers tucked into heavy Congress boots. Judging from the
-silvery whiteness of his hair he might have been eighty-five, but from
-the strong, stern lines of his thin, smooth-shaven face he might have
-been forty-five. There was no sign of nervousness. Not a finger moved
-and his eyes rested unwaveringly on a small clearing half a mile down
-the mountain where he could catch a glimpse of the road to the village.</p>
-<p>A white flag waved for an instant in the clearing and the lines of his
-face relaxed. The sternness had given way to an expression of
-anticipation. The man’s eyes shifted from the clearing to the bend in
-the road just below the cabin. Other than that there was no movement. It
-would have taken a careful student to have discovered that an
-all-consuming curiosity was gnawing at this man’s heart. He seemed to be
-without a care in the world. Certainly no one could have guessed that he
-was suffering from a suspense which was almost unbearable.</p>
-<p>Suddenly a slip of a girl, not more than thirteen years old, and small
-for her age, came running around the bend in the road. The brown of her
-sunburned legs twinkled in the patches of sunlight that came through the
-trees, and her blue-checked calico dress fluttered in the wind as she
-ran with unfaltering stride. It was not an impatient burst of speed at
-the end of a journey. She had been running steadily all the way from the
-village, almost two and a half miles away and nearly a thousand feet
-below.</p>
-<p>At the sight of her the man arose and stretched his gaunt form to its
-full height. The coming of the child meant much to him, but he showed no
-sign of curiosity. She stopped before him with chest heaving and dark
-eyes aflame.</p>
-<p><q>He went to Wait’s,</q> she panted.</p>
-<p>The lines in the old man’s face tightened, and he seemed to grow taller,
-but he made no answer.</p>
-<p><q>That was the man who came yesterday,</q> she continued furiously. <q>He
-bought a sack of tobacco at Wait’s this morning, and went up on the
-other mountain. The other one who came this morning didn’t go in
-nowhere. He ain’t much more than a boy.</q></p>
-<p><q>Where is he?</q> the man asked sternly. <q>At the hotel?</q></p>
-<p><q>No, he went there, but he only stayed a few minutes. Then he walked
-right through the village and started up this way. I passed him just out
-on the road.</q></p>
-<p><q>Did he see you?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> she answered contemptuously. <q>I was in the brush, but he would not
-have seen me if I had run right by him. He was looking at the ground and
-frowning.</q></p>
-<p>The man turned the news slowly over in his mind before he answered.</p>
-<p><q>So the new supervisor is a young lad, is he?</q></p>
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-<p><q>And he did not go in anywhere,</q> the man continued meditatively. <q>What
-sort of looking man is he?</q></p>
-<p><q>He’s two inches shorter than you are, grandpa, but he is heavy and
-strong,</q> she said confidently, with the air of one who is accustomed to
-gauge the physical builds of men. <q>He’s wearing one of them uniforms,
-and he’s dark and good looking.</q></p>
-<p>He gave the girl a quick, searching glance. <q>Well, don’t make friends
-with him yet, Vic. He has not gone into Wait’s, but he has not been in
-our store either. Let’s wait till we see what he is going to do.</q></p>
-<p><q>Me make friends with one of those government men,</q> she burst out
-contemptuously. <q>They all of them side with the Waits. I’d spit in his
-face if he spoke to me.</q></p>
-<p>Her grandfather smiled approvingly. <q>Oh, I would not do that, Vic, not
-till he gives you some reason to. This one may turn out to be all
-right.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then let him keep away from the Waits, if I have to be polite to him,</q>
-she snapped.</p>
-<p>The old man took the girl tenderly by the shoulders, and looked at her
-earnestly. <q>You’re the best Morgan in the bunch, Vic, and we’ll have to
-stick together. The boys may stick by me, but they would give the whole
-thing up if they saw a good way out. You and old Jarred are the only
-ones left to uphold the honor of the family.</q></p>
-<p>The child shook the mass of black hair back from her face, and looked
-squarely into the old man’s eyes. The concentrated hatred and fury of
-three generations gave her the appearance of a witch. <q>Don’t you worry,
-grandpa. Let daddy and uncle Bob give up if they want to, but no Wait
-will ever cross the line while I am here to help you.</q></p>
-<p>Her grandfather patted her head proudly. <q>That’s the girl. I knew I
-could count on you, Vic. Now go in the house, and get some lunch. Then
-we’ll go down to the village again. I want to get a look at that
-handsome young man myself.</q></p>
-<p>Vic glared at him angrily. <q>I had to say that to tell you what he looked
-like. Let him go into the Wait’s store, and I’ll show you what I think
-of his looks.</q> She tossed her head defiantly and stalked into the house
-with great dignity.</p>
-<p>The old man watched her go with a twinkle of pride in his eye and smiled
-affectionately. Then he turned away and looked sadly down into the
-valley. These were indeed sad times when the honor of the Morgans rested
-on a girl of thirteen, and an old man past sixty, but his gaunt frame
-straightened unconsciously at the thought, and his chin set all the
-harder. If the Waits thought that they could walk over him because he
-was old they were surely reckoning without their host.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER V</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD</span></h2>
-<p>While the old man and the child were pledging their everlasting hatred
-to the Waits, Scott Burton, with puzzled frown, was slowly climbing the
-mountain road to their cabin. He did not know the location of old Jarred
-Morgan’s cabin, and probably would have avoided it if he had, for he
-wanted to think this feud business over before he talked to any of them.
-Ignorant of how close he was to them, he turned into the woods less than
-a quarter of a mile below them and sat down with his back against the
-trunk of a great, wide-spreading beech tree. He was out of sight of the
-road, and he had purposely chosen the spot in the deep woods to be free
-from interruption.</p>
-<p>So this was the simple little job which the Service had given him to
-complete before he went back to his old home in the southwest? Why did
-they always pick him out to unravel some mess? He had never had a job
-where he could really show what he could do. Always there had been some
-complication, something outside of the regular line of duty that had
-taken his whole time and attention. Never had he found himself in a
-position where he could devote himself to his technical work and show
-what he knew. Even when he had logged his own land he had found his
-operations hindered by the bully of the country who had tried to ruin
-him. His first impulse now was to write to the Service that he did not
-care to mix up in this mess at all. If they wanted him to go back to his
-old post, all right; otherwise, he would resign. He had made enough to
-live on out of his own logging operations, and he could make more the
-same way. He did not have to worry over these miserable feuds. Two men
-had already lost their reputations on this job and been run out of the
-country and....</p>
-<p>Right there Scott lost all interest in that line of thought. Was he
-going to let them run him out of the country? His jaw set at the mere
-thought of it, and he knew that he would never leave till he had been
-completely beaten or was carried out in a wooden box. He dropped all
-idea of giving up the job and settled down to look it squarely in the
-face.</p>
-<p>Just what was this problem anyway? The government owned a big tract of
-land here, and there was timber on it that was ready to be cut, and it
-was up to him as supervisor to sell it. It was located on both sides of
-the valley, part in Wait territory and part in Morgan. Two other men had
-already tried it, and had failed utterly before they had ever started
-because they had become involved in this everlasting feud between the
-Waits and the Morgans.</p>
-<p>When he really thought about it, it did not seem to be such an
-impossible task. Why should he mix up in this feud at all? It looked as
-though old Foster Wait was to blame for starting it years ago, but it
-did not matter now who was originally to blame, they were both equally
-to blame for keeping it up all these years. He would put it up to them
-squarely that they had to forget the feud, and come together or he would
-have nothing to do with either of them. Just what could they have to do
-with it in any event? He did not think, from what he had seen of the
-country people there, that either family could scrape together enough
-money to buy the timber on a single acre. He did not see how they could
-influence the sale one way or the other, and he was not going to let
-them do it if they could.</p>
-<p>When Scott had come to that somewhat Irish decision he felt better. It
-seemed almost as if the problem had been solved and he began to look
-about him. His eyes had been fixed absently on the ground all the time
-and his first upward glance revealed a sight that sent a cold shiver up
-his back.</p>
-<p>A man was sitting on a log not six feet from him, and was staring at him
-with bright blue eyes. It was startling enough to find any one sitting
-so close to him when he had thought himself entirely alone, but it was
-really alarming when the man had a gun in his hand and a large piece of
-sheet iron on top of his head. At first Scott thought that he must be
-dreaming, and he blinked his eyes two or three times to try to dispel
-the illusion, but it would not dispel.</p>
-<p>This was really a man. He looked much as other men save for a queer,
-dreamy look in his eyes, and he was dressed like other men except for
-his strange head gear. Instead of a hat he was wearing a strange
-contraption of wood and iron. On the bottom of a sheet of heavy iron
-about eighteen inches long and a foot wide he had nailed four pieces of
-wood in the form of a square. This he was wearing on his head like a
-senior’s mortar board.</p>
-<p>All during Scott’s astonished examination, the newcomer sat staring at
-him without the slightest expression on his weather-beaten face. He was
-so still that he might have been a statue and his unwavering pose added
-to Scott’s feeling of his unreality. He finally, after several minutes
-of astonished silence, recovered sufficiently from the spell to exclaim
-<q>Hello.</q> He said it in a rather startled tone. It did not sound in the
-least like a friendly greeting, but it seemed to be altogether
-satisfactory to his visitor. The man’s face relaxed, and a friendly
-smile lighted it up. Scott was in hopes that he would remove the iron
-hat, but he did not.</p>
-<p><q>So you are the new supervisor,</q> the stranger remarked in a low,
-pleasing voice.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott replied a little stiffly, for he had not entirely recovered
-from his astonishment, and could not keep his eyes off the iron hat,
-<q>I’m the new supervisor. And who may you be?</q></p>
-<p><q>I might be almost anybody,</q> the man smiled, <q>but I happen to be
-Hopwood.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, I’m sure I don’t know where you came from, Mr. Hopwood. You just
-seemed to appear on that log as if by magic, but I am glad to know you,
-all the same.</q></p>
-<p><q>Not Mr. Hopwood,</q> the man said solemnly, <q>just Hopwood. Hopwood Wait.</q></p>
-<p>Scott looked at him with a new interest. So this was one of the Waits,
-the first one he had seen, and he wondered if the iron hat were a part
-of the family armor. It might have protected him from an airplane
-attack, but would have been of little use for anything else. He had
-understood that the Waits did not come over on this side of the valley.
-Could this man be scouting in enemy territory or had he come in hope of
-getting a pot shot at a Morgan? He decided to risk a question.</p>
-<p><q>Aren’t you in dangerous territory here?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head slowly. <q>No, they all think I am crazy, but I
-have more sense than anybody else in the family. I can eat lunch with
-Jarred Morgan and supper with Foster Wait, and that’s more than anybody
-else can do,</q> he replied proudly.</p>
-<p><q>Then you don’t believe in this family feud?</q> Scott inquired eagerly.</p>
-<p>Again Hopwood shook his head. <q>Why should I? They will all be killed if
-they keep it up. The cemetery is full of them now.</q></p>
-<p><q>Do you think that they would give it up if they had a good chance?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded.</p>
-<p><q>What makes you think so?</q> This man might be able to give him some
-useful information even if he was crazy.</p>
-<p><q>Because they are scared,</q> Hopwood answered promptly. <q>Every one of them
-is scared except old Jarred and Vic. They don’t pay any attention to me
-and I hear them talk.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then why don’t they give it up?</q></p>
-<p><q>Because they are more scared to quit than they are to go on. If they
-should quit, old Jarred would kill them all, both Morgans and Waits.</q></p>
-<p>Scott thought for a moment. Old Jarred Morgan seemed to be the key to
-the situation if this man knew what he was talking about.</p>
-<p><q>Where could I find you if I should need you some time?</q> Scott asked. He
-thought he could see how this man might be very useful to him.</p>
-<p><q>Almost anywhere,</q> was Hopwood’s unsatisfactory answer.</p>
-<p>Scott looked thoughtfully off through the woods a moment wondering what
-other useful information he could get out of this man, and when he
-looked back the man was gone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT TALKS WITH THE AGENT</span></h2>
-<p>The disappearance of Hopwood had been so silent and so unexpected that
-Scott hardly knew whether it had not been a dream after all. He sat
-still for a moment to see whether he would come back, but, when he did
-not, he arose leisurely, and began to glance cautiously about him. He
-did not want to search because he thought that Hopwood must be behind a
-tree somewhere waiting to have the laugh on him. After all what
-difference did it make what had become of Hopwood? Scott felt that he
-had learned all that he could get out of him just now, and he had made
-up his mind what he wanted to do.</p>
-<p>He glanced at his watch. It was a quarter of twelve, and he would be
-late for his dinner if he did not hurry. He was curious to know how
-Hopwood had disappeared so suddenly and where he had gone, but he struck
-out for the road without looking to the right or the left. Just as he
-reached it he saw the man of the iron hat stroll leisurely around a bend
-a little way up the mountain, apparently unconscious that he had acted
-peculiarly, and without a backward glance. The sight of him reminded
-Scott that he had not found out why this man wore his strange iron hat,
-and he made up his mind to ask some one the first chance he had.</p>
-<p>When Scott reached the hotel after again running the gauntlet of stares
-in the village there were no signs of a meal in the very near future.
-The women were talking in the kitchen, but there was no sign of any
-hurry in spite of the fact that it was already fifteen minutes after the
-time they had announced for dinner. He went to his room and found it
-just as he had left it. Either he was expected to make his own bed or
-the women did not make them till afternoon. He decided to wait and see
-what would happen.</p>
-<p>When the dinner bell finally rang, it was a quarter past one. Scott
-found himself alone with the station agent. The meal was about the worst
-he had ever seen. Great cubes of salt pork fat three inches square,
-boiled and transparent, that might have made an Eskimo’s mouth water,
-but were impossible for the uninitiated. Corn bread as dry as powder, a
-sickly looking gravy, and some gluey rice. At first Scott thought that
-he could not eat any of it, but what was he going to do? This was
-probably what he would have to eat for several weeks. There was no place
-to look for anything better. With a desperate look around the table to
-make sure that he had not overlooked any possibilities, he resolutely
-helped himself to the rice and the corn bread and waded in. He could
-swallow these things if he had to, but he could not bring himself even
-to try the salt pork.</p>
-<p>He had been so disgusted with the meal that he had forgotten all about
-the station agent. Now he recalled that the gentleman had been rather
-offended at his actions in the morning, and that he had better try to
-make his peace with him now.</p>
-<p><q>Mr. Roberts, you probably thought me very ungrateful this morning, but
-I knew absolutely nothing of this feud here, and could not imagine what
-you meant.</q></p>
-<p>The agent answered rather stiffly. <q>None of the government men who have
-been here seem to want to know anything about it, but they all learn
-something about it sooner or later.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, I want to know all I can about it. Up the road this morning I met
-Mr. Sanders, and when he asked me that same question about buying at the
-stores I asked him to explain. He told me all he could about it, and
-then I realized what you meant. I really appreciate your kindness very
-much, and want to thank you for trying to warn me. I don’t believe there
-are many people around here who would have done it.</q></p>
-<p>The agent was evidently pleased with the apology and melted immediately.
-<q>No, I reckon there ain’t,</q> he said rather proudly. <q>Old man Sanders and
-I are about the only ones. The others are all in it up to their necks.</q></p>
-<p><q>Now that I know about it, I am not going to get mixed up with either
-side. They will have to give up their feud and work together like other
-people if they want to get in the game.</q></p>
-<p><q>They will never do that as long as old Jarred lives,</q> the agent
-answered confidently.</p>
-<p>That familiar phrase reminded Scott of the strange man with the iron
-hat. <q>By the way,</q> he asked, <q>who is this man Hopwood?</q></p>
-<p><q>He’s Foster Wait’s nephew. Foster’s father is the man who started the
-feud, you know. He had an awful bad temper, and they tell me that, when
-Hopwood was a little kid, old Foster hit him in the head with his cane
-and he’s been crazy as a loon ever since. Did you meet him at Sanders’
-place?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Scott replied, <q>I met him up in the woods.</q></p>
-<p><q>Thought you might have met him at Sanders’,</q> the agent said. <q>His
-mother was old Sanders’ daughter. What did you think of his hat?</q></p>
-<p><q>I was just going to ask you why he wears that thing,</q> Scott said with
-renewed curiosity.</p>
-<p><q>He thinks it will keep the devil away.</q> The agent was delighted with
-the opportunity to tell some one of the strange gossip of the country
-that he had collected in his ten years of residence. <q>You see when he
-grew up he saw that he was not like other people, and they had to give
-him some reason for it, so they told him there was a devil in him. He
-went right out and built that iron hat and has worn it ever since. Says
-he’s going to wear it till they give up the feud.</q></p>
-<p><q>Doesn’t wear it at night, does he?</q> Scott asked. It was ridiculous, but
-it was so pathetic that he hated to laugh at it.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> the agent answered seriously, <q>he doesn’t wear it at night, but he
-sleeps on his back with that thing on his chest.</q></p>
-<p><q>He looked queer,</q> Scott said, <q>but he seemed to talk reasonably enough.
-He said just as you do that they will never drop the feud as long as old
-Jarred Morgan lives, but he says the others are all scared and would
-drop it if they could.</q></p>
-<p><q>Sometimes I think he isn’t as crazy as they make out. They talk about
-him and in front of him as though he couldn’t understand anything, but
-he can tell you every word that they have said for the past five years.</q></p>
-<p>Scott thought for a minute. <q>Do you think it would be safe for me to
-make use of him or would that be considered as taking part with the
-Waits?</q></p>
-<p><q>No, that would not tie you up with the Waits. Everybody talks to him,
-even old Jarred Morgan. They do not seem to consider him as belonging to
-the family, somehow. But you don’t want to be too sure about using him.
-If he happened to take a liking to you he will do anything for you, but
-if he did not like you this morning you’ll probably never see him
-again.</q></p>
-<p><q>I don’t know whether he liked me or not,</q> Scott said thoughtfully. <q>He
-appeared on a log in front of me so suddenly that I did not see where he
-came from, and he got away again in the same way.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh, he moves like a shadow in the woods,</q> the agent exclaimed
-enthusiastically. <q>He has any Indian I have ever seen beaten three ways
-for woodcraft. He moves about so fast and so silently that a lot of
-folks around here think he is a spirit.</q> It was easy to see from the
-agent’s manner that he was not altogether clear on that point himself.</p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> Scott said, <q>I hope he likes me because it looks as though I
-won’t have very many friends around here.</q></p>
-<p><q>You sure will not,</q> the agent remarked with decision. <q>You can make
-friends with half the people easy enough, but sure as you do the other
-half will hate you. If you don’t take up with either side, as you are
-planning on doing, likely as not they will all hate you.</q></p>
-<p>Scott sat for a moment dreamy eyed, considering this disagreeable
-dilemma. When he looked up Hopwood was standing in the doorway, calmly
-looking at him over the agent’s head. For a moment Scott was too
-astonished to speak. He wondered if Hopwood had been outside listening,
-and he thought of what the agent had said about this strange man being a
-spirit.</p>
-<p><q>Hello, Hopwood!</q> he exclaimed, and the agent almost jumped out of his
-chair.</p>
-<p>Hopwood smiled an answer. <q>Is that red-headed man who came on the train
-yesterday your boss?</q> he asked, as though they had been talking for some
-time.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott admitted, <q>he is, in a way.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, <i>he’s</i> joined the Waits,</q> Hopwood remarked.</p>
-<p>The announcement almost stunned Scott. He stared wildly at Hopwood for
-an instant and then at the agent. <q>What makes you think so?</q> he asked
-dully.</p>
-<p>There was no answer, and he found Hopwood had disappeared as suddenly as
-he had come.</p>
-<p>The agent tiptoed to the door and looked cautiously up and down the
-porch. Hopwood was nowhere to be seen. He looked back at Scott and shook
-his head. <q>Gone completely. Well, whether he is man or devil, I reckon
-he is a friend of yours all right.</q></p>
-<p><q>I guess he is,</q> Scott replied with a sickly smile, <q>but it does not
-look as though my boss thought much of me.</q></p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT RECEIVES <q>AID</q> FROM HIS BOSS</span></h2>
-<p>Mr. Roberts went back to his office soon after Hopwood’s visit, and was
-evidently glad of the opportunity to get away. He had spoken derisively
-of those who thought that Hopwood was a spirit, but he had looked behind
-him nervously till he was well away from the house.</p>
-<p>Scott scarcely noticed that he had gone. He sat with his chin dropped
-dejectedly on his chest, and stared across the table with unseeing eyes.
-If what Hopwood had said was true, his troubles there would be greatly
-increased even if his plans were not completely ruined. It seemed as
-though some evil genius had brought him to this place, and if he had he
-certainly must be laughing at the pickle his victim was in.</p>
-<p>Scott was so disappointed that he felt almost ready to cry. With
-considerable difficulty, and the help of old man Sanders and the station
-agent, he had succeeded in posting himself fairly well on the ins and
-outs of this feud. After carefully considering the possibility of an
-alliance with one side or the other he had come to the conclusion that
-the only safe thing to do was to remain absolutely neutral. He felt
-confident that if he could keep away from any entangling alliance with
-either side, he could successfully carry on his work in spite of the
-feud and might even be able to get these old enemies to patch up their
-differences. He had still considered that a possibility even though
-every one said that the feud would never be dropped as long as old
-Jarred Morgan lived.</p>
-<p>And now his superior officer had taken sides with the Waits and spoiled
-everything.</p>
-<p>Scott determined to find Hopwood, learn where Mr. Reynolds was, and know
-the worst as soon as possible. One of them was right and the other
-wrong. They must at least get together and agree on a common policy.</p>
-<p>So Scott started out in search of Hopwood. He felt sure that he could
-tell him where to find Mr. Reynolds. The iron hat was nowhere in sight,
-but Scott felt that he could not be very far away. Surely he would not
-have come to make such a statement as that and then disappear without
-waiting to give any explanation of it. Possibly he had gone to one of
-the stores.</p>
-<p>He had started down the village street to investigate when he noticed a
-motionless figure sitting back of a pile of cordwood a little way back
-from the street. He instantly recognized Hopwood. Was he hiding from him
-and would he run away? Scott approached him rather cautiously, but
-Hopwood watched him calmly and showed no sign of retreating. He rather
-appeared to be waiting for him.</p>
-<p><q>Thanks for the warning you gave me,</q> Scott said as soon as he was near
-enough to him.</p>
-<p><q>I thought that you would be looking for me,</q> Hopwood replied with his
-usual disregard of preliminaries.</p>
-<p><q>What made you think that I would find you in this out-of-the-way
-place?</q> Scott laughed. <q>Why didn’t you stay at the hotel? I would have
-been glad to have had a visit from you.</q></p>
-<p><q>The more people see me with you the less I’ll hear,</q> Hopwood answered
-cunningly.</p>
-<p>Scott started at the flash of wisdom from a half-wit. <q>I guess you are
-right,</q> he replied earnestly. <q>Do you think we are safe here?</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh, yes,</q> Hopwood replied confidently. <q>No one can see us here except
-from that one place, and no one else will go along that street for half
-an hour.</q></p>
-<p>Scott did not waste any time trying to find out how Hopwood knew that.
-There was something else that he was anxious to know. <q>Then maybe you
-can tell me, Hopwood, what makes you think Mr. Reynolds has joined the
-Waits?</q></p>
-<p><q>He’s been up at the Waits’ nearly all day, and has just about promised
-them that you will give them the logging contract.</q></p>
-<p><q>How do you know he did?</q> Scott asked incredulously. <q>You were with me
-part of the morning, and went up the other mountain when you left me,</q>
-he protested.</p>
-<p>Hopwood only smiled.</p>
-<p><q>Where is he now?</q> Scott continued. He could not believe that Hopwood
-knew what he was talking about. Maybe he was mistaken. He hoped so.</p>
-<p><q>He is on his way down the mountain with Foster Wait,</q> Hopwood replied
-promptly. <q>He’ll be down here at the store in less than half an hour,</q>
-he added, as though he had noticed the doubt in Scott’s face.</p>
-<p><q>Then I guess I’ll wait here till he comes,</q> Scott said. <q class='cq'>I don’t want
-to be seen now traipsing around the country with Foster Wait.</q></p>
-<p><q>He’ll have some job to make me give a logging contract to either of
-those gangs,</q> Scott muttered defiantly. Then, after a minute’s silence,
-<q>Do you think that either the Morgans or the Waits could carry out a
-logging contract if they did get it, Hopwood? Have they the money to do
-it?</q></p>
-<p>But there was no answer. Hopwood had disappeared again in his usual
-silent and mysterious fashion. Scott knew better now than to waste his
-time looking for him. He fell to brooding over this phase of the
-problem, and when he looked at his watch it was already ten minutes
-after the time which Hopwood had predicted for Mr. Reynolds’ arrival.
-Scott jumped to his feet and hurried out into the open. He was delighted
-to see Mr. Reynolds coming up the street alone and walked down to meet
-him.</p>
-<p>Mr. Reynolds was a rather effeminate-looking man, over neatly dressed in
-the very latest cut of riding suit. He affected a rather bored manner.
-He waved an indolent greeting to Scott.</p>
-<p><q>Hello, there, Burton! I sure am glad to see you. I thought I was going
-to have to eat another meal in this beastly hole. Now I can probably
-finish up with you in time to catch the afternoon train.</q></p>
-<p>Scott wished that he had caught the train the day before but he did not
-dare to say so. Instead he said, <q>Think how long I shall have to eat
-here. Better stay awhile. Misery loves company, you know.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, I hope you get all the company you want, but it sure will not be
-mine if I can help it.</q></p>
-<p><q>By the way,</q> Scott asked suddenly, <q>where did you get that cigarette?</q></p>
-<p><q>Pardon me,</q> Mr. Reynolds exclaimed, as he fumbled apologetically in his
-pocket for the package, <q>but I was under the impression that you never
-smoked.</q></p>
-<p><q>I don’t,</q> Scott replied. <q>I was only wondering where you bought them.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh, here at the store. They carry them, but they are a pretty bum
-brand.</q></p>
-<p><q>Which store?</q> Scott insisted.</p>
-<p><q>The one on the left there. Hadn’t noticed there were two. What’s the
-big idea? You rooting for one of them?</q></p>
-<p>Scott knew that it would be useless to argue with this man. He evidently
-had no conception of the situation in the village and Scott did not
-think it worth while to try to explain. <q>No,</q> he replied, <q>I was just
-wondering which one I ought to deal with,</q> which was true enough.</p>
-<p><q>Well, if everything they sell is as rotten as their cigarettes you’d
-better try the other one. But come on up to the hotel so that I can go
-over things with you in time to catch that train. I think that I have
-things lined up here for you in pretty good shape.</q></p>
-<p><q>How is that?</q> Scott asked. In spite of the harm this man had done him
-he could not help smiling at his unbounded conceit.</p>
-<p><q>Oh, I had a long talk with Foster Wait this afternoon, and fixed it up
-with him so that the Waits will take over the logging contract. There is
-a big family of them and the labor problem will be settled. No use in
-scouring the country the way those other fellows did when it can be
-handled so easily locally.</q></p>
-<p><q>Didn’t sign them up, did you?</q> Scott asked the question as carelessly
-as he could, but he really waited breathlessly for the answer.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Mr. Reynolds answered pompously, <q>I could not very well go into
-all those details because I did not have the necessary forms with me. I
-only smoothed the way for you a little. Now that I have talked to them
-it will be no trick at all for you to get them to sign up and arrange
-all the details.</q></p>
-<p><q>And,</q> Scott thought, <q>the details would have to include the hiring of
-an undertaker to sweep up the remains.</q> But to Mr. Reynolds he said
-nothing. The more he let this man talk the more certain he would be of
-getting rid of him on the afternoon train, and that was Scott’s one
-ambition now—to get rid of this man at the earliest possible moment.</p>
-<p>They walked on up to the hotel and when they came out two hours later
-Scott was more than ever anxious to see him go. If this man had had
-anything to do with the business when the two previous supervisors had
-been run out of the country he could understand perfectly well how it
-happened. Scott had listened attentively and talked hardly at all.</p>
-<p>As they approached the stores Scott saw a good-sized delegation
-assembled on the porch of each. The Waits looked smilingly elated. The
-Morgans glared angrily from across the way.</p>
-<p><q>Come on up and I’ll introduce you to these people now if I have the
-time.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was determined to avoid this but he did now know how to do it. If
-he refused, Mr. Reynolds would undoubtedly start an argument which the
-spectators could not help but understand. Fortunately the train was on
-time, something which rarely happened, and it whistled just in the nick
-of time.</p>
-<p>As the train pulled out of the station, Scott watched it with a feeling
-of profound relief, but at the same time he half wished that he was on
-it. He was rid of Mr. Reynolds, but would he ever be able to get out of
-the mess into which this man had drawn him?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT LOSES HIS NEUTRALITY</span></h2>
-<p>When the train had disappeared Scott turned to find the station agent
-close behind him waiting for an opportunity to speak.</p>
-<p><q>I reckon Hopwood was right,</q> he said with his slow drawl.</p>
-<p><q>What makes you think so?</q> Scott asked, for he knew that Mr. Reynolds
-had not told him.</p>
-<p><q>Three of the Waits have already told me that they are going to get the
-logging contract,</q> he replied.</p>
-<p><q>Oh, they did, did they?</q> he exclaimed indignantly. Either Mr. Reynolds
-must have talked to a gathering of the whole clan or the news had spread
-like wild fire over the face of the mountain. <q>Well, they haven’t got it
-yet,</q> he snapped. <q>I guess I’ll have something to say about who gets
-that logging contract.</q></p>
-<p><q>I asked them if you had told them and they said no, but your boss had,
-and you would have to do as he said.</q></p>
-<p>Scott’s teeth came together with a vicious snap. <q>They’ll see whether I
-have to or not.</q> He turned abruptly and walked across the tracks toward
-the Wait country. <q>No pair of whipcord riding breeches is going to tell
-me where to let a logging contract,</q> he muttered angrily to himself.</p>
-<p>He did not know exactly why he had come in that direction. Possibly it
-was his natural tendency to go straight for his enemy. He did not even
-realize where he was going; he only realized that he was mad clear
-through and that he had better walk some of it off before he talked to
-anybody.</p>
-<p>The forest came close down to the edge of the valley on this side and
-the road was arched over with the beautiful hardwood trees. Scott would
-have marveled at their size and beauty if he had not been too angry to
-notice them. The quiet solitude of the steep mountain road was well
-fitted to smooth a man’s ruffled temper and make him forget his
-troubles. Everywhere the gray squirrels were chasing each other around
-the trees in a never ending game of tag, and the birds were singing all
-over the woods.</p>
-<p>Before Scott had gone very far he met two men riding down the mountain
-on horseback. They wore the regular uniform of that section, rough
-homespun trousers and a black sateen shirt, and carried long
-muzzle-loading rifles balanced across their saddle bows. They both
-grinned condescendingly at Scott and gave him a careless, <q>Howdy.</q></p>
-<p>He did not think it strange that he should meet two men, but when he met
-two more a little farther up and they greeted him in the same way he
-began to comprehend. These were the triumphant Waits on their way to
-town to celebrate their victory, and they were all laughing at him,
-laughing because they had overreached him and made terms with the boss
-that he would have to accept.</p>
-<p>The thought maddened him, and by the time he had passed eight more he
-was so angry that he could hardly see the big fellow who brought up the
-rear of the last group of four. It would never do to start a row with
-them now before he was really ready, and yet it was all he could do to
-hide his fury and return their greetings casually.</p>
-<p>The big fellow who had just passed turned in his saddle and looked at
-him inquiringly. <q>Weren’t looking for me, were you, sonny?</q> he called
-insolently in a rather thick voice.</p>
-<p>Scott’s blood boiled at the tone and wording of the question. He did not
-dare look at the man and it almost choked him to answer calmly, <q>Not
-to-day.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, to-morrow will do,</q> the man called insolently. <q>You can find me
-home most any day.</q> And the others laughed at the retort.</p>
-<p>Scott saw red for a minute and half turned, but he caught himself in
-time. He would not make much headway in handling this timber sale if he
-began with a fight in the public road on a somewhat doubtful pretext. If
-he did fight he ought to have a little better cause than that.</p>
-<p>He did not meet any more of the offensive Waits and was beginning to
-cool off a little so that he could think calmly. Suddenly he stopped
-with a jerk and turned his startled gaze down the road in the direction
-all the bands had been traveling. What would be the outcome of this
-meeting in the village? He had met twelve men on the road and he had
-noticed eight more at the store when he came by. They were all armed and
-most likely there would be much drinking. Would they take this
-opportunity to wipe out the remnant of the Morgans?</p>
-<p>He had never seen old Jarred Morgan nor had he ever spoken to any of the
-family, but right now his sympathy was with them. The picture which old
-man Sanders had drawn of that lonely old man and a slip of a girl
-holding the Morgan fort almost alone appealed to him. But what could
-they do against a gang of twenty? No matter how brave they were, they
-would be helpless.</p>
-<p>Scott’s sense of fair play sent his fighting blood bounding through his
-veins. He turned resolutely and hurried down the mountain. He thought
-that he might be able to prevent that crime. He would help to protect
-that plucky pair if he possibly could, and he would not care what
-anybody thought about it. He did not admit it to himself, but probably
-the greatest incentive was the opportunity to fight these insolent
-Waits. He hurried on without a thought of the possible effects it might
-have on his plans. Every minute he half expected to hear the shot which
-would announce the beginning of the fight.</p>
-<p>When he came out of the forest at the foot of the mountain, he was
-relieved to see that everything looked peaceful in the village. The
-station agent saw him coming and lounged out to the end of the platform
-to meet him.</p>
-<p><q>Well, they are all in town to celebrate,</q> he drawled.</p>
-<p><q>I guess they are, judging from the procession I met coming down the
-mountain,</q> Scott growled bitterly. <q>Do you think there will be any
-trouble?</q></p>
-<p>The agent looked at him curiously. <q>Oh, I don’t believe they will bother
-you any now. They think that you are their friend.</q></p>
-<p>Scott glared at the man indignantly. <q>I am not talking about myself. Do
-you suppose I care what that gang thinks of me? But it occurred to me
-that they might take this opportunity to catch the Morgans unprepared
-and clean up what is left of them.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh, you mean that kind of trouble?</q> and the agent seemed greatly
-relieved to find it out. <q>There won’t be any fight unless old Jarred
-comes to town.</q></p>
-<p><q>There will not be any at all if I can prevent it,</q> Scott replied
-resolutely. <q>If there is any fight it will be a fair one and not a
-murder of one old man by a gang like that. I wish I could find Hopwood.
-You have not seen him, have you?</q></p>
-<p>The agent looked cautiously behind him and shook his head. <q>No, I
-haven’t seen him since noon, but that is no reason why he may not be
-sitting right here somewhere staring at us.</q></p>
-<p>Scott turned away. <q>Well, maybe I’ll run on to him. He seems to turn up
-somehow when he is wanted.</q></p>
-<p>He dreaded passing that crowd at the store and yet he would not have
-gone home any other way this afternoon for a hundred dollars. There
-would almost certainly be some impudent remarks and Scott was almost
-afraid to trust himself, but he made up his mind that he would not fight
-with them no matter what happened till he had tried to persuade them to
-drop the feud.</p>
-<p>Purposely he kept out of sight behind some trees till he was not more
-than fifty yards from the store. Then bracing himself for the coming
-trial he walked casually out of the shadow. His eye took in the
-situation at a glance, but he could not understand it.</p>
-<p>Two lonely men sat silent and sullen on the porch of the Morgan store.
-At least twenty crowded the porch of the store across the street,
-laughing and gibing at a burly giant who was dragging a young girl
-across the street by the hair. The girl’s head was bent down so that
-Scott could not see her face, but he could imagine her expression. She
-was not uttering a sound, but she was fighting with the fury of a
-wildcat.</p>
-<p>Scott’s blood boiled at the sight of a man mistreating a girl in this
-way. Moreover, he recognized the man as the big fellow who had spoken to
-him so insolently up on the mountain. Even before he realized what he
-was doing he had covered the short distance and grabbed the man by the
-arm. He had been a boxer all his life and had won the heavyweight
-championship at college. He was calm now, as calm as he had ever been
-when he stepped into the ring. This man was almost twice his size, but
-he did not even notice it.</p>
-<p><q>Let go of that girl,</q> Scott commanded, and as he spoke he let go of the
-man’s arm. He had grabbed it only to attract the man’s attention. He
-knew that he could not hold this man in any such way and he was too good
-a fighter to hold on and be jerked off his balance. The steely ring in
-his voice was enough to hold any one’s attention now.</p>
-<p>The man turned upon him furiously, but he did not let go of the girl.
-Evidently he had expected to see a Morgan, for when his eyes fell on
-Scott his mouth dropped open for a moment and he stared blankly.</p>
-<p><q>Did you hear what I said?</q> Scott insisted with suppressed fury.</p>
-<p>A cunning leer came over the man’s sodden face. The spectators at the
-two stores listened breathlessly.</p>
-<p><q>Quick work to get sweet on her so soon. Get out of the way, sonny, and
-go get the papers ready for that logging contract.</q></p>
-<p>Quick as a flash Scott caught the big fellow a tremendous blow on the
-jaw with the flat of his hand. If the man had been sober he would have
-hit him with his fist, but he did not want to slug him when he was in
-that helpless condition, much as he deserved it. Even as it was, the
-slap was enough. The big man let go of the girl, stumbled, lost his
-balance and sprawled his length on the ground, where he lay groping
-helplessly for his gun and muttering curses.</p>
-<p>The girl shook her long hair from her face and cast a look of furious
-hatred at the fallen foe. Her chest was heaving from the desperate, but
-futile, struggle. Turning slowly she swept a contemptuous glance over
-the spectators on both porches. <q>Cowards!</q> she snapped with all the
-concentrated contempt she could muster. She turned and walked slowly
-down the street with all the dignity of a queen.</p>
-<p>Much to Scott’s astonishment not a man had moved a hand to interfere
-with him. He looked them over slowly to see if they were going to mob
-him, but nobody moved or spoke. When he had stood there long enough to
-avoid any appearance of running away, he cast a curious glance at the
-retreating figure of the girl who had so completely ignored her rescuer,
-and walked slowly away toward the hotel, trying to figure out what it
-could all mean.</p>
-<p>As he turned the corner of the hotel he almost laughed aloud. He was
-thinking what the Waits must think of his friendship now.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT MAKES ANOTHER RESCUE</span></h2>
-<p>When Scott entered the hotel he was still thinking what it could all
-mean. Why were the men of both factions quietly looking on while a big
-burly drunkard dragged a child around the street by the hair? If the
-girl was a Morgan why had the Morgans let such an act go unchallenged?
-If she was a Wait why had not the rest of the gang protected her? He
-started. Perhaps it was the man’s own child. No matter. No man had a
-right to drag his own child around by the hair. Well, when the station
-agent came to supper he could probably explain things.</p>
-<p>But the station agent did not come to supper and Scott ate the atrocious
-food in lonely state still trying to solve this mystery. In any event he
-had shown the Waits just how much they could count on his friendship and
-that was worth something. It was also some satisfaction to know that
-they were probably as much troubled as he was.</p>
-<p>Alone in his room he pondered the problem for an hour without coming any
-nearer to a solution. Finally the suspense became unbearable. He
-determined to go to old man Sanders and see if he could offer any
-explanation. It was growing dusk when he went out and objects seemed a
-little indistinct in the distance. He glanced toward the place where
-Hopwood had been waiting for him in the afternoon, but there was no
-trace of him now.</p>
-<p>Both stores apparently were deserted. Scott had not seen a soul when he
-turned into the road which led up to Sanders’ little cabin. He thought
-that he had never known the woods to be so silent. It seemed as though
-every living thing must have left the country. But there was a light in
-Sanders’ cabin. The full moon peeped at him over the trees behind the
-house. He knocked on the door and heard the old man shuffling across the
-floor to open it.</p>
-<p><q>Good evening,</q> Scott said as the door swung wide. <q>You see I have come
-back to you for advice pretty quick.</q></p>
-<p><q>Come in, come in,</q> the old man said cordially. <q>Glad to see you.</q> He
-motioned Scott to one of the old-fashioned chairs. When they were
-comfortably seated he spoke again.</p>
-<p><q>You said you came here for advice. Let me give you a little before I
-forget it. It happens to be perfectly safe for any one to knock on my
-door at any time of the day or night, but don’t try it anywhere else.
-You would probably find yourself looking down the barrel of a gun if the
-dogs did not chew you up first. It is the custom in this country to
-stand outside the gate and shout.</q></p>
-<p><q>Thanks,</q> Scott replied gratefully. <q>I am very anxious to learn the
-customs of this country. There seem to be some customs here I do not
-understand. That is what brought me up here to-night. What does it mean
-when a big bully of a man hauls a girl around the street by the hair
-while twenty others look on and do nothing?</q></p>
-<p>The old man straightened up in his chair. <q>What’s all this?</q> he asked
-sharply.</p>
-<p>Scott explained as fully as he could and the old man listened
-breathlessly to every word. When Scott had finished his story the old
-fellow sank back in his chair with wrinkled brow.</p>
-<p><q>So that was how it happened,</q> he muttered to himself. <q>The girl has
-more sense than I thought she had.</q> Then he spoke aloud to Scott. <q>I
-heard a little something of this but I did not know that you had
-anything to do with it. It’s a wonder to me that you are here to tell
-it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott misunderstood him. <q>I admit it was a little hasty,</q> he replied
-with dignity, <q>but I am not ashamed of it.</q></p>
-<p>The old man laughed aloud. <q>No, no, you have nothing to be ashamed of. I
-am only surprised that Foster has not killed you before this. Be on your
-guard, for he will certainly try it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Tell me about it,</q> Scott said. <q>What was going on? I could not make
-head or tail of it.</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders thought for a moment. <q class='cq'>Must have seemed queer to you. Would
-to anybody. You see Foster Wait, he was the big fellow, was drunk as he
-usually is when he has any excuse for it at all. He happened to see Vic
-Morgan there in the village and could not help poking some fun at her
-about the logging contract. They all love to tease her just to see her
-spit fire. She flew into a tantrum just as she always does, ran out to
-the middle of the street, which is the dividing line between Morgan and
-Wait territory, and told him what she thought of him and the whole Wait
-tribe. She said herself that she cursed Foster pretty bad.</q></p>
-<p><q>You see she felt safe because the Waits never come past the middle of
-the street. But, as I said, Foster was drunk and he reached over the
-line and grabbed her. Probably just wanted to spank the kid for a joke.
-Vic could not see the joke and bit his thumb. Hurt him pretty bad, I
-reckon, and made him mad. He has a terrible temper like his father. He
-grabbed her by the hair for a safe hold and then you came along.</q></p>
-<p><q>But how could those men there at the Morgan store see a Wait treat a
-member of their family in any such way as that?</q> Scott protested.</p>
-<p><q>Because Jim don’t believe in keeping up the feud, and it makes him mad
-every time Vic stirs things up that way. Probably thought it served her
-right.</q></p>
-<p><q>So that child is Vic. And she is the only supporter old Jarred has. Who
-is she, anyway?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p><q>She is the daughter of Jim Morgan there at the store, but she spends
-most of her time up on the mountain with her grandfather. She and the
-old man are great chums.</q></p>
-<p><q>Just one more question,</q> Scott said, <q>or rather two more and then I’ll
-let you go to bed. Why didn’t any of the Waits interfere when I knocked
-their leader down? I did not know who he was or I might have been
-scared.</q></p>
-<p><q>Because they don’t like him. He is a regular bully, and they were
-probably glad to see somebody stand up to him. Besides, they are
-expecting a good deal from you.</q></p>
-<p>Scott ignored the last remark. <q>And my last question. How did you find
-out about it so quickly?</q></p>
-<p>The old man hesitated an instant. <q>That is the part that puzzled me. Vic
-stopped in here and told me about it herself. That would not have
-surprised me because she usually tells me everything, but she asked me
-not to let her grandfather hear about it if I could help it. That is
-what astonished me. Ordinarily she would have gone to her grandfather on
-the run and wanted him to kill the whole tribe. He’ll try to do it too
-if he ever hears about this and his own tribe, too, for letting it
-happen. I think Vic must have realized that. Didn’t know the kid had so
-much judgment. She did not say anything about your rescuing her,
-either,</q> he mused.</p>
-<p>Scott was thoughtful a minute. <q>Well, I certainly appreciate your help,
-Mr. Sanders. I think I understand it a little better now, but,</q> he added
-slowly, <q>I don’t think I shall ever understand how a father could sit
-still and see a drunken man treat his daughter like that.</q> And he arose
-to take his leave.</p>
-<p><q>Old Jarred wouldn’t understand it, either,</q> Mr. Sanders said, as he
-rose to show his guest to the door. <q>I wish you would help me to keep
-him from finding it out. The kid does not want him to know, and I like
-her.</q></p>
-<p><q>So do I,</q> Scott replied. <q>She fought like a wildcat. I admire nerve in
-anybody. I admire the old man, too, for holding out alone against that
-big gang, and I am going to protect him all I can.</q></p>
-<p>He was out on the porch now, and the old man was standing in the
-doorway. <q>Good night, and thank you again.</q></p>
-<p><q>Good night, and be careful,</q> the old man warned him. <q>Foster Wait is a
-dangerous man and he’ll never be satisfied till he gets his revenge for
-this insult. He won’t stop at anything and you must be on your guard all
-the time.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll try to watch him,</q> Scott replied simply.</p>
-<p><q>Do that,</q> the old man called. <q>I’ve taken a fancy to you and I don’t
-want to see you shot for nothing.</q></p>
-<p>The door closed before Scott could reply and left him alone in the
-moonlight. He felt his loneliness then in that unfriendly country and
-was grateful to the old man for his help and his friendship. With a sigh
-he turned down the mountain road pondering on the strange story he had
-heard. He could see how the news of this encounter might mean the
-disruption of the whole Morgan faction if it were ever revealed to old
-Jarred, and the girl must have seen it too.</p>
-<p>He was walking along slowly in this thoughtful mood when he was startled
-by the sight of an old white horse standing in a patch of moonlight in
-the middle of the road. He wore a bridle but no saddle, and his head was
-hanging low as though he were exhausted from hard riding.</p>
-<p>Scott’s mind flashed to the old man’s warning against Foster Wait and he
-jumped behind a point in the bank beside the road. He was not a coward
-but he did not mean to be shot down by a madman without a struggle. He
-peeped cautiously through the bushes. At first he could see nothing, but
-as his eyes became more accustomed to the uncertain light he thought he
-recognized the body of a person lying under the horse’s muzzle. He
-watched it carefully for a moment. There was no sign of motion. Surely
-any one lying in wait for him would not have chosen such a peculiar form
-of strategy. He threw his caution to the winds and stepped out into the
-road.</p>
-<p>The old horse raised his head and nickered. The raising of the horse’s
-head let the moonlight fall on the figure in the road and Scott clearly
-recognized it as a woman. He ran forward and there was Vic Morgan lying
-unconscious in the road. A small bundle of clothes lay beside her.
-Evidently she had fallen from the horse, but Scott could not tell how it
-happened. The faithful old horse was standing guard over her unconscious
-form; it would hardly have been his fault.</p>
-<p>Scott felt her pulse. She wasn’t dead. One leg was twisted under her in
-an unnatural position. He straightened it out and the bone did not seem
-to be broken. He was uncertain whether to take her back to Sanders’
-cabin or home to her father. It was not much farther to the village and
-he decided to take her there. He tied the bundle of clothes on his belt
-and led the horse over to the bank where he could get on.</p>
-<p>When he started to pick the girl up she groaned and moved uneasily. He
-gathered the slight form in his arms and carried her over to the bank.
-Just as he slipped on to the back of the docile old horse with his
-clumsy burden the girl opened her eyes. She looked at him sleepily at
-first, but as consciousness came to her she started up with a violent
-jerk and stared at him wildly. She evidently did not realize what had
-happened or just where she was.</p>
-<p><q>Let go of me,</q> she commanded sternly, and before Scott realized what
-she was doing she had boxed his ears till they rang.</p>
-<p>He held the wildly struggling little figure as best he could and tried
-to explain. <q>Listen, I found you unconscious in the road and I’m only
-trying to take you home.</q></p>
-<p><q>Don’t you dare hold me,</q> she snapped angrily, and redoubled her
-struggles. <q>I don’t want you to take me home. I’d rather die here than
-have you touch me.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was so taken back and so indignant that he felt like dropping her
-in the road and leaving her, but he could not do that. He gritted his
-teeth and held her the more firmly. <q>Well, I am going to take you home,
-young lady, whether you like it or not, so you might as well stop
-struggling. You can go back in the road and die afterwards if you want
-to.</q></p>
-<p>After an even more violent struggle than before the child’s form
-suddenly collapsed, and she began to cry. This worried Scott far more
-than her struggles.</p>
-<p><q>Don’t cry,</q> he begged her. <q>Where are you hurt and how did it happen?</q></p>
-<p>For a while she was silent save for her sobbing and when she spoke it
-was not to answer his question. <q>If you’ve got to take me somewhere,</q>
-she said in an uncertain voice, <q>take me to grandpa.</q></p>
-<p>Scott stopped the horse and looked at her doubtfully. <q>Why?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Because I ran away from home and never want to see my father again,</q>
-she retorted defiantly. <q>And it’s none of your business,</q> she added
-promptly.</p>
-<p>Scott hesitated but he remembered what Mr. Sanders had said about her
-spending most of her time with her grandfather, and after the events of
-the afternoon he did not blame her for wanting to run away from her
-father. <q>Where does your grandfather live?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Up the mountain,</q> she replied.</p>
-<p>Scott turned the old horse around and he plodded slowly upward. The
-light was already out when they passed Mr. Sanders’ cabin and all was
-still. The girl did not deign to speak and Scott maintained a dignified
-silence. They had traveled almost a mile when the girl spoke suddenly.</p>
-<p><q>If you say anything to granddad about that fight this afternoon, I’ll
-kill you.</q></p>
-<p>Scott had already promised Mr. Sanders not to tell but there was
-something he wanted to know. <q>How were you hurt this evening?</q> he asked
-again.</p>
-<p><q>None of your business,</q> the child snapped.</p>
-<p><q>Then it may not be my business to keep your secret,</q> he retorted.</p>
-<p>She was silent for a moment as though thinking it over. <q>The horse shied
-at a hound on the bank and I fell off,</q> she replied reluctantly.</p>
-<p><q>How did it hurt you?</q> Scott insisted.</p>
-<p>Again there was a pause as though she was struggling with herself. <q>I
-have a knot on my head and my leg hurts,</q> she answered grudgingly.</p>
-<p>Scott had found out what he wanted to know. <q>I promise not to tell,</q> he
-said.</p>
-<p>She did not thank him. A hound barked on the left-hand side of the road.
-The horse stopped. She called to the hound and he stopped barking
-instantly.</p>
-<p><q>Let me down from here,</q> she commanded.</p>
-<p>Scott could see no reason for holding her longer. He balanced her on the
-horse’s withers and slipped to the ground. He reached up to help her.
-She tried to avoid him but he caught her and it was well that he did,
-for when her foot touched the ground she uttered a sharp gasp and sank
-limply. He thought for a second that she had fainted.</p>
-<p><q>Call granddad,</q> she commanded in a voice pinched with pain.</p>
-<p><q>Hello, there,</q> Scott called.</p>
-<p>There was a noise as of some one cautiously opening a door.</p>
-<p><q>Grandpa,</q> the child called weakly.</p>
-<p>The door swung wide and the old man strode hurriedly across the yard.
-Scott was about to meet old Jarred Morgan.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER X</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT MEETS JARRED</span></h2>
-<p>Scott let the girl sit on the ground with her back against his knees and
-watched the famous old man coming to protect his own. He presented a
-striking figure striding along through the moonlight with hurried
-dignity. His tall, gaunt form was as erect as that of a man of twenty,
-and his step as springy. His ever present rifle hung comfortably across
-the hollow of his arm. He cast one keen glance of suspicion at Scott and
-knelt beside the girl.</p>
-<p><q>What is it, Vic?</q> he asked tenderly.</p>
-<p><q>I fell off old Dan,</q> she confessed sheepishly.</p>
-<p><q>Are you hurt?</q> he insisted anxiously.</p>
-<p><q>I have a knot on my head, and I twisted my leg,</q> she said.</p>
-<p><q>How under the sun did you come to fall off old Dan?</q> her grandfather
-asked, as he laid down his long rifle and gathered her tenderly in his
-arms. Scott stepped back a pace or two out of earshot.</p>
-<p><q>I was sitting on him sideways and he shied at a hound on top of the
-bank down below Sanders’.</q></p>
-<p><q>And this gentleman?</q> he asked, looking Scott squarely in the eye.</p>
-<p><q>He found me in the road and brought me home,</q> she replied shortly.</p>
-<p>The old man straightened up with his burden and bowed solemnly to Scott.
-<q>I thank you, sir.</q></p>
-<p><q>I certainly am glad to have been of service to you,</q> Scott replied
-cordially. <q>I hope to have the pleasure of calling on you in a day or so
-if I may, so I will not intrude on you any longer at present.</q></p>
-<p>Jarred frankly looked him over from head to foot. <q>If you will be so
-kind as to wait till I have taken the girl in the house I would like to
-speak to you for a moment.</q></p>
-<p><q>Certainly,</q> Scott answered politely. He liked the old man’s frank,
-straightforward gaze, but it did not seem to him that steady eye looked
-on him with much favor. Perhaps he was no more grateful than his
-granddaughter. In less than five minutes he came out again to join
-Scott. He came straight to the point.</p>
-<p><q>Sir, I am sorry that I could not invite you in, and I regret that I
-have to appear discourteous to a man who has rendered me the service you
-have.</q> Scott listened in silent astonishment and the old man continued.
-<q>I owe you a debt which I can never repay for the kindness you have
-shown my grandchild, but any man who aids my enemies can never be more
-to me than a creditor, as much as I would like to have it otherwise.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was astonished at the old man’s courtly manner and fine English.
-He did not learn till later that many of these mountaineers were
-descendants of the old Huguenot families who were driven out of France
-and had retained a wonderful purity of speech. He answered as earnestly
-as he could.</p>
-<p><q>I do not know what you mean, Mr. Morgan, unless you refer to the rumor
-that I am going to let the logging contract to the Waits.</q></p>
-<p><q>You call it a rumor,</q> Jarred replied a little doubtfully. <q>It was
-reported to me as a fact, apparently a very widely known fact,</q> he added
-bitterly.</p>
-<p><q>I assure you that it is nothing more than a rumor and a false rumor at
-that. I have not spoken more than half a dozen words to a Wait since I
-came here.</q></p>
-<p><q>That may all be true enough but did not your superior officer make the
-promise for you?</q> Jarred asked with a slight sneer.</p>
-<p>The sneer angered Scott but he knew that it was justified under the
-circumstances.</p>
-<p><q>I, too, Mr. Morgan, have heard that Mr. Reynolds very rashly made some
-informal promises to the Waits in regard to that contract. All I can say
-is that he did it without conferring with me. I am entirely responsible
-for letting that contract and I do not feel myself in any way bound by
-what he may have said. I can assure you that there will be no contract
-let to either the Waits or the Morgans unless they will agree to forget
-their feud and take the contract together.</q></p>
-<p>Old Jarred looked him squarely in the eye for a minute before he
-replied. Then he held out his hand. <q>I beg your pardon,</q> he said with
-dignity. <q>You must charge my discourtesy to a mistake. I appreciate your
-frankness and I want to be equally frank. Under those conditions there
-will be no logging contract let here. Won’t you come in, sir?</q></p>
-<p>Scott had grasped the proffered hand eagerly. <q>Thank you, sir. I will
-not come in now because it is late and you will be busy with the little
-girl, but I would like to come up and talk things over with you
-to-morrow.</q></p>
-<p><q>We’ll be glad to see you any time,</q> Jarred answered cordially.</p>
-<p><q>Good night, sir. I hope the little girl’s injuries are not serious.</q></p>
-<p><q>She’ll be all right to-morrow, I think. And thank you again for helping
-her. Good night, sir.</q></p>
-<p>Scott turned down the mountain and left the old man standing in the
-moonlight looking after him. He liked old Jarred; he was a man and a
-gentleman. He did not wonder that he held the Waits at bay almost
-unaided. One man like that could overawe a whole tribe of cowards such
-as the Waits appeared to be.</p>
-<p>And when Scott paused outside the hotel for a moment before going in, he
-glanced admiringly up at the silvered mountainside where that staunch
-old man was nursing his hate with such undaunted courage.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>A VISIT TO JARRED’S CABIN</span></h2>
-<p>After breakfast the next morning Scott started back up the mountain. It
-was a beautiful morning. A light haze still lay like a blanket over the
-valley but the mountain ridges glistened in the sunshine. The woods
-seemed alive with birds everywhere he looked and many of them were new
-to him. It was the kind of morning that made a man feel as though he
-would never get tired, and Scott walked with a light step. The gloom of
-the night before had left him and everything seemed as bright as the
-mountain tops. He felt as though everything must come out all right.</p>
-<p>As he passed the Sanders’ cabin the old man was sweeping off his little
-front porch. <q>Morning,</q> he called cheerfully, <q>going up to beard the
-lion in his den, are you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said, <q>and I am not a bit scared either. I met him last
-night and I liked him. He seems like a real man.</q></p>
-<p><q>Last night?</q> the old man repeated doubtfully.</p>
-<p><q>Yes, your little friend Vic fell off her horse down below here and hurt
-herself a little and I took her home.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh!</q> Mr. Sanders exclaimed as though some mystery had been solved.
-<q>That’s how it happened. I was wondering how you got into old Jarred’s
-house at night. Vic was not hurt bad, was she?</q></p>
-<p><q>Not so bad but what she almost tore me up before I got her home,</q> Scott
-replied. And he told the old man what had happened.</p>
-<p><q>Sounds like Vic. So she was running away from home, was she? She’ll
-never go back either. I thought something would come of that row
-yesterday.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was puzzled. <q>How is that?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Jim let Foster grab her. She’ll never forgive him for that.</q></p>
-<p><q>I see,</q> Scott said. <q>I can’t say that I blame her much, either.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> the old man sighed, <q>it may be wrong to back the girl against
-her father, but I like Vic and there is no denying she is twice the man
-Jim is. She is just like her grandfather.</q></p>
-<p><q>I liked him,</q> Scott exclaimed. <q>He told me right away last night that
-he never would give up the feud, but I liked him all the same.</q></p>
-<p>The old man opened his mouth as though to speak but changed his mind and
-closed it again. Then after a pause, <q>Well, stop in when you come down
-and tell me how Vic is. I’ll be anxious about her.</q></p>
-<p>Scott hurried on. At the Morgan gate he remembered Mr. Sanders’ advice
-and shouted before he entered. Old Jarred appeared almost instantly in
-the doorway. When he saw who it was, he stood the long rifle against the
-corner beside the door and called to Scott to come in. He met him
-halfway to the gate with extended hand.</p>
-<p><q>Come in, sir, come in, sir,</q> he repeated hospitably. <q>Vic is a little
-shy but I reckon she’ll be glad to see you.</q></p>
-<p><q>She seemed anything but glad to see me when I picked her up last
-night,</q> Scott laughed. <q>I thought she was going to tear me up before I
-could get her home.</q></p>
-<p>Old Jarred chuckled. <q>Vic’s a fighter, she is. You see she had heard
-that rumor about the logging contract and she hates the Waits worse than
-I do. She feels right ashamed of herself this morning.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, she needn’t,</q> Scott said. <q>I understood why it was and admired
-her nerve.</q></p>
-<p><q>If the Morgan men had half Vic’s nerve this feud might end,</q> old Jarred
-remarked bitterly.</p>
-<p><q>Why not drop it, anyway?</q> Scott asked. <q>I’ll wager there is not one of
-your worst enemies who would not admit that you did not do it because
-you were afraid. It seems such a pity to have it go on. It can end in
-only one way some day.</q></p>
-<p>Old Jarred stopped in the doorway and looked at him for a moment. Scott
-had not intended to broach the subject so suddenly and he half expected
-a burst of anger, but it did not come.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> the old man answered sadly, <q>it can have only one ending. They
-will get me some day. But as I told you last night I shall never give it
-up; so let’s not discuss it.</q> He saw the disappointment in Scott’s face
-and laid a friendly hand on his shoulder. <q>I am sorry, my boy, for I
-know that you mean well. I suppose it does look to you like a wholly
-unreasonable thing, but you don’t know all the story. You are asking
-something that it is utterly impossible for me to do. So it is better to
-drop it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott could not hide his disappointment but he bowed his respect for the
-old man’s request. <q>I hope Vic was not badly hurt last night?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p>Jarred smiled his gratitude. <q>No, no. Sprained her knee a little, but
-she is hobbling around this morning and will be all right in a day or
-so.</q></p>
-<p>The cabin into which Jarred led the way was a plain oblong structure
-built of logs. There was but one room which served as bedroom, dining
-room, living room and kitchen, but it was clean and everything seemed to
-be in order.</p>
-<p><q>Pretty neat for an old man’s den,</q> Jarred chuckled with evident pride.
-<q>Vic did that for me this morning in spite of her crippled knee.</q></p>
-<p>There was an uncertain thump on the back step and Scott turned to see
-Vic hopping in on one foot. She certainly looked like a different girl
-from the one he had struggled with the night before. She hopped toward
-him without embarrassment and held out her hand.</p>
-<p><q>I am sorry I acted so badly last night,</q> she said frankly. <q>I hope that
-you will forget it. I would have been in a pickle without you.</q></p>
-<p>Could this be the little wildcat he had picked up in the road the night
-before? Scott stared at her open-mouthed for a moment before he could
-find his tongue.</p>
-<p><q>I could not very well expect anything else when I picked you up and
-carried you off against your will,</q> he laughed, when he had finally
-recovered from his astonishment.</p>
-<p><q>She says she is going to stay with me now,</q> Jarred said. <q>Says she has
-had a row with her father and is not going back. I don’t know what the
-trouble is and I’m afraid to look it up for fear I might have to send
-her back.</q></p>
-<p>He put his arm affectionately around the child and it was plain to see
-where he would put the blame. She cast an apprehensive glance at Scott
-and he knew she was worrying about the promise she had extracted from
-him the night before. He relieved her mind at once.</p>
-<p><q>There are one or two things I would like to know before I go on with
-this timber sale, Mr. Morgan, and I think you can probably answer my
-questions better than any one else if you will.</q></p>
-<p>Jarred nodded. <q>I’ll be glad to help you all I can.</q></p>
-<p><q>I have already told you,</q> Scott proceeded, <q>that I am not willing to
-give the contract to either the Waits or the Morgans unless they will
-take it jointly. I have heard—and heard it so often that I think it must
-be true—that Mr. Reynolds promised this contract to the Waits. Of course
-either of you has a right to bid on it if you want to, and I can’t stop
-you. I could turn either of you down even though you were the high
-bidder, but you can easily see in what a disagreeable position that
-would place me and I don’t want to do it.</q></p>
-<p>Jarred nodded his comprehension.</p>
-<p><q>Could either faction put up a bond of fifty thousand dollars as a
-guaranty?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p>Jarred smiled sourly. <q>Five thousand would strain either of us
-considerable.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then it will be simple enough,</q> Scott said. <q>The law requires that
-guaranty. But I want to be perfectly certain that it cannot be met.</q></p>
-<p><q>You need not worry about that,</q> Jarred replied. <q>It would be altogether
-impossible.</q></p>
-<p>Scott felt relieved. Here would be an easy way to get out of the promise
-Mr. Reynolds had made the Waits. Probably he had not told them anything
-about the necessity for a bond.</p>
-<p><q>Then my next question, Mr. Morgan, is this. If an outsider takes that
-contract will the Waits and the Morgans work for him on the same job?</q></p>
-<p><q>They will not,</q> Jarred replied decisively, and Vic bristled visibly at
-the mere thought of it. <q>Moreover,</q> Jarred continued, <q>no outsider will
-take the contract.</q></p>
-<p><q>Why not?</q> Scott asked sharply. He had taken this as a threat and it
-made him bristle a little on his own part.</p>
-<p><q>Because none of them will touch it for fear of getting mixed up in this
-feud. They have tried that and no one would risk it.</q></p>
-<p><q>It’s a wonder Mr. Reynolds would not tell me about that!</q> Scott
-exclaimed indignantly.</p>
-<p><q>You would not need to know it if you had followed his plan,</q> Jarred
-remarked ironically.</p>
-<p><q>Then I have one last question. Would the people here interfere with an
-outsider if he brought his own crew in here?</q></p>
-<p><q>I would not,</q> Jarred replied promptly, <q>and I don’t think any of our
-people would. I can’t answer for the others.</q></p>
-<p>Scott rose to go. <q>I certainly appreciate your help, Mr. Morgan, and I
-feel that I can rely on what you say.</q></p>
-<p><q>Don’t leave a man much chance to do anything,</q> Jarred said
-sympathetically.</p>
-<p><q>Not much,</q> Scott admitted, <q>but I am going to get that stuff logged if
-I have to do it myself.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe you won’t always have this trouble,</q> Jarred said with a twinkle
-in his cold gray eye and a wink toward the child. <q>When I’m gone the
-rest of them will all let the feud drop.</q></p>
-<p>The child straightened suddenly and the blood rushed to her cheeks, but
-she caught sight of the twinkle and subsided again with exactly the same
-twinkle in her own.</p>
-<p>Scott took his leave and when he rounded the turn in the road that shut
-off the view of the Morgan cabin the old man was still standing at the
-gate with his arm around the girl’s shoulders. To Scott they represented
-the last link which was holding the old feud together.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT ASKS FOR BIDS</span></h2>
-<p>The next morning a wave of astonishment quickly followed by another of
-indignation spread over the west mountain with almost incredible
-rapidity, and a corresponding feeling of relief and satisfaction settled
-on the family of the Morgans. Quite the reverse of the situation of the
-day before.</p>
-<p>The sole cause of this momentous change was a small sign posted on the
-village bulletin board. It was couched in somewhat intricate legal
-language, but it said in effect that bids were now open for the logging
-contract and any one desiring to submit one must place it in the hands
-of the supervisor, along with a bond for fifty thousand dollars, within
-ten days. No one had seen either a Wait or a Morgan read it, but their
-knowledge of it was universal.</p>
-<p>Single horsemen threaded their way along by-roads and paths on the west
-slope to meet others at cabins scattered here and there over the
-mountainside, and all these little groups finally assembled at the home
-of Foster Wait. That worthy gentleman was half intoxicated, as usual,
-and greeted each sullen new arrival with a detailed blustering account
-of what he was going to do to the man who had double-crossed him. They
-did not seem to take much stock in what he said (it looked as though
-they had perhaps heard that same kind of bluster from him many times
-before) and their apparent indifference drove him to wilder boasts.</p>
-<p>Hopwood sat on the corner of the porch whittling a stick and apparently
-oblivious to all that was going on around him. He glanced occasionally
-from one of the group to another but the blank expression on his face
-never changed. The others paid no attention to him at all except when
-they wanted to know something. They seemed to be strangely inconsistent.
-They treated him as an idiot except when they wanted news, but they put
-implicit confidence in what he said.</p>
-<p><q>Where did you find this out, Hop?</q> one of the newcomers asked. It was
-Sewall Wait, the real leader of the Wait faction. Foster was the nominal
-ruler by inheritance, but Sewall furnished the brains which Foster
-lacked. He had to repeat the question before Hopwood seemed to
-understand.</p>
-<p><q>It is on the bulletin board in the village,</q> Hopwood answered in an
-expressionless tone.</p>
-<p><q>What did it say?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood repeated the gist of the notice.</p>
-<p><q>Who read it to you?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood seemed offended at the string of questions. He did not answer at
-once but seemed to think better of it. <q>Mr. Roberts,</q> he answered in the
-same dull tone.</p>
-<p>Sewall turned towards Foster but came back again to Hopwood. <q>Where’s
-that man Reynolds?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Left on the train yesterday,</q> Hopwood answered promptly.</p>
-<p>Sewall walked over to where Foster was raving for the benefit of two
-late comers. <q>What’s the use of bawling like a spanked kid?</q> he asked in
-a disgusted tone. <q>That is a formal request for bids posted in regular
-form by the U. S. Government, and if Hopwood has the lingo right it’s
-according to law. That man Reynolds is the fellow who made a sucker of
-you and he went home yesterday. I’m going home myself.</q></p>
-<p><q>Going home?</q> Foster raved. <q>And let that little squirt of a supervisor
-rob us of the contract and probably give it to old Jarred Morgan? No,
-sir, we’ll go down there and teach him that he can’t trifle with the
-Waits. That contract is ours and I am going to make him give it to us.</q></p>
-<p><q>And get your ears boxed for your trouble,</q> Sewall sneered as he walked
-to his horse. <q>Fighting the Morgans is one thing, but fighting the U. S.
-Government is something else.</q></p>
-<p>Foster was furious at the reference to his boxed ears and started after
-him with waving fists, but Sewall rode slowly out of the yard without so
-much as looking at him, and his three sons followed him.</p>
-<p>Foster bawled threats and objurgations after them till they were far out
-of earshot and then returned to rail at the others. <q>Hopwood!</q> he
-shouted.</p>
-<p>They all looked at the place where Hopwood had been sitting. It was
-vacant. Hopwood had disappeared in his usual sudden manner.</p>
-<p>One by one the others tired of Foster’s futile raving and rode away till
-the hereditary leader of the family was left alone. The frenzy into
-which he had worked himself had sobered him and he looked after the last
-of his departing followers with anxious humiliation. He knew the
-trouble; it had happened before. He had talked too much and done too
-little. He would have to do something to reinstate himself and he owed
-the supervisor something anyway. This would be a good chance to kill two
-birds with one stone. He would have preferred some company but there was
-no chance of that now, and he prepared to go alone.</p>
-<p>In the meanwhile Scott was sitting down in the hotel waiting. He knew
-that nothing could come of this advertisement either on the bulletin
-board or in the local papers where he had sent it, and he wanted to be
-about his business. He knew what he was going to do now and he was
-anxious to be at it, but he knew what a hubbub the news would make among
-the Waits and he did not want to appear to run away. He had to wait at
-least till he had seen Foster Wait. It would never do for them to come
-down and find that he had left the country as soon as he had posted the
-notice. His duty did not require him to stay there, but his pride did.</p>
-<p>He sat on the front porch, from which point of vantage he could bring
-the whole village under his surveillance at once. He could see the
-little white square of his posted notice on the bulletin board at the
-other end of the street, and he watched it curiously to see if any one
-would read it. He saw two or three from the east slope stop there, and
-come on to the Morgan store in apparent good humor. No one at all came
-down from the Wait territory, and Scott was disappointed because they
-were the ones on whom he was anxious to note the effect.</p>
-<p>One hour crawled slowly after another and he patiently watched the
-lights and shadows creeping over the mountain slopes as the sun rose
-higher in the heavens. It was after ten o’clock when Scott happened to
-glance to his right and started to find Hopwood sitting in an
-inconspicuous place on the end of the porch.</p>
-<p><q>Where under the sun did you come from, Hopwood?</q> he exclaimed.</p>
-<p>Hopwood spread his hands in both directions as he always did to indicate
-that he came from everywhere.</p>
-<p><q>Foster is pretty mad,</q> he remarked casually.</p>
-<p><q>Have you seen him?</q> Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded. <q>I saw them all.</q></p>
-<p><q>I suppose they were holding a big family powwow over it and will all be
-swarming down here after a while to find out what it means.</q> Scott
-chuckled at the discomfiture he was causing the Waits, for he had taken
-a distinct dislike to the whole tribe with the exception of Hopwood.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Hopwood remarked quietly, <q>they are not coming, but maybe Foster
-will get up the nerve to come down alone. He’ll pretty near have to or
-he will be done for.</q></p>
-<p><q>What do you mean?</q> Scott asked. <q>I thought they always went in a gang.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. <q>Sewall would not back him up.</q></p>
-<p><q>Who is Sewall?</q> Scott had never heard of him and he had gathered from
-what he had heard that Foster was the leader of the Waits.</p>
-<p><q>He’s the only Wait who has any brains,</q> Hopwood answered, and added
-naïvely, <q>except me.</q></p>
-<p>Scott glanced at him keenly but saw only the usual blank expression. <q>By
-George, Hopwood!</q> he exclaimed, <q>I believe you really have more brains
-than any of them. But what do you mean by saying that Foster will have
-to come?</q></p>
-<p><q>He’s been saying so much about what he is going to do to you that he
-will have to do it or they will quit him,</q> Hopwood explained.</p>
-<p>Scott rubbed his hands with satisfaction at the prospect of a meeting
-with Foster Wait alone.</p>
-<p><q>Are you sure he will come, Hopwood?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood was silent a moment as though waiting for a message. <q>Yes,</q> he
-said confidently. <q>He’ll be here in about an hour. Don’t let him scare
-you. He’s a coward.</q></p>
-<p><q>Going to try to scare me into it, is he?</q> Scott asked, but Hopwood had
-disappeared and left him to plan alone for his meeting with Foster Wait.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>FOSTER WAIT DEMANDS THE CONTRACT</span></h2>
-<p>The news that Foster Wait had been boasting among his followers of the
-terrible things he was going to do to the supervisor and the possibility
-of his coming down alone to make good his threats gave Scott a new
-interest in the meeting. He had taken an instinctive dislike to the man
-at first sight, and everything he had seen and heard of him since had
-only served to intensify that feeling.</p>
-<p>Foster was a much larger man than Scott, but Scott had not needed
-Hopwood’s warning to tell him that the giant was a coward. He had seen
-it and felt it. Probably his followers knew it, too, and maybe that was
-the reason they had refused to back him up. That was one of the things
-he had wanted to ask Hopwood, but the man of the iron hat always
-disappeared before he found out half that he wanted to know.</p>
-<p>A man appeared suddenly at the end of the village and Scott watched him
-eagerly, but it proved to be only the mail carrier who had stopped to
-read the notice. A new notice on the Caspar bulletin board was in itself
-an event. The time dragged slowly by and still the expected visitor did
-not arrive. Could Hopwood have failed in his prophecy? He had the
-reputation of being infallible.</p>
-<p>Things always happen when they are least expected, and Foster Wait had
-ridden his white horse halfway up the village street before Scott saw
-him. But even then the suspense was not over for the rider stopped at
-the store instead of coming straight to the hotel as Scott had hoped.
-Probably he had dropped in there to bolster up his nerve with a little
-more bragging, Scott thought. If so, he must have had a great deal of
-bragging to do, for ten minutes elapsed and he had not come out.</p>
-<p>Finally some one came out of the store and started for the hotel. Scott
-was disappointed to see that it was not Foster but one of the boys who
-stayed at the store. The boy shuffled along slowly looking everywhere
-except at Scott, and plainly showing that his errand was not to his
-liking. He headed for the corner of the house as though he were going
-around to the back door but changed his course suddenly and edged along
-the front of the porch. His actions were so peculiar that Scott watched
-him keenly.</p>
-<p>The boy finally came to a halt about ten feet away and looked the front
-of the house over carefully as though he had come to estimate the cost
-of a new coat of paint.</p>
-<p><q>Foster says he wants to see you at the store right away,</q> the boy
-gulped suddenly without looking at Scott.</p>
-<p>Scott was so amused at the boy’s embarrassment that he almost forgot to
-be indignant at Foster’s message, but he stiffened a little as he
-realized the impertinence of the command.</p>
-<p><q>Tell Mr. Wait that I am at the hotel and will be glad to see him any
-time he cares to come,</q> Scott said with forced dignity.</p>
-<p><q>That’s what I told him,</q> the boy said, as he looked at Scott for the
-first time. And he seemed very much relieved. He hopped out of the gate
-and whistled all the way to the store.</p>
-<p>Scott waited anxiously for the result of his message. He did not have to
-wait so long this time. Foster’s angry roar when he heard the boy’s
-message reached Scott at the hotel, and the next minute Foster lunged
-out of the door. Three men followed him out on to the store porch, but
-they stopped there and watched him clamber on to his big white horse.
-Another small group gathered in front of the Morgan store to see the
-show.</p>
-<p>It was not over seventy yards from the store to the hotel and it would
-have been easier for Foster to walk, but he was not used to walking and
-he felt that he would be more impressive on his horse. He started from
-the store at a gallop but before he had covered the short distance he
-had slowed down to a walk. He drew up at the gate and scowled at Scott
-fiercely.</p>
-<p><q>When I tell people to come to me they come,</q> he blustered. He knew when
-he said it that it was the wrong thing to say but he could not help it.</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him calmly. <q>It must be very convenient to have them so
-well trained,</q> he remarked.</p>
-<p><q>You will be trained, too, before I am through with you,</q> Foster
-blustered. <q>That’s what I came for.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then maybe you better come in and have a seat, for it will probably
-take some time.</q> Scott pushed forward a chair and smiled at him
-tauntingly.</p>
-<p>Foster hesitated. He felt that he was decidedly getting the worst of it
-and he was uncertain just how to proceed. He might force him down to the
-store at the point of his rifle, but he was a coward at heart and he
-feared the consequences. He slowly dismounted and swaggered up to the
-porch with all the braggadocio he could muster. Scott rose to meet him.
-Foster climbed the two steps to the porch and glared down at Scott from
-his superior height.</p>
-<p><q>I want to know what you mean by not giving us that logging contract?</q>
-he blustered fiercely.</p>
-<p><q>Won’t you be seated?</q> Scott said quietly, as he offered him a chair.</p>
-<p><q>I did not come here to sit down,</q> Foster growled angrily. <q>I came here
-to find out why you did not give us that logging contract.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh,</q> Scott said as though puzzled, <q>I understood you to say that you
-came to train me to come when you called.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll do that, too, before I’m through with you,</q> Foster exclaimed,
-furiously. <q>Are you going to answer my question or will I have to beat
-it out of you?</q></p>
-<p>Scott looked him calmly in the eye a moment and smiled contemptuously.
-<q>You want to know why I did not give this contract to <q>us</q>? Just whom do
-you mean? Who is <q>us</q>? You forget that you are a stranger to me.</q></p>
-<p>Foster stared at him open-mouthed. Then the blood rushed to his already
-purple face, his neck swelled and his whole frame shook with the fury of
-his passion. His words were almost inarticulate. <q>You know me, you
-insolent hound. Everybody knows Foster Wait and a lot of ’em to their
-sorrow. Answer that question before I send you after old Jarred Morgan.
-I’ll teach you to insult a Wait!</q></p>
-<p>Scott knew of Foster’s furious temper and he had been doing his best to
-arouse it. He wanted him to fight and he knew that he would not do it
-except in a fit of passion. He knew his danger and he watched the man’s
-every move as he gave his temper one more prod.</p>
-<p><q>Talk sense, Mr. Wait, if you want an answer from me,</q> he sneered.
-<q>Threats do not scare me any more than they do old Jarred Morgan.</q></p>
-<p>Foster gave a roar of rage and threw forward his long rifle. He would
-undoubtedly have shot Scott as he had shot several other men when worked
-up to an uncontrollable passion, but Scott had been watching for just
-such a move.</p>
-<p>He had already grasped hold of a short piece of pipe which he had leaned
-up against a pillar of the porch in case of emergency, and when Foster
-threw forward his rifle he struck the barrel with all his might. The
-unexpected blow knocked the weapon out of Foster’s hands, and the bullet
-went through the roof of the porch.</p>
-<p>The suddenness of it all bewildered Foster for a moment and before he
-had fully recovered, Scott struck him a crushing blow on the jaw. The
-blow staggered him, but he quickly recovered his balance and threw
-himself upon Scott with the fury of a wild animal. He was usually a
-coward but now he was a crazy man, blinded by his passion, and did not
-realize what he was doing.</p>
-<p>His enormous size and great reach gave him a decided advantage in one
-way but it was partially offset by Scott’s skill and coolness. If he
-should succeed in landing one of his terrific but wild swings or in
-grappling his opponent the fight could have but one ending. Scott’s only
-chance was to keep out of his reach and hammer him into submission.
-Foster fought with all the wild fury of a madman; Scott, with the
-coolness of a boxing master.</p>
-<p>Again and again Scott landed blows which would have felled a smaller
-man. Some of them staggered this giant a little but most of them seemed
-to have no effect at all. Scott was handicapped by the necessity of
-keeping entirely out of his reach. A grazing blow on the side of his
-head warned him that if one of them should land squarely he would be
-done for.</p>
-<p>In attempting to avoid one of Foster’s mad rushes Scott stepped off the
-edge of the porch and fell on his back on the ground. Instantly Foster
-jumped for his head with both hobnailed boots. For the fraction of a
-second Scott, stunned by the fall, saw this demon hovering over him, and
-the sight almost sickened him. But he recovered just in time to roll
-suddenly over out of reach and spring to his feet. Foster, dazed by the
-escape of his victim, tripped and fell. Scott could have jumped on the
-lumbering giant there on the ground but he had been taught to play the
-game fair. Moreover, he did not want this man to have any excuse. He
-wanted to thrash him as he had never been thrashed before and make him
-acknowledge it.</p>
-<p>The men from both stores had edged up to the fence and almost forgotten
-the dead line in their excitement.</p>
-<p>Scott let the giant scramble to his feet unmolested, and paid dear for
-his chivalry. He had counted on this man’s dissipation sapping his
-endurance. It was beginning to tell on him. His breath was coming in
-great choking gasps but his mountain training had made him tough.
-Moreover, he realized that his strength was waning, and with that
-knowledge his blind fury gave way to craft.</p>
-<p>Scott had always boxed according to the rules of the ring, and he was
-taken entirely off his guard when Foster suddenly sprang some lumberjack
-tactics and landed his hobnailed boot squarely in his stomach. For a
-second everything turned black before him and he staggered like a
-drunken man. As in a haze he saw the giant spring forward to finish him
-off. With the instinct of the fighter, he side-stepped and the instant’s
-reprieve brought back his wandering senses and his wind.</p>
-<p>When he saw the slight effect of his blows earlier in the fight he had
-devoted himself almost entirely to defense and saved his strength till
-Foster should be tired out. Now he took the offensive with all his
-power. He rained blow after blow on the gasping giant with bewildering
-rapidity and finally, seeing the man was almost exhausted, he threw
-every ounce of strength into a blow square on the point of his chin.</p>
-<p>The big fellow staggered an instant and sank limply in a lifeless heap.
-Scott leaned panting against the fence. He was almost exhausted. Foster
-moved uneasily and raised himself groaning on one elbow.</p>
-<p><q>Are you through training me to come when you call?</q> Scott asked between
-his gasps for breath.</p>
-<p>Foster rose slowly and wobbled towards the gate without a word. Not a
-word of sympathy came from his friends and they watched him clamber
-painfully on to his horse without offering any assistance. He rode
-slowly down the village street with drooping head, a thoroughly beaten
-man.</p>
-<p>The two groups of men walked silently back to the stores and left Scott
-still leaning against the fence, weak and sick, but filled with a
-feeling of intense satisfaction.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXIV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT MAKES A TRIP TO WASHINGTON</span></h2>
-<p>Scott leaned wearily on the picket fence for a long time after the old
-white horse had carried Foster out of sight up the mountain road. He did
-not bear any trace of the fight on his face, but his body was sore and
-he was very nearly exhausted. He could not but smile as he stood there
-with heaving chest to think how far he had departed from the policy of
-strict neutrality which he had laid down for himself. But from the
-remarks which Hopwood had dropped that morning he doubted whether it
-would make very much difference to the Waits.</p>
-<p>Well, it was done now, anyway, no matter what the Waits might think. He
-had shown them that he had no intention of running away, and he felt
-that he could now go about his own business without running the risk of
-being called a coward. As he turned toward the hotel he saw Hopwood
-leaning on the corner of the fence.</p>
-<p><q>Well, Hopwood, did you see the big fight?</q> he asked smilingly.</p>
-<p><q>That was a good job,</q> Hopwood replied soberly.</p>
-<p><q>Shall I have to fight all of the rest of the Waits now, Hopwood?</q> Scott
-asked a little anxiously. He did not want to waste any more time waiting
-for these people or fighting them.</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. <q>Sewall told him he would get his ears boxed
-again. They will be glad of it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Listen, Hopwood. Is Sewall going to try to take the contract?</q> Scott
-asked earnestly.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Hopwood replied emphatically. <q>How could he? There is not that
-much money in the whole country.</q></p>
-<p><q>I did not think there was myself but I wanted to make sure of it. Could
-you deliver a message for me, Hopwood?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood looked up eagerly. Collecting news and carrying messages were
-things he liked best to do. He did not have to speak. Scott could see
-that he was more than willing.</p>
-<p><q>I have some business I want to attend to, Hopwood,</q> Scott continued,
-<q>and I’ll have to go away for a couple of days. If I go now it will look
-as though I have thrashed Foster and then run away. I want you to tell
-Foster Wait, or maybe it would be better to tell Sewall, if he is the
-real head of the family, that I am going away for three days but will be
-back here Saturday. You can tell the same thing to Jarred, too, so that
-they will all know it. Do you think that you have it straight now?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded gravely. <q>I always get messages straight,</q> he replied
-proudly. <q>You are sure you will be back Saturday?</q> He had taken a
-strange liking to this man who had treated him like a rational being and
-thrashed his surly uncle.</p>
-<p><q>Yes, Hopwood, I’ll certainly be here Saturday without fail, and,</q> he
-added, for he could see how the friendship pleased Hopwood, <q>I would
-like to see you again pretty soon after I get back.</q></p>
-<p>He might as well have saved himself the trouble, for Hopwood had gone to
-deliver his precious message. Scott sighed when he saw that the man was
-gone. He could not get used to his unexpected movements. He wasted no
-more thoughts on it now. The dinner bell rang, on time for once, and the
-station agent came in the gate.</p>
-<p><q>Hear you beat up Foster Wait,</q> he grinned.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott admitted. <q>He forced it on me but I was glad of the
-opportunity. Who told you?</q></p>
-<p><q>One of the Wait boys told me, but that would have been unnecessary
-after I saw Foster.</q></p>
-<p><q>I wonder what the Waits will think of it?</q> Scott asked. He was anxious
-to have some one back up Hopwood’s opinion.</p>
-<p><q>They are as tickled as you are,</q> the agent answered confidently. <q>He is
-always bragging, and none of them like him. He’ll probably have to quit
-the country after this.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was glad to hear it. That would leave him free to carry out his
-plans. He told the agent of the trip he was going to make, and spent the
-afternoon busily working over a bunch of legal-looking papers. Four
-o’clock found him on the afternoon train headed north, an impatient
-traveler.</p>
-<p>Scott had not told any one where he was going. If he had said that he
-was going to Washington, they would have thought that he was running
-away as the other fellows had done. But he was going to Washington, and
-when he got there he lost no time in going to the Forest Service office
-and to the chief of his division.</p>
-<p>Mr. Johns seemed very much surprised to see him back so soon. <q>Well,
-Burton,</q> he laughed, <q>I didn’t think that they could put the run on you,
-not so soon, anyway.</q> He laughed, but at the same time it was plain that
-he was disappointed.</p>
-<p><q>Well, they have,</q> Scott replied, <q>but I am going back.</q></p>
-<p>Mr Johns brightened at once. <q>That sounds better,</q> he said heartily.</p>
-<p><q>There are one or two things about that logging contract I want to make
-sure of,</q> Scott said. <q>As I understand it, those logs have been sold and
-we have contracted to have them delivered at a certain time.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s right,</q> Mr. Johns agreed. <q>It is rather an unusual thing to do,
-but we were forced to it in this instance or we could not have bought
-that piece of land for the forest at all.</q></p>
-<p><q>And now,</q> Scott continued, <q>we are responsible for the delivery, and no
-one will take the logging contract.</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Johns frowned. <q>I thought that man Reynolds told me that he had
-arranged for the logging contract before he left.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe he thought he had,</q> Scott replied bitterly, <q>but he hadn’t.</q></p>
-<p><q>Don’t be bashful in saying what you think about him,</q> Mr. Johns urged.
-<q>He was a man we took on temporarily, and we’ve let him out again.</q></p>
-<p><q>It is a good thing,</q> Scott said. <q>I think I should have killed him
-myself if he had stayed there. Do you know the situation down there, Mr.
-Johns?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Mr. Johns replied, <q>I am beginning to think that I do not. Two men
-were sent there before you were. Both of them seemed to be getting along
-fine according to their reports, but one suddenly resigned and the other
-asked for a transfer. Neither of them gave a very satisfactory reason.</q></p>
-<p>Scott grinned. <q>I can tell you the reason. There is an A1 feud down
-there. Those fellows tied up with one party, and the other one ran them
-out of the country.</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Johns was intensely interested and insisted on knowing all the
-details. <q>But why not ignore both factions and give the contract to an
-outsider? That is altogether possible.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s what I thought,</q> Scott said, <q>but everybody knows of that feud,
-and no one will touch the contract for fear of getting mixed up in it.</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Johns rubbed his forehead in perplexity. <q>And unless we can deliver
-those logs on time we’ll lose our option on that piece of land. What are
-you going to do about it?</q> He looked at Scott helplessly.</p>
-<p><q>Resign like the rest of them,</q> Scott grinned.</p>
-<p><q>Oh, come now, Burton,</q> Mr. Johns remonstrated. <q>I did not expect that
-of you. You have the reputation of being resourceful and a fighter. You
-are not going to resign and let yourself be run out of the country at
-the first sign of trouble, are you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott replied firmly, <q>I’m going to resign but I’m not going to
-be run out of the country. I want to resign and take that logging
-contract myself.</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Johns looked at him a moment in open-mouthed astonishment. <q>Do you
-mean that?</q> he asked eagerly.</p>
-<p>Scott nodded. <q>If it will be all right with you. I am going to put in my
-bid. I had some experience logging my own timber last winter, you know,
-and I’d be willing to spend my last dollar to beat that feud down
-there.</q></p>
-<p>His chief thought a moment. <q>It’s a bit irregular, and I’ll have to take
-it up with the forester, but under the circumstances I believe it can be
-done.</q></p>
-<p>The upshot of the matter was that Scott started back for North Carolina
-the next day with the assurance that if no one else made a satisfactory
-bid, his resignation would be accepted and he would be awarded the
-contract.</p>
-<p>Three days before he had been hoping for some one to bid on that same
-contract; now he was praying with all his heart that no one would.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT HEARS SOME RUMBLINGS OF THE OLD FEUD</span></h2>
-<p>Scott stopped for a day in Asheville to make some business arrangements
-for starting the logging operations in case he was awarded the contract
-and then hurried back to Caspar. He found Hopwood, who had constituted
-himself his faithful follower, waiting for him in the corner of the
-hotel yard.</p>
-<p><q>I knew you’d come back,</q> Hopwood remarked in a tone of extreme
-satisfaction.</p>
-<p><q>Why?</q> Scott asked. <q>Did any one think that I was not coming back?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded. <q>They all said you had run away like all the others, and
-Foster has been taking most of the credit for it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott ground his teeth. <q>I suppose that will set him up in business
-again with the rest of the family.</q></p>
-<p><q>A lot of them believed it, but now that you have come back he will
-probably have to leave the country himself. None of them will believe
-him now.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, tell them that I have come back, Hopwood, and I’ve come back to
-stay. They will find out before I am through that I am not very badly
-scared after all.</q></p>
-<p><q>Has any one taken the logging contract?</q> Hopwood asked eagerly. <q>It
-would help me if I could predict it right,</q> he added wistfully.</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him curiously a moment. The more he saw of Hopwood the
-harder it was for him to believe him an idiot. In any event it was
-perfectly clear that he was devoted to him and he decided to make him
-his confidant. It could not do him much harm if the man of the iron hat
-did not keep faith in this and it might make him a closer friend.</p>
-<p><q>Yes, Hopwood, some one has bid on it. You can safely predict that the
-logging will begin in ten days, for—but you must not publish this part
-of it—if no one else takes the job I am going to resign and take it
-myself.</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh!</q> Hopwood exclaimed with a gasp of satisfaction. <q>I won’t tell them
-but you don’t know how much good it will do me to know that.</q> And
-without waiting to make his usual mysterious disappearance he walked
-quickly into the woods to carry the news of Scott’s return.</p>
-<p>Scott was not surprised to find that no one had responded to his call
-for bids. He had found out in Asheville that there was practically no
-chance of any one showing any interest in it. He hoped no one would. He
-had to confide his plans to the station agent because he had to send a
-number of telegrams. Probably Caspar had never done such a business in
-telegrams before in all its existence, even when the feud was at its
-height.</p>
-<p>For the next week Scott devoted all his time to a careful study of the
-area which was to be logged. From breakfast till supper-time every day
-he hiked over the mountains, running out the boundary lines, sketching
-the topography and tentatively locating the logging roads. This work led
-him through the territory and by the cabins of many of the Waits but he
-did not see any of them. They seemed to be sulking in their tents.</p>
-<p>It seemed to Scott to be a strange country. Long straight slopes
-stretched unbroken to the high, level ridges. They were grooved every
-quarter mile or less with shallow draws and not far below the ridge in
-these draws were springs which sent tiny, crystal-clear streams of
-ice-cold water trickling down into the valley. The low places and also
-many of the higher slopes were covered with a solid mat of rhododendron
-and laurel, so thick that a man was obliged to break or cut his way
-through it. It was the densest growth he had ever seen outside of the
-cane brakes of Florida. The great masses of white flowers made a
-wonderful sight, but after he had tried to run a line through the stuff
-for a couple of days he could no longer see the flowers.</p>
-<p>But the ridges were the strangest of all. They were narrow but straight
-and level, so level that the old Indian trails followed them rather than
-the valleys. And the big red oaks came right up to the top. Only at long
-intervals did the ridges dip to a low pass; otherwise, they stretched
-for miles as level as the floor and were clear of underbrush.</p>
-<p>It was on one of these level, open trails that Scott had the scare of
-his life. He had been familiar with razorback hogs in Florida. He had
-seen one tear a hound to pieces one day and had learned to fear the
-animals as he feared nothing else in the forest. Tall, thin and capable
-of great speed, they were entirely different from any hogs he had ever
-seen at home. Their heads were half as long as their bodies, with large
-tusks and powerful jaws, and they were fearless. Once they had made up
-their minds to charge, nothing would turn them. One had to kill them or
-get out of the way.</p>
-<p>One morning as Scott was going out to work he saw an old sow with a
-litter of very small pigs in a clump of bushes beside the trail, and he
-gave her a wide berth. That evening on the way home he had forgotten all
-about her. He was absorbed in his plans for the logging job and wholly
-oblivious of his surroundings. The razorback never entered his head.</p>
-<p>A large red oak three feet in diameter had fallen across the trail and
-Scott vaulted it mechanically, hardly knowing what he was doing. His
-feet had scarcely struck the ground when he heard a vicious <q>woof,</q> and
-the old sow darted out from under the other end of the log headed
-straight for him under a full head of steam.</p>
-<p>Scott was frightened as he had never been frightened before. With one
-terrified spring he vaulted back over the log. That would have been
-sufficient protection from an ordinary pig, but a fallen tree meant
-nothing to a razorback. She cleared the tree without the slightest
-hesitation and was close behind him.</p>
-<p>This unexpected jump so terrified Scott that he bolted like a frightened
-horse. He had never been a very fast runner but now he turned straight
-down the side of the mountain and made a new life record. It seemed to
-him that his feet were hitting the ground only about every thirty feet.
-Below him he saw a stream with high, steep banks, and at one point a
-tree had fallen across it. He made madly for that spot, somehow managed
-to stay on the log, tripped and fell in a heap on the other side. He
-scrambled to his feet expecting to find those ugly tusks at his very
-throat only to find instead that the old sow was fully satisfied with
-his retreat and was already trotting back up the slope to her babies.</p>
-<p>Scott could not help laughing as he thought what a great show it would
-have been for a spectator. The conqueror of Foster Wait breaking the
-world’s record in his endeavors to get away from an angry pig. And yet
-it might have been serious, and he knew that he would run as fast or
-faster next time.</p>
-<p>He was getting himself together for the climb back up the ridge when he
-noticed a deeply worn trail along the edge of the little creek. He
-thought at first that it was made by the razorbacks and the cattle which
-roamed around the mountains in considerable numbers, but he was
-surprised to find that the tracks were made by men, and some of them
-very recently.</p>
-<p>Where could such a well-worn path as that lead to away up there on the
-mountainside? It might be a short cut over the ridge into the Tennessee
-valley, but why should so many people be traveling that way on foot?
-These people always rode horseback whenever they were going any
-considerable distance. He determined to follow it up and find out for
-himself. It was on the forest and it was his business to know about it.</p>
-<p>The trail run obliquely upward across the face of the mountain and in
-the next draw it ducked into a dense patch of rhododendron. There it was
-very evident that the trail had been built for a purpose. It was cut out
-clear two feet wide and had been used so long that the stubs had all
-been worn down smooth.</p>
-<p>While he was examining it he was startled by the sound of approaching
-voices, raised high in argument if not in an actual quarrel. At first
-the voices were too distant for the words to be distinguished. Scott had
-no reason to avoid these people whoever they might be, and it never
-occurred to him to hide till he caught a sentence distinctly.</p>
-<p><q>I tell you, Foster, it won’t do. You were licked and you are done for,
-and that is all there is about it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott did not recognize the voice, but he had every reason to believe
-that they were talking about him and he wanted to hear the rest of it.
-He slipped back of a big oak tree beside the trail and listened. The
-voices came nearer till he could distinguish both sides of the
-conversation.</p>
-<p><q>I know it would work.</q> It was Foster speaking now, and his voice was
-thick and sullen. <q>Why wouldn’t it work? If I started a fight, the
-Morgans would have to fight; and if they fought, the Waits would have to
-fight, and then we would clean them up. It’s time they were cleaned up.
-They kept us from getting that logging contract and they’ll keep us from
-getting anything else. I’m for cleaning them up, I tell you.</q></p>
-<p><q>And I’m telling you that it won’t work,</q> the other voice answered
-curtly.</p>
-<p><q>Why won’t it?</q> Foster persisted. <q>Are you afraid of them?</q></p>
-<p><q>Afraid of them?</q> the other exclaimed contemptuously. <q>No, but I am not
-fool enough to fall for your scheme. And neither will the others. You’re
-down and out. You know it and you think you can get back on your feet by
-starting a fight. Well, you can’t.</q></p>
-<p>Scott peeped around the tree and saw them standing at the entrance of
-the tunnel into the rhododendron. One, as he already knew, was Foster
-Wait. The other was a short man of medium build, and rather clean-cut
-features. He seemed wide awake and altogether different from the other
-Waits he had seen. Instinctively he felt from what Hopwood had said that
-this man must be Sewall Wait, the brains of the family.</p>
-<p>The smaller man was staring silently at Foster with a manner showing
-both domination and disgust. Foster shifted uneasily from one foot to
-the other and looked uncertainly about him. He was unable to look Sewall
-steadily in the eye, but his braggart habit finally came to his rescue.</p>
-<p><q>Well, it doesn’t matter so much what you think. It is up to me to
-decide and if I say fight, you will have to fight,</q> and he swaggered off
-down the trail up which Scott had come.</p>
-<p>Sewall looked after him contemptuously for a moment, shrugged his
-shoulders, and turned into a faint trail which led straight down the
-mountain.</p>
-<p>When they were both out of sight Scott came out of his hiding place. He
-decided to investigate the trail at some other time, and climbed back to
-the ridge. What he had just heard gave him something to think about. He
-knew now that there was nothing neutral about him. His sympathies were
-all with old Jarred and he hurried home to warn him of his danger.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXVI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XVI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT HAS AN INTERVIEW WITH SEWALL</span></h2>
-<p>The next day Scott was still worrying over what he had overheard on the
-mountain the evening before. He did not know what to do. At first he had
-determined to carry a warning straight to old Jarred Morgan, but what
-good would that do? Jarred could not stop the Waits from starting a
-fight even if he tried, and no one had ever heard of his trying.</p>
-<p>He wanted to see Hopwood and ask his advice but for once Hopwood did not
-show up when he was wanted. He wasted all the forenoon watching for him.
-Then he suddenly remembered what Hopwood had said about Sewall being the
-real leader of the Waits and determined to go and see him at once. He
-had two reasons for going. He wanted to see where he stood on the
-question of the feud, and he wanted to know if it was he who was talking
-to Foster the day before.</p>
-<p>Immediately after lunch he started for the cabin which the agent pointed
-out to him as a speck up on the mountainside. On the way up he saw
-Foster approaching on his white horse, but Foster evidently did not care
-to meet the man who had given him such a thrashing and turned off into
-the woods. He had his rifle with him and Scott did not feel comfortable
-till he was well past the spot. He half expected to hear a shot and had
-an uncomfortable feeling that some one was aiming at a spot between his
-shoulder blades.</p>
-<p>When he came in sight of the cabin he was surprised at its appearance.
-All the Wait cabins he had seen were slovenly and seedy-looking, as
-though no one had taken any interest whatever in them since they were
-first built. This one was very different. The inevitable picket fence,
-which Scott had now learned was to keep out the wandering razorbacks,
-was neatly whitewashed. The house was newly painted and the roof had
-recently been shingled. There was real sod in the yard and there was a
-bed of gorgeous flowers beside the porch.</p>
-<p>Scott stopped at the gate and shouted. A middle-aged woman came to the
-door and looked surprised at the sight of a stranger. Scott’s surprise
-was even greater. Instead of the regulation Mother Hubbard which all the
-women in that country seemed to wear, this woman was neatly dressed in a
-blue house dress and a white apron. She quickly recovered from her
-surprise and smiled pleasantly.</p>
-<p><q>Won’t you come in?</q> she said sweetly. <q>This is one house,</q> she
-explained, <q>where you don’t have to stand outside and shout.</q></p>
-<p>Scott thought at first that she was criticizing his manners, but he saw
-from the way she said it that she was stating this only as a matter of
-pride.</p>
-<p><q>I am glad to know there is one such place,</q> Scott said. <q>I was told
-that it is always safer to shout, and they did not tell me that there
-were any exceptions. Does Mr. Sewall Wait live here?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> she replied offering him a chair. <q>Please have a seat and I’ll
-call him. It is such a beautiful day that I am sure you will find it
-pleasanter here on the porch than inside.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was a little disappointed for he would have liked to see what the
-inside of this house was like, but he thanked her and took the offered
-chair. He did not have long to wait. He heard quick footsteps inside the
-house, and the man he had seen with Foster stepped briskly out on to the
-porch.</p>
-<p>Scott arose. <q>Mr. Wait, my name is Burton, and I am the new supervisor
-at Caspar.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall had sized him up at a single glance and extended his hand. <q>Glad
-to know you, Mr. Burton,</q> he smiled mischievously. <q>I have heard of you
-before from my cousin Foster.</q></p>
-<p>Scott blushed like a schoolgirl. <q>I regret that I was forced into a
-quarrel with your cousin, but I assure you, Mr. Wait, that it was not of
-my seeking.</q></p>
-<p><q>Pshaw!</q> Sewall exclaimed heartily. <q>Don’t let that worry you. Everybody
-around here knows Foster, and I for one am glad that you thrashed him.</q></p>
-<p><q>I am glad that the rest of you feel that way,</q> Scott said. <q>But it was
-a shame that I had to do it when I was trying so hard to be absolutely
-neutral. When I heard of this feud, Mr. Wait, I determined not to get
-mixed up in it as the others had done. Unfortunately, Mr. Reynolds was
-ignorant of both the feud and the regulations, and he made promises to
-your family which the law would not permit me to keep. It is illegal to
-let a contract without submitting it to bids and requiring a bond. I
-admit frankly that I was glad of it, because I did not want to see
-either party get it as long as this feud exists.</q></p>
-<p><q>I don’t blame you,</q> Sewall agreed sadly. <q>It would just add to the mess
-that already exists.</q></p>
-<p><q>That is the reason I came to see you, Mr. Wait,</q> Scott exclaimed
-quickly. <q>It seems to me a pity for this feud to continue indefinitely.
-I heard that you had some influence with your family and I want to see
-if we can’t figure out some way to bring it to an end.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall shook his head sadly. <q>Did you ever see old Jarred Morgan?</q> he
-asked hopelessly.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said. <q>I have met him and I admit that he turned my
-proposition down cold.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s the trouble,</q> Sewall interrupted a little impatiently. <q>He will
-never give up. He and that little vixen of a Vic nurse the feud like an
-only child.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s true enough,</q> Scott admitted. <q>But they are in the minority and
-I cannot blame them much. I cannot help but admire the old man’s
-gameness in a way. I thought possibly the larger party could afford to
-make the overture. You are an educated man, Mr. Wait, and you must see
-the futility of it.</q></p>
-<p><q>See it? Why, of course, I see it,</q> Sewall exclaimed bitterly. <q>I am the
-only one of the Waits who had the ambition to drag myself out of the
-Middle Ages in which the rest of them are living, and I’d make them drop
-that feud to-morrow if I could. Foster is the only one on this side who
-wants to keep it up. The rest would drop it quick enough if old Jarred
-would let them, but as long as he holds out, their pride will not let
-them give it up. And what would be the use of our quitting if Jarred did
-not?</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s true,</q> Scott sighed, <q>but I have not given up hope if you are
-willing. I want to try again to persuade Jarred.</q></p>
-<p><q>Go to it,</q> Sewall replied gloomily, <q>but you will not succeed.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe not,</q> Scott said, <q>but I want to try. Can I count on you to avoid
-any new outbreaks while I am trying?</q></p>
-<p><q>There will never be any more outbreaks if I can prevent it, Mr. Burton.
-And,</q> he added confidently, <q>I can prevent it unless Foster runs wild,
-and I doubt if he has the courage for that.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> Scott said, as he rose to go, <q>I certainly shall appreciate your
-help, and if I can ever be of any service to you, please let me know.</q></p>
-<p>He left with the feeling that there was at least one man in the Wait
-tribe, and he marveled all the way home to think how this one individual
-had raised himself so far above all the others in spite of his
-surroundings. It made his own accomplishments seem small.</p>
-<p>Then he thought of the lonely old man on the other mountain, just as
-good a man and just as intelligent as Sewall. With the leadership in the
-hands of two such men there surely ought to be a reasonable way out. He
-determined to try once more in spite of the old man’s request not to
-mention it.</p>
-<p>When he came to the Morgan cabin it was unnecessary to shout. Jarred was
-sitting on the front steps and rose to welcome him. He even came part
-way to the gate.</p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> he said with a smile, <q>I see you found a way to keep the
-contract out of the hands of the feudists even if you had to thrash one
-of them to do it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott laughed at the old man’s humor. <q>It does seem like a strange way
-to keep neutral,</q> he admitted, <q>but it was forced on me.</q></p>
-<p>The smile left Jarred’s face and he looked at Scott gravely. <q>Yes, I
-know it was, and let me give you a warning. Keep your eyes open from now
-on. That fellow will shoot you in the back if he gets a chance.</q></p>
-<p><q>I believe he would,</q> Scott agreed, <q>but I was talking to one of the
-Waits this morning who seemed to be altogether different.</q></p>
-<p><q>Sewall?</q> Jarred asked quietly.</p>
-<p><q>Yes, I heard that he was the brains of the party and I went up to see
-him.</q></p>
-<p>Jarred nodded. <q>Yes, Sewall is different. If all the Waits were like
-Sewall there would not be any feud.</q></p>
-<p>Scott took advantage of the old man’s calm mood. <q>You asked me not to
-say anything more about dropping the feud, but I want to say something
-about it just once more if you will let me.</q></p>
-<p>Old Jarred’s face turned dark with sudden anger and Scott saw that he
-was going to be ordered out with little ceremony. But the order did not
-come. For a moment there was intense silence. Then the old man spoke,
-and his voice was quiet and rather sad.</p>
-<p><q>I know what you would say, but go ahead.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was so surprised that he could scarcely find the words now that he
-had the opportunity. Then he blurted out his words like a schoolboy.</p>
-<p><q>It is only this, Mr. Morgan. I could not help thinking when I found out
-what sort of men you two were, what a pity it was for you to hold out as
-a matter of pride till one of you is killed, and Mr. Wait said that he
-would be glad to drop the whole thing if you would. Is there no way out
-of it?</q></p>
-<p>Again Jarred’s face darkened but the wave of temper passed as the other
-had done.</p>
-<p><q>I suppose that is the way it looks to a stranger,</q> he said slowly. <q>I
-suppose I seem like a stubborn old fool, all pride and nothing to back
-it up, keeping the whole country in arms for the fun of it.</q></p>
-<p><q>No, it’s not quite as bad as that,</q> Scott interrupted quickly.</p>
-<p><q>Maybe you would not say it in those words,</q> Jarred replied quietly,
-<q>but it must be about what you think. If any one else had tried to tell
-me what you have I would have ordered him off the place, but I like you
-and I am deep in your debt. I am going to tell you something that I have
-not mentioned before in fifteen years.</q> He paused as though it were a
-great effort to break his prolonged silence. Then he continued with
-enforced calm:</p>
-<p><q>Foster Wait shot my daughter in cold blood just fifteen years ago, shot
-her just to keep the feud from dying out. He brought it to life again,</q>
-he concluded grimly. <q>Now it will live till one of us dies.</q></p>
-<p>They both sat motionless for a minute staring at the opposite mountain
-in silence. The old man was choked with his own suppressed fury. Scott
-was awed by the significance this statement gave to the conversation
-which he had overheard in the woods the day before. What if this
-cold-blooded murderer should shoot Vic this time to keep the feud alive?</p>
-<p>He knew that he dared say nothing more to Jarred. In fact, he could
-think of little more to say. <q>Thank you for your confidence in me, Mr.
-Morgan,</q> he said sincerely. <q>I promise not to mention the matter again.</q></p>
-<p>Jarred did not seem to hear him. His eyes were still fixed on the
-opposite mountain, and when Scott looked back from the turn in the road
-he had not moved.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXVII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XVII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD TAKES A TRIP</span></h2>
-<p>For the next few days Scott was too busy to think anything of Foster
-Wait’s possible revenge. In fact he almost forgot the feud altogether.
-The time for the return of bids had come and he had been awarded the
-contract. He had wired in his resignation to Washington and was once
-more in the thick of a logging job.</p>
-<p>He wired to Asheville where he had already made his preliminary
-arrangements, and in two days carloads of men, lumber and supplies began
-to arrive. He had hired a friend of his old foreman to boss the job,
-another Scotchman, MacAndrews, who knew the country and the logging
-methods. Camp buildings of rough lumber sprang up like mushrooms in the
-valley near the railroad tracks, and the skid roads began to creep
-slowly up the mountain in the shallow draws toward the ridge.</p>
-<p>The log chute was of particular interest to Scott because he had never
-seen one. In that particular place there was a small side valley, larger
-than most of the shallow draws, and the log chute was built along the
-little stream in the bottom of it. It consisted of two strings of logs
-laid side by side on short ties and hewed flat on the inside to form a
-rough trough. The logs were peeled and rolled into it far up on the
-mountain and gravity brought them down with the speed of a toboggan.</p>
-<p>Near the bottom of it they built a contraption which they called a bear
-trap to break the speed of the logs before they came out on to the pile.
-It was a heavy log, one end of which was raised on a tripod over the
-chute while the heavy butt end rested in the chute. Scott never tired of
-watching the great logs rushing down at tremendous speed only to butt
-this big swinging log high in the air and slide gently out of the chute,
-their force all spent.</p>
-<p>Every now and then the silence of the valley was broken by a dull boom
-as the long saws chewed their way steadily through the great trunks and
-the majestic monarchs of the forest plunged headlong down the side of
-the mountain over which they had stood guard for centuries. And down the
-steep skid roads in the shallow draws the teams were hauling long trains
-of logs chained end to end.</p>
-<p>Everything was running as smoothly as a watch under MacAndrews’
-efficient management, and Scott would have been serenely happy but for
-one thing. He had not seen Hopwood for three weeks. Not since the first
-day of his return from Washington. And he had come to rely on Hopwood
-more than he realized. There was no one else who could keep him posted.
-The agent told him what little he heard, and he visited old man Sanders
-one evening. But without Hopwood they were almost as much in the dark as
-he was.</p>
-<p>One evening Sewall came to see him at the hotel which was considered
-neutral ground. He, too, was worrying about Hopwood.</p>
-<p><q>So you have not seen him, either,</q> he said, as he was preparing to
-leave. <q>I do not know what to make of it. He never disappeared this way
-before. I have searched for him everywhere on this side of the mountain
-but no one has seen him. No one has seen him on the other side.</q></p>
-<p><q>Have you any suspicions about it?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p>Sewall hesitated a moment. <q>He seems to have taken quite a shine to you
-and I thought maybe you had sent him on an errand somewhere. I wanted to
-find out before I said anything else.</q></p>
-<p><q>Now what are you going to do?</q> Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Again Sewall hesitated.</p>
-<p><q>This is not mere curiosity on my part,</q> Scott added. <q>I look upon
-Hopwood as a good friend of mine, and I am as anxious to find him as you
-are. If you have any theory and I can do anything to help I want to do
-it.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall still hesitated. <q>I don’t see how you can help me just now and I
-have not told any one my suspicions, but if you are a friend of his I
-might as well tell you what I am thinking. I can’t lower your opinion of
-Foster much. I have no basis for my suspicions, but I can’t help
-wondering if Foster has anything to do with it. He knows that Hopwood
-does not like him and he may have got him out of the way to keep him
-from working against him. I suppose you know how Hopwood came to be
-crazy?</q></p>
-<p>Scott nodded. <q>I heard about it,</q> he said. <q>But surely Foster would not
-do him any farther injury when he is already responsible for that.</q></p>
-<p><q>Foster is desperate now,</q> Sewall replied, <q>and he would do anything. By
-the way, you want to keep on your guard yourself. He’ll never forgive
-you for thrashing him.</q></p>
-<p><q>I am watching him the best I can,</q> Scott replied. <q>I wish you would let
-me know what you find out about Hopwood, and I’ll send him right to you
-if I find him.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall left and Scott sat pondering over the depths of Foster’s
-villainy. It did not seem possible that any one could do such a thing as
-that in cold blood, or that a man who had such a reputation could be
-left at large. He glanced up impatiently and saw Hopwood sitting on a
-chair near the door.</p>
-<p><q>Why, Hopwood,</q> Scott exclaimed as he jumped forward joyously to greet
-him, <q>where have you been all this time?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood’s face beamed with pleasure as he recognized the sincerity of
-Scott’s greeting, and he spread out his hands in his old characteristic
-gesture.</p>
-<p><q>Sewall was just here looking for you. He has searched all that side of
-the mountain, and I have been inquiring for you on this side. You’ve had
-us worried.</q></p>
-<p><q>I saw him,</q> Hopwood replied laconically.</p>
-<p><q>Did you tell him where you had been?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Hopwood said, <q>he did not see me.</q></p>
-<p><q>You should have spoken to him, Hopwood. He is putting in all his time
-looking for you.</q></p>
-<p><q>I did not know that he cared that much about me,</q> Hopwood replied
-rather wistfully. <q>I’ll go right to him.</q></p>
-<p><q>You should,</q> Scott urged him earnestly, <q>for he cares a great deal
-about you, and so do I. You ought not to scare us that way.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood looked a little hurt. <q>I was trying to do something for you.
-That was why I went away.</q></p>
-<p><q>For me!</q> Scott exclaimed in astonishment. <q>How is that?</q></p>
-<p><q>Foster will shoot you if he gets a chance,</q> Hopwood replied
-confidently. <q>I went over to the county seat to try to get him arrested.
-If he was in jail it would be safer around here. It will never be safe
-while he is here.</q></p>
-<p><q>But you can’t get a man arrested for what you think he is going to do,
-Hopwood,</q> Scott remonstrated.</p>
-<p><q>No, not for what he <i>has</i> done, either,</q> Hopwood replied bitterly. <q>He
-killed a little girl here years ago, Jarred’s daughter. It was not a
-fight, just plain murder. It was for that I wanted them to arrest him.</q></p>
-<p>Scott looked at him wonderingly. <q>What did they say?</q></p>
-<p><q>They laughed at me,</q> Hopwood replied angrily. <q>Said they could not
-arrest any one on the word of a crazy man.</q></p>
-<p><q>Did you have on your iron hat?</q> Scott asked, a little amused in spite
-of himself.</p>
-<p>A rare smile came over Hopwood’s face. <q>There’s where I made my
-mistake,</q> he replied. <q>I forgot that I had it on.</q></p>
-<p><q>Why do you wear it, Hopwood?</q> Scott asked, his curiosity getting the
-better of him.</p>
-<p>Hopwood looked at him thoughtfully. <q>I’ll tell you some day. I’m not
-quite ready yet. What did Sewall think?</q> he asked shrewdly.</p>
-<p><q>He thought that I might have sent you on an errand or that Foster might
-have done something to you.</q></p>
-<p>An angry scowl spread over Hopwood’s brow. It was the first time Scott
-had ever seen such an expression there. <q>Foster will never do anything
-to me. If I did not have more sense than they think I have, it would be
-I who would do something to Foster.</q> It did not sound to Scott much like
-the speech of a half-wit.</p>
-<p><q>Well, you’d better go see Sewall now. It will relieve his mind.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood started for the door without comment.</p>
-<p>Scott had not expected him to go so suddenly and called after him, <q>I
-certainly appreciate what you tried to do for me, Hopwood, and I would
-like to see you to-morrow if you get a chance. I have not had any news
-since you left.</q></p>
-<p>It was pathetic to see how grateful Hopwood was for any appreciation. He
-stopped a moment in confusion. <q>I’ll be here,</q> he blurted with evident
-embarrassment and hurried out.</p>
-<p><q>He may be crazy,</q> Scott thought, <q>but if he is, it is a pity that there
-are not more crazy people in the world. If it were not for that iron hat
-I would not believe it for a minute.</q></p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXVIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XVIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>DICK TURNS GENTLEMAN</span></h2>
-<p>These repeated warnings against Foster Wait began to get on Scott’s
-nerves. And yet there was very little that he could do to protect
-himself. He never carried a gun, and felt that he was safer without one.
-He was obliged to travel around over the forest continuously inspecting
-the logging job, and he could not devote all his time to watching for
-Foster Wait. He tried to forget it and go about his business as though
-Foster did not exist but he could not help thinking how many
-opportunities there were for this man to shoot him down from ambush, and
-it made him nervous. If Foster would only do something and show his
-hand, he could do something himself but till then he could only wait.</p>
-<p>A few days later something happened which put him more than ever on his
-guard. He was up near the ridge where they were making up the trains of
-logs for the skid teams. There was an enormous red-oak log forty-five
-inches in diameter lying in the skid road, and Jimmy Barnes, Scott’s
-best teamster, was waiting there with a team of large blacks ready to
-take it down. This particular team was untrained and very nervous. They
-had been assigned to Jimmy because he was the only teamster in camp who
-was willing and able to handle them.</p>
-<p>This one big oak log was in itself heavy enough for a load, but they
-never hauled a single log for fear it would roll sideways and become
-unmanageable. They always fastened a small log on behind to serve as a
-rudder. Jimmy was waiting for them to attach the small log. His team was
-getting so restless at the delay that he drove them around and hooked
-the heavy logging tongs to the end of the oak log. Not that he had any
-idea of trying to take it down alone, but just to give the team
-something to do and stop them from fretting.</p>
-<p>He had hardly straightened up from hooking on the tongs when the bushes
-beside the team were burst apart with a great commotion and Foster Wait
-jumped down the low bank into the skid road.</p>
-<p>The team made one wild lunge which almost jerked Jimmy off his feet and
-stopped trembling. The plunge turned the great log sideways on the
-slope, and it balanced uncertainly for a second on the stub of a small
-bush. Jimmy saw his chance, shouted wildly to the team and slapped them
-with the lines. If he could give that log another jerk before it started
-to roll he might be able to straighten it out. But the team balked. They
-trembled and jerked nervously but they refused to move, in spite of
-Jimmy’s efforts.</p>
-<p>Slowly the stub was bent down and the six-ton log was free. It rolled
-slowly down on to the horses. It had not yet gathered much momentum, but
-if it had been a smaller log it would have broken their legs. As it was,
-it just shoved their hind legs out from under them and they suddenly
-found themselves sitting on the revolving log with the heavy tongs and
-the logging chains clanking beside them at every turn of the log.</p>
-<p>It was too much for any team to bear. For a few yards they sat on that
-grinding log and ran with their front feet. Then with one mighty,
-terrified effort they succeeded in jumping clear of the log and plunged
-desperately down the skid road. But the tongs still held, and the big
-log rolled sullenly from side to side and held them back. Jimmy tried
-desperately to stay by his team, but an unexpected roll of the log threw
-him into the brush, the lines were jerked out of his hands and the team
-was completely out of control. The next instant the log struck a rock,
-the tongs pulled loose, and the freed team tore wildly down the steep
-skid road at breakneck speed.</p>
-<p>Scott took his eyes from the rapidly disappearing team long enough to
-take a glance at Foster and he felt sure that he saw a gleam of
-satisfaction on his face. When the team was out of sight and Jimmy had
-dug himself out of the brush Foster suddenly found himself the object of
-half a dozen pairs of angry eyes. He was frightened by the ugly looks of
-these men, but he succeeded in holding himself in check long enough to
-throw a bluff.</p>
-<p><q>Some frisky team,</q> he remarked genially. <q>Any of you-all see a hound
-dog go by this way?</q></p>
-<p><q>I seen <i>one</i>,</q> MacAndrews exclaimed with an angry glare, <q>but he ain’t
-gone by yet.</q></p>
-<p>The others snorted their amusement and Foster turned red. <q>I’ve lost
-mine,</q> he mumbled as he apologetically backed into the brush.</p>
-<p><q>Better keep him away from here,</q> Mac shouted after him. <q>We’ll tie a
-can on him pretty quick.</q></p>
-<p>Before Foster succeeded in breaking through the brush beside the road
-his flush had changed to a deadly pallor.</p>
-<p><q>Who is that cuss?</q> MacAndrews demanded with a vicious snap of his jaws.</p>
-<p><q>That is Foster Wait,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>Well, he is hanging around here more than is good for his health. He
-scared that team on purpose.</q></p>
-<p><q>I thought so, too,</q> Scott exclaimed, and he added a little anxiously,
-<q>did you say he had been around here before?</q></p>
-<p><q>Turns up somewhere around the job almost every day. He’ll come once too
-often some day. I expect that team is ruined.</q></p>
-<p>Scott had been so absorbed in Foster Wait that he had forgotten the team
-for a moment. Now he found that Jimmy had run down the mountain in
-search of them, and he followed as fast as he could run.</p>
-<p>Was Foster hanging around the logging operation trying to get a chance
-at him or was he up to some other mischief? It did not seem likely that
-he was looking for him. Why should he come there where there were so
-many people when he could so very easily catch him out in the woods
-alone? No, he must be up to something else. And Scott determined that he
-would make it his business to find out what it was as soon as possible.</p>
-<p>He watched all along the road for traces of the runaway team. At each
-turn in the road he expected to find them piled up against a tree or in
-the ditch, but although the road was badly scratched up in places as
-though they had stumbled or slipped badly they had evidently made it.</p>
-<p>Some of the men whom he passed told him that the team had passed safely
-at that point and was going strong. When he came in sight of the landing
-beside the railroad track he spied the big blacks standing in a little
-bunch of men. Jimmy was rubbing them down and trying to soothe their
-ruffled nerves.</p>
-<p>They were pretty well lathered up from the long run, and one of them had
-an ugly cut in his side but otherwise they seemed to be all right. They
-had left the road on the turn by the skidway and had run between two
-trees. The space had not been wide enough for the double-tree, and the
-sudden jerk had thrown one of the horses. Before they could untangle
-themselves from the broken harness the men had caught them.</p>
-<p><q>Better take them to the barn, Jimmy,</q> Scott said, when he had looked
-them over carefully and noticed their violently heaving flanks and
-trembling legs.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll take them over and doctor that cut and the harness,</q> Jimmy
-replied, <q>but I’ll have them out after lunch. If they had a run like
-that every day for a couple of weeks they might get down to where a
-fellow could handle them.</q> It was the second time they had run away with
-Jimmy, and he was getting a little peevish. He was afraid that they
-might endanger his reputation as the best teamster in the mountains.</p>
-<p>Scott knew what was the matter. <q>Never mind, Jimmy, you are doing fine.
-Nobody else could handle them at all. Once you have trained them they
-will be the best team on the job.</q></p>
-<p><q>They are that now,</q> Jimmy replied stoutly. <q>They have the record for
-coming down that mountain, anyway. By the way, did you get that guy who
-scared them?</q></p>
-<p><q>No, we hadn’t any proof that he did it on purpose so we let him go.</q></p>
-<p><q>I don’t need any proof,</q> Jimmy retorted angrily. <q>That’s the third time
-he’s tried it, and if I ever catch him around here again I’m going to
-lose a peavey in him.</q></p>
-<p>Scott did not say anything, but he made a mental note of what Jimmy said
-about it being Foster’s third attempt to scare the big black team. It
-was the first link in the chain of evidence he intended to collect
-against him.</p>
-<p>As long as he was down in the valley and it was so near noon Scott
-decided to go in to dinner. He was still staying at the hotel, not
-because he liked it, but it enabled him to keep in touch with local
-gossip through the station agent and he thought it might give him a
-better chance to see Hopwood. He was doubtful whether it would be a good
-thing for Hopwood to come around camp with that strange iron hat. The
-men would undoubtedly tease him, and he did not know how Hopwood would
-take it.</p>
-<p>As he passed the bunk house he heard some one singing inside. It was not
-usual for any one to be in the bunk house at that time of day, unless it
-was the bull cook, and it did not sound like him. Scott stepped in and
-found one of the swampers sprawled on a bench and crooning a maudlin
-song. His first thought was that the man might have been hurt in the
-runaway, but certainly some one would have mentioned it if he had.</p>
-<p><q>Sick, Dick?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p>The man looked at him with bleary eyes and arose with a ludicrous
-attempt at dignity. Scott saw at once that the man was drunk.</p>
-<p><q>No, shur,</q> the man replied with an elaborate bow which almost upset
-him.</p>
-<p><q>Then why aren’t you at work?</q> Scott asked sharply.</p>
-<p><q>Becaush I don’t have to work for anybody,</q> Dick replied with another
-deep bow which brought him unexpectedly to his hands and knees on the
-bench in front of him. <q>I’m a gentleman, I am,</q> he added as he
-straightened himself with difficulty.</p>
-<p>Scott looked at him with disgust. <q>When Mac comes in tell him I said to
-give you your time,</q> he exclaimed impatiently and turned to the door.</p>
-<p><q>Time,</q> Dick exclaimed. <q>Give me my time. I’ve got all the time there
-is. I’m a gentleman, I tell you.</q></p>
-<p>Scott turned back with a new thought. <q>Where did you get that stuff?</q> he
-asked sternly.</p>
-<p>Dick winked at him slowly and shook his head. <q>A gentleman would never
-tell,</q> he replied knowingly.</p>
-<p>Scott slammed the door in disgust and left him still explaining his
-gentility to the empty room.</p>
-<p>Here was another thing he had to investigate.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXIX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD THROWS AWAY HIS IRON HAT</span></h2>
-<p>After dinner Scott stopped at the bunk house to see that his orders were
-carried out in regard to Dick. Dick had not delivered the message, but
-he did not have to. MacAndrews had spotted him shortly after Scott had
-discovered him and had started him down the track before dinner.</p>
-<p>Scott decided to devote the afternoon to collecting news from his
-friends in the hope that he could find out something which would throw
-some light on Foster’s actions. The station agent had heard nothing and
-he went up to see old man Sanders. The old man greeted him with his
-usual cordiality.</p>
-<p><q>Come in, come in,</q> he said. <q>I hear you have beaten up the ogre and are
-succeeding in getting out the timber without his assistance. How did you
-do it?</q></p>
-<p>Scott sat down in the proffered chair a little wearily. <q>Every one seems
-to be more interested in my fighting ability than in anything else. It’s
-a fine reputation for a man who started out to be an angel of peace.
-Things are going pretty well but there is something about it I do not
-like. Foster Wait is hanging around the logging operation all the time,
-and I can’t find out what he is up to. Haven’t heard anything about it,
-have you?</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders shook his head. <q>No,</q> he replied, <q>I have not heard anything
-at all. Hopwood seems to have deserted me, and Vic has not been down the
-mountain since the night you took her home. I can’t get around much
-myself and when those two desert me I don’t know much.</q></p>
-<p><q>I have not seen Hopwood for three or four days myself,</q> Scott said. <q>Do
-you suppose he has disappeared again?</q></p>
-<p><q>It is hard to tell what he is up to. The last time I saw him he was
-coming up the road there, but when he saw me he slipped into the woods.
-It was not like him. He never avoided me before.</q></p>
-<p>Scott saw that there was nothing to be learned from Mr. Sanders and he
-rose to go. <q>Maybe he was just in a hurry and did not want to be
-delayed. He seems to be very busy on some scheme of his own.</q></p>
-<p><q>Poor fellow!</q> the old man sighed, <q>a lot of good his schemes will ever
-do anybody, but I suppose it gives him something to do.</q></p>
-<p>Scott turned back from the gate. <q>Just what do you think of Hopwood, Mr.
-Sanders?</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders looked at him with a little surprise. <q>I thought I told you
-about him. He has never been right since Foster hit him in the head
-years ago.</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes, I know,</q> Scott interrupted. <q>You told me about that, but I have
-been wondering a good deal lately whether he is really as crazy as
-people think.</q></p>
-<p>Mr. Sanders shook his head sadly. <q>I wish you were right but there is no
-chance. I have known him too long.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, I think I’ll take a look for him, anyway. I like him, whatever he
-is.</q></p>
-<p>Scott crossed the valley and took the road up the other slope towards
-Sewall Wait’s cabin. There were several other cabins along the road and
-as Scott approached one of them he saw a man come out of the gate, stand
-uncertainly for a minute and go back. The funny part of it was that he
-thought he recognized Dick, the man who had been fired from the camp
-that morning, but the distance was too great to be sure of it, and when
-he passed the cabin there was no one in sight. There seldom was any one
-in sight at any of these cabins. The children all ran away and hid at
-the approach of a stranger. Sometimes he caught a glimpse of some one,
-peeping out of the corner of a window, but that was all. It always made
-him feel uneasy to go by one of them.</p>
-<p>Sewall was home and glad to see him. Scott told him what Foster had done
-in the morning and how he was continually hanging around the camp.</p>
-<p>Sewall only shook his head doubtfully. <q>I don’t know what it is, but he
-is up to something. He has avoided me for a month. I don’t like the way
-he is chumming with some of the wilder of the young fellows. My boys
-don’t like him any better than I do, and they have tried to find out
-what he is doing but they can’t. I know his game but I can’t figure out
-his next move.</q></p>
-<p><q>Just what is his game?</q> Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p><q>He knows that the family has pretty much lost confidence in him as a
-leader, and he thinks that if he starts some trouble they will have to
-support him. That much is clear enough, but I can’t see how he can gain
-anything by jimming your logging job.</q></p>
-<p><q>I thought that was probably just revenge for the thrashing I gave him,</q>
-Scott said. <q>If that’s all it is I am not worried, for he can’t do very
-much harm, but I was afraid there might be something else back of it.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall shook his head. <q>He is too big a coward to risk very much just
-for revenge. To shoot you in the back would be more like his methods. He
-beat up poor Hopwood the other day. That’s about his size,</q> he added
-bitterly.</p>
-<p><q>That is what I really came up for,</q> Scott exclaimed quickly. <q>To find
-out whether you knew anything about Hopwood. I have not seen him for
-three or four days.</q></p>
-<p><q>I saw him this morning. Foster went after him with a club day before
-yesterday, and if it had not been for that old iron hat I think he would
-have killed him.</q></p>
-<p><q>The big bully. What was it about?</q> Scott asked eagerly.</p>
-<p><q>He would not tell me, but I thought from the way he talked that it had
-something to do with you.</q></p>
-<p><q>Where is he?</q> Scott asked. If Hopwood had taken up his fight he wanted
-to know what it was so that he could take it up himself.</p>
-<p><q>He is up in his cabin. I tried to bring him down here, but he would not
-come. He’s funny that way. I have never known him to sleep in anybody
-else’s cabin. If he can’t get home he sleeps out-of-doors.</q></p>
-<p><q>Where is his cabin?</q> Scott asked. <q>I must go and see him.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall hesitated. <q>He does not usually like to have people come to his
-cabin.</q></p>
-<p><q>But can’t you see that if he got into this trouble on my account I must
-see him at once.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> Sewall admitted reluctantly. <q>I reckon he would not mind seeing
-you. His cabin is away up there on top of Jones’ Knob. The trail turns
-off this road about a half mile above here. It’s not very plain but I
-guess you can find it.</q></p>
-<p>Scott took a hasty leave of Sewall and started in search of the trail.
-Sewall told the truth when he said that it was not very plain. Scott
-looked for it closely, but he passed it and had to come back in his
-search. He finally found a faint trace and followed it up over little
-ridges and down into the draws for an hour, always drawing a little
-closer to the peak. When he came out in the little flat opening on the
-top there was no cabin to be seen. He had never been there before but he
-knew that this was Jones’ Knob, and yet there was no cabin.</p>
-<p>Scott looked carefully around him and there on the edge of the clearing
-he discovered a tiny cabin nestled back in the edge of the spruce
-thicket. He hurried over to it and looked eagerly in the open door.
-There was a man lying on the bed, but at first Scott did not recognize
-him as Hopwood till he saw the iron hat lying on his chest. He appeared
-to be asleep.</p>
-<p>It was the first time Scott had ever seen Hopwood without his iron hat,
-and he took the opportunity to study him carefully. He was amazed at the
-high, well-formed forehead and fine features. The blank expression which
-he always wore when awake was entirely gone now. He seemed to feel that
-some one was staring at him and moved uneasily.</p>
-<p>As Scott did not want Hopwood to discover him there and think that he
-had been spying on him he knocked softly.</p>
-<p>Hopwood sat up suddenly at the first tap and hurriedly put on his iron
-hat. He was very much displeased at the intrusion, but when he saw who
-it was a radiant smile chased away his frown. Nor did the usual blank
-expression take its accustomed place.</p>
-<p><q>I went up to see if Sewall knew anything about you,</q> Scott explained,
-<q>and he told me that you were hurt.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood’s face beamed when he heard that Scott had come in search of
-him, but a shadow of hatred passed over it when his injury was
-mentioned. It seemed as though a struggle were going on within him. The
-next instant he was as calm as usual.</p>
-<p><q>I am glad you found me,</q> he said simply.</p>
-<p><q>Is it true as Sewall said that you were hurt on my account?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood hesitated. <q>Sewall does not know why I was hurt,</q> he answered
-evasively.</p>
-<p><q>But can’t you see, Hopwood, that if it had anything to do with me, I
-ought to know about it?</q></p>
-<p>Still Hopwood was silent.</p>
-<p><q>Foster has been acting queerly,</q> Scott continued. <q>He has been hanging
-around the camp all the time and this morning he scared one of the teams
-and almost ruined it. I am almost sure that he did it on purpose.</q></p>
-<p><q>He did,</q> Hopwood exclaimed angrily. <q>That was what my trouble was all
-about. He wanted me to set fire to the camps.</q></p>
-<p>Scott gasped in astonishment. He had rather expected Foster to attempt
-some personal revenge but it had never occurred to him that his
-cowardice would ever drive him to use such an expedient as that. It was
-a move too degraded for Scott to understand.</p>
-<p><q>When I refused,</q> Hopwood continued, <q>he tried to kill me for fear I
-would tell on him.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was silent a moment. <q>I don’t suppose that will prevent him from
-getting somebody else to do it,</q> he said gloomily.</p>
-<p><q>I doubt it,</q> Hopwood said. <q>If it burns now, everybody will know who
-did it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Could we have him arrested for assault?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. <q>There were no witnesses except his own family
-and they would swear to anything.</q></p>
-<p><q>Did he hurt you badly, Hopwood?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Hopwood answered, <q>not very, but if it had not been for my iron
-hat he would have killed me. He hammered me with a heavy club, bruised
-my shoulders and cut my face. I’m all right now.</q></p>
-<p>Scott glanced questioningly at the bed.</p>
-<p><q>Oh, I don’t have to stay there,</q> Hopwood replied with a laugh. <q>But
-since he knocked me crazy the first time I am always careful when I get
-hit on the head.</q></p>
-<p>Certainly that did not sound like the talk of a crazy man, but Scott did
-not question him.</p>
-<p><q>Is there anything I can do for you, Hopwood?</q></p>
-<p><q>Oh, no!</q> Hopwood exclaimed. <q>I’m all right. Won’t you stay and have
-supper with me?</q> he asked bashfully.</p>
-<p><q>I wish I could,</q> Scott said, <q>but there are some things I have to
-attend to down at the camp. I hope I can some day. This is a beautiful
-place.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood came to the door with him, and they stood for a moment looking
-in silence at the beautiful scene before them, or rather below them.</p>
-<p>Jones’ Knob was the highest peak in that section, and they looked down
-upon a number of smaller mountains. The sun, setting rapidly over the
-western ridge, sent ever changing shadows over the eastern slopes. The
-evening mists were beginning to fill the valleys like a rising tide, and
-even as they watched one of the lower peaks was submerged in the sea of
-white.</p>
-<p>Scott roused himself. <q>It will be dark in the valley before I get down
-there if I don’t hurry. Take care of yourself, Hopwood.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll be down to-morrow,</q> Hopwood replied confidently, and as Scott
-disappeared down the winding trail he threw his iron hat far down the
-side of the mountain.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>AN ATTEMPT AT ARSON</span></h2>
-<p>As Scott had predicted, it grew dark in the valleys long before he
-reached home, and he lost the trail on the open ridge. He did not worry
-because he knew that if he went downhill he would soon come out on a
-road somewhere, but he was impatient of delay. He was anxious to get
-back to the camps since he had heard of Foster’s proposal to burn them
-up. Maybe he was trying it again now.</p>
-<p>It was awkward work going through the dense woods and brush in the dark,
-but as he expected it was not so very long before he came out into a
-road. He did not recognize the road at first but he knew that he must
-turn to the left if he would find the road up which he had come.</p>
-<p>About a half a mile further down he came upon an unusually large house
-and recognized it instantly as Foster Wait’s. There was a light in the
-room downstairs but the shades were drawn down tight. Scott was looking
-curiously at the house as he walked by when two silhouettes suddenly
-appeared on the white shade. He was not surprised to recognize one of
-them as Foster, but when he recognized the other he stopped short and
-almost cried aloud. It was Dick.</p>
-<p>Ordinarily Scott would have considered it dishonorable to eavesdrop, but
-he felt sure that the meeting of these two men had something to do with
-him. What better would Foster want than to get hold of a drunken man who
-was disgruntled over his treatment at the camp! Maybe that was his
-purpose in hanging around there.</p>
-<p>Under the circumstances Scott had no scruples about attempting to hear
-the conversation. He determined to crawl up to the window and listen.
-Hardly had he taken a step in that direction when the loud baying of a
-hound told him that it was hopeless. As much as he wanted to hear that
-conversation he beat a hasty retreat. And he was none too soon. The echo
-of the dog’s bark had hardly died away when he heard the door open and a
-voice roughly scolding the hound.</p>
-<p>Scott hurried down the road while his imagination ran riot in vain
-attempts to solve Foster’s plans. Foster Wait was not the man to take in
-a drunken lumberjack unless he intended to make use of him, and Scott
-felt sure that those plans had something to do with him. At one time he
-thought of going to Sewall for help, but his pride prevented him. He had
-protected himself before from smarter men than Foster and he would do it
-again.</p>
-<p>It was long after supper-time when Scott reached the camp; in fact, many
-of the men had already gone to bed. Fortunately the cook was up making
-bread, and he went into the cook shack to get a handout. Scott was a
-favorite with all the crew, and when the cook saw who it was he denied
-himself the grouch he usually enjoyed when any one intruded into his
-castle, and hunted up some coffee, ham, doughnuts and cookies—the
-unvarying lumberjack handout—as though he enjoyed it.</p>
-<p>Scott was absorbed in his own thoughts and let the cook do most of the
-talking, but as he was leaving a thought occurred to him. <q>By the way,
-Ben, if Dick should come back here for a handout any time, keep him here
-and send for me. I want to talk to him.</q></p>
-<p>He went out through the bunk house and motioned to Mac to follow him.
-When the foreman came out he led him over to a log a little way from the
-bunk house and sat down.</p>
-<p><q>Mac, I have seen and heard a couple of things to-day which have me
-pretty badly worried.</q></p>
-<p>Mac looked at him keenly in the dim starlight. <q>I’ll bet it’s got
-something to do with that guy who scared the team this morning.</q></p>
-<p><q>You guessed right the first time.</q></p>
-<p><q>I knew it,</q> Mac exclaimed. <q>I’ve been thinking about him all day. What
-is he up to now?</q></p>
-<p><q>Day before yesterday he tried to get a man to set fire to these camps.</q></p>
-<p><q>Set fire to ’em!</q> Mac almost shouted. <q>The dirty scoundrel!</q></p>
-<p><q>And to-night,</q> Scott continued, <q>I came by his house and happened to
-see him talking to the man you fired this morning.</q></p>
-<p>Mac gave an angry snort of disgust. <q>That’s a fine howdy-do. A man who
-wants to find somebody to burn down the camp and a drunken lumberjack I
-fired this morning. Couldn’t find a better combination than that in all
-North Carolina.</q></p>
-<p><q>I came right on down here to warn you, because I thought you would want
-to put on a guard,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>Put on a guard nothing,</q> Mac exclaimed contemptuously. <q>We’ll go up
-there and clean them out. The boys would enjoy it and I can have the
-crew out in ten minutes.</q></p>
-<p><q>I know the men could do it, Mac, and would probably enjoy it, but it
-would stir up too much of a row. If it were just those two it might be
-all right, but he is a leader of a big gang and we would have to fight
-all the people on that side of the mountain.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, we can do that, too,</q> Mac answered doggedly. <q>Nobody ever burned
-my camps yet and nobody’s going to.</q></p>
-<p><q>Just the same,</q> Scott insisted, <q>we’re not going to fight that gang. We
-might do them up all right, but there would not be much logging done
-around here for the next month or two, and I’m here to get those logs
-out.</q></p>
-<p>Mac sat for a while in sullen silence. <q>Well, what are you going to do
-then, let them burn you up?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Scott cried impatiently. <q>I have no more notion of burning up than
-you have, and if you cannot find a man here to keep watch at night I’ll
-do it myself.</q></p>
-<p>Again Mac sat for a while in silence. His stubborn Scotch blood was slow
-to give in. The last voices had died away in the bunk house and Ben had
-finished his work in the cook shack. There was not a sound save an
-occasional snore and the scream of an owl far up on the mountain.</p>
-<p>Mac finally surrendered as he had known he would from the first, and was
-about to speak when a crackling of twigs in the forest behind them
-brought them both bolt upright with nerves a-tingle and eyes and ears
-straining. They could see nothing, but it was evident that some one was
-making his way slowly through the woods towards the bunk house and was
-making a great deal of noise doing it.</p>
-<p><q>If that fellow is sneaking up on us, he must think we’re dead,</q> Mac
-whispered.</p>
-<p>There was a loud crash as though some one had fallen over a log. They
-heard some mumbling but could not distinguish the words. After a few
-seconds of silence the advance on the bunk house began again. A man
-passed slowly within ten feet of them and made his slow way to the side
-of the bunk house. They could hear him scraping together dead leaves and
-brush.</p>
-<p>Scott and Mac crept silently up to where they could see what he was
-doing, and Scott was not at all surprised to recognize Dick. He had
-scraped together a big pile of leaves and heaped them against the side
-of the bunk house. Scott gathered himself for a spring as he saw him
-fumbling in his pocket for a match to set fire to the leaves.</p>
-<p>But instead of taking out a match Dick stuck both hands in his pockets
-and swayed back and forth staring curiously at the bunk house.</p>
-<p><q>Can’t burn that,</q> he mumbled. <q>Wouldn’t be gentlemanly to burn the bunk
-house with all those men in it. Can’t get ’em out without wakin’ ’em
-up.</q></p>
-<p>He scratched his head in perplexity for a minute and then started toward
-the barn. Scott punched Mac in the ribs and they both followed. At the
-barn Dick repeated the performance. When his leaves were all piled he
-remembered the horses. Again he stopped and scratched his head. <q>No
-gentleman would burn a horse,</q> he mumbled.</p>
-<p>For a moment he stared helplessly about him. Then he seemed to get an
-idea. He made his way uncertainly to the door of the barn and
-disappeared inside. They watched to see that he did not strike a match,
-but did not interfere with him. After a considerable time he stumbled
-out leading two sleepy horses. He turned them loose outside and went
-back for two more. The first pair, finding themselves free and having no
-desire to go to work at that time of the night went back into the barn.
-Dick stopped and looked at them wonderingly as he led out two more.</p>
-<p>Scott and Mac were almost in hysterics. <q>Let me handle him,</q> Scott
-whispered.</p>
-<p><q>Hello, Dick!</q> Scott exclaimed, suddenly, <q>what are you doing out here
-at this time of night?</q></p>
-<p>Dick dropped the halters of the horses he was leading and braced himself
-as though he expected somebody to jump on him.</p>
-<p><q>Why don’t you come inside and go to bed? It’s late,</q> Scott continued.</p>
-<p>Dick relaxed when he saw he was in no immediate danger of attack, and
-winked at them knowingly. <q>Didn’t you give me my time?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Give you your time!</q> Scott exclaimed. <q>Certainly we gave you your time,
-but you were drunk then. You’re sober now. Why don’t you let Foster Wait
-get somebody else to do his dirty work for him? No gentleman would want
-to burn another man’s buildings.</q></p>
-<p>Dick looked at him uncertainly for a minute and then straightened up
-with painful dignity.</p>
-<p><q>That’s right,</q> he said. <q>That’s what I was going to tell him. No
-gentleman would burn a horse.</q></p>
-<p><q>Of course not,</q> Scott agreed. <q>Come on in.</q></p>
-<p>He took Dick by the arm and led him into the bunk house. <q>There’s your
-bunk. Crawl in.</q></p>
-<p>Dick obeyed without a word but as he rolled over they heard him mumble,
-<q>I’ll show him he can’t give me an ungentlemanly job.</q></p>
-<p><q>Going to call up the sheriff?</q> Mac asked when they were outside.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Scott replied emphatically. <q>Arrest him, and when he gets out
-he’ll join Foster again. Put him to work in the morning and he’ll be all
-right.</q></p>
-<p><q>Reckon you’re right,</q> Mac admitted. <q>Good night.</q></p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT FINDS THE STILL</span></h2>
-<p>Dick went cheerfully to work with the other men in the morning and
-seemed to have forgotten all his troubles. Mac put on a guard to watch
-the buildings at night and he kept a sharp lookout for Foster in the
-daytime, but that gentleman seemed to have realized his danger and kept
-out of sight.</p>
-<p>Scott had begun to think that Foster must have left the country when he
-spied him one day sneaking through the woods a short distance from the
-camp. But Foster evidently saw him and immediately disappeared in the
-brush.</p>
-<p>Everything at the camp was in good working order now. The four felling
-crews were hard at it, each one working up a narrow strip from the
-valley to the ridge. Their progress was marked by the steady booming of
-the falling trees. The skid teams followed each other in an almost
-continuous procession with their train of logs, and the big steam jammer
-loaded them on to the cars on the siding as fast as they came down.</p>
-<p>Over in the main draw other felling crews were cutting logs for the
-chute and they were popping down so steadily that the old bear trap was
-playing a regular tune.</p>
-<p>Scott used to stand on the railroad track or the hotel porch and look up
-at the slope with pride. For he had marked that timber for cutting when
-he was still supervisor and he had done it well. Instead of the barren,
-blackened hillside which the logger usually leaves behind him there was
-enough small timber left standing to make it look almost like a virgin
-forest. Some one could log there again before so very many years.</p>
-<p>It looked as though the feud were practically dead. Sewall could report
-no new developments. Hopwood had not shown up with any news for a long
-time, not since Scott had visited him in his cabin, but he had sent him
-word occasionally by Sewall. Scott thought that he was avoiding the
-camps.</p>
-<p>One day Scott’s peace was rudely shattered. He had stayed at home that
-morning to finish up some correspondence. Just before noon MacAndrews
-came bursting into the room. He was so mad that there were tears in his
-eyes and he was almost inarticulate. He strode up and down the full
-length of the room twice, waving his arms wildly, before he could get a
-word out of himself.</p>
-<p>Scott was pale with apprehension. <q>What under the sun is the matter,
-Mac?</q> he asked anxiously.</p>
-<p><q>Drunk,</q> Mac shouted savagely. <q>The whole blame crew’s drunk.</q></p>
-<p><q>Drunk?</q> Scott echoed in his astonishment, while Mac continued to walk
-the floor.</p>
-<p><q>Dead drunk,</q> Mac repeated in disgust. <q>In the middle of the morning,
-and not a lick of work to be got out of any of them.</q></p>
-<p><q>Where did they get it?</q> Scott asked, for both he and Mac had exerted
-every possible effort to keep whisky out of the camp.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Mac roared, <q>that is the question. Where did they get it? I’ve
-asked them all and beaten up half of them and not a word have I got out
-of any one. Show me the man who brought it in, that’s all I ask.</q></p>
-<p>Suddenly a new thought occurred to Scott. <q>Where are they, Mac?</q></p>
-<p><q>Lying all over the woods.</q></p>
-<p><q>I thought so. Round them up into the bunk house, Mac. This is something
-that I think I can solve.</q></p>
-<p><q>You mean to say that you are not going to fire them?</q> Mac shouted in
-amazement.</p>
-<p><q>Certainly not,</q> Scott answered with decision. <q>Do you think I want the
-whole crew added to Foster Wait’s gang? If I am not mistaken, that was
-the purpose in getting them drunk. Round them up in the bunk house where
-they can’t get any more, and I’ll see what I can do. Isn’t there any one
-sober enough to help you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Ben and the bull cook seem to have been overlooked,</q> Mac growled.</p>
-<p><q>They were in camp, that’s the reason. Get them to help you,</q> Scott
-ordered, as he took his hat and started for the door.</p>
-<p>Mac, growling like a polar bear, went back to camp to carry out Scott’s
-orders. He wanted to fire the whole crew and it went against his grain
-to have to act as nursemaid to such a bunch, but orders were orders with
-him, and he would carry them out to the letter.</p>
-<p>Scott started straight for the opposite mountain growling almost as
-savagely as Mac at his own stupidity. Why hadn’t he guessed where Dick
-had obtained his whisky? And why hadn’t he guessed why Foster had been
-hanging around the camp? And why hadn’t it occurred to him what was at
-the end of that well-beaten trail up there on the mountains? He had
-certainly been a bonehead, but now he was determined to get to the
-bottom of it, and the first thing to do was to follow out that trail.</p>
-<p>He was walking rapidly up the road, still grumbling at his stupidity,
-when he saw a stranger sitting on a stump beside the road. He had almost
-passed him when he realized with a start that it was Hopwood. His iron
-hat was replaced with a soft felt such as all the mountaineers wore and
-it changed his appearance completely. He laughed when he saw Scott’s
-amazement.</p>
-<p><q>I thought you must be coming this way,</q> he said in his usual quiet and
-rather mysterious manner.</p>
-<p><q>But what does this mean, Hopwood?</q> Scott asked in bewilderment. <q>I
-heard that you had taken an oath to wear your iron hat till this feud
-was settled.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood was serious at once. <q>I don’t need that old hunk of iron any
-more. I’ll explain it to you soon, but I haven’t time now. Where are you
-going?</q></p>
-<p><q>I suppose you know what has happened. I am going up there to find that
-still. I ought to have done it long ago. I found the trail one day and I
-don’t know why it never dawned on me what it was. I had heard there was
-a big one somewhere, too. Of course, Foster gave those fellows that
-whisky, didn’t he?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood nodded. <q>Yes, and I was just coming down to warn you to keep out
-of his way. He has been celebrating his success and he’s crazy. He would
-shoot you on sight.</q></p>
-<p><q>Where is he?</q> Scott asked sullenly. He did not like this business of
-running away from a man, and yet he knew it was the only wise thing to
-do.</p>
-<p><q>He was up at the house a little while ago. Keep your eyes open and take
-to the woods if you see him. I’ll come down to see you to-morrow if I
-don’t have to go away for a day or two.</q></p>
-<p><q>I may have to go away for a day or two myself,</q> Scott replied. <q>By the
-way, where have you been? I have not seen you for a long time.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ve been too busy,</q> Hopwood replied lightly and disappeared in the
-woods with a backward smile.</p>
-<p>Scott did not understand Hopwood. Some mysterious change seemed to have
-come over him. But he did not have time to figure it out now. He was too
-anxious to see that still. He had Hopwood’s assurance that it was there,
-but he wanted to see it for himself.</p>
-<p>He did not know where the trail started so there was nothing for him to
-do but to go up on the ridge to the place where the old pig had scared
-him so badly. He found the place without any difficulty and looked
-around a little nervously to make sure that the old sow was not still on
-guard. She was nowhere in sight and he dropped down the slope unmolested
-in search of the trail. He was surprised to see how far down it was.</p>
-<p>When he came to the tunnel into the laurel he found some fresh tracks
-and listened anxiously. He was determined to see the still, but he did
-not want any one to see him, partly because he knew that these men would
-not hesitate to shoot any one they found spying around their still, and
-partly because he did not want any one to know that he had found it.</p>
-<p>He could see nothing. He looked down the trail and made a careful survey
-of the woods behind him. There was no one there who might cut off his
-retreat. Everything seemed safe enough and he cautiously entered the
-narrow tunnel. It was longer than he had imagined and the turns in it
-gave him an uncomfortable feeling of being shut in. He stopped every two
-feet to listen and then crawled slowly forward again. It seemed as
-though he would never get to the end of it.</p>
-<p>When he did get to the end he saw something that astonished him even
-more than the length of the tunnel. He found himself in a small opening
-about four rods across, and in the middle of it was a tiny log cabin. He
-had covered over half the distance to the cabin when a noise inside made
-his heart stand still.</p>
-<p>Some one was fumbling with the latch on the inside. After the first
-instant of paralysis Scott took in the situation at a glance. If he
-tried to return to the tunnel he would be in direct line with the door
-and would be in sight for some distance even after he had entered the
-tunnel. This all passed through his mind like a flash. His only chance
-was to hide around the corner of the cabin. He did not know how many
-people there were in there or whether there were windows in the end, or
-possibly another door, but it was his best chance. In two jumps he was
-around the corner.</p>
-<p>The latch clicked up almost the instant he started, and long before he
-reached the corner he heard the door swinging open on its rusty hinges.
-A glance showed him that there were no windows in that end of the cabin.
-He was hidden for the moment unless he had been discovered before he
-reached there.</p>
-<p>He turned and peeped anxiously through a crack between the ends of the
-logs. For what seemed to Scott like an age no one appeared. He looked
-nervously behind him and half expected to see a rifle pointing at him
-from the other corner of the cabin. But there was no one there.</p>
-<p>He was beginning to wonder whether he had really heard anything at all,
-or just imagined it, when there was a knock against the log wall that
-made him jump almost out of his skin, and Foster Wait staggered out of
-the door with a big earthenware jug in one hand and his long rifle in
-the other. He swayed uncertainly and took a step or two in Scott’s
-direction. Scott shrank back against the wall and prepared to sneak
-around the cabin, but Foster changed his course back toward the cabin
-door.</p>
-<p>He stood there mumbling for an instant and seemed to be talking to some
-one inside, but there was no answer. He laboriously turned again and
-started for the tunnel. He had considerable trouble in getting the jug
-and the rifle both into the opening, but finally succeeded. <q>They’ll
-never do it, they’ll never do it,</q> he called back angrily over his
-shoulder.</p>
-<p>Scott was sure then that there was some one else in the cabin. He had
-visions of hiding there behind that corner till dark, for the door had
-been left open and he would not dare try to sneak out in front of it. He
-could still hear Foster fumbling and mumbling his way through the
-tunnel, but he had not caught any sound from within.</p>
-<p>He placed his ear against the log wall and listened. The gnawing of a
-mouse on the other side sounded to him like some one tearing off the
-roof, and would have drowned out any other noises there might have been.
-The mouse stopped and he held his breath to hear better. There was not a
-sound. Minute after minute passed and still no sound. The mouse began
-again.</p>
-<p><q>Better be shot than have that mouse scare me to death,</q> Scott muttered
-to himself, and he determined to have a look in the door. First he went
-back to make sure that there was no door in the rear. There was only a
-little square window on that side. Slowly he came back to his corner and
-listened once more. All was still.</p>
-<p>With a glance at the tunnel he crawled cautiously toward the door. Inch
-by inch he made his slow advance with his eyes glued on the opening and
-his mind made up to jump on any one who might come out—for there was no
-chance to escape now.</p>
-<p>At the very edge of the door he stopped to listen and peeped cautiously
-around the doorframe. Just then a noise behind him brought him to his
-feet with a bound, and he saw a man step out of the tunnel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD GETS JARRED’S PROMISE</span></h2>
-<p>In the meanwhile MacAndrews had carried out his distasteful duty of
-rounding up the crew in the bunk house. Most of them were too far gone
-to offer much resistance and went to bed without protest. He left Ben
-and the bull cook to keep guard and see that no one escaped and no
-outsiders came in. Then he went up in the woods to see if he could catch
-any one looking for the men up there.</p>
-<p>He made his way to the top of one of the skid roads where he had found a
-group of the swampers and road monkeys. If any attempt were made to
-bring the men more whisky it would probably be there where the largest
-group had been. He selected a well sheltered spot in the edge of the
-brush and sat down on a log to wait.</p>
-<p>He did not have long to wait. Hardly five minutes had passed when the
-bushes on the opposite side of the road were parted cautiously and a
-boy’s face peeped out. It was Foster Wait’s son. Not seeing any one, he
-came slowly out into the skid road and began peering about. He was
-evidently disappointed and very nervous. It was like Foster to send his
-son where he was afraid to go himself.</p>
-<p>Mac could not wait any longer. He was curious to see what the boy would
-do but his desire to get his hands on him was too strong for him. He
-tore from his hiding place and made a dive at the boy. But he was no
-match for the badly scared boy. He eluded Mac’s grasp and sprang into
-the brush like a rabbit. Mac tried to follow him, but he might as well
-have tried to follow a weasel in a haystack. He soon gave it up and came
-back to see if the boy had left anything behind him. As he expected he
-found a large stone jug in the brush where the boy had first appeared.</p>
-<p>With a grunt of satisfaction Mac dumped the contents on the ground.
-<q>Enough there to paralyze the whole crew for a week,</q> he mumbled. He
-raised the big jug over his head and was about to smash it on a rock,
-but his Scotch thrift stayed his arm and he took the jug back to camp.</p>
-<p>Mac felt that he had a victory in capturing the jug, but it would have
-been far better if he had stayed in camp, for the boy was on his way
-home to tell his father that he had been seen and probably recognized.</p>
-<p>Hopwood could easily have caught the boy for Mac. After his meeting with
-Scott he had headed straight for the works to see if the men had been
-taken in out of harm’s way. He had been close enough to hear the
-crashing of the brush and the boy had passed within a few feet of him.
-But what would have been the use? They could not do anything with the
-boy after they had caught him, and it did not fit into his own plans to
-line up openly against his family just yet.</p>
-<p>He followed Mac almost to camp to make sure that all the men were in,
-but he did not go in himself. He turned into the brush without making
-his presence known to Mac at all. A half hour later he turned in at the
-gate of Jarred Morgan’s cottage.</p>
-<p>When Hopwood entered the cabin old Jarred sprang from his chair with the
-agility of a cat.</p>
-<p><q>You fooled me that time, Hopwood,</q> he admitted frankly. <q>It is a long
-time since I have seen you without that iron hat. What is the meaning of
-it? Is the feud ended, then?</q> he asked with a wry smile.</p>
-<p>Hopwood cast a quick glance around the cabin.</p>
-<p>Jarred answered the unspoken question. <q>She went out to the orchard.</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Hopwood said soberly, <q>the feud is not exactly ended, but I think
-I am beginning to see the end of it.</q></p>
-<p><q>You think I am going to cash in, do you?</q></p>
-<p><q>I am hoping that it will not end that way,</q> Hopwood replied earnestly.</p>
-<p><q>There is only one other way that it can end,</q> Jarred answered, and his
-jaw clenched tight.</p>
-<p><q>That’s why I have come to see you. Would you drop this feud if Foster
-were put out of the way for good?</q> Hopwood spoke with the tone of a man
-exacting an oath.</p>
-<p><q>I have never made a contract for a murder,</q> Jarred answered coldly,
-<q>and I am too old to begin it now.</q></p>
-<p><q>Look at me, Jarred,</q> and Hopwood squared himself around in front of the
-old man. <q>Do I look like a crazy man?</q></p>
-<p>Jarred’s frown melted into an affectionate smile. <q>No, Hopwood, your old
-iron hat has not fooled me for many years.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then listen to me,</q> Hopwood replied with a strange tone of confident
-authority. <q>I am no more likely to take the contract for murdering a man
-than you are. You have always said that you would not give up the feud
-while Foster lived. Now I want to know if you would give it up if he
-were otherwise disposed of so that he would never return to this
-country?</q></p>
-<p>Jarred walked to the door and gazed out across at the opposite mountain
-in silence. It was five minutes before he turned back to Hopwood and his
-face was haggard.</p>
-<p><q>I could do it, Hopwood,</q> he said sadly. <q>I hate to think of that
-scoundrel escaping my vengeance, but I could do it, and—would,</q> he added
-after a short struggle. <q>But I was thinking of Vic. Would she? I have
-trained her all her life to hate the Waits, and Vic is a good hater.
-Would she give it up, or would she think me a traitor?</q></p>
-<p><q>I think she would give it up,</q> Hopwood replied confidently.</p>
-<p>Jarred turned quietly and faced him. <q>What makes you think so?</q> he asked
-sharply.</p>
-<p>Hopwood blushed like a schoolgirl. He was silent a moment and then
-looked Jarred squarely in the eye. <q>You know what I think of Vic and I
-think she likes me. She never seems to think of me as being a Wait, but
-if we should marry some day, it would end all thought of the feud.</q></p>
-<p>Jarred looked at him thoughtfully. <q>If I thought that could be true, I
-would agree to anything,</q> he said slowly. <q>I have been wondering lately
-what would become of Vic. I am not as strong as I was and I cannot last
-forever. She won’t give me any reason, but she says she will never go
-back to her father, and I think she means it. She’ll be terribly alone
-in the world when I am gone.</q></p>
-<p><q>I know why she won’t go back and I think she is right,</q> Hopwood replied
-with a dark frown. <q>Would that be satisfactory to you then?</q> he asked
-wistfully.</p>
-<p>Jarred placed his hand affectionately on Hopwood’s shoulder. <q>Hopwood,
-as far as I know there are only two men in the world to whom I am
-indebted—you and Mr. Burton. You have done me innumerable good services,
-and he brought Vic to me the night she fell off her horse. Both of you
-want me to give it up. I am going to do it and pay a part of both
-debts.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood jumped to his feet and grasped the old man’s hand. <q>Now I can go
-about my business. We’ll speak of the other some other time,</q> he added
-with a blush.</p>
-<p><q>No need to put it off,</q> Jarred said. <q>All I ask is that you wait till
-Vic has grown up. If she will have you then, there is nothing in all the
-world that would please me more.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood wrung his hand once more and ran out of the house.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>A CLOSE CALL</span></h2>
-<p>When Scott turned his head and saw that man standing just at the end of
-the tunnel a great lump rose in his throat and his knees almost gave way
-under him. He wanted to run but he could not move. The next instant he
-recognized Hopwood and the reaction was so great that he sat down limply
-in his tracks and stared helplessly.</p>
-<p><q>You might as well kill a fellow as scare him to death, Hopwood,</q> he
-exclaimed when he had recovered his breath.</p>
-<p><q>And you might as well be dead as to be caught here,</q> Hopwood retorted.
-<q>Did Foster see you? I just met him coming out and he was crazy drunk.</q></p>
-<p><q>Not quite,</q> Scott replied with a nervous laugh, <q>but I thought so for a
-minute when I saw you,</q> and he explained to Hopwood what a narrow escape
-he had had, and how he was trying to find out whether there really was
-any one else in the cabin.</p>
-<p><q>You should have asked me to bring you here,</q> Hopwood scolded. <q>Then you
-would not have run such a risk.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll let somebody bring me next time,</q> Scott answered with a grin. <q>I
-have done about all the exploring I want to do around here alone.</q></p>
-<p>He had completely recovered now, and he got up to have a peek into the
-cabin. So strong had been his impression that there was somebody in
-there that he now peeped cautiously around the corner of the doorframe.
-The little mouse scurried across a rafter and down the opposite wall.
-There was no other sign of life.</p>
-<p>In the center of the opposite wall of the cabin was a crude clay
-fireplace and in it there was a large copper retort shaped like an
-immense pear. From the top of it a long goose-neck extended far out into
-the room. Three barrels were sitting along the wall at the end of the
-cabin. In another barrel, on which there was a tin lid, there was a sack
-of corn.</p>
-<p>Scott looked the things over curiously. It was the first moonshine
-outfit he had ever seen. When his curiosity was satisfied he turned
-suddenly to Hopwood. <q>Will you swear that Foster Wait runs this thing?</q>
-he asked.</p>
-<p>Hopwood started at the question. <q>Why?</q> he asked in some confusion.
-<q>What are you going to do?</q></p>
-<p>Scott thought that he had asked too much of Hopwood in asking him to
-give evidence against his relative, much as he knew he hated him. But it
-was too late to back out now.</p>
-<p><q>Because I am going to get the United States marshal and have him
-arrested,</q> Scott answered doggedly.</p>
-<p><q>But that is just what I was going to do myself,</q> Hopwood answered with
-disappointment. <q>You better let me do it. I know more about it than you
-do,</q> he pleaded.</p>
-<p><q>No, Hopwood,</q> Scott replied firmly, <q>this is my problem and I must
-settle it myself.</q></p>
-<p><q>Why do you call it your problem when I have been working on it for
-years before you ever heard of it?</q> Hopwood remonstrated with some
-spirit.</p>
-<p>Scott saw that line of argument would not work and changed his tactics.
-<q>But, Hopwood, I need you here. There is no use in my staying here if
-you go away. I can’t find anything about what is going on if you are not
-here to tell me. I could not tell whether Foster was getting ready to
-burn down the camps or murder us all. If you stay here while I am away
-and will keep MacAndrews posted, he can take care of things all right.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood scratched his head doubtfully for a minute and frowned his
-disappointment.</p>
-<p><q>I am not the only one who depends on you, you know,</q> Scott urged. <q>All
-the people on the other mountain over there depend on you for the news.</q></p>
-<p>That was the deciding argument. Hopwood had told Jarred that he was
-going to put Foster out of the way and he wanted the glory of doing it,
-but he had been doing things for other people all his life and he knew
-that there was some truth in what Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>Very well,</q> he said quietly. <q>I suppose I’d better stay, but I do wish
-that I could go. Some day I am going to do something I want to.</q></p>
-<p>It seemed so pathetic to any one who knew the history of Hopwood’s life
-that Scott was almost tempted to let him go. But he was afraid that
-Hopwood might fail in the mission through his limited knowledge of the
-world.</p>
-<p><q>Then if you will take a message to Mac Andrews that I am going and for
-him to put the crew to work in the morning as usual, I am going to start
-right away,</q> Scott said resolutely. The sooner he accomplished his
-purpose the safer he would be.</p>
-<p>Hopwood agreed without a word of protest and led the way into the
-tunnel. They were halfway through it when they were startled by a
-crashing in the brush ahead. Hopwood crouched and listened an instant
-and then motioned frantically for Scott to go back. Scott needed no
-second warning. The scare Hopwood had given him had shaken his nerves a
-little and he ran back through the tunnel like a rabbit. Hopwood was
-close on his heels.</p>
-<p><q>What is it?</q> Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p><q>Foster coming back.</q> Hopwood replied briefly. <q>Come.</q> He ran lightly to
-the wall of laurel beside the cabin and slowly pushed his way into it.
-Scott followed as close as he could but found himself no match for
-Hopwood at this game. Hopwood did not go far. He did not have to. A few
-feet in that thicket and they were completely hidden, but they could see
-out fairly well.</p>
-<p>They were scarcely settled in their retreat when Foster lunged out of
-the tunnel into the little clearing. He was apparently in a towering
-rage and was mumbling savagely to himself. He looked keenly around the
-clearing and strode over to the cabin. From the length of time he was
-inside he must have made a very thorough examination. When he came out
-he was examining the ground for tracks. Scott thanked his stars that he
-was wearing tennis shoes.</p>
-<p>Whatever the tracks were that Foster was following so carefully they led
-him out to the tunnel again. The two refugees breathed more freely when
-he was gone, but their troubles were not over. Foster was not making the
-noise he did when he came in and they could not tell where he was. Had
-he gone away or was he still in the tunnel?</p>
-<p>They had waited five minutes and no sound came from the tunnel. The
-suspense was beginning to tell on them.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll sneak out and see,</q> Scott whispered.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Hopwood remonstrated. <q>Let me go. He would shoot you on sight. He
-would not shoot me.</q></p>
-<p><q>He tried to kill you a while ago, didn’t he?</q> Scott asked indignantly.
-<q>He will not shoot me on sight because he is not going to see me, not if
-I can help it,</q> he mumbled to himself.</p>
-<p>He did not wait for Hopwood to answer, but slipped as quickly and
-silently as he could out into the clearing. He listened intently but
-could hear no sound. Slowly he crawled to the tunnel and peeped into it.
-There was no one in sight. With one more attempt to pick up a sound he
-crawled cautiously in.</p>
-<p>It was far more nerve racking than it had been when he crawled in. Then
-he did not have much fear of any one being there. Now he knew that some
-one had been there and was not at all certain that he had left. His
-progress was painfully slow. He listened after every step. He remembered
-where he had been hiding a minute before and glanced nervously at the
-wall of rhododendron on either side. He was almost tempted to run the
-rest of the way and have it over with.</p>
-<p>It was well that he did not act on that impulse. A few feet more brought
-him in sight of the outer end of the tunnel, and there was Foster
-sitting in the entrance with his long rifle across his lap and his eyes
-glued on the mountain trail.</p>
-<p>Noiselessly Scott backed out of sight and beat a cautious but rapid
-retreat. He made his way back to Hopwood in the rhododendron and told
-him what he had seen. <q>Looks as though he was posted there for the
-night,</q> Scott growled.</p>
-<p><q>He probably is,</q> Hopwood replied quietly. <q>I reckon it’s up to us to
-get out through the rhododendron.</q></p>
-<p>That possibility had entirely slipped Scott’s mind. It had never
-occurred to him that you could go through that rhododendron. He had been
-too fascinated by the tunnel and that mumbling man at the end of it with
-a long rifle.</p>
-<p><q>Then let’s go,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>Hopwood glanced about him to get his bearings and glided through the
-dense brush like a snake, and as silently. Scott was put to it to keep
-up with him, and try as he would he could not move as silently. It was
-slow going at the best, for the course Hopwood had chosen led them down
-into a draw and up on to the next ridge.</p>
-<p>They had almost reached the edge of the rhododendron when they stumbled
-on to a covey of ruffed grouse. The frightened birds went up with a
-tremendous rush and crashed through the brush out into the open.</p>
-<p><q>It is a good thing we did not strike them down by the clearing,</q>
-Hopwood whispered. <q>We would have had Foster on us in an instant. Here
-we are safe because he can’t very well follow us fast enough through
-there to do him any good.</q></p>
-<p>They came out of the brush on to the open ridge and it seemed almost
-like coming out of a cave. Scott climbed up on a point of rock to get
-his bearings.</p>
-<p>Scarcely had he straightened up when his hat flew from his head and the
-ping of a rifle sounded from the opposite ridge. Scott fell from the
-rock in a heap.</p>
-<p>Hopwood ran to him. <q>Did he get you?</q> he asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Scott felt his head and there was blood on his fingers. <q>Must have
-grazed me,</q> he said, <q>but it does not amount to anything.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood examined it and found a half-inch cut in his scalp. <q>That’s what
-those partridges did for us,</q> Hopwood said. <q>I am sorry he saw us but it
-can’t be helped now. Now, we’ll have to get out of here.</q></p>
-<p>Scott scrambled to his feet and recovered his punctured hat. He examined
-it with a little shudder and started up the ridge.</p>
-<p><q>Not that way,</q> Hopwood exclaimed. <q>That’s the way he will come.</q></p>
-<p>So Hopwood led the way once more across a brush-filled draw on to the
-next ridge. Up this they made their way very cautiously, taking good
-care to keep out of sight. They were almost up to the main ridge when
-Hopwood hid behind a ledge of rock and motioned Scott to do the same.</p>
-<p><q>We can see the other ridge from here,</q> he whispered, <q>and we better
-wait till we see Foster go down. We might meet him up there on the
-ridge.</q></p>
-<p>After what seemed like an age they caught a glimpse of Foster making his
-way cautiously down the opposite ridge. He had seen Scott fall from the
-ledge and was on his way down to make sure of him. When he was out of
-sight they crawled out of their hiding place and struck for the main
-ridge.</p>
-<p><q>I wonder what aroused his suspicion,</q> Hopwood said.</p>
-<p><q>I don’t know,</q> Scott said, <q>and it does not make any difference. He
-can’t head us off now.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head doubtfully. <q>Maybe not, but I wish he did not
-know anything about it. He may guess what we are going to do, and if he
-does it may drive him to something desperate.</q></p>
-<p>They were on the open trail now and stopped for a moment. <q>Well,</q> Scott
-said, <q>don’t let’s worry about it. You take the message to Mac and keep
-your eye on Foster the best you can. I’ll take the trail over the
-mountain.</q></p>
-<p>They had hardly disappeared when Foster ran back on to the trail. He was
-raging like a madman. He knew that something, he could not tell just
-what, was in the wind, and it was driving him mad.</p>
-<p>A squirrel chattered at him from a big oak tree, and he shot it with an
-oath.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXIV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXIV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT GOES AFTER THE MARSHAL</span></h2>
-<p>Scott did not lose any time on the trail to the town where the United
-States marshal made his headquarters, but it was a long day’s hike and
-he had not started much before the middle of the afternoon. Night caught
-him while he was still on the mountain trails. The sky was cloudy, and
-down in the dense woods it was black as a pocket. He knew that he would
-save time and effort by camping out for the night and getting an early
-start in the morning. He was not gaining anything by feeling his way
-along inch by inch in the dark. He stumbled into an ice-cold trout
-stream and gave it up.</p>
-<p>The nights were cold there in the mountains, and he was feeling around
-for some firewood when he saw a light glimmering through the trees far
-down the trail. As his feet were already wet he waded across the stream
-and made his way slowly toward the light.</p>
-<p>It proved to be a lamp in a small logging camp. It was a comparatively
-small cabin with the cook stove and dining table in one end of it. The
-walls of the rest of the room were lined with double-decked bunks. Every
-one seemed to be in bed except an old woman who was reading at the
-dining table. She looked up indifferently when Scott knocked at the
-door.</p>
-<p><q>Good evening,</q> he said. <q>Night caught me up here on the trail. Is there
-any place here where I can get a bed?</q></p>
-<p>The woman looked at him suspiciously for a minute and seemed to be
-undecided whether or not to call her husband. Then she pointed to an
-empty bed in the corner.</p>
-<p><q>I don’t want to crowd you here,</q> Scott apologized.</p>
-<p><q>You won’t bother nobody,</q> the woman replied without looking up from her
-book.</p>
-<p>Scott did not think much of his reception. He had not had anything to
-eat since morning, but the looks of the place did not encourage him to
-ask for anything. It would be better than sleeping out in the cold
-without blankets even if he were hungry. He walked over to the bunk and
-crawled in without any further ceremony than taking off his shoes.</p>
-<p>For a few minutes he lay there and marveled at the tremendous chorus of
-snores which seemed to be coming from all parts of the little cabin, but
-he soon fell asleep in spite of the music and his hunger. In the morning
-Scott was astonished to see the number of people who rolled out of those
-bunks—men, women and children. It was evidently a big family, but he was
-not sure he had seen them all.</p>
-<p>After the way he had been received the night before, Scott intended to
-thank them for the lodging and depart without breakfast, but the man
-would not have it so.</p>
-<p><q>Where did you get supper?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>I did not have any,</q> Scott replied a little spitefully.</p>
-<p>The man was very much put out and insisted on Scott’s staying to
-breakfast. Scott accepted, but before he was through he was sorry he had
-not stuck to his original purpose of going away hungry. When the man
-learned he was running the logging job on the other side of the
-mountain, he became so interested that Scott had a hard time getting
-away from him. If he had seen one of the boys slip around the house and
-run off up the trail in the direction from which he had come the night
-before, he might have been suspicious of so many questions.</p>
-<p>It was seven o’clock before he got away from these people and started
-for the town. Even at that the marshal was not up when he arrived. He
-had recovered from his logging camp breakfast sufficiently to eat
-another at the little hotel while he was waiting for the marshal.</p>
-<p>Scott had never heard anything but curses for the United States marshal
-from the mountaineers and had formed a picture of him that was rudely
-shattered when he saw the reality. Instead of the shiftless, cringing
-old man he expected to see, he found a keen, alert, energetic man of
-about forty-five. He had been a sharpshooter in the Spanish War and was
-every inch a man.</p>
-<p><q>Now what can I do for you?</q> he asked briskly, when Scott had introduced
-himself.</p>
-<p><q>I am running a logging job on the other side of the mountain,</q> Scott
-explained, <q>and there is a moonshine still over there that is causing me
-all kinds of trouble. I thought maybe I could get you to clean it up for
-me. The man who is running it is an incendiary and a murderer as well as
-a moonshiner.</q></p>
-<p><q>Sounds as though it might be Foster Wait,</q> the marshal said with a
-frown.</p>
-<p><q>It is,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>Then you may be able to get him in the courts for arson or murder if
-you can produce the evidence, but I am afraid I can’t help you much. I
-have put in days looking for that still, have searched every square inch
-of his place, but have never been able to find a trace of it. That has
-been a sore spot with me for several years.</q></p>
-<p><q>But the still isn’t on his place,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>Do you mean to say that you know where it is?</q> the marshal cried
-eagerly.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said, <q>I stumbled on to it in the woods one day.</q></p>
-<p><q>But if it is not on his place, can you prove that it is his?</q> the
-marshal asked doubtfully.</p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said. <q>I know a man who is familiar with it and will swear
-to it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Good!</q> the marshal exclaimed, jumping enthusiastically to his feet.
-<q>Come on over to the judge and we’ll swear out a warrant for this bird.
-Didn’t see anybody on the way over here, did you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said. <q>Foster saw me just before I started,</q> and he
-explained his experience.</p>
-<p><q>Still that was a long way from here and he may not have guessed where
-you were going. See anybody else?</q></p>
-<p><q>I spent the night at a little logging camp up here on the mountain a
-ways,</q> Scott admitted, <q>but they seemed too dumb to know anything.</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes, they seem dumb enough, but they have notified Foster long ago that
-you came this way. I doubt if we can get him now, but I’ll fix that
-still for you.</q></p>
-<p>The judge was as interested as the marshal. <q>I’d like to get that
-fellow,</q> he exclaimed. <q>There was a crazy man in a big iron hat down
-here some weeks ago who wanted me to arrest him for something he had not
-yet done, but we have never been able to get any real charge against him
-that any one would support.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll support this one,</q> Scott said doggedly. <q>He’s the key man in that
-feud over there and I am going to put him in the penitentiary if it
-takes me all summer.</q></p>
-<p><q>All right, then, let’s go,</q> the marshal exclaimed. <q>Did you hoof it
-over here?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes,</q> Scott said. <q>I didn’t have a horse handy, and, anyway, I thought
-I could make better time over these mountain trails on foot.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, you couldn’t if you had my horse, but I’ll walk with you this
-time. We’ll be off the trail a good deal and I don’t want to be too
-conspicuous.</q></p>
-<p>They went back by another trail which the marshal knew to avoid the
-logging camp and any one who might be looking for them. When the marshal
-started out anywhere, it was usually well heralded all over the
-mountain.</p>
-<p>They were walking rapidly up a steep mountain trail when the marshal
-suddenly stopped and held up his hand. Scott peeped through the bushes
-and was surprised to see that they were in sight of the trail on the
-main ridge just above the still. He followed the direction of the
-marshal’s pointing finger and saw one of Foster’s boys earnestly
-watching the trail Scott had gone down the day before.</p>
-<p>They made a detour and crossed the main ridge trail back of the boy.
-Just as they started down the slope toward the still, three rifle shots
-rang out in the valley below.</p>
-<p><q>There is something doing down there,</q> the marshal whispered. <q>Sounds as
-though we ought to have brought the sheriff and a bunch of deputies.</q></p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXV'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>HOPWOOD SENDS FOSTER A MESSAGE</span></h2>
-<p>Hopwood did not go immediately back to camp to carry the message to
-MacAndrews. There would be plenty of time for that after dark. He
-thought it better to hang around and try to find out something of
-Foster’s plans. Instead of going down the trail he hid in the brush and
-watched, for he felt sure that Foster would come back that way when he
-found he had missed his mark.</p>
-<p>He saw Foster come out of the woods and judged his state of mind pretty
-well from his looks. When he saw him shoot the squirrel he was convinced
-of his savage rage. In such a condition as that he might do anything. He
-thought of old Jarred and little Vic up there on the opposite mountain
-and wondered what form his rage would take.</p>
-<p>Just then Foster could not have told him himself. He only knew that he
-had lost his opportunity in a game that he did not very clearly
-understand. Why had Scott gone to the still and not touched it? If he
-had destroyed the still and the supply of whisky in those barrels he
-could have understood that. He would have been trying to protect himself
-and his crew. But he had not destroyed it.</p>
-<p>Then a new thought occurred to him. Perhaps Scott had gone there to
-destroy things but had been interrupted before he had a chance to carry
-out his purpose. Perhaps he had destroyed it after he himself had been
-there. There had been quite an interval between the time he had looked
-in the cabin and the time he discovered Scott on the opposite ridge. He
-decided to see; it would at least give him something to do.</p>
-<p>He started toward the still again and Hopwood, who had been able almost
-to read his thoughts, followed as close as he dared. Foster went
-straight to the still and Hopwood waited outside the tunnel. Foster was
-not reasoning, he was just grasping wildly for some clue in this blind
-puzzle. He hurried to the cabin. Everything was just as he had left it.</p>
-<p>He came out and examined the edge of the clearing. He easily found the
-trail leading into the laurel. He really did not see the tracks of
-Scott’s tennis shoes, but he had not seen Hopwood and mistook his boots
-for Scott’s. He realized now that he had trapped Scott in there when he
-came back, and ground his teeth in his disappointment. As much puzzled
-as ever he paced nervously up and down the little clearing. Then he
-determined to go home and send his boy to find out where Scott had gone.</p>
-<p>Hopwood followed Foster home and saw the boy start down the road toward
-the village. He did not think it likely that Foster would leave the
-house again that night and decided to overtake the boy. Possibly he
-could pump some of Foster’s plans out of him. He was a favorite with all
-the young people on both sides of the mountain. For some reason they
-seemed to look on him as an old man, although in reality he was little
-older than they were, except in mental capacity.</p>
-<p>He kept to the woods till he was out of sight from the house. But he was
-so used to the woods that he lost little time by that and once in the
-road he soon overtook the boy.</p>
-<p><q>Hello, Bill!</q> he called. <q>Dad out of chewing tobacco?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Bill growled. <q>He ain’t even got that excuse.</q> The boy did not
-seem to be any too pleased with his errand, whatever it was and spoke
-sullenly.</p>
-<p><q>What then?</q> Hopwood persisted. <q>Just out for your health?</q></p>
-<p><q>Out for his health, I reckon,</q> the boy replied spitefully. <q>He wants me
-to find out where that logging boss is.</q></p>
-<p><q>Who, MacAndrews?</q> Hopwood asked innocently.</p>
-<p><q>No, Burton,</q> Bill growled.</p>
-<p><q>That ought to be easy,</q> Hopwood said teasingly. <q>MacAndrews can
-probably tell you where he is.</q></p>
-<p><q>Might if I asked him,</q> the boy replied doggedly, <q>but MacAndrews isn’t
-going to see me.</q></p>
-<p><q>What’s the matter? Been stealing stuff from the cook shack?</q> Hopwood
-went on.</p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Bill protested, <q>but he pretty near caught me this morning when I
-went over to take some whisky to the men.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood whistled. <q>No wonder you don’t want him to see you. Then how are
-you going to find out?</q></p>
-<p><q>Ask Mr. Roberts, I reckon.</q></p>
-<p>For some reason or other the station agent had never lost his title with
-these people. He was still <q>Mr.</q> Roberts after years of residence in
-close touch with them.</p>
-<p>Hopwood thought a moment. Mr. Roberts might know where Scott had gone,
-and if he did, he might tell Bill, and that would not do at all.</p>
-<p><q>Maybe I can find out for you from MacAndrews,</q> he volunteered.</p>
-<p>Bill cheered up at once. <q>Gee, will you, Hop? Dad seems to want to know
-awful bad, and if I don’t find out I’ll be afraid to go home.</q></p>
-<p><q>All right,</q> Hopwood agreed. <q>I’ll ask MacAndrews for you.</q></p>
-<p>They walked on for a while in silence. Bill’s troubles had been
-unexpectedly lifted from his shoulders and Hopwood had found out what he
-wanted to know. Foster did not know where Scott had gone, and he would
-not find out from this boy if Hopwood could help it. And he thought that
-he could.</p>
-<p>When they came within sight of the camp it was growing dark, but they
-could still see dusky figures moving about.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll wait here,</q> Bill said, and the tone of his voice indicated that
-nothing on earth could persuade him to go any nearer.</p>
-<p><q>All right,</q> Hopwood agreed. <q>I’ll be back in a few minutes.</q></p>
-<p>He strolled on down to the bunk house. The men had just straggled out
-from supper and they were a sorry-looking lot. Some had gone straight to
-bed. Others were lolling around a bonfire outside. They looked at
-Hopwood curiously but none of them had ever seen him before, and they
-were too woebegone even to speak to him.</p>
-<p>He was just going into the bunk house when he saw MacAndrews coming out
-of the cook shack. Hopwood walked straight up to him and came out
-frankly with his message. <q>Mr. MacAndrews, Mr. Burton asked me to tell
-you to put the men to work in the morning as usual and that he would be
-back to-morrow.</q></p>
-<p>Mac had been staring hard at him trying to recognize him in the dusk.
-<q>Who are you?</q> he asked gruffly.</p>
-<p><q>My name is Hopwood,</q> Hopwood replied wisely leaving off his last name.</p>
-<p><q>Come into the cook shack,</q> Mac growled, <q>where I can have a good look
-at you. I am suspicious of visitors since this morning.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood followed him obediently into the cook shack and looked him
-squarely in the eye. <q>He also told me that I was to keep in touch with
-you while he was away and let you know what Foster Wait was doing.</q></p>
-<p><q>He did, did he?</q> Mac grunted, as he looked him over suspiciously from
-head to foot. <q>Where has he gone?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood looked around and lowered his voice. <q>He went over the mountain
-to see the United States marshal.</q></p>
-<p>Mac grunted his satisfaction but his suspicion was not completely
-allayed. <q>Who the deuce are you?</q> he asked again. <q>You look like one of
-these pesky mountaineers to me.</q></p>
-<p><q>I am,</q> Hopwood replied bluntly, <q>but I am a friend of Mr. Burton’s and
-I don’t like Foster Wait as well as you do. That ought to be enough to
-satisfy you.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> Mac said grudgingly, <q>if you are a liar you are a mighty slick
-one. I’ll take a chance on you, anyway. What’s that man Wait up to now?</q></p>
-<p><q>He was in the house when I came by there a while ago. He’s not likely
-to come out again to-night, and I’ll watch him in the morning and let
-you know if he’s up to anything.</q></p>
-<p><q>Very well,</q> Mac replied. <q>I’ll be watching for you, and—for him,</q> he
-added grimly.</p>
-<p>Hopwood started for the door. <q>Don’t you want a handout?</q> Mac called
-after him hospitably.</p>
-<p>As Hopwood had not had anything to eat since morning, he gladly accepted
-the invitation. While he was eating Mac plied him with all kinds of
-questions about Foster Wait. It was evident that it would be a bad day
-for Foster if he ever fell into Mac’s hands.</p>
-<p>When he had finished the generous meal which Ben had given him he walked
-out to find Bill. The boy was sitting on the stump waiting patiently.
-Waiting was one of the best things Bill did.</p>
-<p><q>You ought to have come with me,</q> Hopwood said. <q>The cook gave me a
-great handout.</q></p>
-<p><q>You can have mine in there,</q> Bill replied with a wry face. <q>What did he
-say about his boss?</q></p>
-<p><q>He said he was out on the works to-day and would be back in camp
-to-night,</q> Hopwood lied glibly.</p>
-<p>It was enough for the boy to have a satisfactory answer to take home. He
-did not question the truth of it. <q>Thanks,</q> he said, and started back up
-the mountain.</p>
-<p><q>Wait a while and I’ll walk up with you,</q> Hopwood volunteered.</p>
-<p><q>I gotta be getting home,</q> the boy said. <q>He’ll be mad enough now
-without keeping him waiting any longer.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood watched him out of sight in the darkness. <q>Well, give him that
-information,</q> he mumbled maliciously to himself. <q>It may quiet his
-nerves.</q></p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXVI'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXVI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>FOSTER REVIVES THE FEUD</span></h2>
-<p>No one knew where Hopwood spent the night. He did not accept Mac’s
-invitation to stay at the camp, but early morning found him on the road
-again on his way up to scout around Foster’s cabin. He had an uneasy
-feeling that something would happen if Foster found out where Scott had
-gone. He chuckled to think that he probably would not find it out now.
-He had sounded out Mr. Roberts and found that he did not know.</p>
-<p>It was an hour after he had taken up his watch in a little patch of
-woods across the road from the house before he noticed any signs of
-life. A thin wisp of smoke curled up from the kitchen chimney. Every now
-and then he caught a roar from the rear of the house but no other sound
-of voices, a pretty good indication that Foster was in no better mood
-than he had been the night before.</p>
-<p>A half hour later Bill came running around the house with head ducked
-low. Once safe around the corner he dropped down to a slow shuffle. He
-had been crying, and he looked longingly up at the mountain before he
-turned reluctantly down toward the village.</p>
-<p><q>He either suspects where Scott has gone or he is planning some new
-devilment as soon as he gets back,</q> Hopwood mused, as he watched Bill
-crawling slowly on his snail-like way. <q>Well, Foster is not likely to go
-out till Bill gets back and that can’t be for two hours at the rate he
-is moving.</q></p>
-<p>He had almost decided to go on another errand while he was waiting for
-Bill to come back when a movement caught his eye and he saw a barefoot
-boy turn in at Foster’s gate. Hopwood groaned with disappointment and
-apprehension, for he knew that boy was bearing one of two messages:
-either that Scott had passed the logging camp on the way down, or that
-the marshal had left town on the way up. Probably it was the former,
-because the marshal would know enough to avoid that camp. Hopwood blamed
-himself for not having warned Scott to keep away from it. Well, it could
-not be helped now.</p>
-<p><q>There will be something doing pretty soon now,</q> he thought.</p>
-<p>He was not mistaken. The arrival of the boy at the Wait cabin was like
-the spark on a fuse running into a powder magazine. Foster roared like a
-wounded lion, and everything seemed to be in great commotion. A little
-girl darted out of the house and tore down the road toward the village.</p>
-<p><q>After Bill,</q> Hopwood mused. <q>I wonder what the game is?</q></p>
-<p>The commotion in the back of the house continued.</p>
-<p>In a few minutes the girl and Bill came trotting back together. His
-reluctance to go had made his recall easy. Hopwood kept a close lookout
-now. He did not want anything to escape him, for much might depend on
-what he saw now. He saw Bill slip out of the side gate and take a short
-cut up the mountain carrying a long rifle.</p>
-<p>Hopwood knew what that meant. The boy was to keep watch and fire his
-rifle as a signal if he saw the marshal coming that way. That was an old
-trick that he had seen worked many times before, but he had never had
-the interest in it that he had now. The boy from the logging camp
-followed close behind Bill.</p>
-<p>These things did not worry Hopwood. A warning of the marshal’s approach
-would not do any harm. He had expected that. But when he saw two of the
-younger children scamper off on the trails which led to the cabins of
-other members of the family, and saw Foster run hurriedly to the barn to
-get his white horse, he began to get excited.</p>
-<p>If this were Sewall, he would know that he was assembling the clan to
-resist the marshal. But he knew that they would not protect Foster, and
-Foster knew it himself.</p>
-<p><q>There is only one way,</q> Hopwood thought, <q>that Foster could get the
-support of the others, and that would be to start a fight with the
-Morgans.</q> If that were the plan he did not have much time to do it. No
-wonder he was in a hurry, with the marshal probably already on his way
-over the mountain.</p>
-<p>So firmly did this idea take hold of Hopwood that he could stand it no
-longer. Foster galloped away furiously in the direction of the village,
-and Hopwood, breaking cover like a rabbit, darted across the road and
-straight through the woods on a bee line for the opposite mountain.</p>
-<p>A little farther down he came into a trail and ducked out of it again
-just in time to miss another Wait who was hurrying toward the village.
-As soon as the rider was out of sight he broke into the trail again and
-ran panting on his way.</p>
-<p>He crossed the railroad track below the village and ran gasping up the
-steep slope with his eyes glued on a little clearing far up on the
-mountainside. Every instant he dreaded that he would see Foster’s white
-horse flash across that clearing. Would he be in time?</p>
-<p>It was this thought that drove him on and urged him to almost superhuman
-efforts, while every breath he drew tore at his lungs like a rusty
-knife. Stumbling like a drunken man he tottered out into the road in
-front of Jarred’s cabin.</p>
-<p>The white horse was nowhere in sight. He had won the race. No matter how
-fast they came now Jarred would have his warning. He did not have the
-breath to shout at the gate. He ran across the yard and into the cabin
-without ceremony.</p>
-<p>The minutes dragged slowly by and Hopwood did not come out. An unnatural
-silence seemed to surround the place. Not a single bird note broke the
-weird stillness, and even the little brook which usually tinkled so
-musically over the stones by the house seemed to be gliding softly now.
-Only the ticking of the old cuckoo clock within the cabin boomed out
-like the blows of a hammer.</p>
-<p>The slow minutes passed: ten, fifteen, twenty, and Hopwood came slowly
-out. He looked weary and disheartened. Even the sound of a rifle shot
-from the valley below did not arouse him. He stood with his arms folded
-on top of the fence and looked listlessly across at the opposite
-mountain. There was another shot fired in the valley and a scattering
-volley answered it, but he did not seem to hear them.</p>
-<p>Vic appeared in the doorway and called to him. <q>You must find out what
-that is, Hopwood. Are they fighting us or the logging camp?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood started as though he had been awakened from a dream. With a wave
-of the hand to Vic he vaulted the fence and ran down the slope. When he
-came to the railroad track he hesitated a moment and then turned up the
-track toward the village.</p>
-<p>He found Mr. Roberts sitting on the end of the station platform watching
-the fight as calmly as though watching a game from a grand stand.</p>
-<p><q>Just what happened?</q> Hopwood asked.</p>
-<p>Shots were still being fired spasmodically from both sides of the
-street.</p>
-<p><q>Foster rode up to the store like a madman and shot across at Morgan’s
-wife without any warning,</q> Mr. Roberts replied, without taking his eyes
-off the fight.</p>
-<p><q>Did he hit her?</q> Hopwood asked with a hard unnatural ring in his voice.</p>
-<p><q>Couldn’t miss her, just across the street,</q> Mr. Roberts replied.</p>
-<p>A cold steely glint came into Hopwood’s soft blue eyes and his jaw set
-tight. <q>Kill her?</q> he persisted.</p>
-<p><q>Couldn’t tell,</q> Mr. Roberts replied calmly. <q>They hauled her inside.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood did not wait to hear any more. With a growl of rage he jumped
-across the railroad track and ran up the western slope with all the
-speed his tired legs could muster.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXVII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXVII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>SCOTT ARRIVES AT THE VILLAGE</span></h2>
-<p>Scott and the marshal started down the mountain in the direction of the
-firing. <q>Where is that still?</q> the marshal asked. <q>We might as well have
-a look at it if it is up this way.</q></p>
-<p><q>It won’t be much out of the way,</q> Scott said. <q>We are about there now.</q>
-He was so anxious to get to the village that he would not have consented
-to stop at all except that he thought he might find Hopwood at the
-still, and he was crazy to know what was going on. He led the marshal
-down the mountain at a run.</p>
-<p><q>Here’s the trail to it,</q> he exclaimed.</p>
-<p>When they came to the tunnel the marshal slipped ahead with his revolver
-in his hand. <q>Let me pack this gun in there ahead,</q> he whispered. <q>Not
-likely to be any one there, but if there should be, he might be
-peevish.</q></p>
-<p>They made their way cautiously through the rhododendron and paused at
-the other end to watch and listen. There was no evidence of any one and
-the marshal ran quickly across the clearing to the cabin. Scott was
-close at his heels. There was no one there.</p>
-<p><q>This is a fine outfit,</q> the marshal exclaimed enthusiastically. <q>Big
-enough to supply the county. No wonder I could not find it. They are a
-foxy bunch. Put it on government land, too.</q></p>
-<p>One glance had shown Scott that Hopwood was not there and he was anxious
-to be off. <q>Come on,</q> he exclaimed, <q>you can destroy this thing any
-time. I’ve got to see what is happening down there. That may be my crew
-fighting.</q></p>
-<p><q>Just the same, I am going to fix this thing before I go,</q> the marshal
-replied coolly. <q>Any one who is slick enough to put this thing in here
-might be pretty clever in getting it out. I’ll take no chances.</q></p>
-<p>With a few blows of his hatchet he cut the copper retort to ribbons and
-knocked the heads out of the barrels. <q>Now they can have it,</q> he cried
-with a chuckle of satisfaction.</p>
-<p>Scott was already halfway out of the tunnel. As soon as he emerged on
-the open trail he saw Hopwood coming, exhausted but determined.</p>
-<p><q>What is going on, Hopwood?</q> he called anxiously.</p>
-<p><q>They’re at it,</q> Hopwood panted as he sank on a log.</p>
-<p><q>What started it?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p><q>The boy from the logging camp reported that you had gone over the
-mountain,</q> Hopwood gasped. <q>And Foster shot Vic’s mother in cold blood.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was horror struck. <q>Why, that is what Sewall predicted,</q> he said,
-<q>but I didn’t believe it possible.</q></p>
-<p><q>It was murder,</q> Hopwood replied coldly.</p>
-<p><q>Jarred isn’t hurt, is he?</q> Scott persisted.</p>
-<p>Hopwood’s answer was so low that Scott had to lean over him to hear it
-at all. A look of keen disappointment passed over Scott’s face.</p>
-<p><q>How did that happen?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p>Again Hopwood’s answer was so low that he could hardly hear it.</p>
-<p>Scott straightened suddenly. His anger was choking him, and the hot
-blood leaping through his veins almost blinded him.</p>
-<p>Hopwood, still panting from his exertions, jumped from the log and
-started straight down through the woods.</p>
-<p><q>Where are you going?</q> Scott called sharply.</p>
-<p><q>Down to fight on the side of the Morgans,</q> he answered without even
-turning his head.</p>
-<p><q>So am I,</q> Scott exclaimed savagely, <q>and so is all my logging crew
-unless this feud is dropped now and forever.</q></p>
-<p><q>What’s going on?</q> the marshal asked.</p>
-<p>But Scott did not seem to hear him. He strode down the mountain slope in
-the direction Hopwood had taken. His eyes were searching the woods for
-any signs of the Waits, and his ears were straining to catch any
-significant sounds from the valley below, but his mind was far away in
-the little cabin up on the opposite mountain.</p>
-<p>When they came to a little clearing on a knoll which overlooked the
-village they stopped to reconnoiter. At first they could see nothing out
-of the ordinary. The village seemed as quiet and deserted as ever. Mr.
-Roberts was still sitting calmly on the end of the station platform and
-two women were peeping from an upstairs window of the hotel.</p>
-<p>They were almost directly in the rear of the Waits’ position, and
-gradually they began to distinguish them. First, one here, crouching
-behind the corner of the store, then another one behind the lumber pile.
-Twenty-two they counted and all armed.</p>
-<p>One man seemed to be holding himself in reserve for an emergency. He
-stood apart from the others, his arms folded across the end of the
-barrel of his long rifle, and his chin resting on his arms. He did not
-seem to be taking any active part. He must have been in plain sight of
-both parties but none of them seemed to molest him.</p>
-<p>Every now and then the vicious ping of a high-power rifle rang out from
-the Morgan store and was answered by a scattering volley from the men in
-hiding before them.</p>
-<p>They saw Hopwood slip across the railroad back of the hotel and glide
-around through the woods to the back of the Morgan store.</p>
-<p>The marshal had been examining the scene minutely through his field
-glasses. Suddenly he grasped Scott’s elbow.</p>
-<p><q>There’s my man,</q> he whispered.</p>
-<p>Scott followed the direction of the pointing finger. Farthest away from
-the store and securely hidden behind a long pile of cordwood was Foster
-Wait.</p>
-<p><q>The farthest away and the best hidden of them all,</q> Scott sneered. <q>The
-coward!</q></p>
-<p>Over in the other direction, opposite the hotel, on a knoll very similar
-to their own, was the whole logging crew.</p>
-<p><q>I’m going over there to give a message to my foreman,</q> Scott said.
-<q>Then I am going down to put an end to this row.</q></p>
-<p><q>Better keep out of it,</q> the marshal advised. <q>Let the sheriff take care
-of it. The peacemaker always gets the worst of it.</q></p>
-<p>But Scott shook his head and started toward his crew. Mac had seen him
-coming and met him halfway.</p>
-<p><q>Some show,</q> Mac exclaimed cheerfully. <q>They have not bothered us yet
-and I reckon maybe they know enough to let us alone.</q></p>
-<p><q>I am going down there to try to stop it, Mac. If anything interferes
-with me it will be these fellows on this side. If they do, clean them
-up.</q></p>
-<p><q>We’ll do that,</q> Mac exclaimed enthusiastically. <q>But why not let us
-clean them up first? It would be safer?</q></p>
-<p><q>No,</q> Scott replied firmly, <q>that would not do. I don’t think they will
-bother me and I don’t want you to mix in the thing at all unless they
-do.</q></p>
-<p>A fresh burst of shots rattled around the buildings on both sides of the
-street. <q>They haven’t hit anybody yet,</q> Mac growled sarcastically, <q>but
-they may hurt somebody if they keep on.</q></p>
-<p>When Scott got back to the knoll, the marshal was nowhere in sight. He
-did not stop to look for him. He had made up his mind what he was going
-to do and he was anxious to be about it. He picked his way diagonally
-across the slope, back of the Waits’ position to where the station agent
-was sitting on the platform.</p>
-<p>He talked earnestly to Mr. Roberts for a moment and started up the road
-toward the village.</p>
-<p><q>Better keep out of it,</q> Mr. Roberts called after him pleadingly.</p>
-<p>But Scott neither turned back nor answered him.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXVIII'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXVIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>THE END OF THE FEUD</span></h2>
-<p>Scott walked rapidly up the road toward the store. He felt a shiver run
-up his back as he passed the woodpile where Foster was hiding, but he
-held his course steadily and looked neither to the right nor the left.</p>
-<p>Astonishment and wonder held the men on both sides motionless. It seemed
-to Scott as though he were walking all alone through a great desert with
-a row of mines on either side of him. He could almost hear the
-sputtering of the fuses. He had never felt so lonely in all his life.</p>
-<p>He heard a voice on the Morgan side shouting to him to keep back, and he
-recognized it as Hopwood’s.</p>
-<p>Only when he came to a spot squarely between the two stores did he stop.
-There he held his hand solemnly up over his head and called out in a
-voice that all could hear.</p>
-<p><q>I have a message for all of you and I call upon you all as men to come
-out here and listen to it.</q></p>
-<p>He called in a loud voice, but so tense was the stillness that a whisper
-could have been heard as well. And the silence continued after he had
-spoken. He did not repeat it but stood there with hand uplifted. The
-suspense was nerve racking. At last it was broken.</p>
-<p><q>Say what you have to say and get out of the road,</q> called a sullen
-voice from the Morgan store.</p>
-<p><q>Very well,</q> Scott agreed solemnly, <q>if it must be that way, listen.</q></p>
-<p>He saw Sewall standing up there apart from the others and rightly
-guessed that he was not in sympathy with what was being done. He glanced
-at him occasionally for reassurance, for he did not feel at all sure
-that his plan would be a success.</p>
-<p><q>If you knew why you were fighting here to-day, you would never have
-come,</q> he began.</p>
-<p><q>If that’s all you have to say, we’ve heard enough,</q> the same sullen
-voice interrupted.</p>
-<p>Scott paid no attention to it, but continued in an impressive voice.
-<q>You think you are fighting for the old feud which has kept you
-neighbors enemies for forty years, but you are not. You are fighting
-because there is a coward in your midst who felt his influence slipping
-and shot an innocent woman to make it appear that you were being
-attacked. It worked, and you are fighting here to protect a murderer.</q></p>
-<p>There was a dead silence as they strove to realize the significance of
-what he had said. He had seen Sewall bring his rifle into a more
-convenient position when he began to talk. Now he suddenly threw it up
-to his shoulder and aimed at the woodpile.</p>
-<p>There were two shots almost at the same instant, and a bullet plowed up
-the ground at Scott’s feet and covered him with dust.</p>
-<p><q>There is the proof of what I say,</q> Scott shouted. <q>He is attempting
-another murder to cover up the first.</q> He pointed scornfully toward the
-woodpile and was as much astonished as the others at what he saw.</p>
-<p>Foster was crouching on the ground with his hands held high above his
-head while the marshal stood over him with his smoking revolver in his
-hand. It was his shot that had spoiled Foster’s aim just in the nick of
-time. Sewall had been too late.</p>
-<p>There was a murmur of resentment among the Waits at the sight of the
-marshal, whom they all regarded as their common enemy, arresting one of
-their members in their very midst. Scott saw that he was in danger of
-losing out.</p>
-<p><q>I brought the marshal here after that man because I could not get the
-sheriff. He is wanted for the cold-blooded murder of two women. Do you
-want to support such a man as that?</q></p>
-<p>There was silence again. Scott saw that he had them with him.</p>
-<p><q>Let me talk to your real leaders,</q> he shouted. <q>Come down here,
-Sewall.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall walked slowly forward, and men on both sides stepped out of their
-hiding places to see him come, and crowded slowly in around the two.</p>
-<p><q>Where is Jarred Morgan?</q> Scott asked, when Sewall stepped out into the
-road.</p>
-<p><q>Probably in the store there,</q> one of the Waits suggested.</p>
-<p><q>He is not,</q> Scott replied loudly enough for all to hear. <q>He is up at
-his cabin dying of pneumonia.</q></p>
-<p>There was a murmur of surprise and incredulity. Sewall’s face showed
-genuine regret.</p>
-<p><q>And do you want to know what gave him the pneumonia?</q> Scott persisted,
-addressing himself directly to Sewall. <q>Because he jumped into the pool
-to save your child from drowning.</q></p>
-<p><q>What?</q> Sewall gasped. <q>Did Jarred do that? She said it was a strange
-girl.</q></p>
-<p><q>Vic took care of her,</q> Scott replied quietly, <q>but Jarred got her out
-and this morning he was dying as the result of it.</q></p>
-<p>There was a hushed silence over the whole village.</p>
-<p>Scott was determined to hold his advantage. <q>Jarred promised that he
-would drop the feud if Foster was out of the way, and Foster is going to
-a place from which he will not return. Are you willing to drop it?</q></p>
-<p><q>I am more than willing,</q> Sewall said, <q>and have been for some time.
-Certainly, I personally can never fight with Jarred’s people again,</q> and
-his voice shook with emotion.</p>
-<p><q>How about the rest of you?</q> Scott asked looking at the rest of the
-assembled family.</p>
-<p>They all agreed eagerly. They were afraid of Jarred and if he would stop
-fighting they were willing enough.</p>
-<p><q>Are you willing to stand by Jarred’s promise?</q> Scott asked, turning to
-the Morgans.</p>
-<p>They were as eager as the Waits.</p>
-<p><q>Then shake hands on it,</q> Scott said, and he pulled Sewall and Ben
-Morgan towards each other.</p>
-<p>They shook hands solemnly and in five minutes both families had almost
-forgotten that a feud had ever existed. They had all completely
-forgotten Foster.</p>
-<p>Scott suddenly remembered him and hurried over to the woodpile, but the
-marshal had taken advantage of his opportunity and spirited him away.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chXXIX'><span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XXIX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.9em'>JARRED AND SEWALL MEET</span></h2>
-<p>As soon as Scott was sure that the marshal had made good his get-away
-with Foster he looked for Hopwood, but Hopwood had also disappeared. He
-could see nothing further that he could do there and turned down the
-road away from the village. He had not gone far when he heard some one
-walking fast behind him. It was Sewall.</p>
-<p><q>Where are you going?</q> Sewall asked.</p>
-<p><q>Up to Jarred’s</q> Scott replied.</p>
-<p><q>So am I,</q> Sewall said.</p>
-<p>They walked in silence, each occupied with his own thoughts. Scott was
-wondering where the marshal had gone with his prisoner and whether they
-would have any trouble in convicting him. Sewall was deeply moved by his
-walk up that road which was to him almost like a foreign country. His
-thoughts finally took the form of words.</p>
-<p><q>Do you know that I have been over this road only once before in thirty
-years, and that at night?</q></p>
-<p>Scott looked at him in astonishment. <q>Do you know Jarred?</q> he asked
-suddenly.</p>
-<p><q>Only by sight. I’ve seen him in the village once or twice, and once
-three years ago when he came up on our mountain,</q> Sewall said
-thoughtfully.</p>
-<p><q>What did they have, a conference?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p><q>No, one of Foster’s boys threw a stone across the street and hurt Vic.
-Jarred rode straight up here after him and horsewhipped him in his own
-yard.</q></p>
-<p><q>I should not think he would have dared,</q> Scott exclaimed. <q>Where was
-Foster?</q></p>
-<p><q>In the house,</q> Sewall chuckled, <q>and he stayed there. Jarred did not
-even look to see if he was in sight. He just licked the kid, turned his
-back on the house and rode away. From all I have heard, Jarred was never
-much afraid of anything.</q></p>
-<p><q>I have always admired him,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>So have I,</q> Sewall confessed simply.</p>
-<p>Again they walked in silence. When they came to Jarred’s gate, Scott
-called softly and Hopwood appeared in the doorway.</p>
-<p><q>How did you get here?</q> Scott asked in surprise. He never got used to
-Hopwood’s unexpected movements.</p>
-<p><q>I hurried up here to tell Vic that her mother was not seriously hurt,</q>
-Hopwood exclaimed.</p>
-<p><q>How is Jarred?</q> Scott asked anxiously.</p>
-<p>Hopwood’s face brightened. <q>He seems much better. I believe he is going
-to get well.</q></p>
-<p><q>Can we see him?</q> Scott asked eagerly.</p>
-<p><q>If you don’t make him talk too much,</q> Hopwood consented reluctantly. He
-felt that it would be better not, but he could not refuse this man who
-had successfully accomplished what he had been trying in vain for years
-to do. He stepped aside to let them enter.</p>
-<p>They walked into the little cabin stepping softly. Vic was hovering
-protectingly around the bed. The old man was very weak, but his pride
-kept him from looking ill even now. A pleased light came into his eyes
-when he saw Scott. He started slightly at the unexpected sight of
-Sewall. Scott noticed it.</p>
-<p><q>Sewall could not wait for Foster and the marshal to get out of sight to
-come up to thank you for saving his child,</q> he explained.</p>
-<p>Sewall knelt appealingly beside the bed.</p>
-<p>Jarred smiled and feebly stretched out his hand. <q>I can easily be
-friends with Sewall,</q> he whispered.</p>
-<p><q>I have always been your friend,</q> Sewall replied earnestly, <q>and I am
-coming to see you often if I may.</q></p>
-<p><q>With Foster in the penitentiary and you for my friend I can die in
-peace, but</q>—Jarred added with a faint smile—<q>I am not going to do it
-yet.</q></p>
-<p>At a sign from Vic they left him as softly as they had come. Hopwood was
-waiting for them outside the door.</p>
-<p><q>He is lots better,</q> Hopwood exclaimed, <q>but Vic wants to keep him
-quiet.</q></p>
-<p><q>She is right,</q> Scott said. <q>Are you going down with us?</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood blushed a little. <q>No, I am going to stay here and see if I can
-be of any help to Vic.</q></p>
-<p><q>Do you want me to send for a doctor?</q> Scott asked. <q>I would be glad to
-get one from Asheville for Jarred.</q></p>
-<p>Hopwood shook his head. <q>Jarred would not like it.</q></p>
-<p>So they left Hopwood standing contentedly on call beside the door, and
-started slowly for the village.</p>
-<p><q>Tell me,</q> Scott exclaimed, <q>why did Hopwood wear that iron hat? I have
-been wondering about it ever since I came and he has always told me he
-would tell me later.</q></p>
-<p><q>He wanted to make his family think he was crazy,</q> Sewall explained.
-<q>Did he fool you?</q></p>
-<p><q>At first,</q> Scott admitted, <q>but not for long.</q></p>
-<p>Sewall laughed. <q class='cq'>He has more brains than anybody else in the family. He
-was crazy for a while after Foster struck him that time, and he began
-wearing the iron hat for protection. He soon got all right, but he was
-shrewd enough to see that he could hear a lot more and go wherever he
-pleased if they thought he was crazy.</q></p>
-<p><q>Of course you know how crazy he is about Vic and Jarred. Well, he kept
-right on pretending to be crazy, and he did it so well that he fooled
-them all completely. All the time, he was working tooth and nail to help
-Jarred.</q></p>
-<p><q>And you knew that all the time?</q> Scott asked.</p>
-<p><q>Certainly. Jarred was in the right, and Foster has been wrong always,</q>
-Sewall exclaimed.</p>
-<p>As they approached old man Sanders’ cabin they saw him waiting for them
-at the gate.</p>
-<p><q>How is Jarred?</q> he called, as soon as they were near enough to hear
-him.</p>
-<p><q>Lots better,</q> Scott said.</p>
-<p><q>And is it true that Foster has gone to the penitentiary for life?</q> he
-asked eagerly.</p>
-<p><q>He’s gone to the penitentiary, all right,</q> Scott said, <q>and we hope it
-will be for life.</q></p>
-<p><q>Good!</q> the old man exclaimed enthusiastically. <q>I congratulate you,
-young man, on the way you kept neutral,</q> he added with a grin.</p>
-<p><q>Well, it worked, anyway,</q> Scott retorted. He had noticed that Mr.
-Sanders had hardly spoken to Sewall, and he had thought that he would be
-surprised to see him.</p>
-<p><q>You surely know Mr. Sewall Wait, don’t you, Mr. Sanders?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Reckon I do,</q> Mr. Sanders laughed. <q>He licked me at cribbage here last
-night.</q></p>
-<p>Scott looked at Sewall indignantly. <q>I thought you told me that you had
-not been up this road for thirty years.</q></p>
-<p><q>That was above here,</q> Sewall laughed. <q>I sneak over here in the evening
-every once in a while to play cribbage with Mr. Sanders.</q></p>
-<p>Scott was beginning to see what a hollow thing that feud really was, and
-yet it had killed several people, wounded many more and ruined the
-community for years.</p>
-<p><q>Did Jarred know it?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p>Sewall nodded. <q>Sure. I have sat on the fence there and talked over the
-feud with Vic by the hour.</q></p>
-<p><q>Do you think Vic will give it up?</q> he asked again.</p>
-<p><q>Sure she will,</q> Sewall replied confidently. <q>She’ll marry Hopwood some
-day and forget there ever was a feud unless Foster comes back. She’ll
-never forgive him, and she’ll never forgive her father.</q></p>
-<p>They left Mr. Sanders and went down to the logging camp. There Scott
-gave directions to MacAndrews to go on with the logging in the morning
-as usual, and told him that if he were short of help he could hire
-anybody around there.</p>
-<p>At the station he sent a telegram to his old boss in the forest service:</p>
-<p><q>Feud ended. Place now foolproof for supervisors.</q></p>
-<p>And when Mr. Roberts came home to supper that evening he brought the
-reply:</p>
-<p><q>Good work. We are going to appoint you the next fool.</q></p>
-<p>But Scott did not want that job till he had finished the one he had. He
-was deaf to the letters from Washington. A few days later, Mr. Johns
-arrived on the scene to plead with him in person. He listened with
-interest to Scott’s account of the struggle.</p>
-<p><q>Well,</q> he said admiringly when Scott had finished his story, <q>you
-certainly turned the trick, all right. You pulled the Service out of a
-nasty hole and everybody appreciates it. Now we want you back as
-supervisor. It ought to be a peaceful enough job now, thanks to you.</q></p>
-<p>But Scott still shook his head. <q>Not till the last log is in here,</q> he
-said, waving his hand toward the mountain slope.</p>
-<p><q>Pshaw,</q> Mr. Johns exclaimed impatiently, <q>anybody can run this logging
-outfit now.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s just it,</q> Scott replied quietly. <q>It has been hard enough work
-to get it to run smoothly, and now I am going to have the benefit of it.
-I am going to make a bunch of money off that contract, low as the bid
-was. When it is all over I will take back the job if you want me to; but
-I would rather go back to my old horse in Arizona.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, we might even arrange that in time,</q> Mr. Johns said, <q>or maybe we
-could bring the horse here.</q></p>
-<p><q>That would be better,</q> came a quiet voice behind them, and they both
-started to find Hopwood looking at Scott reproachfully.</p>
-<p><q>You are right, Hopwood,</q> Scott replied gently. <q>I had forgotten you. I
-will at least come back when you and Vic are married. Let’s all go up to
-see Jarred and tell him the news.</q></p>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
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