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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 #66631 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66631)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of After the Manner of Men, by Francis
-Lynde
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: After the Manner of Men
-
-Authors: Francis Lynde
- Arthur E. Becher
-
-Release Date: October 29, 2021 [eBook #66631]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AFTER THE MANNER OF MEN ***
-
-
-
-
-
-AFTER THE MANNER OF MEN
-
-
-
-
-BOOKS BY FRANCIS LYNDE
-
-PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-
-
- =After the Manner of Men.= Illus. 12mo _net_ $1.35
-
- =The Real Man.= Illus. 12mo _net_ $1.35
-
- =The City of Numbered Days.= Illus. 12mo _net_ $1.35
-
- =The Honorable Senator Sage-brush.= 12mo _net_ $1.30
-
- =Scientific Sprague.= Illus. 12mo _net_ $1.25
-
- =The Price.= 12mo _net_ $1.30
-
- =The Taming of Red Butte Western.= Illus. 12mo _net_ $1.35
-
- =The King of Arcadia.= Illus. 12mo _net_ $1.35
-
- =A Romance In Transit.= 16mo _net_ .75
-
-
-[Illustration: “Did you really think that some one was shooting at
- _you_?” (_Page 7._)]
-
-
-
-
- After the Manner
- of Men
-
- BY
- FRANCIS LYNDE
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY_
- ARTHUR E. BECHER
-
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- NEW YORK::::::::::1916
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- Published September, 1916
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- JOSEPH FRATER,
-
- LOYAL FRIEND OF MANY YEARS,
- TO WHOM MUCH OF THE MATERIAL AND ALL OF THE
- ATMOSPHERE OF THE STORY IS OWING
-
- THIS BOOK
-
- IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED,
- WITH GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS FROM
- THE AUTHOR
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. THE TOWNLANDER 1
-
- II. THE SOW’S EAR 16
-
- III. THE GOLDEN YOUTH 30
-
- IV. IN WHICH CARFAX ENLISTS 47
-
- V. PARTLY SENTIMENTAL 59
-
- VI. DADDY LAYNE, AND OTHERS 73
-
- VII. COMPANY COME 82
-
- VIII. THE STUBBORN ROCK 96
-
- IX. A BAD NIGHT FOR RUCKER 114
-
- X. BLIND ALLEYS 125
-
- XI. ROSEMARY AND RUE 148
-
- XII. DULL STEEL 164
-
- XIII. THE BURNT CHILD 177
-
- XIV. THE LOGIC OF FACT 194
-
- XV. MAMMY ANN’S GRAVE 207
-
- XVI. A FRIEND AT NEED 230
-
- XVII. AN ANTICLIMAX 248
-
- XVIII. EVOLUTIONARY 261
-
- XIX. THE HUMAN EQUATION 278
-
- XX. LIMITATIONS 294
-
- XXI. THE CLANSMEN 305
-
- XXII. OUT OF A CLEAR SKY 323
-
- XXIII. AT WESTWOOD HOUSE 334
-
- XXIV. THE UNKNOWN QUANTITY 346
-
- XXV. THE MANGLING OF POICTIERS 365
-
- XXVI. TRYON’S NEWS 377
-
- XXVII. CLOUD-WRAITHS 389
-
- XXVIII. THE OCOEE’S ANSWER 397
-
- XXIX. BEYOND THE GAP 410
-
- XXX. A GROUNDED WIRE 419
-
- XXXI. ON PISGAH’S HEIGHT 436
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- “Did you really think that some one was shooting at
- _you_?” _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- Carfax stopped abruptly and said no more 162
-
- “Poictiers, I’m a ruined man!” 328
-
- “My heavens!” gasped the discoverer; and a voice, apparently
- at his elbow, said: “Quite so” 400
-
-
-
-
-After the Manner of Men
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-The Townlander
-
-
-Coincident with a miniature thunderclap shattering the summer afternoon
-silence of the mountain forest a bullet whipped through the foliage,
-leaving a half-severed twig to flutter and dangle within easy arm’s
-reach. Tregarvon had never before been under fire, and he was a product
-of twentieth-century civilization and the cities. Yet his colonial
-ancestor, figuring as a seasoned Indian fighter in Braddock’s disaster,
-could scarcely have picked his sheltering tree with better judgment or
-dropped behind it with more mechanical celerity.
-
-“Great Peter!” he exclaimed, under his breath, struggling to draw the
-pocket-entangled weapon which he had persuaded himself to add to his
-impedimenta before leaving Philadelphia, under the impression that it
-would be a necessary part of a land-looker’s equipment in the Tennessee
-mountains; “Great Pete----”
-
-The pocket yielded with a sound of tearing cloth, and the first shock
-of panic subsided. Crouching behind his tree, the Philadelphian twirled
-the cylinder of the revolver to make sure that all the chambers were
-filled. While he was doing this there was another report, and this time
-the bullet scored the sheltering oak. Tregarvon edged himself into
-position, with due regard for the enemy’s line of fire, and cocked his
-weapon, not, however, with any reassuring confidence in it, or in his
-own steadiness of nerve.
-
-Peering judiciously around the buttressing knees of the barricade oak,
-he could see nothing save a matted tangle of briers, blackberry bushes,
-and laurel. But being the possessor of a fairly active imagination, he
-fancied he could see more--the sunlight reflecting from the polished
-barrel of a rifle, for example, and, by another turn of the imaginative
-screw, the indistinct figure of his assailant far back among the trees.
-
-While he was thus reconnoitring, a third shot ripped through the
-screening laurel and clicked spitefully into his oak. Since the
-click came first, with the report a fraction of a second later, he
-reserved his fire. It was evident that the hidden marksman was well
-beyond pistol range, and he decided to save his ammunition against
-a time when it might stand a chance of being more effective. The
-target-practice part of his education had been neglected, and he
-especially distrusted his marksmanship with the nickel-plated house
-weapon, the more since he had never as yet fired it.
-
-Harboring this distrust, he was content for the moment to make
-himself small behind his tree, sitting between two of the flanking
-root buttresses with his back against the barrier trunk, and wincing
-in spite of himself while other bullets, following now in rapid and
-measured succession, whined to right or left, or buried themselves in
-the solid wood. Oddly enough, the misses, though he could feel the wind
-of them on either side, were less disquieting than the hits. At each
-impact of lead against wood there was a jarring little shock quite
-thrillingly transmissible to quick-set nerves in sympathetic contact
-with the other side of the target.
-
-“By Jove! if Elizabeth could only see me now!” he chuckled broadly;
-“Elizabeth, or the _mutterchen_, or even my rough-riding little sister!
-This fusillading miscreant of mine must be one of the McNabb outlaws,
-trying in his elemental fashion to settle the old feud about our title
-to the coal lands. By and by, I suppose-- Whew!”
-
-The spine-tingling thrill was so real this time that he was half
-minded to look and see if the impacting bullet had not come all the way
-through the tree to bulge the bark on his side of it. But he restrained
-the prompting and went on talking to himself.
-
-“By and by, I suppose, he’ll get tired of blazing away at a safe
-distance and come charging down upon me. Then I shall be most unhappily
-obliged to kill him; which will be about the crassest misfortune that
-could happen, next to his killing me. Confound their barbarous feuds,
-anyway! Why can’t these out-of-date mountain people wake up and realize
-that they are living in the twentieth century of civilization and
-Christian enlightenment? That’s what I’d like to know!”
-
-The only reply to this very reasonable query being the vicious “ping”
-of another rifle-bullet, he went on discontentedly.
-
-“As if matters were not hopeless enough without adding a scrap with
-these silly mountaineers about the land titles! Everything torn up at
-home, the family anchor pulled out by the roots in the steel merger,
-two women to be taken care of--with Elizabeth presently to make a
-third--and nothing to make good on but this failure of a Cumberland
-Mountain coal mine! And now, before I’ve had time to turn around, the
-spirit moves this rifle-popping moonshine-maker to turn his grouch
-loose until I feel it in my bones that I shall have to kill him to make
-him quit!”
-
-Then, the _zip-zip_ of the bullets beginning again after a momentary
-pause, the soliloquy went on: “That’s right; keep it up, you pin-headed
-barbarian! I’ve got you for an excuse to commit manslaughter--that’s
-the surest thing there is. Which brings on more talk. I wonder how it
-feels to kill a man? I’d give all my old shoes if I didn’t have to
-find out experimentally. Then there is Elizabeth: it is two completed
-generations back to her Quaker forepeople, but she is quite capable of
-flatly refusing to marry what they would have stigmatized as ‘a man of
-blood.’ Say, you bloodthirsty assassin--that was an uncomfortably near
-one!”
-
-After the glancing shot, which had flicked a handful of bark chips into
-Tregarvon’s lap, the firing ceased. Assuring himself that the battling
-moment at short range was approaching, the young man from the North sat
-tight, gripping the house pistol in nervous anticipation, and listening
-tensely for the sound of advancing footfalls.
-
-The suspense was short. Some one, several persons, as it presently
-appeared, were pushing through the tangle of low-hanging undergrowth
-toward the oak-tree. Tregarvon wondered that there should be no attempt
-cautionary on the part of the enemy; wondered again, this time with
-nettle pricklings of foolishness, when a voice, cheerfully exultant and
-unmistakably feminine, cried out close at hand.
-
-“Oh, you people--come here and see! I _did_ hit it--_lots_ of times;
-not that trifling little sheet of paper, of course”--scornfully--“but
-the tree, I mean. Just come and-- _Ee-e-ow!_”
-
-The shrill little scream of surprise and alarm was for Mr. Vance
-Tregarvon, issuing cautiously from behind the bulwark oak, still
-mystified, and still absently gripping the pistol.
-
-The Philadelphian found himself confronting a young woman gowned
-in stone-blue linen, and wearing an embroidery hat to match, the
-hat shading a face too unaffectedly winsome to be called beautiful,
-perhaps, but yet the most piquant and expressive face he had ever
-looked upon. This young woman was carrying a target-rifle; and pinned
-upon the bullet-punctured side of the oak was the square of white paper
-at which she had evidently been shooting.
-
-There were others coming up to join the pretty markswoman: a
-lean-faced, mild-eyed, spectacled gentleman of middle age, whose coat
-suggested the church or the schoolroom; a vivacious lady in black, with
-strongly marked eyebrows and eloquent hands and shoulders; a young
-woman who wore an artist’s smock over her walking-gown; and another who
-was girlish enough to wear a red tarn, and to be the prettier for it.
-But by preference Tregarvon made his stammering apologies to the blue
-embroidery hat.
-
-“Ah--er--please don’t mind me,” he begged, acutely conscious that his
-abrupt and pistol-bearing entrance was handicapping him prodigiously.
-“I thought--that is--er--you see, I really couldn’t know that it was
-merely a peaceful target practice, and I----”
-
-“Of all things!” gasped the young woman, her slate-blue eyes
-emphasizing her shocked amazement. “Did you really think that some one
-was shooting at _you_? But, of course, you must have! How perfectly
-dreadful!”
-
-Tregarvon was trying ineffectually to hide the ornamental revolver in
-his coat pocket when the others closed in.
-
-“You are sure you are not hurt?” the mild-eyed escort made haste to
-inquire, and Tregarvon grinned sheepishly.
-
-“Only in my self-esteem,” he confessed. “I was silly enough to think
-that somebody was trying to mark me down, though I might have known
-better after the first shot or two.”
-
-“But how could you know when you were behind the tree and couldn’t see
-us?” protested the one who had been doing the shooting. “I’m sure it
-speaks libraries for your self-control that you didn’t retaliate in
-kind! Don’t you think so, Madame Fortier?” and she appealed to the lady
-with the Gallic eyebrows and the eloquent shoulders.
-
-“_Ciel!_ but the _sangfroid_--what you call the cold blood--of these
-American zhentlemen is of a grandeur the moz’ magnificent!” exclaimed
-madame. “Mees Richardia she is shoot a hondred time at zis zhentleman,
-and he is say he is injure’ onlee in hees _amour-propre_!”
-
-It was at this point that the humor of the situation overtook the chief
-offender, and she laughed, the sweetest and most delectable laugh that
-ever gladdened the ears of a young man keenly sensitive to the charms
-of heavenly slate-blue eyes, a piquant face, and a voice remindful of
-wood-thrushes and song-sparrows and golden-throated warblers.
-
-“After this, there is nothing left for us but to declare ourselves,”
-she submitted ruefully, turning to the spectacled escort. “It is the
-least we can do to save the gentleman the trouble of describing us if
-he wishes to have us taken before Squire Prigmore.”
-
-But now Tregarvon was regaining some measure of equanimity.
-
-“Let me be the one to begin the identifying process,” he amended. “My
-name is Vance Tregarvon, and I have the misfortune to be the present
-owner of the valueless piece of property known as the Ocoee Mine. You
-are more than welcome to make a rifle-range of my landscape any time
-you wish. I am quite certain it is the only useful purpose it has ever
-subserved.”
-
-The gentleman whose coat was either clerical or schoolmasterish, bowed
-gravely and took his turn, prefacing it with a question.
-
-“Have you ever heard of Highmount College for Young Women, Mr.
-Tregarvon?”
-
-Tregarvon, in deference to piquancies and slate-blue eyes and the
-like, was tempted to quibble and say that, of course, every one knew
-of Highmount College. But the heavenly eyes were holding him, and they
-promised intolerance of anything but the pellucid truth. So he shook
-his head regretfully.
-
-“Such is fame--the fame of an old, a great, and a noble institution
-of learning!” said the spectacled one, in mock deprecation. “With
-a foundation laid over half a century in the past, with the most
-healthful and charming location on the entire Cumberland Mountain for
-its site; with a corps of instructors second only to those of the
-richly endowed colleges of the North--correct me, Miss Richardia, if
-I am not quoting the prospectus accurately--with all these splendid
-advantages, and with a student body drawn from the oldest and most
-distinguished families of the South.... Mr. Tregarvon, can it be
-possible----”
-
-“Spare me!” laughed the victim. “You must remember that I am only a
-poor, ignorant provincial from Philadelphia, less than a fortnight out
-of the shell.”
-
-“We are merely trying to impress you properly so that you will
-think twice before having us arrested for trespass and attempted
-assassination,” broke in the laughing markswoman. “We may not look
-it, but we are a majority of the faculty of Highmount College for
-Young Women. Let me present you to Madame Fortier, Modern Languages;
-to Miss Longstreet, Art; to Miss Farron, Assistant Mathematics; and
-to Professor William Wilberforce Hartridge, M.A., Vanderbilt, Higher
-Mathematics and the Natural Sciences.”
-
-Tregarvon bowed in turn to the Gallic eyebrows, to the artist’s smock,
-to the red tam-o’-shanter, and shook hands cordially with the M.A.,
-Vanderbilt.
-
-“This is fine, you know; it’s like Robinson Crusoe’s meeting with his
-rescuers,” he asserted joyously. “This is my first real hearing of the
-English tongue since I began doing time down yonder in Coalville, with
-my old ruin of an office-building for a dungeon, and Mrs. Matt Tryon
-for my jail matron. Is it very far to Highmount College? And may I hope
-sometime to----”
-
-The three younger women laughed at this, and Madame Fortier hastened to
-be hospitable.
-
-“We shall be moz’ charm’, Monsieur Tregarvong. I will spik for
-President Caswell and hees good madame.” But Tregarvon waited for Miss
-Richardia’s confirmation, which was given unhesitatingly.
-
-“Certainly, you must come, if you can spare the time,” she affirmed.
-“We were speaking of you, and of the Ocoee prospects, at dinner the
-other evening, and Doctor Caswell was even then threatening to look
-you up. I think he said he had met your father in years gone by.”
-
-“I am sure that was exceedingly kind and hospitable--to think of taking
-the stranger up before he had made himself known,” said Tregarvon, with
-the hearth-warmed exile’s glow at his heart. They were moving over
-to the rifle-rest, and he had fallen a step or two behind with Miss
-Richardia. “You would have to be a castaway in a strange land yourself
-to know how good it feels to be counted in.”
-
-“I have been both--the castaway and the counted-in,” she returned. “I
-was four years in Boston; two of them without knowing a single soul
-outside of a limited little Conservatory circle.”
-
-“Ah,” he said, with the air of one who pats himself on the back for his
-own perspicacity. “You didn’t introduce yourself a moment ago, as you
-may remember, but I was sure you were Music.”
-
-“Why were you?” she asked.
-
-“Because you look it.”
-
-“Harmony or discord?” she queried, with the bright little laugh
-remindful of the bird songs.
-
-“How can you ask! Celestial harmony--no less!” It was only a matter of
-a hundred yards, between the oak-tree target and the firing-stand, but
-they were getting on very well, indeed.
-
-“Following that line of reasoning, you might say that Miss Longstreet
-looks picturesque, I suppose? And Miss Farron----”
-
-“Miss Farron is far too charming to warrant any allusion to figures,
-mathematical or other,” he retorted lightly.
-
-“And how about Professor Billy?”
-
-Tregarvon chuckled. “Is that what you call him? I’m glad I have a
-Christian name that can’t very well be nicked entirely out of all
-resemblance to the original. Which reminds me: have I got to call you
-‘Miss Richardia’? It sounds awfully formal--don’t you think?--in the
-mouth of a man who has been familiarly shot at by its possessor.”
-
-“You had better,” she replied calmly. “I am ‘Miss Dick’ in the
-classrooms; but that is the student body’s privilege. Other people have
-to earn it.”
-
-“Consider me an employee from this moment, if you please. I’m good at
-earning things.”
-
-“Have you earned the Ocoee property?” she asked, altogether, as it
-appeared, by way of making conversation.
-
-“No; but my father did--very bitterly, as it turned out. May I ask
-what you know about the Ocoee?”
-
-“Only what every one knows: that it brings sorrow and ruin to everybody
-who has anything to do with it.”
-
-They had reached the rifle-stand, and Hartridge was reloading the
-target-gun for Miss Farron. There was still a little isolation for
-Tregarvon and his companion, and the young man made the most of it.
-
-“Your words imply a lot more than they say,” he suggested. “I shall
-take an early opportunity to make my Highmount call, and when I do,
-perhaps you will tell me some of the things I need to know.”
-
-“Professor Hartridge or President Caswell can tell you better than I
-can,” she demurred, as one dismissing an unpleasant subject. “I only
-know that the mine has always been a wretched failure; first a thing
-of broken promises, and afterward a cunningly devised pitfall for the
-unwary.”
-
-If Tregarvon had for his major weakness the love of women, he was not
-lacking such other qualities as may go with broad shoulders, good
-gray eyes set wide apart, a clean-cut face, and a resolute jaw. The
-squareness of the jaw was emphasized when he said: “This is the time
-when the Ocoee quits being a failure, Miss Richardia. It is up to me
-to make it a success, and I mean to do it.”
-
-It was at this conjuncture that Miss Farron, trying vainly to sight
-the rifle over the fallen-tree firing-stand, broke in upon the
-_tête-à-tête_.
-
-“Dickie, dear, do come here and hold your hand over my left eye,” she
-called plaintively. “It just persists in coming open to see what the
-other one is trying to do.”
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-The Sow’s Ear
-
-
-The rough-hewn world of mountain and valley had taken on a distinctly
-cheerful aspect for the young man from Philadelphia when, late in the
-afternoon, he reluctantly separated himself from the rifle-shooting
-party and turned his steps valleyward to keep an appointment made
-two days earlier with one Angus Duncan, an old Scotch mining expert,
-upon whom the great Southern title company, unlimited, had long since
-conferred the brevet of “captain.”
-
-Whatever the Tregarvon gray eyes and resolute jaw promised in the
-way of decisive action and stubborn determination, their possessor
-was never born to be a contented anchorite. Not even the matchless
-beauties of nature, arrayed in all the glories of a Tennessee mountain
-September, could atone for the solitude imposed by the dead-alive
-hamlet of Coalville, and the newly opened prospect of an occasional
-escape to the congenial social atmosphere of the mountain-top school
-was like the shadow of a great rock in a thirsty land.
-
-Tregarvon was planning the first of these escapes, and forecasting the
-time which would be consumed in freighting his motor-car down from
-Philadelphia, when the forest path ended and let him out among the
-deserted slope-foot buildings and empty coke-ovens of the Ocoee. He
-glanced at his watch. The up-train on the branch railroad was due; it
-had doubtless announced its approach by some distant crossing whistle,
-since the little squad of village idlers had left its cantonments under
-the porch of Tait’s store to straggle across to the station platform.
-
-Tregarvon remained on his own side of the railroad-tracks and waited.
-He knew that Captain Duncan’s visit would be discussed in all its
-possible bearings in the idlers’ caucus at Tait’s, and he was willing
-to disappoint the country-store gossips when it came in his way.
-
-There were but few passengers to get on or off at Coalville when the
-branch-line train rolled up to the platform, and Tregarvon had no
-difficulty in identifying his man; the stocky, ruddy-faced, shrewd-eyed
-mining engineer who had been named to him as the foremost coal expert
-in the Tennessee field. He cut Duncan out of the group of loungers at
-the instant of hand-shaking, and took him across to the dilapidated
-building which had once been the superintendent’s office and the
-commissary of the Ocoee Company, seeking, and securing, as he imagined,
-ear-shot privacy for the business conference.
-
-But privacy in a Southern country hamlet, where gossip is as the breath
-of life to the isolated few, is only to be bought with a price. From
-his post of observation in Tait’s doorway, a lank, bristly-bearded man
-in grimy jeans that had once been butternut, marked the direction of
-the retreat across the railroad-tracks, made a dodging détour around
-the engine of the standing train, and was safely hidden behind a thick
-clump of althea bushes at the corner of the office-building when
-Tregarvon and the Scotchman came leisurely to sit on the door-stone.
-
-“Ye’re paying me for an expert opeenion, Mr. Tregarvon, and that’s what
-I’m bound to gie ye,” the engineer was saying. “I’ve known the Ocoee
-ever since the first pick was piked intil it, and ye’ll be wasting
-your time and money if you try to develop it. That’s what I told your
-father, and it’s what I’m telling his son.”
-
-“Poor coal? Or not enough of it?” Tregarvon’s manner was that of a man
-desirous of knowing the exact facts.
-
-“Good coal--fine! It makes a coke that would run everything this side
-of Pocahontas, or maybe Connellsville, out o’ the market. And there is
-enough of it if the two veins could be worked as one. But there’s the
-bogie, Mr. Tregarvon; two well-defined veins, each a foot and a half
-thick, one above the other, and with six foot of solid rock between. If
-you had twenty such veins it wouldn’t pay to work them in this part of
-the country.”
-
-“You mean that the digging out of the rock between the two coal seams
-would eat up all the profits?”
-
-“Just that.”
-
-Tregarvon was pulling ineffectually at his short pipe. When he stooped
-to pluck a spear of grass for a stem-cleaner he said: “Wasn’t it the
-notion of the earliest promoters that the two veins would merge into
-one, farther back in the mountain?”
-
-The expert waved his hand toward the long and costly inclined tramway
-running straight up the steep slope of the mountain to the two black
-openings at the foot of the cliff-line.
-
-“Ye’d think they believed in it--wouldn’t ye now--to build that tramway
-on the strength of it? Two hunner’ thousand and better they put in
-here, first and last; on the tramway and the coke-ovens, the miners’
-houses, and this fine office-building that’s crum’ling down behind our
-backs! And with every practical coal man in the country telling them
-that such a thing as two veins--two separate veins, mind ye--coming
-into one was a geological impossibeelity. Parker--the man who set the
-trap and caught everybody--he knew, I’m thinking; but Judge Birrell and
-all the rest of ’em were crazy--fair crazy!”
-
-“But is it a geological impossibility, Captain Duncan? That is one of
-the questions I got you up here to answer for me,” Tregarvon put in.
-
-The Scotch engineer was too cautious to be definitely oracular.
-
-“It’s never been h’ard of yet,” he replied shrewdly, “and there’s a
-many to tell ye that the day o’ merricles is past. But that isn’t all,
-Mr. Tregarvon. Besides being a sow’s ear that ye canna hope to make
-into a silk purse, the Ocoee has another handicap. If ye had your coal
-in profitable shape and quantity, ye’d never be allowed to mine and
-coke and market it; never in this warld.”
-
-“Who would stop me?”
-
-“The C. C. & I. Company, which is another name in this part o’ the
-warld for Consolidated Coal--the trust. The combine owns all the
-producing mines hereabouts; they’ve got one in full blast at Whitlow,
-five miles above this. If you should develop into anything worth while,
-it would be another case of the lion and the lamb lying down in peace
-together--with the Ocoee lamb inside of the trust lion. They couldn’t
-afford to lat ye operate. Your coke, for as much of it as ye could
-make, would drive theirs out o’ the market.”
-
-“Well?” said the Philadelphian.
-
-“They’d buy ye, if they could haggle ye down to sell at a bargain; and,
-failing in that, they’d break ye. I’m not questioning your resources,
-ye unnerstand; that part of it was none of my business after I’d had
-your check for my fee safely in my pocket,” he threw in cannily. “But
-tell me, now: if ye had your four or five or even six foot of coal, are
-ye big enough in the way o’ backing and capital to fight Consolidated
-Coal wi’ any hope of coming out alive?”
-
-“That is as it may be,” said Tregarvon, wishing neither to deny nor
-to affirm publicly. Then he asked casually if the engineer could give
-chapter and page proving the Cumberland Coal and Iron Company’s policy
-of extermination.
-
-“Can I no?” said the Scotchman, with a snap of the shrewd eyes. “I can
-show ye wrecked mines by the handfu’ in a day’s ride up and down this
-same Wehatchee Valley we’re sitting in. ’Tis the power o’ money, Mr.
-Tregarvon. When ye get between the jaws o’ that crusher, ye’re like
-this”--picking up a bit of friable sandstone and crumbling it in his
-palm.
-
-The younger man smoked on thoughtfully for a time. Then he said: “Two
-of the points upon which I wished to have your opinion have been
-covered pretty conclusively, it would seem. But there is a third. What
-about this trouble with the McNabbs over the land title?”
-
-The Scotchman waved the third point away as if it had been a buzzing
-fly.
-
-“The McNabbs are just a whiskey-making lot of poor bodies living back
-in the Pocket beyond Highmount. An unscrupulous lawyer-scamp got hold
-of them when the second Ocoee Company was fair rolling in money, and
-showed them how they could trump up a claim to a wedge-like slip o’
-land on the top o’ the mountain which, if the claim could be made good,
-would cut off the mine a hundred feet or so back from the cliff. There
-was neither sense nor justice in it, and the courts said so. Ye’ll be
-having no trouble wi’ the McNabbs, unless one o’ them might be taking a
-pop at ye wi’ his squirrel-gun some fine day.”
-
-Tregarvon smiled, recalling his sensations while Miss Richardia’s
-bullets were snipping bark souvenirs from his sheltering oak.
-
-“One wouldn’t be scared out by a little thing like that,” he remarked
-half humorously. Then he asked, quite abruptly, another question--the
-chief question for an answer to which he had paid the expert’s fee.
-
-“I have been told, Captain Duncan, that you have made an analysis
-of the Ocoee coals. Also, I have been given to understand that no
-two veins in these Tennessee coal-measures have exactly the same
-characteristics; that the quality of the coal varies with its distance
-from the original surface, though the depth difference between any two
-deposits may be very slight. If you didn’t know of the existence of the
-six-foot layer of stone lying between my two coal seams, would you, or
-would you not, say that they were one and the same?”
-
-Duncan took time to consider before answering the crucial question.
-
-“I see what ye’re driving at, now,” he said at length. “Ye’ve paid me
-for a true answer, Mr. Tregarvon, and much as I’ll hate to see your
-father’s son banging his head against a stone wall, I’ll give it ye.
-I’ve made half a dozen analyses: so far as they prove anything, the
-coal in the two seams is the same.”
-
-“Thank you,” returned Tregarvon, drawing a free breath as if a burden
-had been lifted from his shoulders by the answer. And then, as a
-quavering whistle blast announced the approach of the down freight
-train on the branch: “There is your return train, Captain Duncan. If I
-had any hospitality to offer you, you shouldn’t go back to Hesterville
-to-night. As it is, I know you’ll be glad you don’t have to stop over
-in Coalville. Even the name is a misnomer, it would seem.”
-
-The grizzled Scotchman had discharged his duty and earned his fee. But
-the cravings of a purely Caledonian curiosity were still unsatisfied.
-
-“And what’ll ye be doing, think ye, Mr. Tregarvon?” he asked
-inquisitively.
-
-Tregarvon’s answer was pointedly and purposefully indifferent. “Oh, I
-don’t know definitely yet. I may take a notion to butt my head against
-the stone wall, and I may not. If I should, you’ll doubtless hear of
-it. Good-by; it was mighty good of you to take the trouble to come and
-talk with me when you might have put me off with a letter.”
-
-Though the leave-taking at the door of the office-building was a fact
-accomplished, Tregarvon prolonged it a little by walking across to the
-station with Duncan. Thereby he missed a possible chance of seeing the
-retreat of the man who had been crouching behind the althea bushes, the
-dodging run, first to the shelter of the row of coke-ovens, and later
-to the lower fringe of the Mount Pisgah forest, darkening now in the
-early valley twilight.
-
-Late that night, in his room in the cobwebbed and dismantled
-office-building, Tregarvon wrote two letters. The first was to a
-certain golden youth in New York, a young man rejoicing in the ancient
-and honorable name of Poictiers Carfax, and whose father had left him
-more money than he knew what to do with. Upon Carfax Tregarvon leaned
-as upon a brother, having shared rooms with the golden one in the
-university at a period in which the Tregarvon family check could also
-have been drawn for seven figures.
-
-“You are always howling and taking on about living the simple life,”
-was the opening phrase in the letter to Carfax. “I wish you could be
-with me to-night and have a taste of what it really is--ten thousand
-miles from the Great White Way or a decent beefsteak. I’d describe it
-for you if this were anything but a begging letter--which it isn’t.
-
-“First, I wish you’d send your machinist over to Philadelphia and have
-him ship my car to me here. Tell him to put in extras of everything,
-from spark-plugs to tires, just the same as if he were sending it to a
-man in Darkest Africa.
-
-“Next (and this is of more importance to me, and perhaps less to you),
-I am going into a scheme here which promises to leave me stony broke
-before I shall have pulled half-way through the experimental stage,
-and will possibly bankrupt even the Carfax strong box when it fairly
-gets its second wind. I may have to sell you some stock, later on, and
-to that end I’ll be glad if you’ll keep in touch--so that you may be
-‘touched’--or at least keep yourself within reach of a wire.
-
-“This is all I’m going to write, for the time being, except to say that
-I’ve thought of you about five times a minute during the past week, and
-have tried to picture you in Coalville, hesitating between suicide and
-a lingering death from disgust. Come down and try it. I’ll go bail it
-will give you an entirely new set of sensations. What do you say?”
-
-The second letter was to Miss Elizabeth Wardwell, and it was a
-masterpiece in its way--the way of a man who writes as he would talk,
-and who talks when he would much better hold his tongue.
-
-“The adventures began to-day,” so ran the words of unwisdom. “While I
-was clambering around on the mountain above the Ocoee opening, _zip!_
-came a bullet--yes, an indubitable leaden bullet fired from a gun--near
-enough to make me dodge. What will you think of me when I write it down
-in muddy black ink on white paper that I hid behind a tree! I did, you
-know, and immediately had plenty of reasons for being thankful that the
-tree was big enough to cover me, and thick enough through to stop a
-rifle-bullet.
-
-“For fifteen minutes, or such a matter--though it seemed a moderately
-long lifetime--my assassin kept busy with the sharpshooting, and I
-could feel myself growing smaller with every fresh spat of a bullet
-into my tree. What did I think? I thought of you, my dear Elizabeth,
-and wondered if you’d keep your promise to marry me in accordance with
-the terms of Uncle Byrd’s will if I should be obliged to kill a man.
-Would you?
-
-“When it was all over, my assassins--it turned out that there was a
-bunch of them--proved to be a party of school-teachers from Highmount
-College shooting at a mark, which the same--though I hadn’t seen it,
-and didn’t remotely suspect its existence--was affixed to the farther
-side of my tree. There were five people in the party; three attractive
-young women, a French lady of uncertain age, and a middle-aged
-professor in spectacles doing escort duty. Of course, there were
-explanations and apologies all around: I had slipped out, cocked
-revolver in hand, with a sort of ‘Now I’ll get you!’ expression on my
-face, I suppose.
-
-“They were all very kind to me, especially the young woman who had
-been doing the actual shooting. I wish you could hear her laugh.
-It is the sweetest thing in Tennessee. She has the soft Southern
-voice, and a face that can be perfectly wooden one minute and a whole
-insurrectionary passion-stirring volume in the next. No, Miss Wardwell,
-I didn’t make love to her. How could I, with all the others standing
-about and looking on and listening in?
-
-“I’m to make myself free of the college, they say, and perhaps I
-shall--later on. Please don’t lift those matchless eyebrows of yours
-and ask if I’m not going to wait at least until I have met these people
-properly. If you could see my present surroundings, and realize for one
-little instant what an elemental ruffian these same surroundings are
-likely to make of me, you’d urge me to go.
-
-“Please write often. You can’t imagine how I hang upon the arrival of
-your letters--how much they mean to me.”
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-The Golden Youth
-
-
-It was on the day following Captain Angus Duncan’s visit that the
-hamlet of Coalville, nestling at the foot of Mount Pisgah, took a fresh
-start as an industrial centre. Word went out from Tait’s store, which
-served as a general intelligence exchange for the country roundabout,
-that Tregarvon wanted laborers and would pay good wages.
-
-The men came; some from the half-tilled valley farms, a few from the C.
-C. & I. mines farther up the railroad, and two or three mountaineers.
-Two of the mountain dwellers, long-haired, unshaven backwoodsmen, gave
-their names as Morgan and Sill, suppressing, for some reason best known
-to themselves, their surname of McNabb. Also there came the lean,
-bristly-bearded man who had squatted behind the althea bushes at the
-corner of the office-building during Tregarvon’s talk with Captain
-Duncan; James Sawyer, by name. Tregarvon knew nothing of this man’s
-antecedents; of the forehistory of any of them, for that matter. What
-he demanded was work, and he went about securing it in the best of all
-possible ways: by stripping off his coat and acting as his own foreman.
-
-In strenuous toilings fled the first two weeks, during which period
-the old machinery was overhauled, the tramway up the mountain repaired
-and put in running order, and the _débris_ of disuse cleared away.
-For the aggressive campaign a deep-well drilling plant was secured
-in Chattanooga, and upon its arrival all things were made ready for
-transporting it to the top of the plateau mountain.
-
-Tregarvon’s plan, which he thought was original with him, was to go
-back on the level mountain top with his test-drill, and to sink a
-series of holes down to the coal-measures. If the first test should
-show the two veins still separated by the stubborn ledge of intervening
-rock, he would move the machinery farther back and try again--and yet
-again, if need be; though of all this he said no more to his workmen
-than was necessary to enable them to help intelligently.
-
-At the beginning of the second week the drilling machinery was hauled
-up the mountain, and two days later, Uncle William, a solemn-faced
-old negro with a narrow fringe of white wool ringing his otherwise
-perfectly bald head, made his appearance at Coalville.
-
-He was waiting for Tregarvon on the Thursday morning when the
-Philadelphian turned out to go up the mountain with his working gang;
-waiting to doff his battered hat and scrape his foot, and to announce
-in honeyed tones that he had come “ter tek cha’ge of de young marsteh.”
-
-Quite naturally, Tregarvon thought there must be some mistake, and said
-so; but the old man persisted with the velvety sort of pertinacity
-which refuses to be denied, vaunting himself as a body-servant of “the
-quality,” and acquiring, or seeming to acquire, a curious hardness of
-hearing when Tregarvon questioned him as to where he had come from and
-who had sent him.
-
-“Yas, suh--yas, suh; cayn’t hear ve’y good on dat side o’ my haid--no,
-suh. But I’se suttin sho’ gwine tek mighty good keer o’ you-all; I is
-dat, marsteh.”
-
-“But a body-servant is the last thing on earth that I am needing here,
-uncle!” protested Tregarvon, firing his final shot of objection. “If I
-could find a good cook now, that would be more to the point.”
-
-“Dat’s it--dat’s it, suh. You-all jes’ go ’long up de mounting and
-boss dem po’ white trash, and lef’ ol’ Unc’ Wilyum ter fix up dat
-cook-house. He gwine show you what quality cookin’ is; yas, suh; he
-will dat!”
-
-Tregarvon left the old man bowing and scraping and backing away to
-take possession of the deserted office-building and its detached
-cook-shanty; and when he came back to the valley in the evening he
-gasped to remember how near he had come to incurring the penalty
-imposed upon those who refuse to entertain angels in disguise.
-
-The old office-building was swept and garnished, above and below.
-Out of the lumber-room in the basement Uncle William had rescued a
-dining-table, chairs, napery of a sort, and dishes; and in the rear
-room, which had once been the office of the Ocoee superintendent, a
-supper was spread, hot, smoking, and appetizing enough to tempt a sick
-man. Even the napkins, improvised for the moment out of pieces of a
-flour-sack washed to snowy whiteness, were not lacking; and when the
-master would sit down, Uncle William was behind him to whisk the chair
-away and to replace it, with all the deftness of a trained butler.
-
-Tregarvon ate and drank in grateful and heartfelt silence down to the
-black coffee, which was served, for the want of the proper crockery,
-in an egg-cup, with a small fruit dish for a saucer. Then he made the
-amende honorable.
-
-“I don’t know who you are, or where you came from, Uncle William, but I
-owe you an apology, none the less,” he said. “Consider that I belong to
-you for as long as you care to keep me--at your own price.”
-
-“Yas, suh; dat’s it--dat’s jes’ de way de quality talk to ol’ Unc’
-Wilyum, eve’y time--_hyuh! hyuh!_ ’Long erbout an hour o’ sun, white
-woman comed ercross f’om dat white-niggah cabin turrer side de big
-road, and she say: ‘I gwine fix up Mistoo Tregarbin’s suppeh.’ _I_ say,
-‘Mistoo Tregarbin ’sents his compliments an’ say t’ank you kin’ly, but
-he done got he own body-sarvant!’ Yas, suh; dat’s what I done tol’
-_huh_.”
-
-Tregarvon’s eyes twinkled.
-
-“You’ll be getting yourself disliked, Uncle William, if you put on your
-quality manners with Mrs. Tryon and her kind. They tell me that this
-county was Republican during the war.” Then he added: “Are you ready to
-tell me now who sent you here?”
-
-The old man was clearing the supper-table, and he seemed to have
-entirely misunderstood the query.
-
-“Dat ol’ cook-house? Yas, suh; it sholy did try me for to git dat ol’
-chimley ter mek de fiah bu’n for de supper-fixin’s. Ter-morrer I gwine
-chink him up some; yas, suh, I sholy is.”
-
-After Uncle William’s mysterious advent the work on the mountain
-progressed the more rapidly by precisely the difference between a
-well-fed leader and an ill-fed. Tregarvon and his pick-up crew wrought
-manfully, and on the eighteenth day--the day of fresh surprises--the
-drilling machinery had been safely transported to the plateau, had
-been set up, and was ready to be started on the test upon which the
-Tregarvon hopes were building airy structures of future affluence.
-
-At quitting-time on this eighteenth day of preparatory toil Tregarvon
-came down in a tram-car with his men and, after the dispersal at the
-mountain foot, stood for a moment on the office-building porch to let
-the quiet grandeur of the perfect autumn evening soak in and wash the
-work-weariness out of his jaded brain and muscles.
-
-The sun had gone behind the mountain for all the lower reaches of the
-valley, but its level rays were still pouring in a flood of yellow
-light across the flat-topped promontory crowned by the buildings of
-Highmount College. Pisgah, densely forested on slope and summit, loomed
-vast as the early shadows rose like silently drawn curtains to soften
-its rugged detail, and on the sky-line Tregarvon’s gaze sought and
-found the derrick skeleton of his drilling plant struck out in rigid
-lines of black against the hazy blue. Just above him the tramway cut
-its steeply ascending gash through the forest of the slope, and in his
-mind’s eye he could see the cars descending, each with its load of the
-reopened mine’s largesse, to be dumped upon the receiving-platform
-beside the row of coke-ovens.
-
-From the outlined derrick to the sun-illumined college buildings was
-an airy leap of a mile or more. Tregarvon had not as yet used his
-invitation, though the French teacher’s giving of it had been promptly
-confirmed by a cordial note from the president’s wife. The social
-hunger rose strong in the expatriated townlander as he let his eyes
-make the leap from the industries, typified by the derrick skeleton,
-to the possible relaxations harboring on Highmount. He meant to go;
-he promised himself afresh that he would go, the moment his motor-car
-should arrive and be put into commission to make the five-mile climb up
-the mountain pike from Coalville something less than an added weariness
-after a hard day’s work.
-
-He was still looking longingly up to the sun-shot heights and
-wondering why he had heard nothing from Poictiers Carfax, when a
-sound, breeze-blown up the valley, made him start and listen. When he
-heard it again it was nearer; the unmistakable roar of an automobile’s
-engines with the muffler cut out. To confirm the witness of the ear, a
-big yellow car presently topped the rise in the valley road below the
-village and came bounding over the roughnesses of the country wagon
-track toward the railroad crossing.
-
-Tregarvon immediately recognized his own car and the cacophonous
-thunderings of it; but it was only a guess that the slender young man
-in dust-coat and goggles behind the steering-wheel was Carfax; that the
-square-shouldered fellow in a leather jacket and closely fitting cap
-beside him was the machinist; and that the liveried person sitting bolt
-upright with folded arms in the exact centre of the tonneau seat was
-Merkley, Carfax’s imported valet.
-
-Tregarvon gasped, and his hands went up in the gesture of a man vainly
-striving to avert a crash of worlds. “Great Heavens!” he ejaculated.
-And at that moment Jefferson Walters, acting chairman of the convention
-of idlers in session under the awning of Tait’s store porch, made
-himself an imaginary errand to Tryon’s, across from and a little
-beyond the Ocoee office-building, timing his saunter to bring him upon
-the scene as an interested onlooker when the yellow car rolled up to
-Tregarvon’s door.
-
-“Hit do beat the Dutch--what-all gits up in the big woods when you
-ain’t totin’ a gun,” he remarked to the executive session when he
-returned to the other side of the railroad. “Young feller with the
-eye-glasses--he must be powerful nigh blind to have to wear sech big
-ones--he pulls up the team with a jerk at a han’le, and says: ‘Hello,
-Vance! Here we are; the dog and the tail, and the tail wagging the
-dog.’ And Tregarvon, he jest shets his fists tight and says, sort
-o’ hoarse-like, ‘My Lord, Putters’--’r some sech name as that--‘did
-you tool that car all the way down here from Philadelphia?’ ‘Sure, I
-did,’ says Goggles; and all the while that there circus ringmaster was
-a-settin’ up like he’d growed with a hick’ry saplin’ down his back,
-lookin’ straight out ahead of him as if he didn’t know that anything
-was happenin’,’r was ever goin’ to happen.”
-
-“President o’ the new Ocoee Comp’ny, d’ ye reckon?” queried one of the
-listeners.
-
-“President o’ nothin’! I’m comin’ to him, right now. ‘And you brought
-Merkley?’ says Tregarvon, speakin’ right low and soft, and chokin’
-some more. ‘Naturally,’ says Goggles, as cool as a cucumber, and then
-he climbs out and goes in with our man, with the ringmaster feller
-_totin’ the carpet-bags_!”
-
-“I know,” chirruped the oldest man in the circle, a wizened veteran of
-the Mexican War. “I seed ’em in the army; the West Pointer gin’rals had
-’em--called ’em val-lays.”
-
-“I wonder what-all our young feller over yander’ll turn up next?” mused
-Jabez Layne, bringing his huge jack-knife to bear upon a pocket-worn
-nugget of plug tobacco.
-
-“He’ll turn up a heap o’ trouble ef he don’t quit hirin’ them McNabbs,”
-volunteered one of the valley men who had hitherto been speechless.
-“He’s got two of ’em in his gang now--Morgan an’ Sill; an’ ef they
-don’t git him afore he gits the coal----”
-
-“Why, then, the C. C. & I.’ll git him about five minutes afte’wards,”
-laughed Walters, breaking in to complete the sentence in his own way.
-
-Thus ran the leisurely comment in the gray of the evening, working
-its way from man to man among the loungers on Tait’s porch. But in
-the dilapidated office-building across the railroad-tracks there was
-consternation.
-
-“Why, Poictiers, old man, you can’t endure it for twenty-four hours!”
-Tregarvon was protesting anxiously. “Look at this place--a dusty,
-cobwebby ruin that a self-respecting tramp wouldn’t lodge in! Heavens,
-man! couldn’t you see a joke when it was written out plain with a pen
-and ink? I would have as soon invited Elizabeth--meaning it!”
-
-Carfax had slipped out of his dust-coat and goggles, the valet
-assisting, and stood revealed as a handsome young fellow, a shade too
-well-groomed, perhaps, but with smiling good-nature atoning for the
-Carfax millions in every line of his beardless and almost effeminate
-face.
-
-“Now that is what I call downright inhospitable,” he laughed, with the
-faintest suspicion of a lisp on the sibilants, “after you had written
-me to come. Your letter is out in the go-cart, if Merkley didn’t forget
-to put it in my letter-case. Also, after I’ve driven that unspeakable
-car of yours over a thousand miles of the worst roads the rain ever
-rained on----”
-
-“Oh, good Lord, Poictiers--you’re welcome; as welcome as the sunshine!
-Don’t rub it into me that way. But the place; the--the----”
-
-Carfax’s smile was cherubic; or rather it would have been if the
-womanish lines of his face had not made it seraphic.
-
-“No apologies, you inexpressible old coal-digger. I knew you were
-only joking when you asked me--or rather dared me--to come down.
-But the notion seized me, and here I am. Here, likewise, is Rucker,
-the machinist, who will happily shift for himself; and what is more
-serious, perhaps, here also is Merkley. In all human probability I
-shall bleat like a sheep at the corn-pones and the hardtack, and all
-that; but Merkley was once in the service of the Duke of Marlford and
-his agonies----”
-
-Tregarvon laughed, and the stresses came off.
-
-“Luckily, I have acquired Uncle William, or, perhaps I should say, he
-has acquired me, since I wrote you, and you won’t starve, whatever
-happens to Merkley. Find your way up-stairs and take possession,
-while I tell the old uncle what he is up against in the way of
-supper-getting. You’ll find a bath, with ice-cold mountain spring
-water--my one luxury--at the end of the upper corridor.”
-
-Considering his resources, which were few and strictly limited, Uncle
-William shed a lustre all his own upon the dinner for two, which was
-served in the makeshift dining-room as soon as Carfax came down.
-
-“I’m sure you needn’t find fault with your table,” was the guest’s
-comment, when the snowy biscuits and the egg-bread, the fried chicken
-and the riced potatoes had passed in review. “I only wish I could
-induce an Uncle William to adopt me.”
-
-Thus the master; but the London-bred man was not faring so well. It was
-Uncle William’s effort to orient the valet--an effort vocalizing itself
-through the screened windows of Tregarvon’s dining-room--that reopened
-the question of the practicabilities.
-
-“Is you-all dat gemman’s white niggah?” was the blunt demand, made when
-Merkley, dinner-inclined, ventured into the sacred precincts of Uncle
-William’s detached cook-house.
-
-“H-I am Mr. Carfax’s man, and h-I’ll trouble you to serve my dinner,”
-was the lofty reply, returned in Merkley’s best tone of aloofness.
-
-“I’s askin’ ef you is dat gemman’s white niggah!”--scornfully. “Ef you
-is, you jes’ sots youse’f down on dat door-step an’ waits, same as
-any turrer niggah. When de quality folks gets t’rough, an’ _I_ gets
-t’rough, den you kin have what’s lef’.”
-
-Carfax waved a shapely hand toward the open window.
-
-“The irrepressible conflict has begun,” he remarked. “What do you do in
-such cases in--er--Coalville?”
-
-“We go down on our knees, metaphorically speaking, and plead with an
-outraged and righteously indignant Uncle William,” Tregarvon laughed;
-and when the old negro made his next appearance in the dining-room,
-the Philadelphian did it so skilfully that Merkley was provided for at
-a side table in the hall; not of grace, as certain mumblings from the
-cook-house proved, but because the master desired it.
-
-“That settles our status,” said Carfax, with the cherubic smile, “at
-least down to Rucker, the mechanician. I wonder what has become of him?”
-
-“If he is the same mechanical barbarian you had last year, he’ll not
-go hungry,” Tregarvon ventured; and then, with the assurance of a
-tried friend: “Whatever possessed you to come down here _en suite_,
-Poictiers? Did I give you the impression that the Ocoee headquarters
-was a summer-resort hotel?”
-
-Carfax laughed joyously. “You certainly did not. But I was tired of
-Lenox, and it was too early for the shooting. Moreover, you said you
-wanted your car, and the fit took me to drive it. That accounts for
-Rucker; and I suppose I account for poor Merkley. He is due to have
-the time of his gay young life--don’t you think?--with Uncle William
-and the elemental environment? But tell me more about your affair.
-What have you been letting yourself in for, down here in the Southern
-backwoods?”
-
-Uncle William had removed the cloth, and had put a tobacco-jar and two
-pipes on the table.
-
-“It is the best we can do, even for you,” said Tregarvon, indicating
-the tobacco aftermath apologetically. “Nobody has ever seen a bottle of
-wine in Coalville, and the whiskey of the country isn’t fit to drink.”
-Then he plunged abruptly into the story of the Ocoee, so far as he knew
-it, giving the last-resort reasons why he was trying to make a family
-windbreak of it, and Carfax heard him through patiently.
-
-“Then it sums itself up about like this: You haven’t anything at
-present, and if you succeed in getting anything, the other fellows will
-nab it,” he said, when Tregarvon had finished. “Is that about the size
-of it?”
-
-“You have surrounded it completely. Only I am eliminating the ‘if.’ I
-mean to get something, and I don’t mean to let the other fellows get
-away with it.”
-
-“Any move made yet?” queried Carfax, between delicate little puffs at
-the pipe of hospitality.
-
-“Not visibly. The trust people will scarcely move in the matter until
-after I have proved my first proposition, which is that the two veins
-of coal become one farther back in the mountain. But the McNabbs may
-not wait that long.”
-
-“Who are the McNabbs?”
-
-Tregarvon explained again, at some length, not omitting mention of a
-mysterious leaf fire which had threatened to destroy a tramway trestle,
-and other small accidents which had somewhat impeded the work of the
-past fortnight, and which were blankly unaccountable save upon a theory
-of somebody’s malice.
-
-“Why don’t you buy ’em off?” said Carfax casually. Money was his
-cure-all for most human ills.
-
-“For one reason, they haven’t given me a chance. For another, I don’t
-propose to be held up and robbed. They haven’t any title to the land;
-they have never had a shadow of a title.” Then he broke off suddenly,
-glanced at his watch, and changed the subject. “How much too tired
-are you to take a five-mile spin with me up the mountain in the car,
-Poictiers?” he asked.
-
-Carfax’s eyebrows went up in mild surprise. Nevertheless, he said:
-“Call it a go--if you can find Rucker.”
-
-“Never mind Rucker; I’ll drive you myself,” said Tregarvon, and a few
-minutes later the big car, with its dazzling headlamps picking out the
-way, was storming up the steep grades of the Pisgah pike to Highmount.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-In Which Carfax Enlists
-
-
-On the broad veranda of the administration building at Highmount, which
-looked down sidewise upon the twinkling light or two of Coalville and
-faced on even terms an opposing shoulder of the mountain where the
-newly erected drill derrick stood, Carfax was holding Miss Farron and
-four privileged members of the senior class at bay, while Tregarvon
-contentedly monopolized Miss Richardia Birrell.
-
-The two thus comfortably isolated had quickly exhausted the
-commonplaces. Tregarvon was made to know thus early that one of Miss
-Richardia’s charms was her ability to plunge at once into the heart of
-things; and the talk had turned upon Carfax, distance and the hubbub of
-the others sanctioning personalities.
-
-“Oh, you don’t know him yet,” Tregarvon protested, in refutation of a
-remark of Miss Birrell’s based upon Carfax’s apparent satisfaction with
-his present besetment. “He is anything but a butterfly, in the meaning
-you imply; and I say this in spite of his pretty face and airy gabble,
-and the lisp and his bad habit of slipping instinctively, as you might
-say, into the easiest chair in sight. I’ve summered him and wintered
-him, and I know.”
-
-“I like loyalty,” said Miss Richardia, with the air of one to whom
-abstractions are as daily bread. “Are you going to winter him in
-Coalville?”
-
-“No such good luck as that for me, I’m afraid. After the shooting
-begins, I don’t imagine he has a week untaken. You may not believe it,
-but Poictiers is in demand--where he is known and appreciated.”
-
-“I am sure we shall appreciate him,” was the half-mocking rejoinder.
-“Young men who come to Highmount driving their own tonneau cars are not
-so plentiful.”
-
-Tregarvon’s laugh was not more than decently boastful.
-
-“This particular tonneau car happens to be mine,” he explained.
-“Besides, Carfax might discount your praise. His latest purchase is an
-imported Dumont-Sillery, I believe. It probably cost three times as
-much as mine; and on the other side of the water, at that.”
-
-“How easily and familiarly you talk of imported luxuries and ‘the
-other side’,” she commented, still in the mocking vein. And then,
-with an exactly proportioned touch of wistfulness: “I wish I might
-have a glimpse into your world; the world you have turned your back
-upon--temporarily.”
-
-Tregarvon slid into this little pitfall without realizing that it had
-been digged especially for him, thus proving that social hunger may
-be as blind as any of the other appetites. So far from suspecting
-pitfalls, he was thinking that there were many less enjoyable
-diversions than sitting in a moderately secluded corner of a dimly
-lighted veranda in the company of a young woman who was kind enough to
-evince an interest in a chance visitor’s proper sphere.
-
-“It is not such a very high-planed world, the one I’ve left behind,
-Miss Richardia; not nearly as human as this of Coalville and Mount
-Pisgah,” he returned. “I believe I have seen more real human nature in
-the past three weeks than I had ever seen before.”
-
-“You mean that the other world is artificial?”
-
-“It is; without intending to be, especially. We are not elemental any
-more; not even in our passions. We do things in a certain well-defined
-way because that is the way other people do them. We are afraid, or at
-least disinclined, to strike out on new lines.”
-
-“You have struck out on a new line, haven’t you?” she asked.
-
-“I have been pushed out, in this Ocoee matter. There is enough of the
-elemental surviving in me to make me break with traditions and become
-a hustler when it is a question of bread and meat for my mother and
-sister. But apart from that, I suppose I am quite as hidebound as other
-men of my world.”
-
-“And Mr. Carfax?” she queried. “Is he a slave to conventions, too?”
-
-“Poictiers is a law unto himself in a good many ways; but on the
-whole, he’s tarred with the same stick. You will remark his regalia:
-I couldn’t have pulled him up here to-night with a three-inch hawser
-if he hadn’t happened to have evening clothes in his kit. And he has
-brought his man; a typical Cockney valet, knee-smalls, Oxford ties, and
-all.”
-
-Miss Richardia’s quiet laugh fitted the incongruity. But when she spoke
-again it was of the business affair.
-
-“You are at work on the Ocoee?” she inquired.
-
-“Yes, indeed! I am going to make a spoon or spoil a perfectly good
-horn. You must all come over and see my test-drilling outfit when we
-get it going.”
-
-“Is it your machine that we can see over beyond the glen? I wonder
-if you could make me understand what you are going to do?” she said,
-with interest real or so skilfully feigned that Tregarvon could not
-distinguish the difference.
-
-He expressed himself as being very willing to try; did try at some
-considerable length. And Miss Birrell, notwithstanding an air of
-abstraction that seemed to come and go, appeared to grasp the
-mechanical details.
-
-“You have no doubt that you will succeed? It will be fine to prove to
-everybody that all that was needed was for some one to come from the
-other world--your world--to show them how to do it.”
-
-Tregarvon winced, seeing now the pitfall into which he had suffered
-himself to be led.
-
-“Is that the impression I’ve been giving you?” he asked. “Do I
-advertise myself as such a blooming bounder as that would signify?”
-
-“Forgive me,” she said, with a little laugh which might have meant
-anything from veiled ridicule to a keen appreciation of a palpable
-hit. “I suspect it is the way of your world to be austerely sufficient
-unto itself. You may contradict me if I am wrong.”
-
-“Nonsense!” he exclaimed generously. “You are as much of my world as I
-am.”
-
-“Oh, no!” she objected: “we are only poor outlanders. I was called that
-once, in Boston; not spitefully, of course, but rather as an excuse for
-my shortcomings, I fancy.”
-
-“Whoever said it was a snob,” he exploded. “Boston is horribly
-provincial, at times, you know.”
-
-“And Philadelphia never is?”
-
-“I shouldn’t dare to make the claim too broad. But I am sure
-we recognize the fact that there is an America west of the
-Alleghenies--and south of Mason and Dixon’s line.”
-
-“That is charitable, at least,” she conceded. “Still, you think it is
-left for you to demonstrate success where others have failed--in the
-Ocoee undertaking.”
-
-“I hadn’t thought of it in that way,” he answered, with due modesty.
-“Indeed, I know little or nothing about the early history of the mine.
-My father became interested in it some years before he died, and I
-think he always regarded it as a dead loss. But he bought the stock,
-or rather, I should say, had it forced upon him, when it was pretty
-cheap, and----”
-
-“Yes,” she interrupted, a little forbiddingly, he thought; and then
-she began to speak of other things as if groping for a more congenial
-common ground. It was found when Tregarvon confessed to an amiable
-weakness for good music.
-
-“I’ll play for you if you wish,” she said almost abruptly; and it was
-an hour later when Carfax entered the music-room to break the spell
-which Miss Richardia had woven about her single listener.
-
-“You must do this again, but not too often,” was Tregarvon’s
-half-jesting warning to his entertainer at the moment of leave-taking;
-a moment snatched while Carfax was giving the privileged seniors a spin
-around the campus drive in the yellow car.
-
-“Why not often?--or as often as you care to come?” the musician asked
-indifferently.
-
-“Because I am much too impressionable. You could very easily make me
-forget some things that it is up to me to remember.”
-
-“For example?” she prompted.
-
-“It’s a long story, and Poictiers won’t give me time to tell it now.
-But some other evening, if I may come?”
-
-“Why shouldn’t you come when you feel like it? I hope you won’t go away
-underestimating your welcome--you and Mr. Carfax. You owe it to us to
-come frequently, so that the novelty will wear off--for the student
-body. I’ll venture to assert that Miss Longstreet has been having the
-time of her life keeping order in the dormitories this evening. Good
-night; and give my love to Uncle William.”
-
-“To Uncle William? Then you know him?”
-
-She laughed and showed him that Carfax was waiting for him. “Uncle
-William will know who sent the message if you say ‘Miss Dick’,” she
-explained; and he was obliged to accept this as an answer to his eager
-question.
-
-The road down the mountain was a speeding track only in spots, and
-between stretches the big car crept at a snail’s pace on the brakes,
-and so permitted conversation.
-
-Carfax began it in genial raillery, congratulating Tregarvon upon the
-accessibility of Highmount and the very evident heartiness of his
-welcome.
-
-“You can’t desiccate entirely down here, Vance, with such a well-spring
-of youth and beauty as that within shouting distance,” he remarked.
-
-But Tregarvon was thinking pointedly of Miss Richardia when he
-rejoined: “She is a puzzle to me, Poictiers; nothing less.”
-
-“The charming music teacher, you mean? Peaches-and-cream, I’d call her,
-if she’d let me.”
-
-“You’re blind; blind as a mole!” retorted Tregarvon. “Why, man! she is
-anything but that--or those.”
-
-“Doubtless,” Carfax laughed. “They are all ‘anything but that’ when
-you get down under the pose. But ‘peaches-and-cream’ is Miss Birrell’s
-pose, just the same; not the conventional kind they serve you at the
-Waldorf or Ritz-Carlton, of course, but the sort you get when the cream
-comes thick and rich from your own dairy, and the peaches are picked,
-sun-warm, in your own orchard. You may tell her that, if you like, and
-palm it off as original with you. Strikes me it’s rather neat.”
-
-“Oh, you go hang!” said Tregarvon. “I don’t have to work in your
-compliments, second-hand. I can turn ’em myself, at a pinch.”
-
-At this point a half-mile of good road beckoned for speed, and the talk
-was interrupted. When it was resumed at the next curving hazard in the
-pike, Carfax had somewhat to say about the Ocoee.
-
-“What do you know about the ancient history of your mine, Vance?” he
-asked, when the topic was fairly launched.
-
-“Nothing much, in detail. Why?”
-
-“I was asking for information. President Caswell was speaking of it
-while you were in the music-room with Miss Birrell. He came out and
-sat with us for half an hour or so. There is a mystery of some sort
-connected with the Ocoee.”
-
-“Sure!” said Tregarvon. “The mystery is six feet thick, and it consists
-of a layer of good solid sandstone. I’m about to penetrate it with a
-test-drill.”
-
-“No; I didn’t mean that,” Carfax objected. “It is another kind of
-mystery. I’ll tell you what Doctor Caswell said, and you may draw your
-own conclusions. We had been talking about superstitions and their
-hold upon humanity. I was scoffing, as usual, but the president seemed
-inclined to a belief that Providence or fate, or whatever you wish to
-call it, does interfere sometimes; and that these interferences form a
-basis for some of the convictions we call superstitions.”
-
-“All of which would seem to be a good many miles from a pair of coal
-seams made profitless by a stone ‘horse’ between them,” suggested
-Tregarvon mildly.
-
-“I’m coming to that; the distance isn’t so great as it may seem.
-The doctor rode his notion as if it were a hobby. He spoke of the
-well-grounded belief in the saying that ‘murder will out,’ and insisted
-that the facts proved the truth of this saying; facts which were often
-mysterious. Then he referred to that other pet notion of the bulk of
-mankind: that misfortune pursues the possessor of ill-gotten gains. To
-my astonishment, he pointed to your Ocoee property as an example.”
-
-“The dickens he did!” exclaimed Tregarvon, with interest suddenly
-awakened. “How did he make the Ocoee fit in?”
-
-“That is the peculiar part of it. When I betrayed my complete ignorance
-of matters Ocoeean by beginning to ask questions, he shut up like a
-clam. All I could get out of him was an assertion that misfortunes had
-accompanied every succeeding attempt to open the mine, and that they
-would doubtless continue to follow until justice was done.”
-
-“But justice to whom?” queried Tregarvon. “You didn’t let it rest at
-that, I hope.”
-
-“I tried not to, but he gave me a dignified cold shoulder and referred
-me to you; said you doubtless knew all the circumstances, and would,
-he hoped, take proper steps toward removing the curse.”
-
-The descent of Pisgah was accomplished, and Tregarvon steered the
-yellow car into an empty warehouse which was to be its garage.
-
-Later, when he was showing his guest to the sleeping-room made ready
-for him by Uncle William, he said: “I don’t wish to pull you into this
-thing with me blindfolded, Poictiers. If there is a skeleton in the
-Ocoee closet, I’ll have it out and give it decent Christian burial
-before I ask you to back me.”
-
-But at this, Carfax appeared at his multi-millionaire best.
-
-“You’ll do nothing of the sort, old man. You will find me some old
-clothes to-morrow morning and we’ll go up and set your test-drill at
-work. Further along, when more money is needed, I’ll go somewhere to a
-bank and turn the fortunate spigot. We’ve got to make a go of your mine
-now, if only to show Doctor Caswell that the superstitions can’t prove
-up on this particular homestead.”
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-Partly Sentimental
-
-
-Carfax’s promise to stay and see the Ocoee experiment fairly on its
-feet was made in good faith, as the idlers at Tait’s store, and more
-than these, a London-bred and disconsolate Merkley, were shortly
-given to understand. Moreover, the golden youth’s threat of wearing
-old clothes and dipping into the crude mechanical processes of the
-experiment was also carried out; which not only deepened Merkley’s
-conviction that he had attached himself to a mild-mannered lunatic of
-a peculiarly American type, but left him without an occupation--a mere
-fragment of urban flotsam eddying in the backlash of a rude current of
-bucolic unfamiliarity.
-
-Unlike Rucker, the mechanician, who promptly donned overalls and
-jumper, pulled his tight-fitting burglar’s cap down to his ears, and
-put himself at the head of Tregarvon’s drilling squad on the mountain
-top, Merkley took to drink and the company of the loungers on Tait’s
-porch. Here he became (though unhappily without knowing it) a target
-for the shrewd wit of the idlers, and, what he was even further from
-suspecting, the gossip circle’s chief source of information touching
-the daily progress of the latest attempt to make a silk purse out of
-the Ocoee sow’s ear.
-
-At first there was little for Merkley to tell, and the army of
-leisure, smoking its corn-cob pipes and whittling the corners of the
-packing-boxes on Tait’s porch, looked on and amused itself by slyly
-baiting the disconsolate Londoner.
-
-Day by day, Tregarvon, Carfax, and the promoted chauffeur turned out
-early in the morning, took their places with the native laborers in the
-tram-car, and were lifted to the scene of their labors on high Pisgah.
-At sunset they came down, ate much, smoked a little, talked less, and,
-save for an occasional evening when Tregarvon and his guest got out the
-yellow automobile and drove to Highmount College, went early to bed as
-those who had earned their rest by good, honest muscle-weariness.
-
-But when the smoke plume streaming bravely from the stack of the
-mountain-top drilling plant announced the actual beginning of the
-experiment, Merkley brought news to Tait’s. Something had gone wrong
-on the mountain summit; something was continually going wrong. The
-two young men inhabiting the tumble-down office-building across the
-railroad-track no longer went to bed immediately after their evening
-meal. Instead, there were prolonged conferences behind the closed door
-of the dining-room in the rear.
-
-In addition to this, Rucker, characterized by Merkley as a despised,
-greasy-handed mechanic, whose burglarish aspect would earn him the
-attentions of a plain-clothes policeman in any properly Scotland-Yarded
-city of the world, was sometimes called in to these dining-room
-conferences, while he, Merkley, once the confidential and trusted valet
-of his Grace the Duke of Marlford, was excluded. At this point in his
-narrative, Merkley, being the worse for two or three tiltings of Jeff
-Walters’s or old man Layne’s jug of corn whiskey, would become tearful
-and despondent.
-
-These Merklean hints of a changed condition of affairs on Mount
-Pisgah were well buttressed by sundry discouraging facts. During the
-making-ready of the drilling plant everything had gone on fairly
-well. But dating from the hour when Rucker had first sent live steam
-whistling into the cylinder of the small portable engine which
-furnished the power, a stream of disaster had trickled discouragingly
-and persistently upon the experiment.
-
-First the drills went dull and refused to cut the fine-grained
-sandstone of the plateau; and when Rucker had retempered them, the
-engine worked water and started a cylinder-head. After the cylinder was
-repaired, one of the natives who was firing the boiler let the water
-get too low--to the loosening of some of the boiler-flues, and to the
-imminent risk of an explosion.
-
-Rucker, handiest of mechanics, calked an entire day on the loosened
-flues, and the machinery was started again. Two hours later the
-pivot-bolt of the big timber walking-beam which imparted the
-up-and-down motion to the drill worked loose, and the walking-beam came
-down, one end of it narrowly missing Tregarvon, and the other wrecking
-the machinery to the tune of a hundred dollars and an indefinite
-interval of waiting for renewals.
-
-It was after this last and most disheartening of the disasters, the
-only one thus far that Rucker had not been able to repair on the spot,
-that the two young men once more shut the door of the back-office
-dining-room upon a disappointed London serving-man.
-
-“By George! I’m beginning to come around to your view of it,
-Poictiers,” said Tregarvon, cramming his pipe with dry tobacco from
-the jar set out by Uncle William. “These setbacks are knocking us too
-regularly to fit decently into any chapter of accidents. I’m beginning
-to believe they are inspired.”
-
-“That is precisely what I have been trying to tell you and Rucker all
-along, but neither of you would have it that way,” rejoined Carfax
-coolly.
-
-“Well, carry your theory to a conclusion; who’s doing it?”
-
-“Ah! now you are getting out to a place where the water is over my
-head,” Carfax admitted, toying delicately with a pipeful of strong
-“natural-leaf” tobacco. “According to Captain Duncan’s prophecy, you
-have two possible ill-wishers--haven’t you?--the C. C. & I. people and
-the McNabbs.”
-
-“Yes; but it is rather incredible on both counts, don’t you think? You
-can hardly imagine a great corporation getting down on its hands and
-knees to chuck pebbles into the wheels of our little mechanism up on
-Pisgah.”
-
-Carfax nodded. Then he said: “How about the McNabbs?”
-
-“It seems rather more in their line, you’d say. And yet I haven’t a
-shadow of right to accuse them. So far, they are entirely mythological;
-a mere name mentioned by Captain Duncan and a few others. So far as I
-am aware, I have not yet seen a McNabb.”
-
-“Whoever it is who is setting these little traps for us is deucedly
-clever,” remarked Carfax, who was still toying half-heartedly with his
-long-stemmed pipe. “Rucker is fooled, all right; he still insists that
-it is mere hard luck.”
-
-“Yes, and that is another argument against the McNabb hypothesis,”
-Tregarvon put in. “It would take a pretty skilful mechanic to fool
-Rucker; and from what I can hear, these title-claimants are ignorant
-mountaineers whose mechanical gifts most probably don’t rise beyond
-the lock action of an old-fashioned squirrel-rifle or the simple
-intricacies of a ten-quart whiskey-still.”
-
-“Which brings us back to the original proposition--the C. C. & I.,”
-suggested Carfax reflectively, and, after a pause: “How long is this
-last smash going to hang us up?”
-
-“Three or four days. If Rucker gets back from Chattanooga with the new
-gears by Monday, he will be doing well.”
-
-“All right. To-morrow morning I shall ask you to lend me your yellow
-chug-wagon. I have a premonition that the spirit will move me to go and
-run this little mystery of yours into a corner.”
-
-Tregarvon laughed good-naturedly. “You’d much better go back to your
-own stamping-ground and begin to take up your shooting engagements. You
-can’t afford to stay down here monkeying with this last-resort hustle
-of mine.”
-
-The golden youth was looking shrewdly over the smoke wreaths at his
-companion.
-
-“Is it a last resort, Vance?” he asked quietly, adding: “You have never
-told me much about the family smash.”
-
-“It was complete, Poictiers; an up-to-date, finished product of modern
-high-finance methods. The Vanderburg crowd got father against the wall
-in the steel merger, and--well, you’ll know how bad it was when I tell
-you that it killed him. The doctors said pneumonia, but it was really a
-Wall Street sand-bagging. He didn’t leave a will; and when we gathered
-up the fragments afterward, we knew why he didn’t; there wasn’t enough
-to make it worth while. So, you see, the Ocoee _is_ a last resort, for
-me.”
-
-Carfax was musing again.
-
-“Yet you are going to many a comfortable little gold mine,” he said,
-after a time.
-
-“Uncle Byrd’s Colorado millions?--yes. And I am rather sorry; for
-Elizabeth’s sake, not less than for my own. We were engaged before
-Uncle Byrd died, and he knew it. It was entirely unnecessary--not to
-say cruel--for him to leave his fortune to Elizabeth on the condition
-that she shouldn’t change her mind and marry somebody else, and to me
-in case she did.”
-
-Carfax did not comment upon the cruelty. He was perfectly familiar with
-the terms of Mr. Byrd Tregarvon’s will. Instead, he said: “You hear
-from Elizabeth regularly, I suppose?”
-
-“Oh, certainly. Duty is always written out in large capitals for
-Elizabeth.”
-
-“And you think she writes to you from a sense of duty?”
-
-“We needn’t put it just that way. But I have no doubt she conceives it
-to be her duty to a man she has promised to marry.”
-
-“You shouldn’t say such things as that, Vance, not even to me,”
-corrected the other man quickly.
-
-“I know I shouldn’t. It is only one of the many ways in which Uncle
-Byrd’s millions corrode things. Without meaning to, the old uncle stood
-matters upon an entirely different, and most difficult, footing for us
-two. We meant to marry: we had passed our word to the various members
-of the clan that we were going to marry; and the clan was glad because
-it had always counted upon that outcome for us. So far as a man up a
-tree might discern, it was a perfectly free choice for both of us.”
-
-“Go on,” said Carfax, when Tregarvon stopped to refill his pipe.
-
-“Then one day, out of a clear sky, _zip!_ comes Uncle Byrd with his
-will and his millions. After which, of course, Elizabeth can’t throw
-me over without impoverishing herself; and it is equally out of the
-question for me to let her do it. Moreover, it is imperatively up to me
-to make good before I marry her. If I don’t, uncharitable people will
-say that I let go of the business end of things because I knew that my
-wife’s money would stop all the holes to keep the wind away. There you
-have it--sermon length.”
-
-Carfax smoked in sober silence for quite a few minutes. Then he
-said mildly: “Do you know, Vance, I don’t more than half like your
-attitude--as you’ve just expressed it?”
-
-Tregarvon’s smile was a grin.
-
-“Tell me what there is about it that you don’t like, and I’ll change
-it, Poictiers. You are by long odds the best friend I have in the
-world, and I’d change a dozen attitudes for you, any day in the week.”
-
-“It isn’t lover-like,” Carfax objected.
-
-“You mean that it is too purely cousinly? I can’t very well help that
-phase of it, you know; we _are_ cousins, and we have been trotting
-around together, more or less, ever since Noah walked out of the ark.
-Nothing like that for killing sentiment.”
-
-“But sentiment shouldn’t be killed, if you are going to marry
-Elizabeth,” insisted the purist.
-
-“We have threshed all that out, time and again, down to the final
-spear of straw, Elizabeth and I,” Tregarvon explained carelessly. “At
-first we did try to galvanize ourselves into some of the sentimental
-throes, but it was such a ridiculous little comedy that Elizabeth
-herself called it off. We are sufficiently fond of each other; Uncle
-Byrd’s will is mandatory, and we shall be able to live together without
-quarrelling. What more could you ask?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Carfax thoughtfully. “Your summary fits in pretty
-accurately with the way of the world. Yet, if I had to change places
-with either of you, I fancy I should ask a good bit more.”
-
-“If you were Elizabeth Wardwell, you wouldn’t ask any more; and if you
-were Vance Tregarvon, you couldn’t. So there you are.”
-
-Again there was a smoke-beclouded silence, and into the thick of it
-Carfax launched a pointed query:
-
-“Have you told Elizabeth anything at all about the girls’ school on the
-mountain--Highmount?”
-
-“Oh, sure; and about the bewitching Miss Birrell, as well. I always
-tell Elizabeth everything; I haven’t sense enough not to.”
-
-“And her comment?” asked the golden one half-absently.
-
-“On Miss Birrell, you mean? To tell the brazen truth, I
-expected a wigging; not anything like a jealous outbreak, you
-understand--Elizabeth is miles above that--but some nicely worded,
-cool-lipped advice about not pitching the conventions out at the
-window just because I happen to be living a thousand miles from real
-civilization--Philadelphia civilization.”
-
-“And you didn’t get it?”
-
-“No, indeed. She didn’t say a word about Miss Birrell, specifically,
-but she wrote me a good cousinly letter in which she told me how glad
-she was that I needn’t deny myself all of the social mitigations, and
-urging me not to let my job on the Ocoee make a one-sided hermit of me.
-That letter came nearer to making me sentimental over her than anything
-else she has ever said or done. It did, for a fact.”
-
-Carfax did not vote Aye or No on this. He appeared content to let
-the sentimental matter rest, since he went back to the business
-difficulties.
-
-“About this last-resort tussle of yours, Vance, I see now why it is
-mighty necessary for you to make it win, and I wish you had a little
-better assurance that you are not up against a brace game; that Old
-Pisgah hasn’t stacked the cards on you.”
-
-“I can’t very well afford to think of that possibility,” said Tregarvon
-grimly.
-
-“No, I suppose you can’t. Yet if the genially cynical attitude of the
-native bystander counts for anything----”
-
-“The loafers over at Tait’s, you mean? They’d scoff at anything that
-smelled of good, honest work.”
-
-“I wasn’t thinking of them particularly, though they help swell the
-grand total. But the entire countryside seems to think that you are
-barking up an empty tree. President Caswell says you are wasting time
-and money; and that mild-eyed, clerical-looking professor of sciences,
-Hartridge, fairly chortled when I told him what we were doing. You may
-remember that he strolled over from Highmount the day we started the
-drill.”
-
-“What did he say?” Tregarvon demanded.
-
-“He very pointedly said nothing. But there was a look in his skim-milk
-eyes that recalled the villain in a play.”
-
-Tregarvon was laughing appreciatively. “You have an eye for the
-dramatic possibilities, always, haven’t you, Poictiers? Why should Mr.
-William Wilberforce Hartridge have it in for me?”
-
-“I can only make a crude guess. Even a mild-eyed professor of sciences
-may turn, like the trodden worm. You umpire him out of the game pretty
-ruthlessly when we spend an evening at Highmount.”
-
-“With Miss Richardia? Pshaw! you don’t suppose that dried-up old stick
-of a pedagogue--why, it would be Beauty and the Beast!”
-
-Carfax’s smile was truly angelic, but it betrayed a wisdom far beyond
-his years.
-
-“Yes,” he rejoined reflectively, “Hartridge may be all of ten years
-your senior--possibly fifteen. No doubt he ought to be quietly
-chloroformed and carried behind the scenes. But, as I say, he
-chortled--with his eyes--when I told him that you were planning to
-drill a series of test-holes, continuing the series until you find
-the place where your two coal seams come together as one. He is a
-geologist, among other things, and they tell me he knows this region
-like a book. I believe I’d cultivate him a little, if I were you; even
-if it did cost me an occasional _tête-à-tête_ with Miss Richardia
-Birrell.”
-
-Tregarvon scoffed hardily at the suggestion, and the scorn was not
-thrown away upon his companion. Perhaps that was the reason why Carfax,
-going to bed a little later, without the ministrations of a lachrymose
-and whiskey-breathing Merkley, opened the back of his watch to gaze
-long and earnestly at a picture therein, closing the case finally
-with a little sigh. Millions are good things in their way, but there
-be pearls, trampled thoughtlessly underfoot by the millionless, which
-millions cannot buy.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-Daddy Layne, and Others
-
-
-On the morning after the crash of the walking-beam and the consequent
-halting of the mountain-top activities, Carfax took the yellow car out
-of its warehouse garage; and after driving for a half-hour or so up
-and down the valley road with a tonneauful of speechless but highly
-delighted children picked up at Tryon’s and Jeff Walters’s, he pulled
-up in front of Tait’s and went in, ostensibly to buy smoking tobacco,
-but really to make friends with the country-store idlers.
-
-Cursory observers from an alien North, penetrating now and then to
-unhackneyed regions in the Cumberlands or the Great Smokies, are apt
-to find the country folk, either valley or mountain bred, reticent by
-nature and notably shy of strangers. But there was no resisting the
-genial and childlike affability of the young man who had been giving
-the village children joy-rides, who recklessly bought a box of Tait’s
-best two-for-a-nickel cigars and distributed them generously as one
-among friends, and who presently had the hood lifted from the yellow
-car’s motor installation and was explaining, in words of one syllable,
-the workings of the driving mechanism to a group of curious and deeply
-interested onlookers.
-
-The small lecture explanatory gave Carfax a chance to pick his man, and
-the choice fell upon the elder Layne. Would Mr. Layne like to take a
-little ride up the road in the car?--just to see how much more easily
-manageable it was than a horse-drawn vehicle?
-
-Daddy Layne was overwhelmed with embarrassment, and was also secretly
-puffed up with pride, though he did not yield too easily, a disposition
-to haggle and make terms being a ruling passion in the Layne nature.
-
-“I ’low I warn’t thinkin’ none o’ takin’ a trip this mornin’,” he mused
-reflectively. “Man ortn’t to go projeckin’ ’round on his’n travels when
-thar’s sech a heap o’ work to be done on the place. But then, thar’s my
-married daughter Malviny--her man’s coal-diggin’ for the C. C. & I., up
-yander at Whitlow; ef ye could git me thar an’ back----”
-
-Carfax assured him that there was nothing easier, and by dint of
-holding the big car down to its slowest speed on the five-mile run to
-Whitlow he accomplished his purpose, which was to beguile Layne into
-telling him all that the countryside knew about the C. C. & I., its
-methods, its local managers, and whether or not the report was true
-that it made industrial war upon the smaller companies and individual
-mine owners.
-
-Layne gave him the countryside point of view, which was, of course,
-inimical to the corporation--to any corporation. The C. C. & I. paid
-its men next to nothing for digging the coal and then sold it for
-fabulous prices to the people in the cities; it ran company stores
-and the miner who refused to buy his supplies thereat was likely to
-find himself out of a job; when a coal-digger was hurt or killed in an
-accident, the company’s long purse defeated the ends of justice in the
-damage suit; and so on to the end of the accusative category.
-
-Pinned down to the particulars about the Whitlow, Layne admitted that
-the young engineer in charge as superintendent was a “squar’” man; but
-Connolly, the local manager under this superintendent, was, in Layne’s
-description, a man-killer. As to the company’s policy toward its
-competitors, Layne could say nothing definite, the countryside point
-of view not being penetrative of hidden corporation methods. But it
-was true that the only mines in operation in the valley belonged to the
-C. C. & I. Company. Others had been opened from time to time, but they
-were usually short-lived.
-
-This drawing of Daddy Layne on the drive to Whitlow, and, later,
-an interview with Connolly, a hard-mouthed Irishman whose crass
-brutality apparently justified Layne’s descriptive epithet of “the
-man-killer,” gave Carfax a clue which he followed patiently until it
-was time to take Layne back to Coalville; a clue which led to a scraped
-acquaintance with the local leaders of the Amalgamated Mine Workers,
-to affable and seemingly pointless talks with all who dared to talk,
-and finally to a friendly conference with the miner Dockery, Layne’s
-son-in-law.
-
-“The kindling-wood for your obstruction fire is all cut and stacked
-at Whitlow, Vance,” was his dinner-table announcement to Tregarvon at
-the close of this day of investigation. “I have discovered a number of
-things. First, that the C. C. & I. methods of benevolent assimilation
-as directed toward possible competitors have varied from instigating
-all sorts of trouble in the mines to be squelched up to swallowing them
-whole in forced sales of stock.”
-
-“That sounds cheerful,” said Tregarvon. “Go on.”
-
-“Next, they leave it to the local managers to nip any new venture in
-the bud as effectually and quietly as possible, without bothering the
-trust headquarters. I took a long chance on Connolly, the assistant
-superintendent at Whitlow, and got that much of it pretty straight.”
-
-“You don’t mean to say that he admitted any such thing as that to you,
-when it is known all up and down the valley that you are interested
-here with me!” exclaimed Tregarvon, wholly incredulous.
-
-Carfax’s smile would have made a blushing debutante envious.
-
-“In Mr. Connolly’s office, I was a lost lamb of the flock, looking
-most pathetically for somebody to lead me home,” he rejoined. “A
-fellow named Tregarvon had got me down here from New York with a view
-to pulling my financial leg as an investor in some coal property a
-few miles down the valley--at Coalville, in fact. I enlarged somewhat
-upon this part of it; kept it up until I was reasonably sure that I
-had convinced Connolly that I am a woolly sheep, merely waiting for
-somebody to come along with a pair of sharp shears.”
-
-“Good--ripping good!” Tregarvon chuckled. “You’ve missed your calling,
-Poictiers, by all the distance lying between Riverside Drive and the
-city detective department down-town. But, as you say, you took a long
-chance; unless Connolly is a bigger fool than he looks to be.”
-
-“Didn’t I? But Connolly is simply an abysmal brute; a man-driver
-without any of the little gifts of perspicacity. He took me under his
-wing like a stepfather-in-law; advised me bluntly to put my money into
-Consolidated Coal at one-forty rather than to go gunning on my own
-hook, or yours, or anybody’s, in Consolidated Coal’s intimate back
-yard. Pressed a little harder, he hinted that you wouldn’t be allowed
-to dig any real coal out of the Ocoee, providing there were any worth
-digging--which there wasn’t.”
-
-“‘Wouldn’t be allowed, Mr. Connolly?’ said I, as lamb-like as possible.
-‘How could Tregarvon be prevented?’”
-
-“‘There’s manny a way, Misther Carfax,’ he scowled up at me; and
-then he let the cat out of the pillow-case: ‘These young min widout
-practical experience--’tis manny a blunder they’ll be making, and
-they’re soon discouraged entirely. I’m hearing that this same Misther
-Tregarvin is having throuble to beat the band, and him not fair at the
-beginning of it yet.’”
-
-Tregarvon was absently spilling a spoonful of sugar into his
-after-dinner coffee--a sufficient measure of his interest in Carfax’s
-story.
-
-“From all of which you have argued that there is a C. C. & I. spy in
-our camp, haven’t you, Poictiers?” he said.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And the remedy?”
-
-“Is to find and fire him.”
-
-“The firing part of it will be easy; but the finding is a horse of
-another color. All of my squad save one or two, I believe, have worked
-at odd times for the C. C. & I. Every able-bodied man in this region
-digs coal a little now and then; ‘huckleberry miners,’ the regulars
-call them.”
-
-“We’ll simply have to watch and sift; that’s all,” said Carfax.
-
-“Well, you’ve done a good day’s work, anyway,” was Tregarvon’s
-summing-up of the amateur detective’s report. “Candidly, I didn’t think
-you had it in you, Poictiers. You don’t look it, you know--to the naked
-eye.”
-
-The angelic smile came and sat upon the clean-shaven, womanish face of
-the golden youth.
-
-“Don’t you know, Vance,” he drawled lispingly, “I believe that is my
-strong point: not looking the ready-made, hand-me-down villain. It
-is foolishly easy to make people take me for a harmless, good-natured
-scrap-bag into which they can tuck any old thing they don’t happen to
-be needing at the moment. Why, even old Daddy Layne confided in me.
-Coming home, he told me all about the feud of the family of one of his
-sons-in-law with the McNabbs. By the way, that reminds me: did you know
-that you have two of the McNabb cousins in your working gang?--the
-fellows who call themselves Morgan and Sill?”
-
-Tregarvon had not known it; and a new field of conjecture as to the
-disasters was promptly opened. Why charge the coal trust with the
-campaign of obstruction when two of the avowed enemies of Ocoee
-progress were right on the ground day by day?
-
-Carfax rather sheepishly confessed that his brain had not been
-capacious enough to entertain two ideas at once. Having fixed upon the
-coal trust as the trouble source to be investigated, he had completely
-overlooked the McNabb alternative.
-
-“I’ll do time for it, though,” he promised. “To-morrow will be
-Saturday; and if you’ll lend me the car again, I’ll find out something
-more about those moonshiners in the Pocket.”
-
-“Not alone, you won’t,” Tregarvon objected joyously. “It is going to be
-my Saturday off, too--and a holiday at Highmount. I’ll go with you, as
-far as the college, anyway.”
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-Company Come
-
-
-On the day following Carfax’s journey of investigation to Whitlow,
-Tregarvon did not keep his promise to accompany the amateur Vidocq.
-There were still some repairs to be made on the tramway, and since
-a working squad of the laborers turned up to round out the week,
-Tregarvon stayed with his men and became a track foreman again.
-
-Carfax, too, had apparently changed his mind overnight. Instead of
-driving off up the mountain after breakfast, he headed the yellow car
-down the valley road and was gone all day. When he returned, late in
-the afternoon, it was evident that he had discovered some other way
-of ascending Pisgah. The committee of leisure, sitting, as usual, on
-Tait’s porch, and amusing itself, also as usual, at the expense of an
-expatriated London serving-man, marked the yellow car returning by way
-of the mountain pike; observed, further, that Carfax was accompanied
-by two men, one of whom sprang from the car at the turn in the
-road nearest to the railway and ran to catch a northbound train of
-coal-empties, so escaping unidentified by the idlers. Carfax’s other
-passenger, well-known to Coalville as “The Bug Professor” at Highmount,
-descended from the auto more deliberately and went across to the
-coke-ovens to shake hands with Tregarvon.
-
-“Comp’ny come, over yander,” Daddy Layne remarked to Merkley. “Better
-hump yo’self acrost the track an’ git ready to curl yo’ boss’s ha’r,
-hadn’t ye, English?”
-
-Merkley adjourned himself accordingly, reaching the office-building
-in time to be sent to show Hartridge the way to the bath-room on
-the second floor. Carfax made no explanation to Tregarvon about the
-guest-bringing other than to say that he had captured the professor
-on the mountain, and had brought him down to take pot-luck of Uncle
-William’s preparing.
-
-“We can eat him all right,” said the young mine owner hospitably; “but
-if we have to sleep him as well----”
-
-“We shan’t,” Carfax asserted. “I have promised to drive him back to
-Highmount in the car after dinner.”
-
-“Oh, that’s better. Who was the other fellow?--the one who jumped out
-and sprinted for the up freight?”
-
-“Wait,” said Carfax mysteriously; “wait and you’ll find out.” And
-Tregarvon, having no alternative, had to wait.
-
-The dinner for three in the back-office dining-room followed in due
-course, and Tregarvon, who brought a working-man’s appetite to the
-table, let the other two do most of the talking. Carfax proved to be
-at his captivating best; solicitous for the guest’s entertainment,
-ingenuous, eager to be informed. Wouldn’t Mr. Hartridge have some more
-of the--er--rabbit, he thought it must be? And was it really a fact
-that the entire Cumberland region was underlaid by a vast sheet of
-bituminous coal?
-
-Tregarvon ate and listened, and presently became aware of two
-things: that Carfax was persistently threshing the talk around to
-the coal-measures, and that the professor seemed equally determined
-to escape from them. A little later, he observed that in this verbal
-ball-passing Carfax was proving himself the better player. Hartridge
-was coerced inch by inch; first into talking about the Southern
-coal-fields in the abstract, and finally into relating the ancient
-history of the Ocoee; which was the purpose for which Carfax had
-baited and set the dinner trap.
-
-“I suspect Mr. Tregarvon can tell you more about the history of the
-Ocoee than I can,” Hartridge demurred modestly, after Carfax had
-fairly pushed him over the brink; and upon Tregarvon’s monosyllabic
-disclaimer, he went on reflectively: “Let me see; I believe it was
-about ten years ago that the first company was formed--to the sound of
-the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, and dulcimer, as you might
-say.”
-
-“A promoter’s scheme?” queried Carfax, alertly inquisitive now.
-
-“Yes. A man from New York--Parker was his name--launched the
-enterprise; bought a little land, obtained free-will donations of a
-great deal more, and, as a favor to the benighted natives who had
-contributed the land, consented to part with about forty-five per cent
-of the stock of his company at half-price, payable in money.”
-
-“Dear, dear; what a world this is!” sighed Carfax gently. “Sold them
-their own land back again, did he? And then what?”
-
-Hartridge’s smile was genially cynical.
-
-“I think it took the able Mr. Parker all of four months, or possibly
-a little longer, to squeeze the local stockholders--the only
-investors who had contributed any real values--out of his scheme;
-after which he sold the reorganized Ocoee to a New England syndicate.
-The Yankees--pardon me; the word is no longer a term of reproach with
-us--the Yankees meant honestly by the Ocoee; though, of course, they
-were under no obligation to recognize the frozen-out natives. They
-spent money liberally in development and on a costly equipment. But it
-proved to be a bad investment for them--as it had for the natives.”
-
-“Ah,” murmured Carfax. “Now I am better able to understand President
-Caswell’s attitude. In strict justice, he would say, the mine belongs
-to those earliest investors who contributed the land and bought the
-stock; or at least these early people should have an equity in it.
-These later--er--Yankees had no ethical rights; hence their venture was
-bound to be ill-starred. By Jove, Tregarvon,”--and here Carfax’s lisp
-became quite apparent--“that puts the black mark on you, too, doesn’t
-it?”
-
-If Carfax had any diplomatic designs on the dinner-guest, Tregarvon was
-not a party to them.
-
-“I only know that my father paid good money for the Ocoee,” he said
-bluntly; “paid it to these same Yankees you are telling us about, Mr.
-Hartridge, when they were ready to lie down. It is up to me to prove
-that they didn’t stick him as bad as they doubtless believed they were
-sticking him when they pulled him into it.”
-
-Carfax, who was observing the dinner-guest narrowly, saw the sign he
-had been watching for flit into the pale-blue eyes of Mr. William
-Wilberforce Hartridge; a half-smile of gratified derision.
-
-“You think Vance isn’t very likely to make good on his little brag,
-professor?” he put in, firing a pointblank shot at the target.
-
-There was no indication that the shot had gone home, unless it lay in
-the quick veiling of the pale-blue eyes.
-
-“Who am I, that I should take out a license as a prophet of evil, Mr.
-Carfax?” was the quiet rejoinder. “He is a brave man nowadays who has
-the assurance to deny anything whatever to youth, vigor, and the spirit
-of modern industry.”
-
-“Still, you believe that Tregarvon isn’t going to win out?” persisted
-the golden youth.
-
-Hartridge laughed.
-
-“As Miss Richardia might put it, I haven’t any think coming to me, have
-I?” he parried.
-
-Carfax gave it up. There was a point beyond which he could not press
-a man who was dipping with him into the common salt-dish, and he felt
-that the point had been reached.
-
-“It is a pity you can’t stay and spend the evening with us, Mr.
-Hartridge,” he said, a little further along, when Uncle William came
-in to bare the table; but he added nothing to the conventional protest
-when the professor declared that he must go: on the contrary, he sped
-the parting guest so nimbly that Tregarvon was scarcely at his third
-pipe-filling when the purring of the yellow car’s motor announced
-Carfax’s return from Highmount.
-
-“I told you so!” was the New Yorker’s first word, as he came in to take
-his place before the handful of fire on the dining-room hearth. “Where
-is my pipe?”
-
-“What did you tell me?” queried Tregarvon, finding the pipe and pushing
-the tobacco within reach.
-
-“That Hartridge knows, or thinks he knows, that you are on a false
-scent up yonder on the Pisgah cliffs: also, that he is deuced glad of
-it.”
-
-“You can see farther into the millstone than I can, if you can draw any
-such conclusion as that,” Tregarvon remarked. “I thought he bluffed you
-good and plenty.”
-
-“He did; and then again he didn’t. I insist that there is something
-doing, and that this mild-mannered gentleman who teaches mathematics
-and the natural sciences is in on it. I have just had an experience
-that was an eye-opener.”
-
-“Unload it,” said Tregarvon briefly.
-
-“Somebody tried to kill one of us a few minutes ago, and--and I’m
-afraid Hartridge knew it was due to come off!”
-
-“Nonsense--you’re joking!” Tregarvon had come out of his pipe-musings
-with a bound.
-
-“I’ll tell you just what happened, and then you shall judge for
-yourself. You know that stretch of good road about two-thirds of the
-way up the mountain?--the longest one there is?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, just as we turned into it, going up, Hartridge twisted himself
-in the seat, looked back, and made some sort of a motion with his hand.
-I was talking; trying to pump him some more; and I don’t know why I
-should have noticed the bit of pantomime. Neither do I know why, coming
-down a few minutes later, I should have hit that piece of road at a
-ten-mile-an-hour gait instead of a thirty or forty. It was mighty
-lucky I wasn’t speeding. For about two shakes of a dead lamb’s tail
-you stood to lose a good friend and a twenty-five-hundred-dollar car.
-There was a tree lying across the road at precisely the correct angle
-to shoot me out into space if I had hit it.”
-
-“Heavens!” exclaimed the listener. “Done while you were going and
-coming?”
-
-“Done while I was going and coming. And that tree was lying at the
-exact spot where Hartridge turned in his seat and made the little
-signal with his hand to somebody that I couldn’t see.”
-
-“But, good Lord, Poictiers! It’s unbelievable. Why, the man wasn’t ten
-minutes away from his bread-breaking with us!”
-
-“I can’t help that. You have the facts.”
-
-“What did you do?”
-
-“I stopped, skirmished under the tonneau seat and found your towing
-rope, and took a hitch on the obstruction. The car was good for it, and
-I dragged the tree around and rolled it over the embankment. Then I
-examined the place where it had stood: it had been partly undermined by
-the road grading, and probably didn’t require much of a push to tip it
-over.”
-
-“Then it might have been a sheer accident?”
-
-Carfax was shaking his head. “I thought so at first. But when I turned
-the flash-light on the gap it had left in the upper bank, I saw that it
-had not fallen accidentally. There are pick marks in the clay, and a
-crowbar had been thrust in behind the roots to pry with.”
-
-“You didn’t see or hear anybody?”
-
-“Not a sign. I even went so far as to make a circuit in the woods along
-the upper embankment. There wasn’t a leaf stirring.”
-
-“But think a minute, Poictiers: whatever crazy grudge any one might
-have against me or the Ocoee, it couldn’t be made to lap over on you!”
-
-“That’s all right; it is your car, and you have usually driven it. You
-are doubtless the one who had the narrow escape, and I was only your
-happen-so proxy.”
-
-For a thoughtful half-hour they sat before the dying embers of the fire
-and discussed the murderous attempt in all its bearings, Tregarvon
-stoutly maintaining to the last that Hartridge could not possibly have
-been an accomplice. But disregarding that single slight clue, they were
-left completely in the dark as to the identity or motive of the man or
-men who had tried to wreck the car.
-
-In the early stages of the discussion Tregarvon had suggested the
-McNabbs; and after every other guess had been exhausted he returned to
-them. But Carfax demurred at this.
-
-“No,” he said. “As I told you yesterday, you have two of the McNabbs in
-your working gang, and they have had a thousand chances to extinguish
-you since you came down here. Besides, I’ve been over in the Pocket
-neighborhood to-day, and have found out a lot about the clan McNabb.
-They’re perfectly harmless, I should say. I ran across both Morgan and
-Sill, and they took me in and fed me fat bacon and corn pone. It is all
-of ten miles to their shack in the Pocket, and they would have had to
-walk out to get on this side of Pisgah. Besides that, Wilmerding gave
-me a lot of pointers about the McNabb tribe.”
-
-“Who is Wilmerding?”
-
-“He is the man who rode down the mountain with Hartridge and me, and
-made the quick dash for the up-train. He is the chief of staff for
-the C. C. & I. in the Wehatchee Valley; has the oversight of all the
-various mines of the company. He is a fine fellow; a mining engineer
-with a few German university finishing touches.”
-
-“How did you happen to meet him?”
-
-“I hunted him up this morning; drove down to the Cardiff Mine for
-that purpose. They told me yesterday at Whitlow that he was at the
-Cardiff. I found him, and we foregathered on the spot. He is having
-some labor troubles, and was about to drive over the mountain to the
-Swiss settlement at New Basel to see if he couldn’t pick up a little
-new blood. I didn’t have to persuade very hard to get him to abandon
-his horse and buckboard, and I drove him over and back.”
-
-“He is all right, you think?”
-
-“As straight as a string. If the C. C. & I. is crooked, he is no party
-to the underhand work. Also, he told me a lot about the McNabbs. He
-seems to be quite certain that they have no grudge of their own to
-work off. Laster McNabb, who is the grandfather of the outfit and the
-chief of the clan, has talked very freely with Wilmerding about the
-Ocoee lawsuit, and if the McNabbs have it in for anybody, it is for the
-lawyer who dragged them into the fight with the New Englanders.”
-
-Tregarvon stood up to rest an elbow against the rough stone mantel.
-“If your estimate of Wilmerding is correct, the C. C. & I. can’t
-be held responsible; and, on the other hand, it doesn’t seem to be
-the mountaineers. Yet we have had the accidents with the drilling
-machinery, and somebody has just tried to assassinate you. You may say
-it’s Hartridge, but I can’t follow you there. The motive is lacking.”
-
-“Is the motive altogether lacking?” Carfax queried gently.
-
-“You mean that Hartridge may be asinine enough to think that I am
-trespassing on his preserves at Highmount? That is nonsense. Miss
-Richardia Birrell and I are merely good friends. Besides that, I don’t
-believe she has ever given the ‘bug professor’ a second thought,
-sentimentally.”
-
-“Maybe not. But a woman as a factor in any problem is always the
-unknown quantity,” Carfax remarked half musingly. Then he added:
-“It would be a real charity, both to you and to Professor William
-Wilberforce, if some outsider would step in and marry Miss Richardia
-out of the game, don’t you think?”
-
-Tregarvon’s frown was morose. Slowly but surely the light with the
-difficulties, material and mysterious, was working a change in the
-young man whose chief characteristic had hitherto been finding its
-principal expression in the light-hearted optimism of those who neither
-toil nor spin. For the first time in his wealth-smoothed saunter he was
-coming to hand-grips with the primitive, and the quick glance shot at
-Carfax was almost a challenge.
-
-“Perhaps you’d like to be the outsider, Poictiers? Is that what you had
-in mind?” he threw in bluntly.
-
-Carfax, gazing reflectively into the heart of the fire embers, took the
-demand, or assumed to take it, at its face value.
-
-“A chap might do a lot worse,” he replied, as one who weighs the pros
-and cons judicially. “It’s a broken family, to be sure, as to its
-fortunes, but it’s good blood. They say that the old judge is as fine
-as they make ’em; a gentleman of the old Southern school, land-poor,
-but as proud as Lucifer. The two McNabb boys were telling me about him
-to-day. They are squatters on Birrell land, as their forefathers were
-before them, and they’d fight for the old judge at the drop of the hat.”
-
-“You haven’t answered my question,” said Tregarvon pointedly.
-
-Carfax rose and stretched his arms over his head like a man who has put
-in a full day.
-
-“No; and I’m not going to answer it to-night. Later on, if you still
-insist on needing a guardian angel, there may be a different story to
-tell. Where’s my candle? I’m going to bed.”
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-The Stubborn Rock
-
-
-By the time Rucker returned from Chattanooga with the repairs for the
-broken drilling plant, the Saturday-night attempt to wreck the yellow
-car on Carfax’s run down the mountain had become a past danger-signal,
-and was in a fair way to be overlaid and forgotten in a fresh upturning
-of the activities.
-
-After the arrival of the new gears one day more was needed for their
-installation; then the smoke plume began to wave again from the top
-of the stack on lofty Pisgah, and the drill resumed its interrupted
-jouncings in the sandstone. In due course, and with no added untoward
-happenings to delay the work--this though the two McNabbs, identified
-now and closely watched by Tregarvon, were still retained in the
-gang--the drill reached the first coal seam, penetrated it, plunged
-again into rock, and, a few hours later, into and through the second
-and lower coal layer; net result--failure.
-
-With the new-found fighting resolution now fully aroused, Tregarvon
-did not waste a minute. In the intervals afforded by temporary pauses
-in the drilling he had found time to select a location farther back on
-the plateau for the next trial; and while the boiler of the portable
-engine was still hot from the fire-drawing of failure, the transfer of
-the plant was begun.
-
-The second trial was a mere repetition of the first, save that the
-layer of rock separating the two coal seams gained six inches in
-thickness for the added distance from the original mine opening in the
-cliff face at the head of the tramway. Wilmerding, the genial young
-superintendent of the C. C. & I. subsidiaries was on the ground when
-the sand-pump tests of this second hole were made, and he shook his
-head doubtfully.
-
-“I suppose I oughtn’t to throw cold water; it doesn’t come with very
-good grace from the boss in the enemy’s camp,” he said deprecatingly.
-“But I’m mightily afraid you gentlemen are chasing fireflies. You have
-two distinct seams, instead of one that has been split by a horizontal
-wedge of the sand-rock, and I believe a careful analysis of the coal in
-the two seams will prove it. Going to move still farther back and try
-again?”
-
-“It’s the surest thing there is,” said Tregarvon, who had already set
-his men at work striking the derrick. “I may be licked, but I’m too big
-a fool to know it.”
-
-“Good!” laughed Wilmerding; “I like your courage immensely. But while
-you are tapping it again, send me some samples and let me analyze the
-two veins for you. I have a laboratory up at Whitlow, and I’ll be glad
-to help out to that extent.”
-
-“You are an enemy, right, Mr. Wilmerding!” said Tregarvon heartily. “A
-fighting friend couldn’t make a fairer offer than that. But you will
-find that the two seams are one and the same. I made even canny old
-Captain Duncan admit that he couldn’t detect any difference in the coal
-taken from the two veins.”
-
-Wilmerding nodded. “The captain is canny, as you say, though you can
-hardly prove it by me. I don’t know him very well--haven’t been down
-here long enough. Thaxter knows him from away back, however, and he has
-told me a good bit about the old Scotchman, who has the reputation, by
-the way, of being at the top of the heap as an analytical chemist.”
-
-“Thaxter?” put in Carfax interrogatively. He had been an attentive
-listener; his usual attitude in any three-cornered conference.
-
-“Yes. Don’t you know Thaxter, my bookkeeper? Not to know Thaxter is to
-argue yourself unknown in the Wehatchee. The rank and file at Whitlow
-think I’m the boss, and that Connolly comes next. But Thaxter is the
-real power behind the throne.”
-
-Carfax made the necessary effort of memory and recalled a pursy little
-man, round-faced, gray-haired and genial, who had beamed up at him
-through a pair of thick-lensed spectacles on the day when he had
-invaded the C. C. & I. stronghold at Whitlow.
-
-“I remember him,” he told Wilmerding. “Reminded me of one of the
-Brothers Cheeryble, and I caught myself unconsciously looking about for
-the other.”
-
-Not having read Dickens, Wilmerding lost the point of the comparison.
-
-“Yes,” he went on. “Thaxter is It, all right enough. More than anybody
-else in this neck of woods he is Consolidated Coal: has every coal
-detail of this entire region down in black on white, neatly docketed
-and labelled and put away for future reference. I carry him on my
-pay-roll, but I couldn’t any more fire him than I could fire the
-President of the United States. On the other hand, I shouldn’t be
-surprised if he could have my head any minute he chose to hold up his
-finger to the big guns in New York.”
-
-“Nice kind of a bombshell to be rolling around under a man’s feet,”
-Carfax commented.
-
-“Oh, Thaxter is harmless; he doesn’t explode. He is like the assistant
-secretaries of the Departments in Washington, you know; the fellows
-who really have the run of the business and stay on the job while the
-political chiefs come and go. They are like the cat: harmless and
-necessary and full of wisdom. Which reminds me: I’ll bet my wind-broken
-old nag, here, against your gas-car, Tregarvon, that Thaxter has an
-analysis of these coals of yours filed away somewhere this very minute.
-If he has, I’ll get it for you. It will be a lot more conclusive than
-any I could make, offhand, in my laboratory.”
-
-So offering, Wilmerding betook himself and his promise to the road
-leading to Whitlow, leaving the two undismayed coal prospectors on high
-Pisgah patiently removing their testing plant to a point still farther
-back from the cliff face. By this time the working gang had acquired
-the practice which makes perfect; and before the news of the failure
-of the second attempt had spread beyond the comment of Tait’s store
-the drill was churning away in the third of the testing holes, with the
-lean, bristly-bearded Sawyer acting as drill-master--a post which he
-had claimed and filled from the first.
-
-“I don’t care how much other people may laugh at you; _I_ think your
-perseverance is beyond praise,” said Miss Richardia, on an afternoon
-when Tregarvon, scamping his job and snatching a few moments for
-himself, had driven her and a group of the Highmount young women over
-in the yellow car to the new location. “I am sure you deserve to
-succeed--if perseverance by itself ever deserves anything.”
-
-“Why do you say, ‘by itself’?”
-
-“I mean sheer, dogged persistence, without any of the justifying
-reasons.”
-
-“I have the reasons; I’m obliged to succeed,” was the answer rather
-gloomily given. Carfax had taken the tonneau party around to the
-derrick, and the two in the driving-seat of the car had their bit of
-the mountain-top world momentarily to themselves.
-
-“You say that as if you were sorry,” laughed the music teacher. “Don’t
-you want to succeed?”
-
-“To want is to desire and need,” he explained meticulously. “Heaven
-knows, I need success; need it awfully. Yet the very reason for
-needing it is vicarious on one hand, and an exhibition of the meanest
-sort of purse-pride on the other. But you know all about that.”
-
-Truly, Miss Richardia did know. It was during his third evening visit
-to Highmount, while Carfax was trundling the entire school in batches
-up and down the cherted pike in front of the college grounds in the
-auto, and Miss Richardia had been playing to him in the otherwise
-deserted music-room, that Tregarvon had told her all about the family
-fortunes, and Elizabeth, and his engagement, and the Uncle Byrd
-millions. He did not regard it as a breach of confidence at the time;
-of Elizabeth’s confidence or his own. He had merely yielded to an
-attack of a purely masculine desire to tell all he knew to the nearest
-woman.
-
-“You still think it is necessary to keep Miss Wardwell waiting?” Miss
-Richardia was always able to answer his unspoken thought without
-apparent effort, as he had already learned.
-
-“You wouldn’t have me do anything else, would you?” he retorted
-discontentedly. “Put yourself in Elizabeth’s place: what would you
-think of me if I should take advantage of your good-nature, and so
-give everybody a chance to say that I didn’t need to be in love with
-you--that your money was a sufficient bait?”
-
-Miss Birrell was not at all past blushing, and she did it very prettily.
-
-“You are so boyishly personal!” she laughed, and the fact that she did
-not resent the personality was an ample measure of the degree to which
-their intimacy had progressed. And then: “You promised me that you were
-going to be sensible and straightforward, and all those things. You
-said you were going to be entirely frank with Eliz--with Miss Wardwell,
-telling her that you haven’t insisted upon her naming the day because
-you think you ought to have means of your own, first. Have you done
-this?”
-
-“No, I haven’t--not yet.”
-
-“Why haven’t you? You owe it to her, don’t you?”
-
-“Perhaps; but I owe something to myself, too.”
-
-Miss Richardia seized upon the admission swiftly and turned it as a
-weapon against him. “You do, indeed! You owe it to Mr. Vance Tregarvon
-not to keep any of the anchors in reserve. As you once said, yourself,
-you are too impressionable.”
-
-“A light o’ love,” he laughed. “I must tell Elizabeth what an eloquent
-special pleader she has unconsciously acquired down here in the wilds
-of Tennessee. What have I done that I ought not to have done?”
-
-“I am not your conscience,” was the cool-voiced reply.
-
-“But you are,” he retorted accusingly. “You tell me what I ought to do,
-and I promise to go and do it. My intentions are always good.”
-
-“I am not sure of even that much, now. You have changed very remarkably
-in the past few weeks, and you must forgive me if I say that the change
-hasn’t been altogether for the better. You were just a nice, cheerful
-boy when you came to Tennessee, and you’re not that any more.”
-
-“I have good reasons, and plenty of them,” he blurted out. “Do you want
-to hear them?”
-
-“Not when you talk that way,” said Miss Birrell, and her attitude
-became suddenly indifferent.
-
-“You shall hear them, whether you want to or not,” he broke in almost
-roughly. “I have the whole world against me on this Ocoee proposition;
-I have given my word to Elizabeth when I don’t love her as the man who
-is going to marry her ought to love her; and----”
-
-“That is quite enough,” she interposed quietly. “It only proves what
-I said a minute ago. You can’t afford to hold any of your anchors in
-reserve. I think we had better join Mr. Carfax and the young women.
-Don’t you?”
-
-“No. And I call that downright cruel, when we see so little of each
-other, and I almost never have you to myself any more.”
-
-“It is your saying such things as that that makes me think I ought to
-be cruel. There are times when you need cruelty. Nothing milder would
-do any good.”
-
-“You may as well say the remainder of it,” he prompted.
-
-“I shall. It is really serious. You must come to a better understanding
-with Miss Wardwell; and you must stop coming so often to Highmount.”
-
-“The first time I went to Highmount you told me that I might come as
-often as I pleased. You needn’t worry about the school-girls. If you
-say the word, I’ll never speak to one of them again unless she is duly
-chaperoned at the moment.”
-
-“We were speaking of Miss Wardwell,” was the rather chilling reminder.
-
-“Well, we will speak of her, then. She isn’t losing any sleep on my
-account. If you only knew Elizabeth as well as I do--but what’s the
-use!”
-
-“There appears to be no use at all, and I have already said more than
-your nearest friend ought to say. Suppose we talk of something else.”
-
-Tregarvon refused flatly to accept the invitation.
-
-“No; I want to know about my welcome at Highmount. I have had Mrs.
-Caswell’s warrant in the past. I have it yet. You can’t make me stay
-away.”
-
-Miss Richardia’s pretty chin went up a quarter of an inch.
-
-“Then you will compel me to be disagreeable; and I don’t like to be
-that. I always have plenty of work to do in the evenings; quite a
-number of the young women would like to take extra music lessons, and I
-have a piano in my rooms.”
-
-Tregarvon gasped. “You don’t mean that you’d be hard-hearted enough
-to shut yourself up? to refuse to see me? That would be--but I simply
-can’t contemplate it. You--you don’t know what your confidence and your
-clear insight have come to mean to me!”
-
-“On the contrary, it is because I do know, or rather because I know how
-you are justifying yourself, that you must----”
-
-“But I shall not! It is just a frank, open friendship that has grown
-very precious to me, Richardia. Put it upon the lowest possible
-grounds; say that it amuses you and doesn’t hurt Elizabeth--I could
-show you letters from her in which she actually encourages it--and add
-to these that it does me a whole lot of good. Why should you freeze up
-right in the midst of it, just when I am needing all the encouragement
-I can get?”
-
-Miss Birrell did not wish to laugh, but his protest, the shocked
-pleading of a little boy who fears he is about to be deprived of his
-customary piece of bread and butter with sugar on it, was too much for
-her self-control. None the less, she would not yield a hair’s-breadth.
-
-“You can’t convince me, and you needn’t try,” she declared. “Granting
-what you say--that it amuses me and doesn’t hurt any one else--there
-are still the conventions to be considered. Perhaps you think,
-because you are a thousand miles from Philadelphia, that there are
-no conventions. If you do, you are greatly mistaken. Highmount, for
-example, has a complete equipment of them.”
-
-“Confound the conventions!” growled Tregarvon. Carfax was leading his
-following back to the car, and the end of the confidential talk was
-approaching.
-
-“No, you needn’t swear at them,” said Miss Richardia, with honey in her
-tone. “More than that, you would be the last person in the world to
-want to have them confounded. In your proper environment, I can picture
-you as an exceedingly correct person; one who would protest most
-vigorously if his sister should----”
-
-She did not finish, because the others were within hearing distance;
-but the sentence was sufficiently complete to point the comparison for
-Tregarvon. He bent over the steering-wheel and pretended to be trying
-the connections of the substitute battery coil. The feint permitted him
-to say in low tones: “You are altogether right--as you always are. I’ll
-be as decent as I can: and it will cost more than you think.”
-
-After which he descended from the driving-seat and shifted the
-responsibility of the return of the party to Highmount over to Carfax,
-saying that since the drill was doubtless nearing the coal depth, he
-would better stay on the job.
-
-He was late getting down the mountain that evening, having worked his
-crew overtime to settle a disputed point with Rucker. The dispute, or
-rather its outcome, was sufficiently explained in his announcement to
-Carfax when he tramped into the office dining-room and dropped wearily
-into a chair before the fire.
-
-“One more slap in the face, Poictiers. We found the coal about two
-hours ago, and a little later the drill landed upon the sandstone layer
-again. I’m too tired to know whether it’s discouragement or just plain
-leg-weariness and back-ache, but I feel as if something had gone out of
-me.”
-
-Carfax rose to the occasion with his customary cheerful alacrity.
-
-“We’re not going to say die, yet a while, Vance, old man. It merely
-means another try. If you are running low in the ammunition-chest----”
-
-“No, it isn’t that; it isn’t costing so terribly much. But to tell the
-blank truth, I don’t know where to go with the drill for another try.
-We are a good quarter of a mile back from the tramway head now; an
-almost impracticable distance, even if we had found the big vein.”
-
-“Well, what is the matter with swinging around the circle a bit? You
-have latitude as well as longitude, haven’t you?” said Carfax the
-comforter.
-
-“Oh, yes; there is Ocoee land enough. And I guess that is about the
-last hope.”
-
-“Which way had you thought of moving, north or south?”
-
-“Whichever way you say,” was the spiritless reply.
-
-Carfax took a coin from his pocket and balanced it upon his thumb.
-“Heads, Highmount way; tails, toward Whitlow,” he called, and flipped
-the coin.
-
-It fell heads uppermost, deciding for the Highmount direction; and when
-Tregarvon would have picked the coin up to return it, Carfax stopped
-him.
-
-“Let it alone; I’m superstitious to-night. Uncle William will be in
-with your warmed-over dinner in a minute: let him pick it up and keep
-it--for good luck.” And a little while afterward, when the old negro
-shuffled in with the covered tray: “There is a dollar on the floor
-which we are both afraid to touch, Uncle William. Don’t you want it?”
-
-The old man scraped a foot and said: “Sarvent, suh,” but he arranged
-the table to the final nicety before going around to look at the money
-on the floor.
-
-“Now, Marsteh Poictiers, whut-all is de marter wid dat dollah?” he
-asked, bending, hands on knees, to eye it suspiciously.
-
-“There is nothing the matter with the dollar, uncle; the trouble is
-with us. We are afraid of it.”
-
-“Sho’ now! Is you? Dat look lak a mighty rightchus dollah to me. Dat
-ain’t no debbil’s money, is it?”
-
-“You’ll have to settle that for yourself. Since the dollar came out of
-my pocket a few minutes ago, I shall be justified in refusing to answer
-so personal a question as that relating to its righteousness.”
-
-“_Hyuh! hyuh!_ It comed out of yo’ pocket, an’ yit you is skeered of
-it? Dat look mighty cur’is to me. Look lak you-all is tryin’ to play
-trick on de ol’ man, Marsteh Poictiers. I ain’t seed no white folks’
-money yit dat I’s skeered of,” and he bent cautiously to pick it up.
-
-“Look out, Uncle William; it might burn you!” said Carfax suddenly; and
-quite as suddenly the old negro dropped the coin and started back.
-
-“Bless gresshus! but dat _wuz_ hot!” he exclaimed, blowing upon his
-fingers. And then: “Des you keep yo’ eye on dat dollah, ef you please,
-suh, twell I come back, an’ I’ll fix ’im,” and a little later he
-returned from the cook-house with a small tin pan which he turned down
-over the piece of money.
-
-“Ef dat won’t be in you gemmans’ way, an’ you-all ’ll des leab ’im dah,
-I gwine come back bimeby an’ tek de cunjer off ’im. I ain’ gwine lef de
-ol’ debbil hab dat dollah, not ef it _is_ his’n.”
-
-The little diversion did for Tregarvon what Carfax had hoped it might;
-and after the belated meal was eaten and the pipes were lighted, the
-atmosphere of disheartenment was changed somewhat for the better.
-
-“There is one thing we have to be thankful for,” the disappointed one
-volunteered, when his reflections began to mellow in the tobacco smoke.
-“We haven’t heard from the enemy since the attempt was made to ditch
-the car, and there haven’t been any more of the unaccountable accidents
-to the machinery.”
-
-“That is so,” said Carfax. “And I have been trying to guess, all along,
-why he--or they--stopped so abruptly.”
-
-“There wasn’t any good reason why he--or they--should have begun,” said
-Tregarvon musingly.
-
-“Somebody evidently thought there was a reason, and afterward changed
-his mind. Why should he change his mind? That is the question that has
-been puzzling me.”
-
-“Perhaps he has found out what a good fellow I really am, and is no
-longer bloodthirsty,” put in Tregarvon, who was too tired to make any
-very heavy drafts upon his mentality.
-
-“You haven’t any notion that the fight, if there is one, is personal
-to you, have you?--excluding Professor Hartridge, of course.”
-
-“Oh, no; I was only joking. And we’ll always exclude Hartridge, if
-you please; I’m still refusing to believe it of him. It was probably
-somebody’s intention to drown the blind kitten of an Ocoee before
-it had time to get its eyes open; but the somebody couldn’t, by any
-stretch of imagination, be Hartridge.”
-
-“But why has the somebody--who isn’t Hartridge--called the fight off so
-suddenly? By Jove, Vance--I have an idea! It has dawned upon the enemy,
-whoever he is, that it wasn’t worth while to efface us at a time when
-we were perseveringly going the right way about it to efface ourselves!
-I’d like to make a bet with you: when we begin drilling in the right
-place--if there is any right place--the trouble will blossom out again.
-What do you think?”
-
-“I haven’t a thought left that isn’t too leg-weary to keep up with
-you,” Tregarvon confessed; whereat he fell to talking of Miss Richardia
-Birrell, dribbling on until Carfax, groaning in spirit, got up to light
-the bed-room candles.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-A Bad Night for Rucker
-
-
-After the drilling plant had been moved to the chance-chosen, fourth
-trial site a short half-mile south of the original line of prospect
-holes, the work of reinstallation was begun. At its completion, it
-was at Rucker’s suggestion that the small tool-house was fitted with
-a single-sashed window and a folding cot-bed, and that the duties of
-night-watchman were added to his daytime oversight of the drilling
-machinery.
-
-Just why the plant, which had been left unguarded since the first
-week of the campaign, and had been unmolested, should now need a
-night-watchman, the mechanician did not attempt to explain. His reasons
-for wishing to transfer his lodgings from the valley to the mountain
-top were entirely personal. He had been taken as a boarder at the
-Tryons’, and to wear out the dull evenings after working hours, he had
-been drawn first into the lounging circle at Tait’s store, and later
-into the smaller circle of the Layne household on the lower valley road.
-
-The loadstone at Layne’s was a granddaughter of the patriarch’s, a
-black-eyed, red-lipped girl of primal passions and impulses; and in the
-beginning Rucker had been given a fair field and no questions asked
-as to his eligible state and standing. Evening strolls on the country
-roads with Nancy Layne for a companion were not to be compared with
-a night off on Broadway under the bright lights; but such diversions
-were made to suffice until a day when Daddy Layne, abruptly pointing to
-the long-barrelled squirrel-rifle resting on its pegs over the kitchen
-fireplace, assumed the aggressive. “Git yo’ license an’ yo’ preachuh,
-’r let Nan alone an’ quit projec’in’ round this yer valley o’ nights,”
-was the old man’s ultimatum; and Rucker, having a wholesome fear of
-consequences, and the best of reasons for not applying for a marriage
-license, asked permission to sleep at the drilling plant.
-
-The first night on the mountain was frankly harrowing to the city-bred
-mechanic, whose burglarish aspect did not insure him against the still
-alarms of the forest intensified by moon-flung shadows of solemn trees,
-by scurryings of fallen leaves rattling like dry bones under the autumn
-night-wind, and, more than all, by a sense of complete and lonely
-isolation.
-
-Each unfamiliar sound brought Rucker out of his cot-bed blankets
-with a bound and sent him groping to the square window. First it was
-a little screech-owl, perching on the walking-beam of the drill, and
-chattering out its blood-curdling cry. Next it was a slow and measured
-crashing in the undergrowth, sound mysterious and unnerving to a degree
-until the night-prowling cow responsible for it lowed gently and
-crossed the clearing to snuff suspiciously at the boiler and machinery.
-
-The tension once more relieved, Rucker tumbled into the blankets
-again, calling himself shop names and swearing by all the gods of the
-metalworkers that nothing short of a forest-fire or an earthquake
-should make him lose any more sleep. Yet, while he was still only
-eye-deep in his first doze a new alarm brought him leaping to his feet
-and sent him, blinking and breathing hard, to the square of moonlight
-framed by the small window.
-
-What he heard this time sounded like the measured hoof-beats of a
-horse. Rucker had a pocket flash-light, and he turned it upon the face
-of his watch. He had gone early to bed, and it was still early, barely
-ten o’clock. A by-road, the one by which the drilling plant had been
-brought in, ran through the wood a little distance to the left of
-the glade. Staring wide-eyed, Rucker made out the shadowy bulk of a
-wheeled vehicle standing in this road, with a white horse, seemingly of
-incredible size, looming gigantic between the thills.
-
-The mechanician got his breath, and his heart began to pump in steadier
-rhythm. A horse and buggy betokened the presence of humankind, and
-Rucker was not a coward of men. Moreover, the ball-peen machinist’s
-hammer, lying within easy reach, was no mean weapon of defense in the
-grasp of a man who knew how to swing it.
-
-Obsessed by the idea that he might shortly have to resort to the
-hammer, the mechanician was wholly unprepared for what followed.
-Slowly, and as if they were materializing out of the shadows of the
-wood, two figures glided into the watcher’s field of vision: a man,
-tall, stately, wearing the long coat and the wide-brimmed soft hat
-which even an unobservant Rucker knew to be the garmentings of the
-old-fashioned Southern gentleman. And, hanging on the man’s arm, a
-woman, small and trimly clad.
-
-They came only to the edge of the open glade. The woman’s hat left her
-face in shadow, so that even if the light had been better, Rucker could
-not have seen what she looked like. The man’s back was turned to him,
-and here, again, he was at fault. Nevertheless, he was presently able
-to postulate the man’s gestures as those of anger, and to understand
-that the woman was pleading with him. It was etched out wholly in
-pantomime; Rucker could hear nothing. Twice or thrice the man made an
-inclusive motion with his free hand as if indicating the glade as the
-subject of whatever he was saying; and finally he balled his hand into
-a fist and shook it wrathfully at the unoffending drill derrick.
-
-This went on for some moments, the woman, Rucker fancied, trying to end
-it and draw the man away. Whether as the result of her efforts, or for
-some other reason, the scene ended as abruptly as it had begun. The two
-figures turned and faded into the wood shadows as mysteriously as they
-had come out of them; and while Rucker was still straining his eyes to
-keep them in sight, the horse and buggy vanished to a soft thudding of
-hoofs on the sandy road.
-
-After this apparition had disappeared, the machinist filled his black
-cutty pipe, opened the door of the tool-house, and sat upon the step
-to smoke and ruminate and strive for a better collecting of things
-into their normal groupings. Later, he strolled out to the by-road to
-see if the hoof and wheel marks were really there; to satisfy himself
-beyond question that he had not been dreaming. The ocular demonstration
-convinced him that he was sane, sober, and awake. The hoof-prints were
-there, though they were by no means so gigantic as he had expected to
-find them; and so were the wheel ruts.
-
-“I guess I needn’t be botherin’ my head about who they was,” he
-muttered to himself as he went back to his seat on the tool-house
-door-step. “Th’ bosses’ll know that, all right, all right. But if
-there’s goin’ to be a whole lot of this ghost business up here, it’s me
-for the downstairs, even if I do have to duck every time I see old man
-Layne comin’ up th’ road. These moonlight picture-shows get next to my
-gizzard-nerve. I ain’t no ghost-killer--not me.”
-
-His pipe was smoked out and, knocking the ash from the bowl, he got up,
-having fresh designs upon the tool-house bed-room and the blanketed
-cot. But he was scarcely afoot before the sounds of wheels and hoofs
-came again, this time from the opposite direction.
-
-“My gosh!” he complained, “are they comin’ back? Or is it a torchlight
-procession of ’em? No, by jing! it’s somebody else: that horse is a
-black one!”
-
-More to be out of harm’s way than for any spying purpose, he slipped
-into the tool-house and softly closed and fastened the door. When he
-tiptoed to the window two other figures had entered the glade; two men,
-and both of them with burdens.
-
-Their movements were even more mysterious than those of the earlier
-visitors. The shorter of the two carried a square box, handling it by
-a buckled strap which encircled it, and the other had a shoulder load
-which Rucker could liken only to a small bundle of poles. Both burdens
-were quickly put down; and at Rucker’s final glimpse, obtained just as
-the moon was passing behind a cloud, the shorter man had gone down on
-his knees beside the box, and was apparently opening it.
-
-Everything turned to a blurred gray for the watcher at the square
-window while the cloud obscured the direct rays of the moon; and when
-a better light came, the taller of the two men had disappeared, and
-the other was standing motionless under a great oak, whose spreading
-branches were sadly obstructing Rucker’s line of sight.
-
-“Now, what the devil is he doin’?” was Rucker’s demand, whispered to
-the inner darknesses. “And where has t’ other guy skipped to, all of
-a sudden. By jinks! I b’lieve the short one’s sightin’ a gun; no, it
-ain’t a gun, either; it’s a kodak. No, I’m off again, and I hain’t
-got any more guesses. Now, what t’ ’ell’s the sawed-off doin’, wavin’
-his arms up and down that way? By gollies, this whole mountain’s gone
-bug-house, ’r else I have!”
-
-Rucker watched the arm-waving for a full minute before it dawned upon
-him that the short man who seemed to be sighting something was making
-signals. The small square window of espial commanded nothing but the
-glade. The watcher crept cautiously to the end of the room facing
-toward the near-by brow of the mountain. The moonlight helped him to
-find the knot-hole he was looking for, but for a time the contracted
-field of vision revealed nothing but a forest tangle of moon-spattered
-shadows.
-
-Rucker had the patience of his craft, and the practical reasoning power
-that goes with it. The man under the oak was evidently signalling to
-some one to the eastward of his position at the edge of the glade:
-Rucker’s knot-hole in the planking at the end of the tool-house covered
-the same field: hence the eye at the knot-hole should be able to descry
-what was apparently visible to the eyes under the spreading oak.
-
-The mechanician stuck to his hypothesis until finally the fact proved
-it to be the true one. Far down among the trees, almost at the cliff’s
-edge, Rucker thought, a dancing light, such as might be made by a
-flaring pine torch, flashed up, flickered, and disappeared. The general
-aspect of the mystery remained as impenetrable as before, but one point
-became clear. The man under the tree was waving to the man with the
-torch, and some purpose, quite well understood by both, was getting
-itself forwarded.
-
-Rucker stayed at his peep-hole until the torch reappeared, flared
-steadily in one place for a few seconds, and then went out as suddenly
-as if a gust of wind had extinguished it. After which he tiptoed
-back to his window, and was there, looking on curiously, when the
-torch-bearer came tramping up from the eastward. There was a little
-delay when the upcomer joined the man under the oak. The watcher saw
-them taking the sighting mechanism, whatever it might be, apart and
-depositing some portion of it carefully in the square box; saw the two
-men resume their respective burdens and thread their way rapidly among
-the trees to the waiting vehicle. Then came the grinding protest of
-buggy wheels cramped short to turn in the narrow by-road, the _shough_
-of a horse, minishing hoof-beats, and silence.
-
-By this time Rucker was beginning to stand somewhat less in awe of
-a forest wilderness which seemed, after all, to be anything but an
-uninhabited solitude. A fresh filling of the short black pipe was the
-preliminary to a careful scrutiny of the ground under the spreading
-oak-tree. There was but a thin layer of sandy top-soil overlying the
-rock through which the drill was to be churned on the morrow, but
-it sufficed to reveal what Rucker was looking for--three conical
-indentations made by the sharply pointed ends of a tripod, the stand
-of the sighting mechanism, level, transit, or telescope, used by the
-shorter of the two men.
-
-This much proved, Rucker went back to the tool shanty, found and
-lighted a lantern, and with it steered a course between the trees
-to the eastward point where the torch-bearer had stood. It took him
-several minutes to discover the exact spot; but when it was found and
-identified by the remains of the extinguished pine-knot torch, he
-whittled a small stake and with a stone for a hammer drove it to mark
-the place.
-
-“There, by heck!” he said, when he was once more sitting on the
-tool-house door-step to finish his pipe. “If I hain’t got funny
-business enough to keep the bosses guessin’ f’r a week ’r so, I’ll sit
-up a few minutes longer and pull down some more.”
-
-It was far past midnight when he found himself nodding over the smoking
-lantern, and got up to go and tumble sleepily into his bed. And this
-time neither the shrilling of the katydids and tree-toads nor the
-screeching of the little owl that came once more to perch upon the
-drill walking-beam, kept him awake.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-Blind Alleys
-
-
-There was a council of war, held without preliminaries, to follow
-Rucker’s report made to his two employers on the morning after the
-night of mysterious alarms. The small tool shanty served as the
-council-chamber, and the councillors were only two, Rucker having been
-heard and dismissed to take his place as chief mechanician in the
-drilling squad.
-
-“Talk about fourteen-fifteen puzzles and the fourth dimension: this
-masquerade puts the kibosh on them all,” remarked Carfax, opening his
-pocket-case of freshly imported cigarettes. “Or are you wiping the
-slate clean by charging Billy Rucker with a bad supper or a drink or so
-too many?”
-
-Tregarvon shook his head.
-
-“It is too circumstantial to be a nightmare. Besides, there are the two
-sets of wheel tracks in the road, and the marks of the tripod under the
-oak; likewise the burnt pine torch and Rucker’s stake to mark the place
-of it. It’s no pipe-dream--more’s the pity.”
-
-“Then what the deuce is it?--or they?--since there seem to have been
-two distinct sets of phenomena.”
-
-Again the owner of the Ocoee shook his head.
-
-“I think we may safely assume that Rucker saw two acts in the same
-play. But what the play may have been is beyond my wildest guess.
-Rucker’s suggestion that we’ve dropped down into a neighborhood of
-crazy people seems to fit better than anything else.”
-
-Carfax was sitting on the cot with his hands locked over one knee. “It
-is rather pointedly our job to chase the shy guess into a corner, don’t
-you think? There is mischief in it. One’s bosom friends would hardly
-come here at night to shake their fists at things, or to run surveyors’
-lines by moonlight.”
-
-Tregarvon got up to tramp the floor, but there was no room in the
-cluttered tool shanty and he sat down again upon a coil of rope.
-
-“Damn this crazy Southern mining country!” he rapped out. “Rucker is
-right: I believe it’s peopled with escaped lunatics fresh from Bedlam!
-You’ve got a theory, Poictiers; I can see it in your eye. Put it in
-words. Whom do you suspect?”
-
-“Small minds suspect: larger ones reason calmly,” said the golden
-youth in mild irony. “The thing for us to do first is to establish a
-few identities, if we can. Who were these late-in-the-evening visitors?
-Let’s take them in their natural order; first come, first served.
-Rucker seems to have had a fair eye-shot at the man in a soft hat and
-long-tailed coat. Doesn’t his description of the man’s clothes and
-figure throw at least a suggestion into you?”
-
-Tregarvon frowned. “You’ve got Hartridge on the brain,” he retorted.
-“You can travel anywhere in the South and still find plenty of men who
-wear soft hats and full-skirted Prince Alberts.”
-
-“Yes; quite so. But we have met only one on Mount Pisgah, thus far, and
-his name is William Wilberforce Hartridge. And if we take Mr. Hartridge
-for the fist-shaking gentleman, the next step--the identity of the
-lady--is simplified.”
-
-“I don’t see it,” Tregarvon objected sourly.
-
-“You mean you won’t see it. What woman, from Highmount, would be most
-likely to be Mr. Hartridge’s companion on a moonlight evening drive?
-Don’t let your prejudices, or rather your prepossessions, make a blind
-mule of you, Vance.”
-
-“I suppose you mean that the woman was Richardia Birrell. It doesn’t
-necessarily follow, and I don’t believe it.”
-
-“It isn’t so dreadfully hard to believe. There is no reason why she
-shouldn’t go driving with the professor of mathematics, if she feels
-like it. Neither is there anything especially culpable in the fact that
-she walked down here with him when he came to shake his professorial
-fist at your drilling-machine. When you have cooled down sufficiently,
-we’ll go and see if my little primary guess won’t prove out.”
-
-“I’m cool enough,” was the answer to this; and together they went to
-seek the proof.
-
-The buggy tracks in the damp sand of the little-used road were not hard
-to trace, and there were places where the hoof-prints of the horse
-which had been driven toward Highmount were clean-cut and distinct.
-Carfax was a spoiled son of fortune only in his affectations. Beneath
-the carefully cultivated fopperies there was a keen, active mentality
-which rarely missed its mark and never fumbled. He made pencil sketches
-of the hoof-prints on the back of an old letter in passing, and it was
-he, and not Tregarvon, who noted the single peculiarity in the horse’s
-shoeing; a missing corner from the toe-calk on the left hind foot.
-
-As the New Yorker’s hypothesis had assumed, the buggy tracks led
-directly to Highmount; or at least the assumption seemed a fair one.
-The two investigators did not follow the vehicle trail all the way to
-the college gates; could not, since the trail-recording wood road came
-out into the hard-metalled mountain pike a few hundred yards below
-the Highmount grounds, and the wheel marks were no longer visible.
-But there seemed to be no reasonable doubt of the correctness of
-Carfax’s guess; and Tregarvon admitted as much on the way back to the
-starting-point.
-
-“Mind you, I’m not admitting that Richardia was a party to anything
-underhanded or crooked,” he added in qualification. “She may have
-been driving with Hartridge; as you say, there isn’t any particular
-reason why she shouldn’t go buggy-riding with him if she wishes to;
-and she may have walked down to the glade with him. I don’t say that
-she didn’t; but I do say that she isn’t tangled up in any of the
-disreputable mysteries, knowingly.”
-
-“Oh, no; I’d be as loath to admit that as you are,” said Carfax gently.
-“In fact, it is barely possible that I have the better right to defend
-her. We’ll put it all up to Hartridge. The next thing is to find out,
-if we can, where Hartridge got his two surveyors on such short notice,
-and what it was that could be proved or disproved by a transit sight
-taken in the moonlight under conditions which must have barred anything
-like mathematical accuracy. Where are your blue-prints of the Ocoee
-property?--down below, or up here?”
-
-The map copies were in the tool-house, one set of them; and when they
-were found, Carfax spread them out on the cot and pored over them
-thoughtfully.
-
-“You are not trespassing on somebody else’s land, at all events,” was
-the verdict, rendered after he had verified the position of the glade
-in which the fourth test-hole was being driven. “It is all Ocoee in
-every direction; your land covers all this part of the mountain. By the
-way, what is this name, ‘Westwood,’ written across these mountain-top
-plats?”
-
-Tregarvon did not know, and he said so; adding that he supposed it
-might be the name of the original owner of the land.
-
-“Who is he? Ever hear of him?”
-
-“I don’t recall that I have. But that is not singular. I haven’t had
-occasion, or the time, to dig very deeply into ancient history.”
-
-“Well, there doesn’t seem to be anything very illuminating about these
-blue-prints, save that they establish your perfect right to bore holes
-almost anywhere you please,” said Carfax. “Suppose we go now and take
-up the trail of the two surveyors.”
-
-The track of the second buggy proved to be a short scent soon lost.
-Within a hundred yards of its turning-point opposite the glade the
-buggy had left the wood road, the tracks swerving to the right in a
-direction opposite to that taken by the earlier vehicle; and neither
-the wheels nor the hoofs of the horse had left any impress on the
-thick carpeting of fallen leaves under the trees; or none that amateur
-trailers could see and follow.
-
-They were returning down the by-road when a crash and a hoarse roar
-of escaping steam notified them that once more something had gone
-wrong with the machinery. Carfax threw up his head like a thoroughbred
-starting in a race.
-
-“We have been hunting for causes,” he snapped: “there is effect number
-one, right now! I can outrun you to the home plate!”
-
-They came upon the scene, neck and neck, just after Rucker had stopped
-the engine and opened his fire-door. The walking-beam had fallen again,
-carrying down a portion of the derrick framework; and the mountaineer
-whose name on the pay-roll appeared as “Morgan,” and who had been
-drill-turning in Sawyer’s place at the moment, was caught and held
-under the wreckage.
-
-Happily, the man was neither killed nor very severely injured. A few
-minutes’ quick work, to which everybody lent a hand, sufficed to
-extricate him from the mass of broken timbers; and a rather ugly scalp
-wound, which Carfax proceeded deftly to wash and dress and bandage,
-figured as the worst of his hurts.
-
-Tregarvon sent the man home in charge of the other masquerading McNabb;
-and then came the reckoning with the smashed drilling plant.
-
-“What are we in for this time, Rucker?” was the owner’s question, put
-after the machinist had measured the damage with a critical eye.
-
-“Mostly a couple o’ days’ hang-up, I guess. Leave me a man or two to
-help me blacksmith, and I’ll see what I can do. But what’s eatin’ me
-is, what done it?”
-
-There seemed to be no categorical answer to this, the cause of the
-breakdown being as yet well hidden in the _débris_ of the effect.
-Tregarvon was willing to charge it to the chapter of accidents, but
-Carfax was less easily satisfied.
-
-“If it were the first,” he demurred; “but it isn’t. There is an
-entire series behind it. And, coming right on the heels of the little
-mysteries of last night ... I’m of the opinion that this is the
-beginning of more hostilities, Vance.” Then to Rucker: “How far did you
-get the hole down, Billy?”
-
-“Not more than a couple o’ feet.”
-
-“Drilling hard?” asked Tregarvon.
-
-“Um-m-m; middlin’ hard; ’bout like the one we put down over yonder at
-the head of the tramway--the first one we drilled.”
-
-Tregarvon told off three of the laborers to help Rucker, and sent the
-remaining three back to Coalville to report to Tryon, who, with another
-small squad, was replacing rotted cross-ties on the lower end of the
-tramway. After this, he beckoned to Carfax, and they went together down
-the shallow glade ravine to the spot where Rucker had found the burnt
-pine-knot torch and had driven his marking stake.
-
-Out of hearing of the four men left at the drilling-stand, Tregarvon
-said: “Well, the McNabbs are eliminated, definitely. It is fair to
-assume that a man wouldn’t be so careless as to get caught in a trap of
-his own setting.”
-
-“You would think not,” was Carfax’s rejoinder; but he did not say that
-it was impossible.
-
-On the ground where the torch-bearer of the previous night had stood
-they searched carefully for something that might give a working clue
-to the mystery of the moonlight survey. There was nothing, unless an
-oak-tree, with a half-overgrown “blaze” and some ancient markings cut
-in it, might be called a clue.
-
-Two or three hundred feet below the scarred oak lay the cliff edge,
-at this point something less than a precipice. Tregarvon stood on the
-brink, looking down over the rough, broken talus. A hundred yards below
-his perch the gray ribbon of the mountain pike leading to Coalville
-wound in and out among the trees and huge boulders. Farther around to
-the left, and almost on a level with the broken talus, he could see the
-head of the Ocoee tramway. At once he called Carfax’s attention to the
-favoring topographies.
-
-“If we should find our big vein anywhere between here and the tramhead,
-it would be almost as accessible as the old opening,” he said. “The
-track could be continued on an easy curve and grade, and there is drop
-enough to give us the gravity haul. I wonder if any one has ever looked
-along here for the outcrop?”
-
-Viewed from the summit, the rough declivity, rocky, wooded, and
-thickly-covered with a matted tangle of brier, laurel, and
-undergrowth, looked as if it had never been trodden by the foot of man.
-Carfax, leaning against a tree which grew on the extreme edge of the
-cliff, gave it as his opinion that the rocky slope had never felt the
-prospector’s pick.
-
-“They have to dig trenches or holes or something, in prospecting for
-coal, don’t they?” he asked; and when Tregarvon confirmed the surmise:
-“I should say that this toboggan-slide is just as old Madam Nature left
-it, shouldn’t you? Can we get from here to the tramhead without going
-back and around and over the mountain?”
-
-“Easily,” said Tregarvon, and he swung out and dropped over the low
-cliff to lead the way along the broken ledges.
-
-It was while Carfax was lowering himself with more care than Tregarvon
-had taken, with the leaning tree to help, that he made a small
-discovery and called Tregarvon back. On its outer or valley-facing side
-the leaning tree carried a “blazed” scar with markings similar to those
-on the white-oak half-way between the cliff and the glade. Like the
-other scar, this one was old, and the bark had long since healed around
-the edges of the ax-wound. But the markings, which were cut into the
-heart-wood, were still quite distinct.
-
-“Well?” said Tregarvon, after they had examined the scar together,
-“what do you make of it?”
-
-Carfax was pencilling the mark on the back of the letter upon which he
-had sketched the damp-sand hoof-prints.
-
-“I don’t know. It looks something like the Greek letter ‘_pi_’, a
-capital ‘T’ with two stems, don’t you think? But, of course, that is
-only a coincidence.”
-
-“Is it, though?” queried Tregarvon thoughtfully.
-
-“It must be. What woodsman in this part of the world would ever mark a
-tree with a Greek letter?”
-
-“No woodsman, perhaps; but a schoolmaster might. Poictiers, I am slowly
-coming around to your point of view. Hartridge is at the bottom of
-all these smash-ups and mysteries. I hate to believe it of him, but
-everything leans in his direction.”
-
-“It looks that way, doesn’t it? But the admission of the fact doesn’t
-clear up the mysteries. Say that, for some reason, sentimental or
-other, Hartridge wishes to drive you out--make you quit. That might
-explain the smash-ups and the hindrances; but it doesn’t begin to
-explain why we should find these marks of his--if they are his--made on
-these two trees years and years ago; or why he should send a pair of
-surveyors up here to make monkey motions in the moonlight.”
-
-Tregarvon was leading the way along the ledge toward the tramhead.
-
-“We shall probably find out more about all these things before we are
-much older on the job,” he replied; and then, vengefully: “If I can
-catch him at it, I promise you I’ll make him sorry!”
-
-After they reached the head of the inclined track and had signalled to
-Tryon at the foot to let them down in the tip-car, Tregarvon outlined
-his plan for the broken day.
-
-“We’ll go down and get out the auto and my engineering instruments,
-motor back to the drilling plant, and do a little surveying on our own
-account. Beyond that, you may take the car and kill time with it as you
-please. I’ll stay and help Rucker.”
-
-The programme was carried out in due course. By ten o’clock they were
-back on the mountain top with the surveying instruments. Placing the
-transit upon the tripod marks under the tree on the edge of the glade,
-Tregarvon took a forward sight to the eastward, with Carfax holding
-the target-staff on the spot where the burnt torch was found. Then,
-without changing the position of the instrument, Tregarvon signalled
-Carfax to go back, halting him at the cliff edge, and moving him
-to right and left until the target was once more in line with the
-cross-hairs of the telescope.
-
-“What developments?” he inquired, when the staff-bearer came up.
-
-“Nothing startling. Your line of sight merely picked up the second of
-the two marked trees, whatever significance that may have.”
-
-“You may be sure it has some significance, if we were shrewd enough
-to figure it out,” Tregarvon asserted. Then: “What will you do with
-yourself until dinner-time?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know; chase around in the car awhile, maybe, if you can’t
-use me here. Perhaps I may be able to pick up a clue or so--if I can
-find anybody to talk to.”
-
-Tregarvon stripped off his coat and went to work with Rucker and the
-helpers, and in this manner the better part of the day was accounted
-for. Late in the afternoon, when the blacksmithing of new irons left
-him without an occupation, he yielded to a prompting which had been
-urging him all day, and went for a long tramp which took him over the
-route covered by the drilling plant in its several removals.
-
-The sun had gone behind the mountain when he finally came out at the
-tramhead and signalled for the cable-car to take him down. Tryon
-answered the signal and started the machinery, and in a few minutes
-Tregarvon was landed at the Coalville level, where he found Carfax
-waiting for him on the porch of the office-building.
-
-“I beat you to it,” said the golden youth; and then, whimsically: “What
-do you know now more than you knew before you knew so little as you
-know now?”
-
-Tregarvon cast himself down upon the porch-step. “I’ll tell you, after
-a bit. Did you find out anything new?”
-
-“Nothing very conclusive. Item number one is that there are only two
-horses in the Highmount stables; neither of them white, and neither
-with a broken toe-calk on the left hind foot.”
-
-Tregarvon smiled wearily. “More negative information; it’s always
-negative.”
-
-“Yes; and you may put into the same basket the item that no one of
-the half-dozen people I asked knew of any white horse owned on the
-mountain. But I picked up one little pointer that belongs in the other
-basket--the positive. I had luncheon at Highmount--upon Mrs. Caswell’s
-very pressing invitation. At table, Miss Richardia wanted to know how
-you came to plant your drilling-machine right in the middle of the old
-burying-ground.”
-
-“What’s that?” said Tregarvon. “You don’t mean to say that the glade is
-a graveyard!”
-
-“It seems that it used to be, many years ago--for the slaves. You
-will remember that you remarked the sunken spots in the only bit of
-soft earth there is, and wondered what made them. They are graves. Do
-you suppose Rucker would sleep any better to-night than he did last
-night if he knew that? If he had known it last night, perhaps it might
-have accounted for some of his restlessness. But I’m drifting from
-the point, which is that Miss Richardia’s question betrayed her: she
-was the young woman who drove with the man behind the white horse;
-otherwise she would not have known about the location of the drilling
-plant in the glade.”
-
-“That doesn’t follow,” Tregarvon objected. “Some one might have told
-her. But let that part of it go. Did you discover anything else?”
-
-“Yes. After school hours I took Miss Farron, Miss Longstreet, and the
-French teacher out for a spin in the car. Miss Richardia said she
-couldn’t go because she had another engagement. We made a rather long
-round to the south and came back to Highmount by a road which parallels
-the western brow of the mountain. Are you paying attention?”
-
-“Breathless attention,” said Tregarvon ironically. “Joy-ride stories
-always make me sit up. Go on.”
-
-“Over on the west-brow road we passed a place which looked as if it
-might be--or might some time have been--a gentleman’s country house.
-It is walled in from the road, with a magnificently groved lawn,
-a box-bordered, weed-grown carriage drive, and a great, rambling,
-porticoed mansion needing the repair-man pretty savagely. Still sitting
-up and taking notice?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Just as were rolling up to pass the stone-pillared lodge-gates a horse
-and buggy came out, with a young woman driving. The horse was old and
-countrified, and he didn’t take kindly to the auto. So I stopped and
-got out to lead him past the machine. You won’t want to believe it,
-but the young woman driver was Miss Richardia; and the horse--well, no
-horseman would call it white, to be sure. It was a dapple-gray, light
-enough to pass for white in the moonlight, and with a mechanician like
-Rucker for the color expert.”
-
-Tregarvon came out of his listless mood with a snap.
-
-“Let it be said, once for all, Poictiers, that I won’t stand for any
-theory that involves Richardia Birrell in the crooked part of it,” he
-declared firmly. “I’d trust her with anything I own; with my life, if
-she cared to borrow it. That dapple-gray suggestion of yours makes my
-back ache! It isn’t worthy of you. Rucker said ‘white,’ and white isn’t
-gray; not by a long shot!”
-
-“Wait,” said Carfax, evenly. “After I had led the horse safely past the
-car, I made sure. ‘Hold on a minute, Miss Richardia,’ said I, ‘let me
-see if your horse hasn’t a pebble in his shoe.’ That gave me an excuse
-to lift his near hind foot. There wasn’t any pebble, of course, but the
-shoe was badly worn, _and the toe-calk had a piece broken out of it_!”
-
-Tregarvon maintained a stubborn silence for a full minute. Then he
-denied again, with more heat than the occasion seemed to demand.
-
-“I don’t care what evidence you bring. I’ll believe nothing against
-Richardia; _nothing_, you understand? And, after all, what does it
-amount to? We agreed this morning that she might blamelessly take an
-evening drive with Hartridge. The fact that they were driving behind
-her father’s horse cuts no especial figure that I can see.”
-
-“She might have been driving with Hartridge blamelessly; we agree on
-that. Or even still more blamelessly with--her father.”
-
-“Put it in words,” snapped Tregarvon.
-
-“Two or three people to whom I have spoken saw them together behind the
-dapple-gray, her and her father.”
-
-“I won’t stand for it!” was the angry retort. “You are hinting that her
-father is behind these bushwhackings, and that she is a party to them.
-That doesn’t go!”
-
-“That was spoken very much like a lover,” said Carfax slowly. And then:
-“You mustn’t let your major weakness get away with you, Vance.”
-
-“And what do you call my ‘major weakness’?” Tregarvon inquired, with a
-rasp to the words that made them sound like a challenge.
-
-Carfax did not mince matters. “The inability to be off with the old
-love before you are on with the new,” he said crisply. “Elizabeth has
-some rights which you ought to respect, don’t you think?”
-
-“Go on,” Tregarvon jerked out. “You haven’t said it all.”
-
-“No, I haven’t; but I shall say it all. You are a changed man, Vance.
-Either this coal-mine fight or your infatuation for this young woman,
-or both, are bringing out the worst there is in you. Don’t you realize
-it?”
-
-“I realize that this is a devil of a world!” was the gritting
-rejoinder. “First Richardia puts the knife into me and twists it
-around, and now you’re doing it. I suppose it will be Elizabeth’s turn,
-next!”
-
-“You deserve all that is coming to you, I venture to say,” suggested
-the mentor evenly. “You are engaged to one woman, and you come here and
-make love openly to another.”
-
-Tregarvon was lost now to all sense of proportion. “I shall do as I
-please!” he retorted hotly. “If you want to write to Elizabeth, it’s
-your privilege. If you do, I shall tell her that you’ve had Richardia
-out in the car twice to my once!”
-
-Carfax’s mentor mood slipped away, and he laughed softly.
-
-“Miss Richardia is a dear girl, and worthy of the best that any man can
-give her, Vance,” he said gently. “Somebody ought to save her from the
-machinations of a William Wilberforce Hartridge, don’t you think? You
-can’t, you know; and sometimes I’ve wondered if that doesn’t put it
-pretty squarely up to me.”
-
-Tregarvon rose and stood over his friend, and for an instant there
-were black passions to blaze in the wide-set gray eyes. But there was
-manhood enough underlying the tumult to enable him to throttle the
-worst of the impulses.
-
-“I--I guess I’m just a jealous dog in the manger, Poictiers,” he
-confessed gratingly. “I’ve had a hunch that it was going that way, and
-I’ve been resenting it--like the damned scoundrel I’m coming to be. But
-it’s all over now, and--and I wish you joy. Can I say more than that?”
-
-Carfax looked up with a quaint twinkle in his eye.
-
-“I’m thinking you might say a good bit more, only you are too
-charitable to turn the whole menagerie loose. Shall we go in and get
-ready to eat? Uncle William will be calling us in a minute or so.”
-
-It was not until after the dinner had been eaten, and they were smoking
-bedtime pipes before the dining-room fire, that Tregarvon went back to
-the discoveries of the day.
-
-“About the time you were going for your drive this afternoon, I took
-a walk,” he said, by way of prefacing the story of the last of the
-discoveries. “I went over the ground we have been covering with the
-drill, examining every inch of it as if I had lost the set out of a
-diamond ring. I know now why we have been permitted to go on drilling
-holes in the rock without interference.”
-
-Carfax nodded. “I’ve had a hint of my own: I wonder if you are not
-going to confirm it.”
-
-“Perhaps. At any rate, I found that somebody else had been over
-precisely the same ground with a test-drill a good while ago. I located
-five holes in all, each of them filled to the top, of course, with sand
-and washings. One of these holes isn’t twenty feet from the last one we
-drilled before we moved to the present location in the graveyard glade.”
-
-“Um,” said Carfax, absently rolling a cigarette between his palms.
-“That was my guess, based upon a word that Hartridge let drop the day
-I drove him down here to eat with us. I suppose the corollary to that
-is----”
-
-“That the accident that smashed things this morning was ‘assisted,’ as
-the others have been. So long as we went on drilling in dead ground
-it wasn’t worth while to interfere. But now that we are trying a new
-wrinkle----”
-
-Carfax got up and returned the softened cigarette to its place in his
-pocket-case.
-
-“I think we’d better sleep on that corollary of yours, Vance,” he
-suggested mildly. “If it looks as plausible in daylight as it does now,
-I don’t know but we had better call out the militia and give Rucker
-more help in the night-watching. Anyway, we’ll see how it stacks up in
-the morning.”
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-Rosemary and Rue
-
-
-The better impulses had been all to the fore when Tregarvon had wished
-his friend a fair field and no favor at Highmount. But between a burst
-of generosity on the spur of a repentant moment and a day-by-day
-renouncing of a pearl of price there is apt to lie a _via dolorosa_
-plentifully bestrewn with stone bruises for misguided feet. On the day
-following the evening of plain speech Tregarvon toiled manfully with
-Rucker and the laborers in the repairing of the damaged machinery; but
-he did it without prejudice to a good many sharp-pointed reflections
-basing themselves upon Carfax’s blunt accusation, upon the golden
-youth’s calm interference, and upon the fact that, late in the
-forenoon, Carfax, apparently tired of looking on and doing nothing at
-the scene of the repairing activities, had strolled away through the
-forest in the direction of Highmount.
-
-There was more than one disturbing string to the bow of reflection. At
-first, Miss Birrell had openly made a good-natured mock of Carfax,
-with his small affectations to point her gibings; but Tregarvon was now
-impecunious enough himself to appreciate the potency of money. Miss
-Richardia had told him a little about the Birrell fortunes--or the lack
-of them; of the vanishing of the family possessions in the aftermath of
-the Civil War; of the fact that her father, once the leading jurist of
-the Cumberland counties--Miss Richardia did not say this, but Tregarvon
-easily inferred it--had found himself out of touch with the later and
-more pushing spirit of the New South, and had withdrawn more and more
-until he had become almost a hermit. The Carfax millions were enough
-to tempt any young woman; and Carfax himself--Tregarvon admitted it
-without bitterness--was a man to whom most women were attracted and
-whom all women trusted.
-
-But was Carfax really in love with Judge Birrell’s daughter? Tregarvon
-boasted that he had summered and wintered the golden youth; yet there
-were depths in him that the Philadelphian suspected no one had ever
-fully plumbed. In Tregarvon’s knowing of him he had always been, or
-appeared to be, immune to sentiment; his attitude had been that of
-a gentle-natured soul who was willing to be used, or even abused,
-without detriment to an impartial affection for the entire sex. Would
-such a man be able to make Richardia as happy as she deserved to be? In
-the intimacy which Tregarvon had pressed to its ultimate limits he had
-come to know that behind the cool, slate-blue eyes and the lips that
-lent themselves so readily to playful mockery there was a passionate
-soul which would give all and demand all; which would starve on a diet
-of mere affection, however kindly and indulgent. Would the Carfax
-millions outweigh this demand? It was an irritating question, refusing
-to be answered.
-
-Tregarvon, driving bolts into the patched derrick frame, strove
-dejectedly to put his own huge misfortune aside as a matter definitely
-settled. He admitted, with pricklings of shame, the truth, or at least
-the half-truth, of Carfax’s accusation--the charge of fickleness. In a
-light-hearted way he had been devoted to many women, for the moment,
-and the nearest woman had always been the loadstone. He excused the
-weakness by saying that it was common to all men--thereby touching a
-truth larger than he knew; excused it further by laying down the broad
-principle that Richardia Birrell, though numerically the last, was
-really the first woman who had ever broken through to the inner depths
-of him.
-
-Just here he had a saving glimpse of the workings of the normal
-masculine mind, and it jogged his sense of humor. Was not the latest
-charmer always the pearl of great price; the one altogether lovely?
-Perhaps; but in this case, he told himself, it was different. The
-Richardias are few and far between; and he had discovered one of the
-precious few only to realize that he was bound in honor to relinquish
-her without a murmur to a Carfax, or even to a Hartridge. It was a part
-of the irrefrangible vanity of the male to regard the relinquishment
-as a voluntary virtue on his part. In all the gnawings of the worm of
-reflection, girdings at his hard lot, questionings as to Richardia’s
-future happiness, gratulatory back-pattings at his own magnanimity in
-leaving the field to Carfax, it did not occur to him that Richardia,
-herself, might have had something to say to his own suit--if he had
-been able, as a man of honor, to press it. Like many other men, he
-comforted himself with the cheerful assumption that, in the absence of
-the abnormal obstacles, any man may win any woman, if he shall only put
-his mind to it; a doctrine, it may be said, which is still lacking
-proof in certain isolated instances.
-
-Thus giving himself over to the bitterness--and the
-self-glorification--of the afterthought, Tregarvon wore out the day,
-deferring to Rucker as boss of the repairing job, and trying not to
-speculate too pointedly upon the doings of the absent Carfax. That the
-golden youth was once more a drop-in guest at the near-by school was
-not to be doubted; and the caviller at an unkind fate steeled himself
-against another disloyalty--a temptation to rail at the New Yorker for
-making such unseemly haste. The ill-natured thought would have likened
-Carfax’s haste to that which prompts the heir-at-law to open and read
-the will while the testator is as yet merely in the throes of the
-death-agony--only Tregarvon would not yield to the temptation.
-
-If the murmurer against fate could have seen beyond the half-mile
-of forest which intervened between the old slave burying-ground and
-Highmount, he would have concluded sorrowfully that Carfax’s haste
-was well on the way to its reward. Miss Richardia’s duty hours in
-the afternoon were short, and at three o’clock she was free to join
-the golden one, who, as Tregarvon’s prefiguring had assumed, had
-been Mrs. Caswell’s luncheon guest, and was now making himself at
-home on the broad veranda of the administration building. For a time
-the talk rambled through Boston byways and was reminiscent of Miss
-Richardia’s sojourn as a Conservatory student and of Carfax’s quickly
-abandoned attempt to take a postgraduate course in the School of Naval
-Architecture.
-
-“You see, I didn’t have the spur,” was Carfax’s excuse for the
-abandoned attempt. Then, in an apparent burst of enthusiasm: “Vance is
-the lucky fellow! He is obliged to work. He thinks it is pretty hard
-lines, but he doesn’t know how jolly good it is for his soul. It is
-precisely what he is needing, don’t you think?”
-
-“Work? yes; but the many disappointments: are they also good for the
-soul?”
-
-Carfax’s smile was entirely amiable. “In due proportion, they are,
-I should say. Vance has been like a bit of soft steel, needing the
-forge fire and the tempering brine bath. I presume you know that he is
-engaged to be married?”
-
-Miss Richardia’s smile was of the sort that no mere man may interpret.
-
-“I think he has told me all there was to tell. Are you acquainted with
-Miss Wardwell?”
-
-“Very well acquainted, indeed. She is all that any man could ask--and
-more,” said Carfax, with more warmth than he usually permitted himself.
-“Last summer she was a member of a Lake Placid outing-party in which I
-had the good fortune also to be included. We became quite chummy. She
-swims, you know.”
-
-Again Miss Birrell’s smile was a charming little mask of
-impenetrability.
-
-“These athletic young women!” she sighed. “It is their day.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t mean that Eliz--that Miss Wardwell is offensively
-athletic. I wouldn’t have you think that. She--she is musical and all
-the other things that a young woman ought to be; but she enjoys the
-outdoor things, too. And so do I.”
-
-“And Mr. Tregarvon doesn’t enjoy them?”
-
-“Just in a way,” was the qualifying rejoinder. “Vance’s misfortune has
-been, that, until quite recently, he has never wanted anything that he
-couldn’t simply reach out and take; he has never been obliged to throw
-himself whole-heartedly into anything. He is doing it now, though.”
-
-“Into the Ocoee, you mean? I am afraid there is nothing but
-disappointment for him there.”
-
-Carfax was silent for a moment. Then he said: “There are times, Miss
-Richardia, when I have the feeling that every one who knows what he is
-trying to do wishes him to be disappointed.”
-
-“Including us here at Highmount?” she laughed.
-
-“Well, yes.”
-
-“Perhaps you would be willing to make it even more definite. Do you
-include me with Mr. Tregarvon’s ill-wishers?”
-
-“Sometimes I’ve been tempted to.”
-
-“I’m sure I don’t know why you should say that.”
-
-“I have said it,” Carfax returned, with the gentle doggedness which
-he could assume when the need was sufficiently pressing. “I shall be
-delighted to be assured that I am mistaken.”
-
-Now came Miss Richardia’s opportunity to fall silent, and she improved
-it. When she spoke again the playful mockery was laid aside.
-
-“My father was one of the sorriest of the losers in the Ocoee in the
-promoting period,” she began soberly. “This entire mountain top was
-once a part of the Birrell estate; my grandfather gave the site for
-this school. When Mr. Parker was promoting the Ocoee, father went into
-the plan, heart and soul, giving a large part of the land, and putting
-all the money he could rake and scrape into the stock of Mr. Parker’s
-company. Worse than that, he was so firmly convinced of the future
-success of the undertaking that he persuaded his friends to invest. You
-mustn’t expect us to be very enthusiastic now, Mr. Carfax. It isn’t in
-human nature to rejoice when others are preparing to reap where we have
-sown.”
-
-Carfax’s smile was angel-compassionate.
-
-“Poor Vance isn’t reaping very successfully as yet,” he pointed out.
-Then he added: “I hope your good father doesn’t feel vindictive toward
-him. I think we may safely say that Vance is the innocent third party
-in the transaction--if there ever is such a thing.”
-
-“You don’t know my father; if you did, you would hardly accuse him of
-vindictiveness, even in your thoughts.”
-
-“Can you say as much for yourself?” asked the accuser gently.
-
-“Indeed, I can!”
-
-“You wouldn’t put a straw in Vance’s way, if you could?”
-
-“I wish you would listen!” she laughed. “Do I look like a--a
-subterranean plotter, Mr. Carfax?”
-
-“You always look charming. But you don’t want Vance to succeed.”
-
-“I am sure I don’t know why you should think such a thing. Perhaps you
-don’t think it. I can never tell when you are really in earnest.”
-
-“Strange that you should have noticed that. Others have said it of me,
-too, at times. But I am very much in earnest this afternoon. It lies in
-your hands to make Vance fail most conspicuously, you know.”
-
-“You are fond of riddles, and I am not. I wish you would be more
-explicit.”
-
-Carfax stole a glance aside at his veranda companion and it was borne
-in upon him that he would have to choose his words carefully. The
-slate-blue eyes had grown a trifle hard, and Miss Richardia’s tone was
-no longer sympathetic.
-
-“Vance can’t mix business and sentiment very well,” he ventured. “He
-has been spending a good bit of time here at Highmount, forgetting some
-things that he ought to remember. Surely you have discovered his one
-weakness by this time, haven’t you?” he went on, gravely pleading. “Not
-that it isn’t tremendously excusable in the present instance, you know.
-You--er--you are enough to turn any man’s head, Miss Richardia; you
-are, indeed.”
-
-Her little shriek of laughter was sufficient to break any thin skim of
-ice which may have been congealing between them.
-
-“You can be quite as absurd as Mr. Vance, himself, when you try!” she
-mocked. Then, with the frankness which was all her own: “Are you trying
-to tell me that I have been playing the part of a modern Delilah, Mr.
-Carfax!”
-
-“Oh, dear, no! But”--he swallowed hard once or twice, and then took
-the plunge--“but Vance simply couldn’t help falling in love with you.
-Er--hardly any man could. And it’s--it’s smashing him to perfection. I
-don’t say that he is admitting the--the little lapse, even to himself;
-he is too honorable to do that, after he has given his word to Eliz--to
-Miss Wardwell. But the fact remains.”
-
-Miss Richardia laughed again, but now the laugh scarcely rang true.
-
-“You are making me out a poor, miserable sinner; though I am a most
-innocent one, I do assure you,” she protested, not without a suggestion
-of sarcasm. “What is it you wish me to do?”
-
-Carfax needed no one to tell him that he was wading in deep waters,
-and that another step might put him in over his head. Yet he could not
-retreat; he had gone too far.
-
-“I have been trying to hammer a little common sense into Vance; perhaps
-I have said more than even a good friend has a right to say. Hitherto
-it hasn’t done much good; but last night I had a perfectly brilliant
-inspiration. I wonder if you could be induced to help me carry it
-out?--just in the interests of a--of a square deal all around, you
-know.”
-
-“Another absurdity?” she queried, half scornfully.
-
-“Yes, just that; a--a most ridiculous absurdity. Will you--er--will you
-marry me, Miss Richardia?”
-
-“Most certainly not,” she returned, with a strained little laugh. “Why
-should I?”
-
-“There isn’t any reason at all, of course,” he hastened to say. “But if
-you would make your answer not quite so--er--so positive: if you would
-be so generous as to--er--to seem to take it under consideration; just
-until Vance can get on his feet again----”
-
-This time her laughter was wholly mirthful; an abandonment of all
-hamperings.
-
-“Of all preposterous askings!” she gasped. “Are there many more like
-you, Mr. Carfax--in New York?”
-
-“Plenty of them,” he assured her, not too seriously. Then: “It wouldn’t
-be such a dreadful thing, would it? I can make love very nicely, you
-know; honestly, I can. And we shouldn’t have to do anything more than
-to keep up appearances.”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“I’m not going to humor you far enough to even pretend to take you
-seriously,” she declared.
-
-“Not even for Vance’s sake? Of course, I know you don’t care for
-him, particularly, but I do; he has been like a brother to me, Miss
-Richardia; really he has. And we ought to make him realize what he is
-about; it’s--er--it’s a sort of duty, don’t you think?”
-
-“If I should tell you what I think I am afraid it might sound
-dreadfully unkind, Mr. Carfax. You seem to have had very little
-experience with women.”
-
-“Oh, but I have, you know,” he burst out. “I--I’m in love,
-myself--with--with some one I can’t possibly marry. That ought to make
-you feel sorry for me, and I’m sure it does. Perhaps you are in a
-similar situation yourself; in love with some one else, I mean. In that
-case----”
-
-Miss Richardia had risen, and the mocking mood was once more firmly
-intrenched behind her laughing eyes.
-
-“You have given me a most delicious half-hour, Mr. Carfax, and in the
-days to come, when I feel particularly blue, I shall always have it
-to look back to and remember. You are not expecting me to say any more
-than that, are you? I can’t, you know, because I have an appointment
-with a pupil, and I shall have to go and keep it.”
-
-Carfax had risen with her. “I’m perfectly delighted to be your
-laughing-stock,” he asserted gently. “You’ll let me come and be it
-again? Thanks, awfully.” And when she was gone he sat down like a man
-who has been through a pass perilous, and smoked three of the imported
-cigarettes in rapid succession.
-
-That evening, returning from the hard day’s work on the repairs, the
-owner of the Ocoee found Carfax awaiting him in the office headquarters
-at the foot of Pisgah. Uncle William’s dinner, served as soon as
-Tregarvon had taken his bath, was not provocative of conversation; and
-even afterward the talk, revolving around the repairs and the mystery,
-was only desultory. It was not until Tregarvon was smoking his bedtime
-pipe that he dug the one important thing out of his mind and flung it
-at his companion.
-
-“You spent the day at Highmount, I suppose?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no; not quite so bad as that. I’ve been down here since
-half-past four or such a matter.”
-
-“But you went to the college after you left us?”
-
-“Yes; and Mrs. Caswell was good enough to give me something to eat at
-the proper time. She makes one believe all the old-time stories of
-Southern hospitality. Which reminds me: we are both invited there to
-dinner to-morrow evening.”
-
-Tregarvon refused to be turned aside.
-
-“You didn’t go to Highmount to visit with Mrs. Caswell,” he suggested
-sourly.
-
-“Not altogether; no.”
-
-“Did you see Richardia?”
-
-Carfax had lighted his candle and was preparing to beat a hasty
-retreat, did retreat as far as the door before he turned to say: “Yes,
-I saw I Miss Richardia. You wished me joy, last night, Vance, and I
-hope you are going to do it again. I’ve asked her to marry me, you
-know.”
-
-“_What!_” shouted Tregarvon, springing from his chair. And then, with a
-mighty effort to keep the words from choking him: “What did she say?”
-
-Carfax smiled like a winning angel. “She--well, it seemed to strike her
-as being a bit sudden, as you might say, and----”
-
-[Illustration: Carfax stopped abruptly and said no more.]
-
-Tregarvon had dropped into a chair beside the table, and was hiding
-his face in the crook of an elbow. Carfax stopped abruptly and said no
-more; and when he closed the door behind him it was done so gently that
-the latch made no sound.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-Dull Steel
-
-
-Rucker proved as good as his word in the matter of estimating the
-delay, two days sufficing for the work of restoration. Having made a
-test run in the evening after Tregarvon had gone down the mountain, the
-mechanician had the machinery whirling merrily to the _chug chug_ of
-the drill by the time his two bosses came on the ground the following
-morning.
-
-Among his better qualities Tregarvon was able to number a certain
-degree of resilience which, given time to take the full impact of a
-blow, could recover and rebound and make the best of the inevitable.
-Whatever might have come of the intimacy with Richardia Birrell--and he
-told himself that nothing could have come of it in any event--it was
-now an episode ended; and after a night of very much mingled emotions,
-he had risen up with the determination to play the man, for Carfax’s
-sake if not for his own, and to let the industrial battle fill all the
-horizons for one Vance Tregarvon. With this determination firmly seated
-in the saddle, he had constrained himself to meet Carfax at breakfast
-without bitterness; to motor with him up the mountain in terms of
-good-fellowship; and, upon their arrival, to shout cheerfully to Rucker.
-
-“Got her going all right again, have you, Billy? Any more puzzle people
-come to see you last night?”
-
-Rucker grinned sheepishly.
-
-“I ain’t goin’ to lie about it, Mr. Tregarvon. What with pushin’ the
-job so bloomin’ hard yesterday, and losin’ so much sleep between
-whiles, I guess they might’ve come and lugged me off bodily without my
-knowin’ it.”
-
-“And you didn’t find anything wrong this morning?”
-
-“Well, no; not to say just wrong; only sort o’ spookerish.” Then, in a
-tone that the men at the drill might not hear: “There was somebody here
-again last night--humans ’r ghosts. I had a fit o’ the jumps a while
-back that everlastin’ly swiped my appetite for breakfast.”
-
-“How was that?” asked Tregarvon, looking up from his inspection of
-the yellow car’s motor; and Carfax said: “It must have been something
-pretty fierce, Billy, if it crippled your pneumogastric nerve.”
-
-“It was this way,” Rucker explained. “Last night, after we got the
-derrick rigged again, I starts and runs the engine for a little while,
-just to make sure everything is in workin’ order. When I shuts down, I
-banks the fire under the boiler so it’ll keep overnight. ’Long about
-sunrise this mornin’ I hikes over to stir her up for business, and when
-I yanks the fire-box door open, it’s me for throwin’ that fit o’ the
-jumps. There was the yallerist, cockiest-lookin’ skull you ever see,
-settin’ on top o’ the banked fire, ready to pull a grin on me when I
-opens the door.”
-
-“A skull?--a human skull?” exclaimed Tregarvon incredulously.
-
-“Yep; a yaller one; all teeth and eye-holes, and with a sort of greasy
-black smoke comin’ out o’ the place where its nose ought to ’a’ been.”
-
-“How did it get there?” Carfax asked the question and then answered it
-himself by adding: “But, of course, you don’t know.”
-
-Rucker was wiping his face with a piece of cotton waste--the
-machinist’s handkerchief. The autumn morning was cool and bracing on
-the mountain top, yet the perspiration stood in fine little beads on
-his forehead.
-
-“No, I don’t know; and if you was to search me all day, you’d never get
-it out o’ me where it come from, ’r who put it there,” he said. “I
-ain’t what you’d call jumpy, but after it was all over, I didn’t want
-no breakfast.”
-
-“What did you do with it?” Tregarvon asked.
-
-“Me? I jammed it back into the coals with the clinker hook, and put the
-blower on, quick! Says I, ‘All right, my bucko! You make me throw a
-fit, and I’ll make you make steam!’”
-
-“Heavens! You burned it?” Tregarvon was still conventional enough to be
-half horrified, and Carfax shuddered in sympathy.
-
-“I certain’y did. But he got back at me, right now! In less ’n five
-minutes by the watch that old boiler was red-hot and blowin’ off steam
-to beat the band. She was sweatin’ black smoke at every joint; and when
-I chases ’round to open the fire-door--Well, you needn’t believe me if
-you don’t want to, but them grate-bars was drippin’ something ’r other
-that looked like burnin’ blood!”
-
-There is a point beyond which the thread of sympathetic horror snaps,
-and the ball rebounds into the field of the ridiculous.
-
-“That will do for you, Billy,” Tregarvon laughed. “We’ll allow you the
-skull, but you needn’t embroider it for us. Somebody played a grisly
-joke on you--with no particular object, that I can see. Just the same,
-it has its significance. Some prowler was sneaking around here while
-you were asleep. Are you sure the drill is working all right?”
-
-“You can see for yourself,” said Rucker, not unboastfully. “She’s
-jumpin’ up and down to the old tune of forty to the minute, same as I
-promised you she’d be this mornin’.”
-
-But a closer inspection proved that Rucker’s boast was loyal to the eye
-but a traitor to the fact. The drill was merely “jumping up and down.”
-It was hardly cutting its own clearance; had gained in depth less than
-half an inch in half an hour, according to the report of Sawyer, who
-was at his customary post, “churning and turning” at the hole.
-
-Rucker looked on critically for a few minutes and then laid a listening
-ear to the steel, bowing and recovering in unison with the stroke.
-
-“She’s hit a bone o’ some kind,” was his verdict; and he stopped the
-churning machinery and threw in the hoist by means of which the heavy
-cutting-bar was lifted from the hole.
-
-An examination of the drill point amply verified the mechanician’s
-guess that something much harder than the fine-gritted sandstone of the
-mountain top had been encountered in the bottom of the test-hole. The
-cutting edges of the drill burr were completely gone, broken down and
-gnawed smooth until the steel cutter-bar was no more than a blunt-ended
-ram.
-
-Tregarvon swore painstakingly, anathematizing the demon of ill luck by
-bell, book, and candle, thereby further emphasizing the distance he had
-travelled on the road toward things elemental.
-
-“Scrap it,” he snapped, meaning the ruined drill point. “How many more
-have you?”
-
-“Three.”
-
-“All right; put another one in and drive it!”
-
-Rucker got out a fresh point, mounted and lowered it, and the churning
-was resumed. Three hours of steady thumping showed a gain of less than
-two inches in the depth of the hole, and at the end of that time the
-second drill burr was worn as smooth as the first.
-
-This went on until the last of the four cutters was put in service.
-For a wasted day of patient churning the hole had gone down only a few
-inches, and Rucker was in despair.
-
-“When this cutter goes, we’re hung up for more ’n any day ’r two,” he
-announced. “I can sharpen these points all right enough, but it’ll take
-scads o’ time with the tools we’ve got here on the job. You two bosses
-hain’t made up your minds what t’ ’ell it is we’re tryin’ to chew
-through down yonder, have you?”
-
-Tregarvon had taken an engineering course in the university, but he was
-no geologist; and Carfax’s equipment was even less hopeful. It was a
-case for a specialist; and the specialist turned up at the opportune
-moment in the person of Mr. Guy Wilmerding, who had ridden over from
-Whitlow to see how the Ocoee experiment was progressing.
-
-His coming was hailed with acclamations by the two amateurs.
-
-“By Jove, Wilmerding, you’re just in time to save us from
-strait-jackets and a padded cell!” Tregarvon exclaimed. “What kind of
-rock do you have in this region that will make a drill point look like
-that?” showing the C. C. & I. superintendent one of the blunted cutters.
-
-Wilmerding scrutinized the dulled point carefully.
-
-“None of the native rock ought to do that,” he demurred. “This is a
-poor piece of steel, isn’t it?”
-
-“It is one of the four cutters we have been using ever since we began.
-Three of them have gone that way, and the fourth is mulling in the hole
-now with only a few more minutes to live.”
-
-“That’s queer. I can’t imagine what you’ve hit that would dub the
-points like this. Let me see the stuff you’ve been taking out with the
-sand pump.”
-
-The little heap of finely powdered cuttings was exhibited. Wilmerding
-examined them with the eye of an expert, rubbing some of the cuttings
-between his thumb and finger.
-
-“Pebbles,” he said definitely; “white quartz pebbles embedded in the
-sandstone--‘pudding,’ the miners call it. You’ve hit a streak of this
-conglomerate, and sometimes it is as hard as blue blazes. Still, I have
-never seen any of it that was hard enough to smash a drill like that,”
-he added reflectively.
-
-“You are the doctor,” Carfax suggested. “What is the needed medicine?”
-
-“There is nothing to do but to keep on hammering away at it,” was the
-reply. “If you shift your location, the probabilities are that you
-would run into the same stratum again. When you go prying into Mother
-Earth’s secrets, you have to take what she sends and be thankful it’s
-no worse.”
-
-Tregarvon’s cup of objurgation overflowed again.
-
-“That means Rucker to go to Chattanooga with the cutter points, and
-more delay. We haven’t any tool-making facilities here.”
-
-“I guess this is where I come in,” said Wilmerding, with prompt
-generosity. “We have a well-equipped plant at Whitlow, and a blacksmith
-who is out of sight on drill-tempering. Load your man and the points
-into your motor-car and shoot them up to us. We’ll try to keep you
-going.”
-
-Tregarvon’s ill temper vanished like the dew on a summer morning. “You
-are certainly an enemy of a hitherto unsuspected variety!” he declared.
-“We’ve been having a good bit of trouble, first and last; some of it
-bearing all the earmarks of design on somebody’s part. Do you know for
-a while I thought you might be inspiring it? That was before Carfax
-discovered you personally, of course.”
-
-Wilmerding’s laugh was good-naturedly derisive.
-
-“I hope you didn’t think so small of Consolidated Coal as to suspect it
-of popping at you with a boy’s whip!” he retorted. “By and by, when you
-find your coal and meet us in the open market, we may have to buy you
-or smash you. But it will be done in the good, old-fashioned commercial
-way.”
-
-“We shall be there when you put up the large come-off-the-perch
-bluff,” Carfax thrust in gently. “But in the meantime, somebody _is_
-popping at us with the boy’s whip.”
-
-“Who?--for a guess?” asked the Whitlow superintendent.
-
-“Ah!” said Carfax, in the same gentle tone, “I have a thousand dollars
-somewhere about my belongings that would be delighted to blow itself
-against the real answer to that question.”
-
-“And you have no clue?”
-
-Carfax smiled. “A dozen of them, more or less. But they all have a
-way of coming out by the roots when we begin to pull on them ever so
-cautiously.”
-
-“You are calling me the enemy, but that doesn’t count until the real
-fight opens up,” said Wilmerding. “If any suggestion of mine will help
-while you are clawing for a foothold.... By the way, that reminds me: I
-made an analysis of your coals the other day. Thaxter didn’t have one,
-didn’t seem to know anything definite about the Ocoee.”
-
-“Well?” queried Tregarvon. “Do you agree with Captain Duncan?”
-
-“If your two veins are not one and the same, they ought to be. I
-couldn’t sift out the slightest difference between the two specimens.”
-
-There was some further talk about the characteristics, analytical and
-otherwise, of the Ocoee coal, and Wilmerding stayed long enough to see
-the fourth and last drill point withdrawn from the hole. The cutter,
-like its predecessors, was a mechanical ruin; and Wilmerding again made
-the proffer of the Whitlow repair-plant. Tregarvon promised to send
-Rucker and the burrs up from Coalville in the morning, and the young
-superintendent climbed upon his nag and rode away.
-
-“Tools up, men!” Tregarvon called to the drilling squad, when
-Wilmerding had disappeared among the trees. “We’ll call it a day; and
-to-morrow you may all go on the track-repairing with Tryon.”
-
-Rucker was busying himself about the machinery after the laborers had
-gone, and as yet he had said nothing about wishing to be relieved from
-the night-watching. But it was clear that a man who put in full time
-during the day could scarcely be expected to sleep with one eye open
-at night. Moreover, if Rucker were to start in the morning for Whitlow
-with the drills, it would be necessary for him to sleep at Coalville.
-
-“What is your programme for to-night?” asked Carfax, as he walked with
-Tregarvon to the tool-house. “I suppose you’ll send Rucker down for
-the early start to Whitlow. You’ll hardly care to leave things up here
-without a watchman, will you?”
-
-“Not at the present stage of the game,” was the prompt reply. “You may
-go down in the car with Rucker, and I’ll stay here for the night. I’d
-like to see some of these queer happenings for myself.”
-
-“I can beat that plan,” Carfax put in. “You’ve forgotten that we have
-an invitation to Highmount for dinner this evening. Mrs. Caswell gave
-it, and I accepted for both of us. We’ll go down and dress, and come
-back in the car, leaving Rucker to stand watch here while we do the
-social act. Later, Rucker can come for us, trundling us over here,
-first, and himself and the drills to Coalville afterward. How will that
-answer?”
-
-Tregarvon demurred upon two counts. “You mean that you’ll sit up with
-me? You don’t have to play night-watchman to this sick project of mine,
-Poictiers. Besides, I don’t care to go to the Highmount faculty dinner.
-More than that, you ought to be the last man in the world to put me in
-for it. I’ve already wasted too much time in that way, and you know
-it.”
-
-“In the present instance I’ve promised for you, and I guess you’ll
-have to go,” said Carfax quietly. “And as for my sitting up with you
-afterward, that’s a part of the game. I’m immensely interested in
-skulls and things.”
-
-And thus, without further argument, it was decided.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-The Burnt Child
-
-
-The dinner in the president’s dining-room at Highmount College was
-anything but formal. By this time the two young men from the North
-were on a footing which lacked little of the household relation, Mrs.
-Caswell having said hospitably, more than once, that their plates were
-always laid at the faculty table.
-
-Quite naturally, the Ocoee experiment came in for a share of the
-table-talk, and in this field Tregarvon let Carfax do most of the
-ploughing. For one reason, Miss Richardia had changed her place and was
-sitting on the other side of the golden one; and for another, his own
-companion was the French teacher, who persisted in talking, and making
-him talk, of things trans-atlantic and Parisian.
-
-Later, however, he was tempted--and fell. The night was too cool for
-the veranda, and the after-dinner dispersal was to the music-room.
-Richardia played, and for a time Tregarvon sat beside Miss Farron and
-said “Yes” and “No,” as the occasion demanded, coming always afterward
-to a rapt and regretful contemplation of the pearl of great price on
-the piano-bench.
-
-Being an artist to her finger-tips, Miss Birrell at the piano
-became a breaker of hearts by just so much more as the mask of
-self-consciousness fell away, leaving the true art soul free to express
-itself in the musician’s ecstasy of detachment. In such moments
-Tregarvon saw her as the embodied spirit of all that was most desirable
-in the world of women; gazed spellbound, sinned, repented, and sinned
-again; calling himself hard names in one breath, and rhapsodizing
-deliriously over the supernal charm of her in the next.
-
-Again and again he told himself in caustic self-derision that his
-infatuation was merely the result of propinquity--the nearness of
-Richardia coupled with the remoteness of Elizabeth. But as often as he
-pleaded this excuse, the merciless inner and final court of appeals
-assured him that the evasion was but the adding of self-deception to
-unfaithfulness, and insisted upon a restatement of the humiliating
-facts: that he had promised to marry a woman whom he did not love,
-when he knew he did not love her; and that he was now adding to this
-baseness by admitting his love for another.
-
-This restatement of the case was dinning itself into his ears for
-the hundredth time while he was saying “Yes” and “No” to the pretty
-assistant in mathematics, and praying in his more lucid intervals
-that Rucker might come early with the motor-car and so forestall any
-chance of deeper mirings. But Rucker was apparently in no hurry.
-Miss Richardia played until she was tired; Madame Fortier and Miss
-Farron excused themselves and went to their duties in the dormitories;
-Hartridge and Miss Longstreet went to brave the chill of the evening in
-a pacing constitutional on the veranda; and the group in the music-room
-was cut down to the Caswells, their guests, and Miss Birrell.
-
-At this conjuncture Tregarvon saw that Carfax was about to add
-insult to injury by leaving him alone with Richardia. The president
-was talking about some improvements he wished to make in the school
-gymnasium: would Mr. Carfax be good enough to look the plans over and
-give a country schoolmaster the benefit of his advice? Tregarvon turned
-to the nearest window to watch for the headlamps of the expected auto.
-They were not yet in sight; and when the silence behind him gave token
-that Carfax and the Caswells had gone, he knew that he had been basely
-deserted.
-
-Miss Richardia was still at the piano, letting her fingers run in
-delicate little harmonies up and down the keyboard. Tregarvon meant to
-keep his distance, but she drew him so irresistibly that he was beside
-her before he realized that he was once more breaking all the good
-resolutions.
-
-“Don’t go just yet,” he pleaded, when she looked around, saw that the
-others were gone, and made as if she would rise. Then he added: “It
-isn’t my fault this time: I didn’t wish to come, but Poictiers had
-accepted for me. You mustn’t punish me when I don’t deserve it.”
-
-She looked up at him with the air of detachment which he had always
-found more trying than her sharpest accusations.
-
-“Why should I punish you at all? Hasn’t your conscience been doing that
-much for you?”
-
-“Don’t!” he begged again. “Now that it is all over, I am going to tell
-you that I have been a liar and a hypocrite.”
-
-She stopped him with a quick little gesture of dismay.
-
-“Please don’t spoil it all now--just because we happen to be alone
-together for a minute or two. When are you going home to marry Miss
-Wardwell?”
-
-“You are perfectly merciless,” he complained. “Must we talk about
-Elizabeth?”
-
-“Ask your conscience,” she retorted.
-
-“My conscience is busy and doesn’t want to be disturbed. One would
-think you had been born and bred in New England!”
-
-“I wasn’t; I was born on this mountain.”
-
-He sat down in the nearest chair and tried to remember that he was
-talking to the woman who was as good as promised to Poictiers Carfax.
-
-“I know,” he offered; “in a rambling old house with a groved lawn. It
-has a box-bordered carriage drive, and a big, pillared veranda fronting
-the west.”
-
-“Yes; when have you ever seen Westwood House?”
-
-“Perhaps I haven’t seen it; perhaps I am only imagining how it ought
-to look. But the name ‘Westwood’ is familiar enough. It is written all
-over the Ocoee maps.”
-
-Her smile, on any other lips, would have had more than a hint of
-bitterness in it.
-
-“I suppose we ought to be proud of the distinction. The printing of the
-home name on the maps was the only return my father ever had for what
-he did for Mr. Parker. But, of course, you know all about that.”
-
-“Not so much as I’d like to know. I have understood that your father
-was a heavy investor in the original Ocoee company, and that Parker
-contrived to give him the hot end of things in the reorganization.”
-
-“It is all true.”
-
-“It makes me feel as if I had been caught stealing sheep,” he
-volunteered. “Ethically, I suppose the Ocoee doesn’t belong to me at
-all, though I hope it is clear to everybody that neither I nor my
-father had any part in the crookedness. So far as that goes, my father
-never knew anything about the early history of the mine; and neither
-did I before I came down here. How does your father feel about it?”
-
-It did not strike him at the moment as being particularly significant
-that she did not answer the question categorically.
-
-“Those things are all past and gone,” she said half-absently. And then:
-“I wish you might meet my father; you and Mr. Carfax.”
-
-The mention of Carfax’s name was as salt to a fresh wound.
-
-“You’ve changed your mind about Poictiers, haven’t you?” he said, and
-he tried to make the saying of it entirely judicial. “You made fun of
-him at first, you know.”
-
-“Not of him, but of some of the things that he said and did,” she
-corrected quickly. “And that was only because I didn’t know him;
-because I was so stupid as not to recognize the real man under the
-transparent little mask of affectation that he delights in holding up
-between himself and all the rest of the world.”
-
-Tregarvon made a loud call upon his magnanimity, and concurred heartily.
-
-“He is the finest there is, Richardia. I--I hope he will be able to
-make you as happy as you deserve to be.”
-
-For the moment he was puzzled. Sheer maiden modesty might have
-accounted for the blush, but why should the slate-blue eyes grow
-suspiciously bright, as with tears?
-
-“Then he has told you?” She had turned away from him and there was a
-little catch in her voice.
-
-“Yes. It broke my heart, Richardia--which shows you how far I had gone
-on the road to depravity. Poictiers said to me once that I was playing
-the dog in the manger, and so I was. There was no excuse, of course;
-there never is an excuse for dishonor. But you were heart and soul and
-conscience to me, and I seemed to need you so much more than anybody
-else ever could. I can say all this without blame now, can’t I? You
-are going to marry Poictiers, and I am going to marry Elizabeth.”
-
-She had turned farther away, as if to conceal emotions too profound to
-be shared. At first he thought she was crying, and wondered why. Then
-it was borne in upon him that she was laughing, and he became instantly
-and hotly resentful.
-
-“If you are laughing at me and my little lunacy, it is all right,” he
-exploded. “But if it’s at Poictiers----”
-
-When she let him see her face again it was perfectly straight, but
-there were twin imps of mockery dancing in the eyes of desire.
-
-“Between you and Mr. Carfax it is hard for a poor country mouse to find
-breathing space,” she asserted. “Am I to understand that you are trying
-to congratulate me?”
-
-Tregarvon frowned heavily. “No; Poictiers is the one to be
-congratulated--if you were not laughing at him.”
-
-“I wasn’t,” she denied promptly. “He is much too splendid to be laughed
-at. Don’t criticise the word; it is the only one that fits him.”
-
-“Then you were laughing at me?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“At what I said, then? that is just as cruel.”
-
-“Why will you insist upon being so quarrelsome? I was laughing because
-I couldn’t help it. Let us talk about something else; about your mine.
-Have you been having any more of the mysterious trouble?”
-
-“Yes; it is one thing after another. You heard what Poictiers was
-telling at the table this evening. He made it sound like hard luck, but
-it isn’t luck; it’s design. Some one is making the trouble for us.”
-
-“Who would do such a thing as that?”
-
-“For a long time we were totally in the dark. But now we know the man.”
-
-Miss Richardia had the translucent complexion that harmonizes perfectly
-with cloudy blue eyes and masses of light-brown hair brightened by
-touches of warmer tints; hence there was no telltale pink to vanish at
-the command of sudden emotion. Yet Tregarvon saw she was startled, and
-that the exciting cause was quick-springing anxiety.
-
-“You have seen him?” she asked.
-
-“Rucker, the machinist, has.” Tregarvon was always making good
-resolutions about not talking too much, and always breaking them.
-It had been no part of his intention to refer to the incriminating
-incident in which Richardia herself figured as one of the two actors,
-but the inexpedient thing was said and he could only hope that
-Richardia would not ask for more.
-
-She was looking away again when she said: “Now that you know, I suppose
-you will defend your rights?”
-
-“Take legal steps, you mean? I don’t wish to do that, if it can be
-avoided.”
-
-“No; anything but that!” she pleaded in low tones. “You must remember
-the provocation.”
-
-“I didn’t give the provocation.”
-
-“No; but you are associated, in a way, with those who did. You have
-inherited a legacy of ill will.”
-
-“I might be able to understand that, if the man who is making the
-trouble were one of the ignorant natives. But he is not.”
-
-“No,” she agreed half-absently; “he is not.”
-
-“Then you know who it is?” said Tregarvon, again permitting himself to
-say one of the things which might better have been left unsaid.
-
-She nodded slowly. “I--I am afraid I do. And I am going to plead for
-him, if you will let me. There are mitigating circumstances--prejudices
-against all Northerners _as_ Northerners. You can’t understand that,
-because the North didn’t suffer as the South did in the war between
-the States--at least, not in the same way. And the South has suffered
-bitterly since the war; from such men as Mr. Parker. There was a
-disposition on our part to let bygones be bygones, after the great
-struggle; but a few unprincipled promoters have done much to keep the
-old sectional animosities alive.”
-
-Tregarvon was regarding her thoughtfully.
-
-“You are wise beyond your years and your sex,” he said soberly. “What
-do you think I ought to do to this anachronistic gentleman who is
-visiting the sins of other people upon my poor head?”
-
-“I can only beg of you to be broad-minded and charitable and slow to
-anger for the sake of all concerned--for my sake, if you must put it
-upon narrower ground.”
-
-At this appeal, the earnestness of which could not be questioned,
-Tregarvon was frankly puzzled. A little earlier in the adventure he
-would not have been surprised to find Richardia Birrell pleading for
-Hartridge; but now, with Carfax apparently elbowing the professor aside
-in the sentimental field, there seemed to be less reason for the plea,
-unless pure friendship might account for it.
-
-“I shall put it wholly upon ‘narrower ground,’ as you call it,” he
-maintained. “If you tell me that you care enough for the man you are
-pleading for to ask me to spare him for your sake----”
-
-“Care enough?” she exclaimed, wide-eyed. “I should be singularly
-inhuman if I didn’t care!”
-
-As in a flash of revealing lightning Tregarvon saw and thought he
-understood. It was not Hartridge for whom she was interceding; the
-professor of mathematics was not the man who had driven with her to the
-glade on the night of strange happenings--who had stood with her in the
-shadow of the drill derrick, shaking his fist at the inanimate symbol
-of the renewed Ocoee activities. The moving spirit in all the enmities
-and antagonisms was her father!
-
-For a moment the thing seemed unbelievable. That a man who had formerly
-been a judge and a champion of the law should become a feudist,
-carrying his vindictiveness over from those who had defrauded him
-to the defrauders’ innocent successor, appeared blankly incredible.
-Yet Tregarvon remembered that the South still held many archaic
-well-springs of thought and action--he had to fight anachronisms
-daily in his laborers--and that the older generation was not to be
-judged by the standards of the new. Judge Birrell had felt the heel of
-the invader, not only in the great conflict between the States, but
-afterward, when the invader came as a friend and robbed him in the name
-of business.
-
-Tregarvon had little time in which to determine what he ought to say;
-time for nothing but a sudden and loyal resolve not to fail Richardia
-in her moment of need. Voices in the hall warned him that Carfax and
-the Caswells were returning, and at the same moment he heard the honk
-of the motor announcing Rucker’s approach. He was upon his feet when he
-said: “You have told me something that I didn’t know--didn’t suspect.
-I can scarcely believe it yet. But you need have no fears for anything
-that I shall do. You mustn’t worry for a single moment. It will all
-come out right in the end.”
-
-He had his reward in a quick little grasp of the hand, in eyes filling
-this time with real tears, and in a low-toned outpouring of gratitude.
-
-“I knew you would say that,” she avouched. “It is what you have taught
-me to expect of you. I am doing all I can to--to bring about a better
-understanding, and if you will only be patient and wait a little
-while----”
-
-Carfax and the two Caswells were entering the music-room, and
-Tregarvon turned quickly and made a pretense of rearranging the music
-on the piano desk. The small diversion gave him a chance for another
-whispered word of assurance. “I’ve been advertising myself to you as
-all kinds of a graceless wretch, but now I’ll show you that I can rise
-to the occasion. Don’t be afraid: there will be no scandal--no tragedy,
-so far as you and yours are concerned.”
-
-She caught instantly at the qualification. “Then there are others?” she
-queried.
-
-“One other, at least. And after what you have just told me I am quite
-sure he is acting entirely upon his own responsibility. I’ll tell you
-more about him some other time.”
-
-Carfax was already taking leave, and Tregarvon joined him. The host
-and hostess went no farther than the door with the departing guests,
-and Miss Richardia remained in the music-room. At the veranda steps
-there was a little delay while Rucker was doing something to the motor.
-In the waiting interval Tregarvon found himself answering a question
-of Hartridge’s about the progress of the test-drilling, the professor
-having outstayed his art-teacher companion in their retreat to the open
-air.
-
-“No,” said Tregarvon, “we are not getting along as well as we might.
-There seems to be a curious obstructive fatality dogging us. If you
-were in the chair of psychology instead of that of mathematics,
-we might give you a very handsome little problem to work on, Mr.
-Hartridge. I wonder if you would attack it?”
-
-The mild-eyed professor’s smile was blandly incommunicative.
-
-“You mustn’t expect any sympathy from me,” he returned genially. “The
-proverb tells us specifically that the burnt child dreads the fire;
-but it doesn’t add the corollary, which is equally true, and as old as
-human nature--namely, that the burnt child experiences an unholy joy
-when his playmate attempts to pick up the same hot nail.”
-
-“Ah?” said Tregarvon. And then: “I had forgotten, if, indeed, I ever
-knew. You were one of the original stockholders in the Ocoee?”
-
-“To the extent of my entire savings account; which was a mere drop
-in the promoter’s bucket, after all. Nevertheless, I can still be
-magnanimous enough to wish you all success.” Then, abruptly: “You have
-a delightful night for your drive to Coalville. I could almost envy
-you.”
-
-Tregarvon did not undeceive him about the destination of the drive;
-for good and sufficient reasons it did not seem necessary to tell
-Hartridge that the drilling plant would have two watchers that night,
-instead of none. With a word of leave-taking he joined Carfax in the
-tonneau seat, and the yellow car rolled away down the drive, with
-Rucker at the wheel.
-
-It was less than an eighth of a mile from the college gates to the
-point where the glade road turned to the left out of the downward pike,
-and when Rucker would have taken the left-hand road, Tregarvon made him
-stop the car.
-
-“We can walk in from here, Billy,” he explained, and the two volunteer
-watchers got out to do it while the car, lightened of two-thirds of its
-load, coasted noiselessly on down the steep mountain road and out of
-sight around the first curve.
-
-On the short walk over to the drilling plant Tregarvon spoke but once,
-and that was to say: “Your guess about Hartridge was right, Poictiers.
-He was one of the native crowd which was pinched out in the first
-reorganization of the Ocoee.”
-
-“Did Richardia tell you that?”
-
-“No; he told me himself, just as we were leaving. And he is still sore
-about it, though he tried to turn it off as a joke.”
-
-“Um,” said Carfax reflectively. “If he is the man who is putting a
-finger into your pie, we’ll be likely to see him within the next
-half-hour or so, don’t you think? He supposes we are on the road to
-Coalville, and he knows that Rucker is driving. Which presumably leaves
-the plant unguarded. What will you do if we should happen to catch him
-red-handed?”
-
-“That remains to be seen,” said Tregarvon moodily. “We’ll cross that
-bridge when we come to it.” And for the remainder of the walk he
-was silent; it being no part of his intention to tell Carfax that
-Richardia’s father was the one who, arguing from conclusions which
-seemed to be well-founded in inference, if not in fact, was most likely
-to be caught red-handed.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-The Logic of Fact
-
-
-Upon their arrival at the drilling plant the two young men who had been
-Mrs. Caswell’s dinner-guests made a dressing-room of the small tool
-shanty and changed quickly to their working clothes; after which they
-sat upon the door-step to smoke in sober silence, each busy with his
-own thoughts.
-
-For Tregarvon the talk with Richardia had wrenched the point of view
-violently aside, adding new perplexities and fresh discouragement.
-Richardia’s apparent fear that her father was responsible for the
-obstacles which had been thrown in the way of the test-drilling was a
-thing to be believed only because Richardia’s plea could apparently
-have no other meaning. Being alien to the South and a townlander,
-the Philadelphian found it difficult to understand the attitude of a
-man who would make a personal matter of an ancient business defeat,
-carrying his animosity over from the real offender to an innocent third
-party. But seemingly--since Richardia’s word was not to be doubted--the
-fact remained.
-
-Tregarvon saw at once that the Ocoee experiment was made vastly less
-hopeful by the discovery to which Richardia had led him. Though he
-had never met Judge Birrell, Coalville gossip had done the fiery old
-recluse ample justice. For the loungers at Tait’s store the judge
-figured as a venerable survival of the _ancien régime_; of the good old
-times when the great landed proprietors ruled their small kingdoms with
-an iron rod; and were coincidentally and in the meliorating sense of
-the word, kindly and generous tyrants to all and sundry. Tregarvon had
-heard enough to assure him that the sentiment of the entire countryside
-would be with Judge Birrell in any cause he might see fit to champion;
-but apart from this, the one insurmountable bar to any defensive
-reprisals on his own part lay in Richardia’s appeal. Tregarvon felt
-that the appeal, and his yielding thereto, had effectually tied his
-hands, and he was still sufficiently infatuated to be glad. Carfax
-might marry Richardia and endow her with his millions; but her greatest
-debt would still be to the man who had refused to defend himself at her
-father’s expense.
-
-Back of the dismaying discovery which had changed the point of view,
-there was other food for reflection. When he had ventured to hope
-that Carfax might make her happy, why had Richardia laughed? The query
-led to the recognition of another impression, given often when he was
-with her, and as often slurred over and dismissed when it came to be
-analyzed. Not the least of her charms for him was her crystal-clear
-straightforwardness. Nevertheless, there had been times when he had
-been made to feel that behind the frankness there were reservations;
-times when he had been given fleeting glimpses of an inner Richardia
-hiding behind the slate-blue eyes and whimsically mocking him.
-
-“I hope the good Mrs. Caswell’s dinner is not disagreeing with you,”
-Carfax broke in, in the midst of the analyzing abstraction; and
-Tregarvon came back to things present with a jerk.
-
-“Not at all,” he denied. “I was just thinking.”
-
-“Better not think too much after a hearty meal. It’s bad for the
-digestion,” was the gentle rejoinder.
-
-Tregarvon grunted. “You didn’t leave out anything but the name. I can’t
-help thinking of her, Poictiers. It’s no disloyalty to you, or to
-Elizabeth. You had no business to leave me alone with her when Doctor
-Caswell asked you to go and look over the gymnasium things.”
-
-Carfax chuckled softly.
-
-“You are a wild ass of the plains, Vance. It is borne in upon me that I
-shall have to marry her out of hand to bring you to your senses.”
-
-“The quicker the better,” said Tregarvon gloomily. “There is no use in
-prolonging the agony.”
-
-“Then you’ll admit that it is an agony?”
-
-“I can’t joke about it, Poictiers. I have made the one crowning blunder
-that spoils a man’s life. Don’t look at me that way. I’m not going
-to be either a fool or a scoundrel. I shall marry Elizabeth and try
-to make her as happy as I can; but it will be without prejudice to
-the fact that I didn’t know what love was when I promised her. I can
-imagine just how brutal that sounds to you, but it’s the truth.”
-
-“The truth is always rather brutal, isn’t it?” Then the golden youth
-permitted himself a word that he rarely used. “I’m damned sorry for
-Elizabeth.”
-
-“As I told you once before, you needn’t be,” Tregarvon snapped back.
-“There is absolutely no question of sentiment between us, and there has
-never been. You’d appreciate that if you should read her letters to me;
-letters in answer to my babblings about Richardia. If Elizabeth had a
-spark of sentiment in her she would have sent me packing long ago.
-I’ve told her pretty nearly everything there was to tell.”
-
-“I suppose you have. That is one of your amiable weaknesses--to tell
-some woman, any woman who happens to be within reach, a lot of things
-that no woman ought to be told. You deserve all that is coming to you,
-Vance.”
-
-“I suppose I do,” Tregarvon admitted; and beyond this the silence
-came to its own again. After a time, Carfax suggested quizzically
-that the ghosts might be too bashful to come out while there were
-two able-bodied watchers in sight; and at that they went inside to
-find seats on a coil of rope opposite the open door. Before long, the
-interior darkness began to make Tregarvon sleepy and he had quite lost
-himself when a touch of Carfax’s hand aroused him.
-
-“Look steadily at the big oak just beyond the engine--the one where
-we found the tripod marks,” was the whispered injunction. “Do you see
-anything?”
-
-Tregarvon rubbed the sleep out of his eyes and stared hard at the oak.
-“Nothing doing,” he said.
-
-“Yes, there is,” Carfax asserted. “There is a man behind that tree. I
-saw him just before I shook you awake.”
-
-“Piffle!” said Tregarvon. “That oak isn’t big enough to hide a man.”
-
-“Just the same, he is there!” retorted Carfax, still in a whisper.
-Then: “I suppose it didn’t occur to you that we might need something
-more persuasive than our bare hands up here to-night, did it?”
-
-“No; and we shan’t.” Tregarvon was suddenly reminded of his promise
-to Richardia that there should be no tragedies. “What we can’t handle
-peaceably, we’ll let go.”
-
-“All right; you’re the doctor,” said the golden youth mildly.
-“Nevertheless, if I had a gun I’d go out and capture that fellow who is
-hiding behind the tree.”
-
-“Still nervous, are you?” Tregarvon put in. “You are dreaming,
-Poictiers. There isn’t any one there.”
-
-“All right, again,” was the serene reply. “Have it that way, if you
-like. Only don’t forget to keep your eye on the tree.”
-
-That was the beginning of a patient watch which was maintained for
-a full quarter of an hour. The night was perfectly still; there was
-not wind enough to rustle the browning leaves of the oaks or to
-whisper in the pines. Afar off, the little screech-owl whose haunts
-had been invaded by the drilling plant lifted up his voice in shrill
-chatterings, but there were no other sounds to break the silence. Once
-during the watchful vigil Tregarvon thought he saw something stirring
-among the trees on the farther side of the glade, and his fingers
-closed upon Carfax’s arm. But when he looked again the shadows were
-undisturbed.
-
-“This is tremendously exciting,” Carfax commented finally, in gentle
-irony. “If I weren’t morally certain that I saw a man dodge behind that
-tree a little while ago, I’d fall asleep.”
-
-“Do it anyway,” Tregarvon suggested. “I’ll stand watch, and call you
-when your turn comes. Take Rucker’s cot.”
-
-“Do you really mean it?”
-
-“Sure I do. Turn in and take your forty winks. If anything seems likely
-to happen, I’ll let you know.”
-
-“Then I believe I’ll take you at your word. I haven’t been so sleepy
-since the year before Noah built the ark of gopherwood. If Mrs. Caswell
-wasn’t as far above suspicion as the angels of light, I might suspect
-her of having put something into the black coffee.”
-
-Five minutes later Tregarvon was sitting alone on the rope coil,
-rubbing his eyes and wishing that he might decently follow Carfax’s
-example. The very act of staring at the moonlit glade hypnotized him,
-the more since there was nothing unusual to be seen. With the view
-through the open door becoming hazy and startlingly distinct by turns,
-he struggled manfully against the rising tide of somnolence, nodding,
-and recovering himself with a jerk when he realized that the tide was
-submerging him. But out of one of the nodding moments he came with a
-violent start that instantly banished all thoughts of sleep. The little
-screech-owl had ceased complaining, and the arousing sound had been the
-distinct clink of metal upon stone.
-
-When he looked he saw that the time for action had come. Standing
-fairly in the midst of the small clearing, the drill derrick was
-struck out boldly in the white moonlight, with every outline and
-detail sharply distinguishable. In the square of cleaned rock surface
-marked off by the four legs of the derrick frame Tregarvon saw a man
-crouching. The clinking noise was repeated and the watcher at the door
-faced about and felt his way in the inner darkness to the bed in the
-corner of the tool-room.
-
-“Wake up, Poictiers!” he called in low tones; “the play has begun!”
-
-Carfax sat up promptly and asked but a moment for the finding of
-himself. “I’m all here,” he said. “What’s doing?”
-
-For answer Tregarvon led him to the door and pointed to the square
-of bared bed-rock under the derrick frame. There was a man there,
-without doubt, but now he was standing up and was apparently examining
-something which lay in the palm of his hand. The sudden rush of the two
-from the tool shanty was quite evidently a surprise for the intruder,
-but he made no attempt to escape. So far from it, he lifted his soft
-hat politely and said: “Good evening again, gentlemen. You took me
-completely by surprise--as perhaps you meant to. I was quite sure that
-you were both safely in bed in Coalville by this time.”
-
-“No,” said Carfax very gently. “We have not been in Coalville at all:
-we have been here, waiting, quite patiently for--you, Mr. Hartridge.”
-
-“That was kind,” said Hartridge affably. “And, now that your patient
-waiting has been duly rewarded?----”
-
-“Now that we have caught you we shall ask you to solve that little
-problem in psychology for us,” put in Tregarvon. “We’d like to know
-what it is that you have just been dropping into that drill-hole.”
-
-“And if I assure you that I have been putting nothing into your
-drill-hole, what then, Mr. Tregarvon?”
-
-“In that case I shall ask Carfax to see that you don’t run away while I
-ascertain for myself,” was the firm rejoinder; and a careful dip of the
-long cleaning spoon into the test-hole brought up a half-dozen small
-metallic objects; cubes cut from a bar of tool-steel they appeared to
-be.
-
-Tregarvon handled the cubes and passed them on to Carfax.
-
-“We owe you something for a day lost and four drill points all but
-ruined, Mr. Hartridge,” he said rather grimly, adding: “But we’ll
-credit your account with this present failure to make us do it all over
-again to-morrow. Would you mind telling us in so many words what your
-object has been--or still is, perhaps?”
-
-The professor’s smile was imperturbably bland.
-
-“I am sure you wouldn’t be so harsh as to put me on the witness-stand
-in my own defense,” he said, still amiable. “Especially since you have
-no evidence of anything worse than a neighborly call at, perhaps, a
-somewhat unseasonable hour.”
-
-At this Carfax came quite close and he forgot to lisp when he said:
-“Mr. Hartridge, may I ask you to remove your overcoat for a moment? The
-night is a bit chilly, I know, but----”
-
-The tone of the request was gentle enough but there was a quality in
-it that made the suggestion a demand. The professor slipped out of the
-coat, quaintly quoting Scripture for the ready compliance. “‘If any
-man ... take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak, also.’ Anything to
-oblige a friend, Mr. Carfax.”
-
-Carfax took the surrendered coat and, feeling in the right-hand pocket,
-drew out one of the little steel cubes; quite evidently the one which
-Hartridge had had in his hand at the moment of surprises.
-
-“Thank you; that is all,” said the searcher, returning the coat, or
-rather holding it thoughtfully while Hartridge put it on. And then:
-“You will hardly deny that we have sufficient evidence now, I take it?”
-
-The professor of mathematics spread his hands as one who has done his
-best and is only regretful that he can do no more.
-
-“Let us assume that the case has gone to the jury: what is the verdict,
-gentlemen?”
-
-“You are asking what we mean to do?” Tregarvon demanded.
-
-“That is it, precisely. What can you do?--drag me before the nearest
-justice of the peace on a charge of malicious mischief? You would
-scarcely wish to disturb the tranquillity of an old and honored
-institution of learning like Highmount College by such a proceeding as
-that, would you?”
-
-Tregarvon could not help smiling at the audacity of the man, and the
-New Yorker laughed outright.
-
-“You have a most excellent quality of nerve, Mr. Hartridge,” was
-Carfax’s tribute to the audacity. “As you suggest, our field is rather
-limited. You are perfectly well aware of the fact that Highmount
-and its hospitality stand as the only barrier between us and social
-starvation. Let us try to discover a _modus vivendi_. The verdict is:
-‘Guilty, with a recommendation to mercy.’ We are willing to give any
-man’s sense of humor a chance to redeem itself. You quoted Scripture at
-me a moment ago, let me return the compliment: ‘Go in peace, and sin no
-more.’”
-
-The professor drew himself up, smiling genially and lifting his hat.
-
-“I thank you, gentlemen; you are very considerate,” he returned in
-gentle irony. After which he walked away, pausing at the edge of the
-glade to lift his hat again.
-
-Carfax drew a long breath when the tall, black-coated figure was lost
-under the tree shadows. Then he turned upon his companion:
-
-“I’m not going to say, ‘I told you so,’ Vance, because I think you
-came around to my point of view some little time ago. What is the
-motive--Hartridge’s motive? Is it merely impish humor? Or does it go
-deeper than that?”
-
-Tregarvon was busily engaged in putting two and two together to make
-the inevitable four. The schoolmaster was in love with Richardia
-Birrell; the Philadelphian’s first visit to Highmount had made this
-perfectly plain: could it be possible that Hartridge was acting
-as Judge Birrell’s agent in the obstacle-raising? And, if so, did
-Richardia know it?
-
-“Stay here a few minutes, Poictiers,” he directed. “I’m going to follow
-him and see if he goes straight back to Highmount.”
-
-“Joy go with you,” said Carfax; and when he was left alone he went to
-sit on the step of the tool-house to smoke while he waited.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-Mammy Ann’s Grave
-
-
-Carfax was smoking his third cigarette when Tregarvon returned from
-spying upon the retreating professor and sat down in sober silence upon
-the door-step.
-
-The smoker waited patiently for some little time before he said
-suggestively: “I hope you didn’t have your walk for nothing.”
-
-“I saw all I needed to see.”
-
-“Hartridge went to the college?”
-
-“I suppose so; he was headed that way when I turned back.”
-
-Carfax waited again, and when nothing further was forthcoming: “It’s
-a remarkably beautiful night, isn’t it? Did you ever see a handsomer
-moon?”
-
-“Don’t make me talk!” was the irritable rejoinder. “You’ll be sorry for
-it if you do.”
-
-“Try me and see.”
-
-“Well, then--if you will have it: there was a witness to our little
-comedy out there under the derrick.”
-
-“Some one who came with Hartridge?”
-
-“I guess so. Some one who went back with him, at any rate.”
-
-“Who was it?”
-
-“I hate to tell you, Poictiers. It was--it was the woman you are going
-to marry; Richardia Birrell.”
-
-Carfax laughed softly.
-
-“I don’t see why you need be so desperately gloomy because it happened
-to be Richardia. As I remarked a moment ago, the night is jewel fine,
-and I don’t wonder that she found it hard to stay indoors. And as to
-my rights in the matter, I am far from denying her the privilege of
-walking abroad with so old a friend as Mr. William W. Hartridge.”
-
-“You are trying to make a jest of it, as you do of everything,” was the
-crabbed retort. “Don’t you see what it means?”
-
-“I must confess that I don’t see anything especially catastrophic about
-it.”
-
-“You don’t? Why, good heavens, man! it means that Richardia knows what
-Hartridge has been doing. I won’t admit yet that she is a party to it;
-but she _knows_!”
-
-“_Place aux dames_,” said Carfax cheerfully. “We’ll give her the
-benefit of the doubt; it’s our clear duty--or, at least, it is mine.”
-
-“No, I’ll be hanged if we do!” Tregarvon growled. “There isn’t even a
-doubt where she is concerned!”
-
-Carfax threw the half-burnt cigarette away and lighted another.
-
-“Your tone is that of the still deeply infatuated lover. Must we
-again come back to that phase of it?” he inquired, in the tone of the
-long-suffering but still amiable bystander.
-
-The man beside him took plenty of time to consider. But when he opened
-the flood-gates there was a torrent of self-accusings to pour out.
-
-“I’m a beast, a cad, the cheapest of cheap skates, Poictiers!--anything
-you like to call me. It hasn’t touched Richardia, but it has gone all
-sorts of despicable distances with me. When you told me the other night
-that you had proposed to her, I could have murdered you. And just now,
-when I saw her walking arm in arm with Hartridge, I wanted to run amuck
-and destroy him. I’m not trying to excuse myself when I say that I
-didn’t go down without a struggle. I did make some kind of a fight at
-first: I even went so far as to tell Richardia all about Elizabeth. But
-it didn’t do any good.”
-
-Carfax’s smile was out of the depths of wisdom, and it was not visible
-above the horizon for the penitent.
-
-“That was great,” he said, referring to the forlorn-hope confession of
-the engagement. “I don’t believe I could have done that.”
-
-“Oh, there is nothing coming to me on that score,” Tregarvon objected,
-carrying self-abnegation to the limit. “I couldn’t help telling her;
-not because it was the honest thing to do, but because I should have
-burst into inconsequent little shards long ago if I hadn’t told her
-everything I knew.”
-
-“And she has been encouraging this little idiosyncrasy of yours?”
-Carfax asked tentatively.
-
-“Not on your life! She has been doing everything that an angel out of
-heaven could do to smash me back into my place; to show me how many
-different kinds of an idiot I was making of myself. No longer ago than
-this evening, when you went off with the Caswells and left me in the
-lurch, the first thing she did was to ask me when I was going home to
-marry Elizabeth.”
-
-For the first time in Tregarvon’s knowing of him, Carfax appeared to be
-losing his temper.
-
-“‘A beast, a cad, and the cheapest of cheap skates,’” he repeated
-carefully. “They are your own words, and they will all apply to you if
-you don’t tell Elizabeth all and more than you have just told me.”
-
-“There is the millstone grind of it!” groaned the sinner. “If I should
-tell her how far it has gone with me, it would be tantamount to asking
-her to make me a present of myself, with the Uncle Byrd millions
-thrown in for a _lagniappe_. I suppose I’ve got it to do, now, but I’d
-cheerfully accept the alternative of walking into old Brother Daniel’s
-den of lions.”
-
-“Y-e-s, I should think you would,” was the drawling comment. “Any man
-who would make a football of the happiness of such a woman as Elizabeth
-Wardwell----”
-
-“Hold on,” Tregarvon cut in, sobering suddenly. “Get up and walk on me,
-if that is what you think is coming to me; but don’t mangle me with a
-cold iron. I’m out of it all around. If Richardia doesn’t marry you,
-she’ll marry Hartridge; and when I tell Elizabeth, as I’ve got to, that
-will be the end of things with her. You mustn’t hit a man when he is
-down. It’s wicked.”
-
-“Everything goes--between friends,” said Carfax, who could never take
-the trouble to put his displeasure into any permanent form. “It does
-look as if you were up against it, before and behind. Far be it from
-me to break the bruised reed, or to quench the smoking flax.”
-
-“Oh, confound you for a Job’s comforter!” rasped Tregarvon, breaking
-out afresh. “I’ve got to believe in people--I’m built that way; and if
-I could think for a moment that Richardia is Hartridge’s accomplice in
-this contemptible trickery of his----”
-
-“Well, if you could?” prompted the comforter, after the pause had grown
-overlong.
-
-“If I could, I’d lose faith in my own good intentions,” finished
-Tregarvon, whose stock of comparisons was running low. “Still,” he
-went on, talking now because he was started and could not stop, “still
-it’s against me, Poictiers; the whole world is against me. In that
-same talk in the music-room this evening--while you were away with the
-Caswells--Richardia was anxious about these happenings of ours; afraid
-somebody would get hurt; in fact, she made me promise not to hurt
-anybody.”
-
-“Meaning Professor William Wilberforce Hartridge, M.A., Vanderbilt?”
-
-“No; er--that is, I don’t think she meant him.” Tregarvon was not yet
-ready to tell Carfax that he was well assured that her fear was for her
-father; though she had not bound him to secrecy, he felt that what she
-had said had been spoken in confidence.
-
-Carfax got up from his cramped sitting on the door-step, stretched,
-yawned, and looked at his watch, holding the dial up to the moonlight.
-
-“Ten minutes past eleven,” he announced. “Do we turn in and sleep a few
-lines? Or is it to be a continuous performance--like those that the
-vaudeville people advertise?”
-
-“Go inside and finish your nap,” Tregarvon directed, filling and
-lighting his pipe. “I’m not sleepy now; don’t know as I ever shall be
-again.”
-
-“You think the curtain has been rung down for to-night?”
-
-“You’d say so, wouldn’t you? The star has gone home and has probably
-gone to bed. If he should get up and walk in his sleep, I’ll call you.”
-
-Carfax hung upon the threshold. “Better call me, anyhow, after I’ve had
-another forty winks or so, so you can take your turn. People have to
-sleep, you know--even after a funeral.”
-
-“You go to bed!” was the gruff command; and Tregarvon began a
-monotonous sentry beat up and down before the tool-house. But a minute
-later he thrust his face in at the little square window to say: “Asleep
-yet?”
-
-“My Heavens, no!” returned a querulous voice in the inner darkness. “Do
-you take me for an auto-hypnotist?”
-
-“I have just developed a notion, and it is beginning to gnaw me,”
-explained the sentinel on duty. “What if the man who was on his knees
-at the test-hole when I went to waken you wasn’t Hartridge, after all?”
-
-“Oh, good Lord!” complained the voice. “Are you trying to drag somebody
-else into it?--when the character cast is already full and running
-over, and all the supernumeraries have been tagged and labelled? Turn
-the notion out of doors; tread on it; break its back with a stick! We
-caught Hartridge with the goods on him, didn’t we?”
-
-“Yes; but----”
-
-“But what?”
-
-“Nothing much: only now that I come to think of it, I seem to remember
-that the man I saw dropping things into the hole wasn’t wearing
-Hartridge’s kind of a hat.”
-
-“Oh, granny! Go on and do your little sentry go. Your head is muddled
-and you want to pass the muddle on to me. I’m asleep, I tell you--sound
-asleep! I don’t hear a word you are saying.”
-
-Tregarvon gave it up; not the lately developed notion, which grew
-rather more insistent the longer he thought about it, but the attempt
-to interest Carfax. During the lonely two-hour watch which followed he
-had time to go reflectively over the events of the night, to set them
-in orderly array, and to let the unconsidered minor happenings fit into
-their places and weigh as they would.
-
-The process straightened out a few of the tangles, or it seemed to.
-Richardia’s concern, expressed by her fear that violence might grow out
-of the antagonisms, was undoubtedly for her father. Also, it was plain
-that up to the moment of confidences she had not suspected Hartridge
-of being her father’s agent; it being a fair presumption that she
-would have spoken of the professor if she had. Having got that far,
-Tregarvon began to ask himself if Hartridge was the only one actively
-involved. In at least two instances the schoolmaster might fairly be
-held exempt. It was still incredible that the man who had come to the
-Coalville headquarters as a guest had deliberately plotted to have his
-host’s motor-car wrecked on its return from Highmount. By the same
-token, it was difficult to imagine the professor of mathematics in the
-rôle of the sardonic practical joker who had shocked Rucker with a
-resin-filled skull, dug, doubtless, out of the old burying-ground.
-
-On the other hand, the murderous attempt at wrecking the car and the
-grim joke on Rucker fitted the mountain-baron-henchman hypothesis most
-accurately; as did the fact, if it were a fact, that there were two
-persons concerned in the recent episode of the hardened steel cubes.
-There had been time, during the arousing of Carfax, for one man to
-disappear and for another to take his place; in which case it seemed
-evident that Hartridge had stood his ground merely to cover the retreat
-of the other man.
-
-The puzzle promised to give a coherent hint pointing to its solution
-while Tregarvon was thinking it out and fitting the pieces together;
-and so long as the mental effort continued to feed the fire of
-wakefulness he was all that an alert sentinel should be. But after
-the various suppositions had been properly labelled and docketed and
-pigeonholed the physical reaction came, and drowsiness sat upon his
-shoulders, riding him like an Old Man of the Sea.
-
-For a time he fought manfully, keeping up the struggle until he had
-exhausted every device he could think of and yielding only when he
-found himself actually falling asleep as he walked. The alternative to
-leaving the plant without a watchman was to call Carfax, and this he
-finally concluded to do. Groping his way blindly into the dark interior
-of the tool-shack, he stumbled over the spare coil of rope, sat down
-upon it for a momentary rest, and in the flitting of a bat’s wing was
-past help.
-
-When he opened his eyes again the high-riding moon had swung far into
-the west, the glade was bathed in a ghostly flood of gray shadow, and
-Carfax was shaking him gently.
-
-“Another act on,” whispered the impromptu call-boy; “no speaking parts
-out, as yet--only pantomime. But it is worth sitting up to see.”
-
-Tregarvon, still sodden with sleep, suffered Carfax to lead him to the
-outlook window. In the gray shadows he presently made out the figure
-of another intruder. Within the area of the sunken graves a man, old
-and black, if the uncertain light could be trusted, was squatting on
-the ground and rocking himself back and forth, his swaying body keeping
-time with the measure of a weird, crooning melody. From time to time,
-he would stop the swaying movement to take a small white object from
-a basket at his side. These objects he appeared to be arranging in
-some sort of a figure on the ground to the accompaniment of the droning
-incantation.
-
-“How long has he been there?” Tregarvon asked.
-
-“Just a little while,” was the low-toned reply. “I awoke about half an
-hour ago, and when I looked out, the moon was going over to the other
-edge of the world, and everything was quiet. A little later the basket
-man came; just appeared, you know, as if he had materialized out of
-the shadows. When I first noticed him he was doing his little song and
-dance, as you see him now.”
-
-“But what _is_ the ‘song and dance,’ as you call it?”
-
-“Write your guess on one side of a sheet of paper and send it to the
-puzzle editor,” chuckled Carfax, adding: “If we had begun doing that at
-first, the editor would have a choice collection by this time, don’t
-you think?”
-
-“I have been making a few more guesses,” Tregarvon offered. “I was
-coming in to unload them on you when my eyes went shut. What time is
-it?”
-
-“About two o’clock--the real witching hour. I want to go home.”
-
-“Go out and tell the old conjurer yonder; perhaps he may have a magic
-square of carpet in his basket,” suggested Tregarvon. Then: “Doesn’t
-the wild and weird atmosphere of this heritage of mine get on your
-nerves to the queen’s taste? Something doing all the time. I’m going to
-put a notice on the derrick frame: ‘Don’t shoot the stunt-setter; he is
-doing the best he can.’”
-
-“’Sh! what is the old ‘ghost doctor’ up to now?”
-
-The droning chant had ceased and the old negro was crouching or
-kneeling at one end of the oblong figure traced by the enclosing row of
-white objects. The silence was profound; so complete that the snapping
-of a twig coming suddenly shattered it like the report of a pistol.
-Both of the watchers started at the sound, but the kneeling negro
-seemed not to have heard it.
-
-“What was that?” whispered Carfax.
-
-“I’m guessing once more: the obi-devil, possibly, coming in answer to
-the old medicine-man’s prayers.”
-
-“Guess again!” Carfax thrust in excitedly. “Look this way--get a line
-on the corner of the derrick frame and follow it over into the woods.
-Do you see him?”
-
-Tregarvon said “Yes,” and began to grope for a weapon. A man, hatless
-and with a handkerchief bound about his head, was edging his way
-cautiously out of the undergrowth. In the hollow of his left arm he
-carried a gun, and his advance was like that of the deer-stalking
-hunter. With the derrick frame intervening it was to be inferred that
-he did not see the negro.
-
-“Somebody pot-hunting for us, this time?” queried Carfax, under his
-breath; but Tregarvon pressed his arm for silence. The cautious
-approach was not in the direction of the tool shanty; it was toward the
-engine of the drilling installation.
-
-“That is the fellow we want to surround,” Tregarvon whispered. “If
-he had a hat on, I’d swear he was the man I saw kneeling under the
-derrick--before he made his drop-out and left Hartridge to throw dust
-for him! By Jove! he acts as if he were scared!”
-
-The exclamation was not unwarranted. The man with the gun was creeping
-toward the portable engine, watchful and alert, starting at every
-whisper of the night air in the pines and exhibiting all the outward
-signs of an inward tension which was ready to snap and recoil in panic.
-
-When he passed out of sight behind the derrick, Carfax would have led
-the charge; but Tregarvon restrained him. “Hold on,” he advised. “We
-may as well wait and find out what he means to do.”
-
-The man was creeping on hands and knees when he came in sight again,
-and the gun had been left behind. When he stood up he was at the
-smoke-stack end of the engine-boiler; and a moment further along the
-two watchers made out that he was unscrewing the fastenings of the
-iron door which gave access to the smoke-box and the flues. They
-waited until he had the door unfastened; saw him swing it open by slow
-inchings; saw him thrust an arm into the sooty depths of the smoke-box.
-
-“_Now!_” Tregarvon commanded, setting the pace for the charge; but
-panic was before them. Just as the man was withdrawing his arm a deep
-groan shuddered upon the stillness. With a cry that was like the snarl
-of a cornered animal, the man leaped up and flung out his arms as if
-to ward a blow. At that the huddled figure kneeling among the sunken
-graves groaned again, following the groan with a terrified, “_Oh_, my
-Lordy!” when he saw the man at the boiler head.
-
-That was sufficient. At the spot where the man with a handkerchief
-about his head had stood clutching the air there was a sudden void,
-and the noise of his crashing retreat through the undergrowth had died
-away before Tregarvon and Carfax could give chase.
-
-They captured the “ghost doctor,” however, and were not greatly
-surprised when the old negro turned out to be Uncle William. His night
-wandering to the mountain top was sufficiently explained when he
-pointed to the sunken grave ringed about with bits of broken china.
-
-“Dah’s whah my ol’ ’ooman is, marstehs; yas, suh; right dah’s whah dey
-bury huh. Dat triflin’ niggah, Sam, from de ol’ place, come erlong
-down de mounting day befo’ yistidday, an’ he say you-all gemman is
-a-trompin’ ’round an’ mashin’ up t’ings in de ol’ buryin’-ground. I
-know dat ain’ so, but I says to mahse’f, ‘Willyum, yo’ gwine right up
-dah and put dem li’l grabestones you been a-savin’ ’round Mammy Ann;
-den Marsteh Tregarbin ain’ gwine ’sturb nuffin’ belongin’ ter you.’”
-
-“No,” said Tregarvon soberly. “You may be sure we shan’t disturb
-your wife’s grave--or any of the others, if we can help it. I didn’t
-know, until after we had begun work here, that this open place was a
-burying-ground. Now tell me; do you know who that man was who stood
-there by the engine and made motions at you?”
-
-“I ’spec’ dat wuz de ol’ debbil, hese’f, marsteh. Couldn’t a-been
-nobody else; no, suh.”
-
-“What makes you think it was the devil, Uncle William?” Carfax wanted
-to know.
-
-“’Cause he go off, _bing!_ in a puff o’ yaller smoke when I say ‘_Oh_,
-my Lordy!’”
-
-Tregarvon had been groping purposefully in the old man’s explanation to
-determine if it held any of the missing puzzle pieces.
-
-“You say Sam, from the ‘old place’ told you we were working here, Uncle
-William; who is Sam, and where is the ‘old place’?”
-
-“Sam, he’s dat triflin’ no-’count niggah what Marsteh Judge keep for
-stable niggah--when dey ain’ nuffin in de stable ’ceppin’ de ol’
-dapple-gray dat’s a heap older’n what I is, _hyuh, hyuh!_ But de ol’
-Marsteh Judge ain’ gwine tu’n nobody off’n de ol’ place whilst dar’s a
-rind o’ bacon lef’ in de gre’t house; no, suh; he ain’ gwine do dat!”
-
-It was at this point that Tregarvon sprang his small trap.
-
-“Why did he turn you off, Uncle William?”
-
-“Who, me? No, suh--I--Miss Dick, she----”
-
-“It’s all right; never mind, Uncle William,” Tregarvon hastened to say.
-“Now we’ll undertake to keep the devil away while you go on setting
-your tombstones. I’m sorry we had to break in.”
-
-“Dey’s all sot, yas, suh; dat’s de bes’ I kin do for ol’ Mammy Ann. I’s
-gwine tromp off down de mounting ag’in, now. Mus’ be gettin’ might’
-nigh de ol’ man’s bedtime; yas, suh; it sholy am dat. I’s sayin’ good
-night to you-all; an’ t’ank yo’ kin’ly, marstehs.”
-
-After the old negro had shuffled away on a short-cut through the wood
-in the direction of the pike, the two young men took up the affair of
-the moment, which was to ascertain what the man with the bandaged head
-had been doing to the engine of the drilling plant. The smoke-box door
-was standing open, as he had left it, and Tregarvon struck a match and
-held it in the small sooty cavern. What he saw made him withdraw the
-match suddenly and blow it out.
-
-“Did it bite you?” asked Carfax, genially quizzical.
-
-Tregarvon’s rejoinder was not in words. Thrusting an arm into the
-smoke-box he drew out a paper-wrapped cylinder with a capped fuse
-buried in one end of it, passing the find to Carfax with the remark: “I
-fancy we can stay awake until daybreak on the strength of that, don’t
-you think, Poictiers?”
-
-“Dynamite!” gasped Carfax, holding the cartridge gingerly between thumb
-and finger and at arm’s length.
-
-“Yes, dynamite. It was poked into one of the flues with the business
-end toward the fire-box, and it made no account of Rucker, who would be
-the one to fire up the boiler before breakfast the day after to-morrow.”
-
-“Say, by Jove, Vance! this thing is getting serious!” exclaimed the
-golden youth, forgetting even the slight hint of a lisp. “We’ll have to
-‘take measures,’ as my father used to say. Come on over to the shanty
-and we’ll get busy. I am in the same condition you said you were, a
-while back: I’m not sleepy now--don’t know as I ever shall be again.”
-
-The talk on the door-step of the tool-house was prolonged far past
-Tregarvon’s recounting of the suppositions pieced together in the
-period of his lonely sentry go. But it came back to the suppositions in
-the end, with Carfax checking off the probabilities on his finger-tips.
-
-“So it figures out about this way,” he said, not too cheerfully. “We
-have Judge Birrell as Lord High Executioner to a couple of receivers
-of stolen goods--always without his daughter’s approval or consent, as
-a matter of course--and Professor Hartridge as his able deputy in the
-field. Then there is this skulking rascal of a dynamite-planter, who
-acts under orders, or possibly exceeds them now and then; and he seems
-to be the only one of the lot that we can satisfactorily pinch--when we
-shall be lucky enough to catch him. Uncle William isn’t in it, is he?”
-
-Tregarvon shook his head gloomily.
-
-“I have been wrestling with that,” he confessed. “He seems more than
-trustworthy. But he is evidently an old house servant of the judge’s,
-and he was sent straight to me from Westwood. That is beyond question.”
-
-“As a spy?--perish the thought!” ranted Carfax, carefully concealing
-his earnestness with an overlaying of extravagance, as his habit was.
-“With the memory of Uncle William’s unapproachable dinners in my
-mind--or mouth--I’ll defend him to the last gasp.”
-
-“He is negligible,” said Tregarvon briefly. “But this dynamiting
-emissary of Hartridge’s, or the judge’s, isn’t. We must contrive to
-trap him in some way. If we don’t, he will fool around until he hurts
-somebody.”
-
-“Yea, verily,” Carfax laughed. “Any guesses coming to you?--as to who
-he is?”
-
-“One small one; and it wouldn’t be worth mentioning if it didn’t fit
-in with some of the others. You saw that he was bareheaded?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And that he was wearing a handkerchief or a bandage of some sort
-instead of a hat?”
-
-“Another ‘yes’.”
-
-“Well, the day before yesterday the man we’ve been calling ‘Morgan’ was
-hurt by the falling walking-beam and had to have his head wrapped up in
-about the same way.”
-
-“All right; but Sherlock Holmes wouldn’t stop with that.”
-
-“Neither do I. Tryon told me a little tale two days ago that possibly
-forges the connecting link. We know that both Morgan and Sill are
-McNabbs, and that for some reason of their own they dropped the surname
-when they hired out to me.”
-
-“Good!” Carfax approved. “The plot thickens. Can’t you stir in a little
-more stiffening?”
-
-“With the help of Tryon’s story, I can. It seems that these men
-are, or have been, moonshiners--breakers of the revenue laws. Some
-years ago the revenue officers raided their secret still, which
-was hidden somewhere in the Pocket, and arrested these two, with a
-number of others. Morgan McNabb and his brother were booked for the
-penitentiary; would have gone there if Judge Birrell hadn’t come out of
-his retirement and fought for them.”
-
-Carfax was slowly filling the short pipe he had borrowed from his
-companion. “I begin to see daylight,” he said. “What was the judge’s
-motive?”
-
-“A sort of clan loyalty, Tryon says. The McNabbs live on his land; they
-are ‘his people’.”
-
-“Um,” was the thoughtful comment. “And because the judge defends
-them, they take up the cudgels for him. We have to-morrow--or rather
-to-day--before us, with nothing especial to do; since Rucker will
-hardly be back with the drills before afternoon. Shall we telegraph to
-Hesterville for the sheriff, borrow Tait’s team, and make a party call
-upon the man with the bandaged head?”
-
-“That would be rather too summary, wouldn’t it?” Tregarvon objected.
-“We may be well convinced, ourselves, but we have no direct evidence.
-Neither of us could go on the stand and swear that the man we saw at
-the boiler-head was Morgan McNabb.”
-
-“No; that is so. Past that, since I have asked the judge’s daughter to
-consider me as a possible husband--” Carfax had called up the cherubic
-smile, but it had the opposite of a mollifying effect upon the objector.
-
-“Don’t harp on that part of it any more than you have to,” was the
-morose interruption.
-
-“I was going to say that the arrest of Morgan McNabb, just at this
-critical turn in the tide of affairs, might make it embarrassing for
-the judge; only you wouldn’t let me finish,” said Carfax, with great
-meekness.
-
-“You are going to call on him?” demanded Tregarvon.
-
-“Since he is Richardia’s father, I don’t see how I can well avoid it.
-To-morrow--or, I should say, to-day--is Friday, and I thought I’d ask
-Richardia to let me drive her over to Westwood House--if you’ll lend me
-the motor-wagon after Rucker gets back.”
-
-Tregarvon rose and stood half-menacingly over the friend of his youth.
-
-“If I thought you were only playing with her,” he grated; but instead
-of saying what he would do in that case, he turned abruptly and went
-into the tool-house to fling himself down upon the cot, leaving Carfax
-to continue the night-watch or to abandon it, as he might choose.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-A Friend at Need
-
-
-With the object-lessons of the night of visitations to emphasize
-the need for vigilance, the two young men, discussing the situation
-in the gray dawn, agreed that the drilling plant must not be left
-unguarded during the Friday of enforced idleness, or at any other
-time. Accordingly, soon after sunrise, Carfax set out to walk down the
-mountain for the purpose of sending Tryon and a man or two of the track
-gang up to relieve Tregarvon.
-
-This arrangement left the owner of the Ocoee to do sentry duty alone
-until Tryon should come--a duty which he scamped ingloriously by
-sitting upon the door-step of the tool-shack and promptly falling
-asleep.
-
-It was a brusque “Hello!” that awakened him, and he sprang up with
-a start to find a round-faced, pursy little man in pepper-and-salt
-garmentings and mouse-colored driving-gloves standing before him. A
-horse and buggy motionless in the edge of the glade accounted for
-the manner of the visitor’s coming, but not for its object. Tregarvon
-took a good look at the stranger before he committed himself, even to
-a greeting. The round face, with its twinkling eyes, double chin, and
-the little patches of closely cropped side-whisker, was altogether
-reassuring; it not only beamed good-nature, it fairly shone with an
-irresistible kindliness. Tregarvon, gathering his scattered wits as he
-could, said: “Good morning; it’s a fine morning for a drive through the
-woods.”
-
-The little man added another layer of geniality to his smile.
-
-“It’s a fine morning, also, for a nap in the sunshine,” he
-reciprocated. “Do you belong to the out-of-door sleepers--the
-‘simple-lifers’--Mr. Tregarvon?”
-
-“Not permanently,” laughed Tregarvon; “though I must confess that I am
-so simple as not to be able to recall your name.”
-
-“Good, dev’lish good!” chuckled the visitor. “Couldn’t have turned it
-more neatly myself, ’pon my word! I’m Thaxter; Wilmerding’s bookkeeper
-at Whitlow. One of my fads is to take a drive before breakfast.
-Excellent habit, Mr. Tregarvon; I can recommend it most highly. Gives
-you an appetite like a coal-heaver. Speaking of coal--how are you
-getting along taking soundings on the old Ocoee? Have you hit it yet?”
-
-“Not yet,” Tregarvon admitted, warming to the little man’s friendly
-interest. “But I am still living in hopes.”
-
-Mr. Thaxter pursed his lips in a way to make them match the general
-effect of rotundity.
-
-“Mighty mean thing to say to a man before breakfast--you haven’t
-breakfasted yet, I dare say--but you are butting your head against a
-stone wall, Mr. Tregarvon. Haven’t they told you that?”
-
-“If your ‘they’ refers to the Coalville gossips, I have been duly
-warned. They told me, with all the variations, before I’d had time to
-climb the mountain on my first exploring expedition.”
-
-“Just so; but not specifically, I suppose. You should have come to
-me. While I am an employee of the C. C. & I. Company, my pay-roll
-connection wouldn’t have kept me from doing you a good turn. And I
-could have given you chapter, page, and verse.”
-
-For the moment Tregarvon lost sight of the fact that Wilmerding had
-reported his bookkeeper totally barren of Ocoee information. So he
-said: “Possibly you will do it now, Mr. Thaxter. We are mere babes in
-the wood, Carfax and I, needing a guardian angel pretty severely, if we
-are to believe what other people say of us.”
-
-“You have certainly been needing a little friendly counsel from some
-one who was in a position to know what he was talking about. You’ll
-never find your coal up here, Mr. Tregarvon.”
-
-“That is what they all say; but they don’t tell us precisely why we
-shan’t.”
-
-“Ah,” said the kindly one, shaking his head in deprecation. “Human
-nature is the same everywhere. Tait could have told you, or Tryon,
-or Walters; all of them who have lived here long enough. But you had
-money and were willing to spend it. It would have been killing the
-golden-egged goose to have driven you away.”
-
-Tregarvon grinned. “Thank you for trying to break it gently to me, Mr.
-Thaxter; but I am braced for it now. Hurl it in.”
-
-“They could have told you that this test-boring experiment of yours has
-been tried before, all over the mountain top. I presume I could show
-you a dozen holes, if they are not all filled up with wash and hidden
-under the leaves.”
-
-Tregarvon was thinking hard.
-
-“Does Captain Duncan know this?” he asked.
-
-“I should suppose so; he ought to know it. The testing was done by the
-New Ocoee Coal Company, and it may have timed itself during the summer
-that Duncan spent in the West. Come to think, I believe it did. You
-advised with him, of course; surely he didn’t encourage you to spend
-money on the property, did he?”
-
-“No; I am obliged to confess that he did not. On the contrary, he
-advised me not to.”
-
-The little man’s smile became benignantly tolerant. “You young men
-are like Mr. Kipling’s puppy at times; you _will_ chew soap, knowing
-perfectly well that it is soap.”
-
-Tregarvon’s answering laugh admitted the justness of the charge.
-
-“Possibly some of us like the flavor of soap,” he retorted. “There is
-no accounting for the depravity of some tastes, you know.”
-
-“Oh, well,” said the visitor, with the air of one who is far too wise
-to combat the vagaries of youth, “go on and have your fling. It is
-harmless enough. If you can afford to buy a little amusement in this
-way, why shouldn’t you do it? It won’t hurt you, and it is a Godsend to
-Tait and the poor devils on your pay-roll while it lasts.”
-
-“But if I can’t afford it?” suggested Tregarvon.
-
-“Ah; that is another matter. From what Wilmerding has let fall, I have
-been assuming that you and Mr. Carfax desired the experience and the
-fun of it rather than any possible money gain.”
-
-“The money side of it may not appeal to Carfax; but it does to me, very
-forcibly.”
-
-“Still, you are throwing good money after bad in putting down these
-test-holes.”
-
-Tregarvon shrugged his shoulders. “What would you?” he asked. “I
-inherited the Ocoee, and it is up to me to make something out of it, if
-I can.”
-
-The round-bodied bookkeeper laughed until he shook like a bowl of jelly.
-
-“It is very evident, Mr. Tregarvon, that you were born in the purple.
-If you wish to make money out of the Ocoee, why don’t you sell it?”
-
-“Because I should first have to find a purchaser, and before I could
-find a purchaser--I should think--it would be a condition precedent
-that I should find the coal. It resolves itself into the vicious
-circle, as you see.”
-
-Mr. Thaxter smote his gloved hands together softly and appeared to be
-debating a nice point with himself. When he spoke again his manner had
-lost the touch of brisk impersonality.
-
-“Pardon me if I seem to crowd the mourners,” he apologized, “but it
-strikes me that this is a matter in which the good-natured bystander
-may quite properly take a hand. Is it possible that you haven’t been
-told of the offer made by our people to your father?”
-
-“It is more than possible; it is a fact.”
-
-“I am truly astonished! Your lawyers must know of it.”
-
-“There has never been any mention of it made to me. What was the offer?”
-
-“If I remember correctly, it was one hundred thousand dollars for all
-the titles.”
-
-“Thank you!” exclaimed Tregarvon triumphantly. “That is the best news
-I’ve heard in many a day. If your company ever made any such an offer
-as that, it proves conclusively that there is coal in the property,
-somewhere.”
-
-The bookkeeper shook his round head in evident dismay.
-
-“Dear, dear!” he lamented; “I was afraid you might jump at some such
-conclusion as that, and it puts me in a rather awkward position. As I
-have said, I am only a pay-roll man in Consolidated Coal; I’m not even
-one of its many superintendents. Yet, as man to man, perhaps I may
-venture to tell you just why the C. C. & I. might still be willing to
-pay you the price named, though in telling you I may be betraying an
-official secret. You probably know that your property line on the north
-abuts on the Whitlow lands about an eighth of a mile from your tramway?”
-
-Tregarvon nodded.
-
-“Very good. Now we have a vein of coal quite near this joint boundary;
-not a very thick vein, but one which could be made to pay for working
-if we could send the coal down over your tramway, and coke it in your
-old ovens at Coalville, but which would not pay if we should be obliged
-to build a new tramway to get at it. That is the whole thing in a
-nutshell.”
-
-“You say that this offer of a hundred thousand for the Ocoee was once
-made to my father? It’s odd that I had never heard of it. Was it in any
-sense a standing offer?”
-
-“It was at the time, and I think it still is, though there has been no
-talk of it latterly, so far as I know. But since the reasons for making
-it still exist, I should imagine that you would stand a good chance of
-reviving it if you should care to do so.”
-
-“If I only had a little breakfast in me!” Tregarvon protested
-half-jokingly. “I’m too hungry to talk hundred-thousand-dollar deals
-with you with any assurance that an empty stomach isn’t making me
-flighty, Mr. Thaxter.”
-
-The bookkeeper laughed pleasantly.
-
-“There are your men coming over from the tramhead,” he said. “Give
-them your orders, and then let me drive you down to Coalville to your
-breakfast. Perhaps you’ll be willing to give me a bite, too, and in
-that case I shall have the pleasure of meeting Mr. Carfax again. I
-didn’t more than half get acquainted with him the day he drove up to
-Whitlow.”
-
-“You are certainly the jolliest lot of commercial pirates a man ever
-had to fight--you people up at the C. C. & I.,” said Tregarvon, after
-he had climbed into the buggy with Thaxter and the spirited black horse
-was flinging the soft sand of the wood road from his hoofs. “First,
-Wilmerding comes to the rescue; and now you are trying to give us a
-lift. It’s heart-warming.”
-
-Thaxter’s rejoinder had just the requisite touch of friendly solicitude
-in it.
-
-“Then you meant what you said a few moments ago, about the financial
-aspect of the--of your experiment? A hundred thousand dollars would be
-worth considering?”
-
-“That amount would look as big as a hundred thousand cart-wheels to me,
-just now,” Tregarvon confided. “My father is dead, as I suppose you
-know, and there have been family misfortunes big enough to sink a ship.
-A hundred thousand would give us a fresh start in the world.”
-
-“Then we must certainly try to get it for you,” was the affable
-rejoinder; and from this on, the spirited horse demanded Thaxter’s
-undivided attention, so pointedly that the bookkeeper did not even seem
-to see Professor Hartridge when the buggy whirled past that gentleman
-as he was returning from his morning walk down the pike.
-
-Carfax was waiting breakfast on Tregarvon when the black horse came to
-a stand at the door of the Ocoee office-building. The young millionaire
-remembered Thaxter perfectly, and seemed to be glad to renew his
-acquaintance with the “Brother Cheeryble.” Yet it was Carfax’s
-judicious applying of the brakes at the breakfast-table conference of
-three that kept Tregarvon from committing himself too definitely in the
-matter of bargain and sale.
-
-Nevertheless, the talk over the ham and eggs pushed the business
-affair considerably farther along on the road to a tentative
-conclusion. Before he took his leave to continue his return drive to
-Whitlow, Thaxter was authorized to communicate by wire with the New
-York headquarters of Consolidated Coal, and, without betraying any
-confidences, to ascertain if the offer of one hundred thousand dollars
-for the Ocoee properties still held good.
-
-After Thaxter had taken his departure, and the two young experimenters
-had threshed the new prospect out to its final straw, the wakeful night
-came in for its revenges, and they slept through the forenoon. Rucker
-did not return from Whitlow with the car and the repointed drills until
-long after the noon meal; and when he came he found his two employers
-waiting impatiently for him--or rather for the car. The reason for the
-impatience was a note from Miss Richardia sent down by the college
-mail-carrier early in the afternoon; a brief message addressed to both,
-begging them to come to Highmount at the earliest possible moment:
-urgency only; no hint of what had happened or was due to happen.
-
-They made the ascent of the mountain as rapidly as the big touring-car
-could measure the distance, and were met at the door of the
-administration building of the college, not by Miss Birrell, but by
-Professor Hartridge, who led them into the visitors’ parlor and calmly
-informed them that Miss Richardia had driven to Westwood House with
-her father shortly after luncheon.
-
-“By Jove, now!” lisped Carfax; “that’s rather curious, don’t you know!”
-And Tregarvon was quite speechless.
-
-“Curious that Miss Birrell should ask you to come up here, and then
-run away?” said Hartridge. “It was a little ruse of mine, and Miss
-Richardia is altogether blameless. I wished very much to see you both,
-and I was afraid you might be foolish enough to disregard an invitation
-bearing my name. So I took Miss Richardia into my confidence, and she
-very obligingly wrote the note which, I assume, has brought you here.”
-
-Carfax snapped his fingers and laughed softly.
-
-“Upon what footing do we stand with you, Mr. Hartridge?--upon that of
-yesterday at dinner-time or upon that of a later hour, when I had the
-pleasure of helping you on with your overcoat?”
-
-“I shouldn’t presume to say, Mr. Carfax; you must make your own
-attitude. But if that attitude should be inimical, I must still beg you
-to believe that I have decoyed you up here to do you a kindness.”
-
-Carfax was still smiling affably. “Is it Virgil who puts it into the
-mouth of one of his characters to say that we should beware of the
-Greeks bringing gifts, professor? You will pardon us if we seem a bit
-suspicious, won’t you? But this”--he held up the small cube of hardened
-steel which he happened to have in his pocket--“this is so completely
-convincing, you know.”
-
-The mild-eyed mathematician waved the evidence aside as a thing of
-small moment.
-
-“Now that you have had time to consider, I am sure you absolve me from
-the charge of having tampered with your drill-hole,” he deprecated.
-
-“We do,” said Carfax. “All you did was to cover the retreat of the man
-who really did the tampering. But that is sufficient to make us--er--a
-bit cautious, as you might say.”
-
-Hartridge smiled in his turn. “You are basing your caution upon a
-small specimen of the metal commercially known as steel which you
-chanced to find in my pocket,” he remarked. “Let us disregard the bit
-of steel for the time being, if you please. If you should happen to
-lose it, it could be very easily replaced; but”--he turned short upon
-Tregarvon--“you can’t replace the Ocoee if you allow Mr. Thaxter to
-persuade you to sell it to Consolidated Coal, Mr. Tregarvon.”
-
-“What’s that?” exclaimed the Ocoee owner, starting from his chair; and
-Carfax fell back upon his strongest expletive, “By Jove!”
-
-Hartridge appeared to be entirely at ease now. He seated himself and
-crossed his long legs comfortably.
-
-“You are puzzled to account for my friendly interest?--after last
-night?” he inquired. “I don’t blame you, and I am only sorry that I
-cannot explain more fully. But I may say this: if you part with the
-Ocoee properties for any such sum as Mr. Thaxter has doubtless offered
-you, you will regret it as long as you live.”
-
-Carfax got his breath sufficiently after a time to say: “May--may we
-venture to ask how you know what Mr. Thaxter has offered?”
-
-“Certainly. The offer of one hundred thousand dollars for the lands,
-titles, and mineral rights of the property is no secret--or at least it
-was not during Mr. Tregarvon’s father’s lifetime. I am merely assuming
-that Thaxter has not increased it; and I am also assuming that a
-renewal of the offer was the reason for his early morning drive with
-Mr. Tregarvon.”
-
-“And you say Vance will be sorry if he accepts the offer?”
-
-“I do; most decidedly.”
-
-Carfax leaned forward and held up an accusing finger.
-
-“Then you know, of your own knowledge, that there is a workable vein of
-coal on the property, Mr. Hartridge,” he snapped.
-
-“That, my dear sir, is an assumption which I must decline to confirm.”
-
-“Nevertheless, it is true. And here is another to go with it: _you know
-where that vein can be found!_”
-
-Hartridge smiled again.
-
-“You are, constructively at least, my guest, Mr. Carfax; I should be
-unpardonably rude if I were to contradict you.”
-
-Carfax glanced aside at Tregarvon, and Tregarvon returned the glance
-as one who sees the shore from the crest of a tossing wave, but has no
-hope of reaching it. After a little pause Carfax renewed the attack.
-
-“This is a most extraordinary situation, don’t you think, Mr.
-Hartridge?” he began mildly. “Would a definite quantity of the thing
-known commercially as money tend to relieve it in any way?”
-
-The professor’s answer was prompt and decisive. “You are assuming that
-I have information to sell? I have not.”
-
-Carfax countered, quickly.
-
-“Then why have you just given us this pointer on Consolidated Coal? You
-profess to be willing to help us and you refuse to help us in one and
-the same breath.”
-
-“Oh, if you are going into motives, my dear sir, that is, indeed, a
-very deep subject. It would hardly be profitable to discuss it, even
-academically. Life, the really human variety of life, is full of
-paradoxes. You are wondering why the man from whom, a few hours ago,
-you took that small cube of steel, is now apparently trying to save
-you from loss. Call it one of the human paradoxes, if you will; only
-don’t sell to Consolidated Coal for a paltry hundred thousand dollars a
-property upon which more than three or four times that amount has been
-spent. This is what I enticed you up here to say to you; and having
-said it----”
-
-“Hold on,” Carfax interposed. “We have met some curious varieties of
-the genus enemy in this forgotten corner of the world, and you will
-pardon me if I say that you are not the least remarkable specimen, Mr.
-Hartridge. We are thankful for the pointer, and much more thankful for
-the assurance you have given us that we are not fishing in a barren
-pond. We----”
-
-The professor had risen and was moving toward the door.
-
-“I have given you no such specific assurance,” he denied.
-
-“No,” said Tregarvon, getting upon his feet and putting in a word for
-himself. “You may congratulate yourself upon your discretion. None the
-less, we shall continue to work on our problem, Mr. Hartridge, until we
-have found the value of ‘_pi_’.”
-
-It was a centre shot, visibly and palpably piercing the bull’s-eye.
-A blow would scarcely have disconcerted the schoolmaster more
-effectively. Yet he recovered instantly, had blandly excused himself
-upon the plea of pressing laboratory work, and was bowing himself out
-at the door, when he fired the return shot.
-
-“You have set yourselves an impossible task, gentlemen,” he offered
-mildly. “You forget that the value of ‘_pi_’ has never yet been exactly
-ascertained.”
-
-“Well, what do you make of it all?” Tregarvon asked, when the yellow
-car was rolling smoothly down the mountain pike on the return to
-Coalville.
-
-“Nothing; except a disappointment for Mr. Thaxter,” was Carfax’s reply.
-
-“Thaxter; yes. Do you know, Poictiers, I’m beginning to smell brimstone
-in _his_ clothes, now. Wilmerding told us definitely, if you remember,
-that Thaxter gave him to understand that he didn’t have any data on the
-Ocoee; didn’t know anything remotely concerning it. There is a lie out,
-somewhere.”
-
-“Which doesn’t matter now, thanks to Mr. William Wilberforce Hartridge,
-the man of mixed motives,” said Carfax definitively.
-
-“You think, on the strength of Hartridge’s warning, that I shouldn’t
-sell to Consolidated Coal?”
-
-Carfax was driving the car and he let the brakes out until the machine
-was dropping down the grade like a stone falling from a height.
-
-“Not in a thousand years!” he said.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-An Anticlimax
-
-
-Bright and early on the Saturday morning the two young men, with the
-repointed drill bits in the car, drove to the mountain top, carrying
-Rucker’s breakfast in a basket generously filled by Mrs. Tryon. They
-found the mechanician, who had resumed his job of night-watching,
-already up and stirring, with the engine fired and ready for starting,
-and there were no disturbances to report.
-
-“Did a little stunt of my own,” Rucker explained with a grin, showing
-a concealed wire which ran all around the glade and led to the
-tool-house. “Yesterday, up at Whitlow, I fished an electric bell out
-of the scrap heap, and last night, before I went to bed, I rigged it
-so that if anybody come monkeyin’ ’round, it’d ring and wake me up.
-I guess there wa’n’t any ghost-walkin’. The bell didn’t ring, and
-everything was all shipshape this mornin’.”
-
-Soon after this the drilling was resumed, not, however, until after
-the hole had been carefully washed and swabbed out. Tregarvon did not
-take any of his men into his confidence to the extent of explaining the
-reason for the extra care, but during the swabbing process he stood
-aside and looked on, watchful to detect any sign of guilty knowledge
-on the part of his helpers. Particularly he studied the face of the
-younger McNabb, the one who had been hurt still being absent. The
-effort went for nothing. If isolation has been sparing of gifts to the
-native of the southern Appalachians, it has at least given him a face
-that no man can read. The bushy-bearded Sawyer, the head driller, was
-the only one who commented upon the hole-cleaning.
-
-“Hit don’t look t’ me like thar was anything more ’n the drill dust to
-be warshed out,” he grumbled, when the swab came up clean; and to prove
-it he rubbed some of the powdered rock cuttings between his thumb and
-finger.
-
-“It’s better to be sure than sorry,” said Tregarvon. “If we know that
-the hole is clean to begin with, we’re that much ahead.”
-
-In due course of time the engine was started, the drill lowered, and
-the churning was resumed. Very shortly it became evident that the steel
-was cutting again at the usual rate, and Tregarvon’s spirits rose
-accordingly.
-
-“Do you know, Poictiers, I believe we are going to ‘prove up’ right
-here on this spot?” he predicted, after the work was well under way and
-they had gone to sit on the tool-house step. “The indications all point
-for us. Here is where the most determined fight has been made to stop
-us; here is where we find Hartridge’s hieroglyphics on the trees; and
-right here, if you’ll remark it, is where Mr. Onias Thaxter hunts me up
-to make me a blanket offer for my landholdings.”
-
-“A little more time will tell the story,” Carfax suggested. “By noon,
-if it doesn’t strike any more bones, the drill ought to be down to the
-coal, if there is any coal here.”
-
-With hope trotting cheerfully on ahead, the forenoon became a period
-of exciting suspense. Each time the drill was withdrawn the cuttings
-were examined eagerly. The rock was showing all the characteristics
-of the former borings: fine sandstone, coarse sandstone, some little
-conglomerate, and, just before the noon hour, the shales which commonly
-overlie the coal in the Cumberland region.
-
-“We’re coming to it!” Tregarvon exulted, when the washings which came
-up in the churning began to show black. “Eighteen inches more, and
-we’ll know whether we live or die!” And he carefully made a chalk-mark
-on the drill so that they might determine when the critical depth was
-reached.
-
-As in the previous tests, the steel sank rapidly in the vein of coal.
-At a foot of additional depth the washings were still coming up black.
-At sixteen inches there was no change. Sighting across a derrick
-brace, Tregarvon watched the chalk-mark with the blood racing in
-his veins. With each plunge of the heavy steel drill his hopes rose
-higher. Already he was anticipating a future which, if it should lack
-some of the ecstasies, would still have a sufficiency of the great
-emollient--money. With a fortune of his own, the impossible situation
-which had grown out of the Uncle Byrd legacy would be alleviated, and
-he saw himself deeding his half of the legacy irrevocably over to
-Elizabeth. The pride wound thus healed, the broken bones of sentiment
-might be allowed to knit as they would. Doubtless, in time, the
-knitting process would accomplish itself, and possibly without leaving
-him a hopeless cripple. Judging from the past, Elizabeth would not
-expect much; and even if he should be obliged to limp a little she
-would probably never notice it.
-
-“Eighteen inches!” he called out to Carfax, “and she’s still bringing
-up the black-diamond dust! Get ready to blow the hewgag and beat the
-tom-tom. We’re in it, this time!”
-
-“Easy!” Carfax cautioned. “Don’t let your hopes soar too high. Maybe
-the top vein runs a little thicker at this point than it did in the
-others. Call it that, anyway, until you’re cocksure.”
-
-As he spoke the power went off. Tregarvon jerked his watch from his
-pocket and stifled a hard word. It was noon, and the men were knocking
-off work on the dot, quite as nonchalantly as if the fate of empires
-were not hanging upon the result of a few more turns of the machinery.
-Tregarvon tramped across to the tool-house with Carfax, a sudden
-weariness making his feet heavy as lead.
-
-“That’s the workman of it!” he gritted. “If the world were coming to an
-end in the next five minutes, they’d stop to eat!”
-
-Carfax permitted himself a subdued chuckle.
-
-“You are beautifully on edge,” he asserted. “A few inches more may mean
-a lot to you, but it’s all in the day’s work for the men. They’re not
-going to get rich out of your coal mine.”
-
-They had brought some of Uncle William’s biscuits and cold chicken
-for the midday snack, and Carfax went to the motor-car, which had
-been left standing in the wood road, for the basket. When he returned,
-Tregarvon was pacing back and forth impatiently before the tool-house
-door, and Rucker was sitting on the step, eating his luncheon. Carfax
-carried the basket inside, and they made a table of the coil of rope.
-While they were picking the chicken bones, the mechanician spoke again
-of a matter that he had mentioned once or twice before.
-
-“I’m beefin’ ag’in about that boiler, Mr. Tregarvon,” he began, between
-workman mouthfuls of Mrs. Tryon’s corn bread. “She ain’t much, just as
-I told you at first; and draggin’ her ’round over this mountain hain’t
-helped her none. She’s leakin’ like a sieve at the fire-box end of her
-flues, right now.”
-
-“Here’s hoping that this is the last hole we’ll have to drill with it,
-Billy,” said Tregarvon cheerfully. “I bought it second-hand, and the
-Chattanooga junk man put one over on me.”
-
-“He sure did,” Rucker returned with a grin. “She’s rotten. Every time
-the pop-valve goes off it makes me jump. One o’ these days----”
-
-The interruption was a blatant roar from the boiler in question. Rucker
-had prudently shut the drafts and had left the fire-door open, or he
-thought he had, but still the pressure had crept up, until now the
-safety-valve was relieving it. Through the open door of the tool-shack
-the two at the rope-coil table could see the plant, with the plume of
-escaping steam rising to the height of the tree-tops. As usual during
-the noon hour, there was not a man of the gang in sight. Tregarvon had
-early learned that a part of the country laborer’s reticence expressed
-itself in a dislike to eat under the boss’s eye. At the stopping of the
-machinery the drill-gang would scatter in the wood, each man to his
-fallen log.
-
-The roar of the safety-valve continuing, and seeming to increase in
-stridency rather than to diminish, Tregarvon leaned forward to shout in
-Rucker’s ear:
-
-“Are you sure you left the fire-box door open, Billy?”
-
-The mechanician struggled to his feet. “I thought I was, but I’ll go
-see. She’s howlin’ a little bit too loud to suit me.”
-
-The words were scarcely out of his mouth when the earthquake crash
-came. With a sound that was oddly like the tearing of a hundred saws
-through dry timber, followed by a reverberating thunderclap, the boiler
-and engine vanished in a thick cloud of steam, and the air was filled
-with flying missiles. One piece of the boiler tore the heart out of
-the sheltering oak-tree; another fragment ripped a corner from the
-tool-house; a third mowed a swath through a thicket of young pines.
-
-Tregarvon and Carfax were both up and out before the nimbus cloud of
-steam had blown aside, and their first thought was for their men.
-Rucker had escaped only by a hair’s-breadth. The twisted fire-box sheet
-which had knocked a corner out of the small building had passed so
-close that the wind of it had bowled him over. Tregarvon left Carfax
-to help the machinist to his feet, and ran shouting across the glade.
-The drill gang answered and came hurrying in, a man at a time. When all
-were accounted for, the material loss was inventoried. It was total, so
-far as it went. The engine and boiler were reduced to a tangled heap
-of scrap; one end of the drill beam was shattered, and one leg of the
-derrick had suffered loss.
-
-For the moment Tregarvon was torn by conflicting emotions; a huge
-thankfulness that no life had been lost and bitter disappointment that
-the catastrophe had come at the instant when all the doubts as to
-the value of the Ocoee were to be either confirmed or swept away. He
-held himself together long enough to tell the men that they might go
-home--that there would be nothing more done until a new power-plant
-could be bought; but when Rucker had gone out to the wood road to see
-if the yellow car had been hit, and the disappointed one was left alone
-with Carfax, the flood-gates gave way.
-
-“Isn’t it enough to make an angel out of the blue heavens swear himself
-black in the face, Poictiers?” he raged. “Just on the very edge of
-things--just as we were going to find out, once for all, what this
-cursed mountain is going to do to us----”
-
-“One thing at a time,” Carfax broke in soothingly. “The wrecked engine
-isn’t fatal--not by many parasangs: it came just in the nick of time,
-when I was wondering what under the sun I should do with the dividend
-draft that I got in the mail yesterday. Take a fresh grip on yourself
-and remember that you have a good bit to be thankful for. If your men
-had been sitting around on the job to eat their dinners, as laborers do
-up North, there’d be another story to tell.”
-
-“Yes, I know; but think of it--it will be days and maybe weeks before
-we can get a new power-plant installed, and all that time we’ll be
-hanging, like Mahomet’s coffin, between heaven and earth; won’t know
-any more than we do now.”
-
-Rucker had come back to report that the motor-car had escaped as by
-a miracle. A square yard of the boiler shell had been hurled over it
-to fall accurately in the middle of the road a rod or two farther on.
-While he was telling about it, a goodly portion of the faculty of
-Highmount College, followed by a bevy of young women, came upon the
-scene. Doctor Caswell was heading the column of reconnaissance, and
-Hartridge also was with it.
-
-“Dear me!” exclaimed the president, coming up breathless; “we are all
-so glad to find you alive! What has happened?”
-
-Tregarvon pointed to the tangled mass of wreckage. “Our boiler blew up.
-It was old, and I suppose we were carrying too much pressure. Luckily,
-it happened while the men were eating, and there was no one near enough
-to be hurt. I thought of you people at once. It must have made racket
-enough to make you think the end of the world was coming.”
-
-“It was frightful!” said Miss Farron. “The windows rattled and--” but
-here her voice was lost in the chorus of excited exclamations pitching
-themselves in many keys as the young women picked their way over to
-the wreck and viewed the remains.
-
-“It is well, sometimes, to be born both lucky and rich,” Hartridge
-commented gravely, when his turn came. “The material loss is serious
-enough, of course; but you ought to be thankful that no lives were
-lost. Were you near enough at the time to see the explosion?”
-
-“We were sitting in the tool-house eating our luncheon,” Carfax
-explained, “and Rucker was just outside. We had been speaking of the
-boiler a moment before. We were all three looking at it, I think, when
-it went up.”
-
-Doctor Caswell had taken his wife over to assist in the sight-seeing,
-but Hartridge lingered behind.
-
-“Happening in broad daylight, this way, with three of you looking on, I
-suppose you are well assured that it was a pure accident?” he suggested
-quietly.
-
-Tregarvon left the answer to Carfax, who made it promptly.
-
-“As you say, we are not able, this time, to blame any one but
-ourselves. The boiler was old, and our mechanic had told us that it was
-not altogether safe.”
-
-“You have been drilling to-day?”
-
-Carfax nodded.
-
-“May I ask if you found anything?”
-
-Tregarvon turned away and busied himself examining the rent in the
-corner of the tool shanty. Carfax called up the cherubic smile for the
-inquiring professor and said: “What if I should tell you that we have
-found our bonanza, Mr. Hartridge?”
-
-Hartridge glanced at the drill, which was still standing in the
-test-hole, and shook his head. “I should say that you are merely
-talking for effect,” he smiled back.
-
-“But we have found the coal,” Carfax persisted.
-
-“You have found the upper measure, the same as you have in all the
-other trials. Beneath it, you will find your sandstone dike again.”
-
-“Are you sure of that?”
-
-“Quite sure.”
-
-“But we have already reached a depth of more than eighteen inches, and
-the drill was still in coal when we shut down for the noon stop.”
-
-“That is quite immaterial,” was the cool-voiced reply. “The measures
-vary in thickness, though not greatly. Geology is one of my small
-side-lines, Mr. Carfax, and I have made a study of this particular
-region, largely as a pastime.”
-
-The sight-seers were straggling back, and Tregarvon was explaining to a
-group of breathless maidens just where he had been sitting with Carfax
-at the moment of catastrophes, and how Rucker had been knocked down by
-the wind of the fragment which had struck the corner of the tool-shed.
-Carfax saw his opportunity preparing to take its leave and he smiled,
-level-eyed, at Hartridge.
-
-“You are still on the obstructive hand, aren’t you?” he threw in. “Even
-now, you would like to discourage us if you could.”
-
-The professor of mathematics and other things was turning away to join
-the others, but he paused for a low-toned rejoinder.
-
-“I neither deny nor affirm, Mr. Carfax. But I may say this much: if
-I were in your shoes, or Mr. Tregarvon’s, I shouldn’t call to-day’s
-disaster a pure accident--until I could prove it.”
-
-And with that he turned his back and began to talk to the art teacher.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-Evolutionary
-
-
-Intent upon the swift purchase of another power-plant, Tregarvon caught
-an afternoon freight on the branch railroad, made a late train on the
-main line, and was obliged to spend the Sunday in Chattanooga, with
-little to console him save the thought that he would be on hand to
-transact business with the machinery merchants bright and early Monday
-morning.
-
-It was a sad Sunday, weatherwise, with a chill autumn rain sweeping the
-streets of the battle-field city, and the crest of Lookout Mountain
-veiled in cloud. Tregarvon had made a few business acquaintances in
-town on previous purchasing expeditions, but there were no familiar
-faces in the hotel; nothing to lighten the monotony of a dreary day of
-enforced idleness.
-
-In such circumstances impatience becomes a rat to gnaw the vitals. The
-suspense, the tormenting uncertainty which he had left behind him in
-the unfinished test-hole on the summit of Mount Pisgah, would have been
-hard to endure even in a whirlwind of work; and upon a day when he
-could neither work nor play he was in despair.
-
-After the noon meal, which figured as “Luncheon” on the hotel bill
-of fare, and was, in point of fact, a heavy and dispiriting midday
-dinner, he braved the elements and went in a closed sight-seeing car
-to the Chickamauga battle-field. The drive proved to be a damp test of
-endurance, and he brought nothing back from it better than a memory of
-rain-sodden fields and forest; of endless colonnades of gray, ghostly
-monuments, a majority of them assuring the beholder in letters of
-granite that here the Ohio troops fought nobly; of parkings of ancient
-cannon, the guns pointing in so many different directions that no human
-being could guess which way the battle had run; of the droning singsong
-of the chauffeur pouring his explanation patter into the reversed
-megaphone for the benefit of his few fares.
-
-The return to the hotel was merely a change from outdoor dreariness
-to indoor. The lobby was a gathering-ground for a scattering of
-disgruntled tourists, who had used their battle-field stop-over
-privilege only to find themselves marooned by the weather. Tregarvon
-smoked in solitary misery for what remained of the afternoon, and past
-the evening meal, begged some of the hotel stationery, and wrote a
-letter to Elizabeth Wardwell.
-
-“It is a sin and a shame to write you after such a day as I’ve
-been wearing out here,” he began, “but you know my weakness for
-afflicting other people--for unloading my woes upon the nearest pair
-of sympathetic shoulders. Your shoulders have always been that; and
-sometimes I wonder that you can still stand up straight and queenly, as
-you do, after having carried so many of my burdens.” Here followed an
-account of the events of the exciting Saturday forenoon, and he tried,
-as well as the written words would serve, to transmit some picture of
-the boiler explosion, tagged with an attempt to portray the tenterhooks
-of suspense upon which the disaster had impaled him.
-
-“You see where it leaves me,” he went on; “still in the air as to
-whether the Ocoee is something or nothing. For a few little minutes,
-after the drill had passed the eighteen-inch dead-line, I saw
-rose-colored, saw my chance to provide for the home-folks, and to
-ignore forever and a day, the Uncle Byrd legacy. But now I am no better
-assured than I was before we began drilling; and, to make it more
-interesting, Hartridge happened along after the explosion--the whole
-college turned out and came tramping over through the wood to see what
-had broken loose--and he says the sandstone dike is still under us. We
-shan’t know positively, of course, until we can get a new engine, and
-haul it by inches up the mountain, and drag it into place and set it
-going; and by that time I shall be a raving maniac.
-
-“In all this new trouble, Poictiers has been all that you’d expect him
-to be; a friend to tie to. He doesn’t lend me money; he simply tosses
-me his purse. I have his last dividend check in my pocket at this
-present moment, and I’m to cash it to-morrow morning to pay for the
-new engine. I suppose I needn’t say that I should have been out of the
-fight down here long ago if he hadn’t joined me and given me a checking
-account. He is pure gold, Elizabeth; and yet----
-
- * * * * *
-
-“The gap represents a good half-hour, my dear cousin, in which I have
-been sitting here at this dinky little table in the hotel writing-room,
-trying to screw my courage to the sticking-place. What I have to tell
-you concerns four people, and you are one of the four. I’ve written you
-a lot about Richardia Birrell--she’s another one of the four--in the
-past few weeks, and I have been assuring myself all along that I have
-been telling you all there was to tell.
-
-“That isn’t strictly true, Elizabeth. There was a thing that I wouldn’t
-admit, even to myself; but I had to admit it three days ago when
-Poictiers told me that he had asked Richardia to be his wife. I knew
-then what Richardia had done to me, and for a bad half-hour I--well,
-I’m not going into details; it is enough to say that I’m not fit to be
-your door-mat, Betha, dear--nor Poictiers Carfax’s, for that matter.
-
-“What can I say for myself more than I have said a hundred times in
-the past? Nothing, I imagine; I’m simply hopeless where the eternal
-feminine is concerned. You’ve known it ever since we went to school
-together, and you’ve promised to marry me in spite of the knowledge.
-I shall not be a faithless husband, my dear--I know I shan’t be that;
-and this last and most humiliating lapse could never have amounted to
-anything, anyway, even if Poictiers had not slammed the door in my
-face. But it is your right to know about it; to know that for some few
-days or hours or minutes, as the case may be, I was daffy, foolish, a
-simpleton from the idiotic wards, with a slant toward depravity.
-
-“You see now what an incredible friend Poictiers is. I’ve never
-thought of him as a marrying man, and I could swear, even now, that he
-isn’t in love with Richardia--though I don’t quite see how any free man
-with live blood in him could help being. Let that go: Poictiers has
-killed my temptation for me. He has asked Richardia to marry him, and
-he and she are good enough for each other--which is the highest praise
-I can offer to either. Poictiers will get a wife who could make any
-man happy; and Richardia will be able to restore the Birrell fortunes,
-which, as you have doubtless gathered from my earlier letters, are
-pretty sadly in need of a rich marriage.
-
-“This leaves us two to face things as they are as best we can,
-Elizabeth. After what I have written down in this letter, can you still
-care enough for me, and for the conventions and the wishes of the
-families on both sides, to--not to forgive me; I’m not going to ask
-that--but to take me just as I am, and let things go on as before? I
-shan’t blame you in the least if you can’t, you know; but if it must
-come to a break between us, you must let me be the one to make the
-break. By all right and reason the Uncle Byrd legacy is yours; and
-whatever happens, I promise you I shall never touch a penny of it.
-
-“Good night, my dear. My love for you is precisely the same as it has
-always been. The madness which Richardia Birrell was stirring up in me
-was something entirely different, and no doubt everybody would say it
-was worlds less worthy.”
-
-Tregarvon had a bad habit of not reading his letters after they were
-written and signed, and he did not break the habit now. Folding,
-sealing, and addressing his confession, he went to the lobby to mail
-it. Thanks to the rainy Sunday, the hotel mail-box was stuffed to
-repletion with week-end missives, and Tregarvon, after trying in vain
-to wedge his own through the slit, exemplified his careless habit by
-leaving it on top of the box with the newspapers.
-
-Later in the evening there were other additions made to the
-overflow newspaper mail, and some one, still more careless than the
-Philadelphian, displaced the letter, which fell, unnoted, to the
-floor. Here, during the small hours, one of the sweepers found it; and
-since some muddy boot heel had defaced the postage-stamp, and all but
-obliterated the address, the sweeper passed his find on to the night
-clerk. At this point another phase of Tregarvon’s heedlessness came
-to the fore. He had neglected to put his own name and address in the
-corner of the envelope, hence the clerk had no means of identifying the
-sender. Being a young man of resource, he enclosed the letter, just as
-it was, in a larger envelope, copying, or trying to copy, the address.
-But the marring boot heel had done its work too thoroughly. The
-Philadelphia street number was entirely effaced; and “Miss Elizabeth
-Wardwell” became, in the night clerk’s transcription, “Miss Eliza Bell
-Woodwell.”
-
-Tregarvon was astir early on the Monday morning, was fortunate enough
-to be able to purchase the new power-plant without waiting to have it
-shipped in from some Northern supply house, hustled busily until he
-had seen his purchase entrained for Coalville, and took the afternoon
-local for his return. As often happened, the local was late, and
-he found Carfax waiting dinner for him when he dropped off on the
-office-building side of the train at the home station.
-
-Over Uncle William’s chicken gumbo the talk ran easily upon the
-business affair. Tregarvon had driven a rather good bargain on the new
-engine, and was inclined to expatiate upon it. In reality, however,
-he was trying to postpone the moment when Carfax should begin to talk
-of the more intimate things. That moment came with the pipe-filling
-before the cheerful wood-fire, after Uncle William had cleared the
-table and disappeared.
-
-“After you left, Saturday, I took Hartridge’s hint and went into the
-explosion details a little deeper,” said Carfax. “Rucker stayed with me
-and lent me his mechanical wit.”
-
-“What is the verdict?”
-
-“It is the Scotch verdict: ‘Not proven,’” was the thoughtful rejoinder.
-“Knowing, as we do, that at least one attempt was made to dynamite
-the boiler, I may have been oversuspicious. In such circumstances the
-judicial frame of mind is hard to attain. Rucker swears he left the
-furnace-door open when we stopped at noon. When we found the front
-sheet of the boiler three or four hundred yards away in the woods, the
-door was shut and latched.”
-
-“That proves nothing,” Tregarvon said.
-
-“No; anything might happen to a door, or to anything else, in a hurry
-trip of that kind. On the other hand, it would have been a very easy
-matter for some one to have sneaked up on the farther side of the
-engine while we were eating. And Rucker insists that only the closed
-door could have accounted for the sudden rise in pressure which caused
-the explosion.”
-
-“We’ll never know,” was Tregarvon’s comment. “But why Hartridge should
-shield our obstacle-thrower at one time, and try to set us on to him at
-another, is beyond me.”
-
-Carfax smiled soberly. “Mr. William W. Hartridge appears to be a
-unique. I had the pleasure of meeting him again, socially, no longer
-ago than yesterday.”
-
-“You spent the Sunday at Highmount?”
-
-“No; I did better than that. Wilmerding was down from Whitlow, and
-I found that he knows Judge Birrell familiarly and well. I took my
-courage in my hand, borrowed your beast of a car, and Wilmerding and I
-drove to Westwood House in the rain.”
-
-“So you have met Richardia’s father?”
-
-“I have; and a finer old citizen doesn’t exist. That suspicion of yours
-that he may be inspiring the fight on us is all bosh. He isn’t at all
-the kind of man to knife an enemy in the dark. He is a poem on the
-Old South, Vance; a whole heart-breaking epic. His manners would put
-a Chesterfield to shame; and you can see at once where Richardia gets
-her keen little mind. The judge was disposed to place me in the Parker
-class at first--quite naturally; I could see that plainly enough--that,
-and his prejudice against all things Northern. But I was there as the
-friend of his friend Wilmerding, and that settled it. A Bedouin chief
-couldn’t have been more hospitable.”
-
-“You told him you were going to marry Richardia?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no; you mustn’t hurry things that way!” laughed the golden
-one. “You simply _can’t_ hurry them, you know, with a man like Judge
-Birrell. But I flatter myself that I made good in the try-out.
-Hartridge was there, with Miss Farron--though I can’t imagine how they
-got over from Highmount in the rain--so there was quite a house-party
-of us. At dinner-time it was raining harder than ever, and the judge
-wouldn’t hear to our going, though I had the top up on the car, and, of
-course, offered to take Hartridge and Miss Farron back to the college.
-So we all stayed to dinner. That dinner would have broken your heart,
-Vance.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because it showed in a thousand little ways what the family has
-been, and what it has now come to. The china was Sèvres, but much of
-it was chipped and broken, and hardly any two pieces were alike. The
-table-cloth had once been somebody’s pride, but it had been laundered
-and darned until it was like a piece of old lace. The silver was
-evidently an heirloom, and it was so worn with much polishing that you
-could scarcely make out the engraving. We had chicken--I imagine nobody
-in the South ever gets so poor that he can’t have chicken--but the
-luxuries were conspicuous by their absence. Do you know what I think,
-Vance? I believe that the Westwood House cash assets are measured
-exactly by the size of Richardia’s Highmount salary.”
-
-“I shouldn’t wonder,” said Tregarvon, keenly sympathetic. “Richardia
-has given me to understand that there is a lot of mountain land, which
-is practically valueless now that the tan-bark timber has all been cut
-off; but there is nothing to bring an income.”
-
-“Wilmerding has told me something of the judge’s involvement with the
-original Ocoee promoters, and the struggle he made to keep his name
-good after he and his friends had been frozen out,” Carfax resumed. “He
-had recommended the scheme to a good many others, and when the smash
-came, he stripped himself bare to make good the losses of his friends,
-withholding nothing but a little money he had put aside for Richardia’s
-musical education.”
-
-Tregarvon nodded. “That explains something that Richardia said to me
-one time when we were talking about people marrying and settling down;
-she said, in that perfectly straightforward way of hers, that she would
-like to marry, but that she was in debt, and couldn’t marry until after
-she had earned enough money to pay herself out.”
-
-“She has said something of the same nature to me,” Carfax admitted.
-“But it seems that there were other troubles besides the property
-losses. The judge had a son, a year or so older than Richardia. He
-was a school-boy at the time of the big smash, but was old enough,
-Wilmerding says, to be hot-headed and a bit wild and ungovernable.
-Parker, the promoter, was foolish enough to show up here again, after
-the _débâcle_; and this boy actually tried to kill him; emptied a
-pistol at him, winged him with one of the shots, and then ran away. He
-has never been heard from since.”
-
-“That is all new to me,” Tregarvon commented. “I didn’t know Richardia
-had a brother. She has never spoken of him to me.”
-
-“Wilmerding says nobody ever speaks of him,” Carfax went on. “Parker
-was vindictive, and pushed the assault case. A grand jury found a true
-bill against young Birrell, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. He
-couldn’t be found; has never been found. His son’s disappearance, and
-the struggle to keep faith with his friends, made the judge what he is
-now, a proud, broken-spirited old hermit who is carrying the heaviest
-burden a father can bear--the disgrace of a son.”
-
-“Disgrace?” echoed Tregarvon. “It’s hardly that, is it? Haven’t we been
-taught that it is a part of the Southern code that a son should shoot
-his father’s betrayer?”
-
-“Oh, yes; that part of it was all right. The disgrace was in showing
-the white feather by running away; in not staying to face the
-consequences. As a matter of fact, I don’t suppose there would have
-been any consequences. Any jury that could have been impanelled in this
-vicinity at that particular time would have acquitted the boy. The
-cowardly streak is what broke the judge’s heart.”
-
-“This story of the boy opens up a bit of new ground,” said Tregarvon
-musingly. “I wonder if Richardia doesn’t know where he is? She has
-given me the impression, more than once, that she has a deep-buried
-trouble of some sort--a trouble that she never shares with anybody.
-Haven’t you had the same notion?”
-
-Carfax shook his head.
-
-“She doesn’t need to go that far afield to find her troubles. The
-wrecked family fortunes, and a broken old man to shield and comfort
-and care for on a music teacher’s wages, are enough to fill all the
-requirements, I should imagine.”
-
-“Surely. But as to the money hardship ... you’ll be able to change all
-that, Poictiers.”
-
-Carfax rose, knocked the ashes from his pipe, and slowly refilled it.
-
-“You have come to see things in their right light, at last, have you?”
-he inquired at the end of the little interval of silence.
-
-“Partly. There is only one light in which they can be seen. I had no
-shadow of right to fall in love with Richardia.”
-
-“Wait a minute,” said Carfax in his gentlest tone. “Are you sure it was
-real? You know, you have had so many of these--er--these little erotic
-explosions in the past----”
-
-“I know,” was the humble admission. “But this was different. You
-may say that the difference lay in the fact that it was forbidden,
-and point me to the moral twist--as old as the race--that makes the
-forbidden thing figure as the one thing altogether desirable. Doubtless
-I have the twist, in common with other men: but the difference
-remains.”
-
-“You have written to Elizabeth?”
-
-“Yes; I wrote last night at the hotel in Chattanooga.”
-
-“I hope you said all you ought to say.”
-
-“I tried conscientiously to do just that, Poictiers. I’ll confess now
-that I didn’t begin to see how dastardly it would look when it was
-written out in black on white. But I didn’t spare myself in the least.”
-
-“What kind of an answer do you expect?” Carfax had sat down again and
-his face was turned away.
-
-“Honestly, I don’t know. Every word that I have ever told you about the
-lack of sentiment between us is true: and yet ... well, Elizabeth is a
-woman, after all, Poictiers. Even in a relationship as unsentimental as
-ours has been there are limitations--there must be limitations.”
-
-Carfax was gazing now into the heart of the dying fire.
-
-“If the case were reversed, Vance, what would your answer be?”
-
-Tregarvon gave a short laugh. “I can’t imagine the reversal,” he
-parried. “Elizabeth is one of those splendid, serene, _élevé_ women who
-go through life without ever knowing the meaning of a grand passion.”
-
-“Still, you haven’t answered my question.”
-
-“I am not afraid to answer it. If Elizabeth had told me, even before I
-met Richardia, that she had-- Oh, piffle! it’s no use; I can’t imagine
-it!”
-
-For a long time Carfax said nothing. But when the final whiff had been
-drawn from the bedtime pipes, he ventured a small request.
-
-“I’ve been butting in on your affairs so long that it has come to be
-a habit, Vance,” he said, with his quaint smile. “When you hear from
-Elizabeth, will you tell me what she says?”
-
-Tregarvon, who had been thinking of many things during the speechless
-interval, answered on the impulse of the moment.
-
-“Of course; I’ll let you read the letter, if you care to. Why shouldn’t
-I? There’s your candle on the mantel, when you want it. I’m going to
-bed.”
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-The Human Equation
-
-
-On the Tuesday after Tregarvon’s return to Coalville the arrival of the
-new equipment was the signal for a brisk renewal of the activities.
-Tregarvon had spent the day scouring the valley for men and teams, and
-by Wednesday morning he had a small army at his command. Many hands
-made light work, and by noon the machinery was unloaded, and all was
-ready for the beginning of the toilsome haul up the mountain.
-
-“I suppose you know how you are going to do it,” Carfax remarked,
-dallying over his luncheon in the office-building dining-room while
-Tregarvon was hastily bolting his meal as fast as Uncle William could
-serve it. “Where did you learn? The university didn’t teach you, I’m
-sure.”
-
-“Experience,” mumbled the working-man. “I learned the trade getting the
-other boiler and engine up the hill.”
-
-Carfax was apparently in a reflective mood. “This rough-and-tumble
-game down here is making a different man of you,” he offered. “Don’t
-you realize the change?”
-
-“I’ve never been afraid of work, if that is what you mean.”
-
-“Yes, I know; but the kind of work that implies the wearing of
-corduroys and a flannel shirt, and builds horny lumps on the palms of
-your hands, and makes you talk to a mule in the only language a mule
-understands--I never used to dream it of you in the old days, Vance.”
-
-“I work for the same reason that other men do--because it’s up to me.
-This would be a damned lazy world if necessity didn’t crack the whip.”
-
-“There it is again,” Carfax smiled; “you even let bits of the mule
-language come to the table with you. It runs in my mind that Elizabeth
-is going to have her hands full recivilizing you.”
-
-“Perhaps she won’t care to. Quite likely she won’t need to. If the
-Ocoee should turn out to be a real mine with a dividend attachment,
-it is altogether probable that I shall become again what I have been
-heretofore--an ornament to polite society and a wart on the body
-economic.”
-
-Carfax shook his head as one who refuses to be convinced.
-
-“That will never happen in the wide, wide world, my dear Vance. We may
-go around, but we never go back. I have heard you spoken of, in times
-past, as a woman’s man: you’ll never be that again.”
-
-“That is the kindest thing you’ve said in a week,” Tregarvon averred.
-Whereupon he bolted the final mouthful and left the prophet to his own
-devices.
-
-Somewhat later, Carfax joined the working party--but only as an
-onlooker. The engine was mounted on heavy trucks, and a string
-of twelve mule-spans was inching it up the mountain pike to an
-accompaniment of cracking whips and much profanity. Tregarvon was in
-the thick of it, and the young purse-holder stood aside and tried to
-realize that this sweating, bullying gang boss and man-of-all-work was
-the light-hearted _flâneur_ of whom his best friends had predicted
-nothing either very good or very bad, and certainly nothing strenuous.
-Carfax was given to nice weighings and measurings of the human
-atom, and he wondered if the roughing-out process owed anything to
-sentimental reactions. Disappointments are rude tonics to some natures,
-and defeat in one field may be the germ of victory in another. Being
-a good friend, he proceeded to administer an additional dose of the
-tonic, dragging Tregarvon aside while the mules were catching their
-breath.
-
-“I like your nerve,” he began, with the drawl more than usually
-pronounced. “You are taking up the entire road with your beastly
-contrivances. How am I going to get past all this clutter with the
-motor-car, I’d like to know?”
-
-“That’s your lookout,” growled the man-of-all-work. “The road is mine
-while I’m using it.”
-
-“But I have an engagement,” was the mild protest. “I’m to take
-Richardia out for a drive after three o’clock.”
-
-“Well, I can’t help that, can I? You’ve got all the time there is for
-your courting, and then some. My job is to get this engine up the
-mountain.”
-
-Carfax chuckled softly. “In another minute or so you’ll be mistaking
-me for one of the mules. I suppose I can take the other road, from
-Hesterville; but as likely as not it will make me late--it’s such a
-long way around.”
-
-“Can’t you send a note up by one of Tryon’s boys explaining the
-situation?”
-
-“Why, my dear Vance! Can it be possible that you are suggesting that I
-should break an engagement with a young lady?--you who just a few weeks
-ago would have broken your neck to----”
-
-“Cut it out,” was the gruff interruption. “I’m busy now, and you are
-delaying the game. Tag along behind us when you are ready to drive up,
-and we’ll make room for you if we can.” Then to his farmer helpers:
-“Now, then--are you fellows going to let those mules rest all day?
-Push ’em into the collars and let’s go somewhere! _Hi!_ you fellows up
-ahead--straighten out those leaders!”
-
-The cherubic smile was at its shining best when Carfax turned away and
-sauntered back toward the coke-ovens. Human atoms are among the most
-interesting things in the world, once the study of them has passed the
-elementary stages. Carfax, deep in the contemplation of the subject,
-had reached the ovens themselves before he saw two men coming toward
-him, stopping at each stoke-door to allow the taller of the two to go
-on his hands and knees to inspect the cavern-like interiors. Carfax
-recognized the shorter of the pair at once. It was Thaxter.
-
-“Mr. Carfax, shake hands with Mr. Thirlwall, our consulting
-engineer--or rather, you’d better not, because his hands are dirty: Mr.
-Thirlwall, this is Mr. Poictiers Carfax, Mr. Tregarvon’s friend and
-financial backer.” Thus the bookkeeper, when Carfax came up.
-
-Carfax acknowledged the introduction and shook hands with the tall man,
-in spite of the warning.
-
-“Delighted,” he murmured; “always delighted to meet any friend of
-Mr. Thaxter’s. Tregarvon is up the road a bit, wrestling with a
-transportation problem. Shall I send for him?”
-
-Thaxter negatived the suggestion at once. “It isn’t at all necessary to
-take him away from his work,” he protested genially. “Mr. Thirlwall was
-with us for the day, and we thought we would run down and have a look
-at your coking-plant. It’s in rather bad repair, isn’t it?”
-
-Now what Carfax did not know about coking-plants would have filled
-volumes, but he was careful not to betray his ignorance.
-
-“There are years of service in these old ovens yet,” he asserted
-confidently. “Don’t you think so, Mr. Thirlwall? But as to that, we
-should expect to put them in good repair if any one wished to buy them.”
-
-“Mr. Tregarvon is still in the mind to sell?” queried the round-faced
-bookkeeper.
-
-“Candidly, Vance doesn’t know his own mind from one day to another,”
-said Carfax, parrying nimbly. “But I guess we are all that way, more or
-less; up one day and down the next.”
-
-The tall engineer smiled because it seemed obvious that he was expected
-to. “You have been having some more bad luck up on the mountain, so Mr.
-Thaxter tells me,” he put in. “It seems rather a pity that you and your
-friend won’t take the word of those who know, and stop throwing good
-money away.”
-
-“It is a pity, isn’t it?” Carfax concurred heartily. “But if we didn’t
-spend money in this way, heaven only knows in what other foolish
-enterprise we might be investing.”
-
-“That is a new power-plant you are hauling up the hill?” the engineer
-inquired.
-
-“Brand-new,” boasted Tregarvon’s proxy.
-
-“The purchase doesn’t look as if you were intending to stop throwing
-the money away,” said Thirlwall.
-
-“Oh, that is entirely as it may happen,” Carfax countered cheerfully.
-“You know the bankrupt always puts up the best front he can when he
-finds himself coming to the jumping-off place.”
-
-“I hope you and Mr. Tregarvon are not trying to run a bluff on anything
-so unimpressible as Consolidated Coal,” laughed Thaxter.
-
-“Much obliged for the hint,” returned the golden youth, accurately
-matching the bookkeeper’s laugh. “I give you my word, we hadn’t
-thought of that. Would it astonish you beyond measure if we should?”
-
-“Don’t try it,” the engineer advised. “We have excellent records of
-every acre of coal land in this region, with all the data; thickness of
-veins, their placement, and so on. You can’t very well run a bluff when
-the other fellow knows every card in your hand, Mr. Carfax.”
-
-“That is so,” Carfax yielded gracefully. “You people have the age on
-us, in both meanings of the word. Have you heard anything from New
-York, Mr. Thaxter?”
-
-“Nothing positive, as yet; there has scarcely been time. But I believe
-Mr. Thirlwall has been asked to make a report on the present condition
-of the equipment.”
-
-The engineer confirmed the supposition with a nod, and Carfax said:
-“Tregarvon will be glad to show you everything he has, I’m sure. Will
-you make the inspection to-day?”
-
-Thirlwall looked at his watch.
-
-“I can hardly spare the time this afternoon,” he demurred. “Besides, if
-I know anything about such things, Mr. Tregarvon wouldn’t care to leave
-his machinery blocking a public road while he was showing us around.”
-
-Carfax had learned all he wished to know, and now he became
-urgently hospitable. Wouldn’t the visitors stop and rest awhile in
-the office-building? True, there was little to offer in the way of
-refreshment, but the old negro cook could make a passable pot of tea.
-To all of this, Thaxter made excuses for both and said they must be
-driving back to Whitlow.
-
-Carfax let them go, apparently with the greatest reluctance, walking
-with them to the post where Thaxter’s horse was hitched. But after
-the natty side-bar buggy had disappeared over the small rise in the
-northward road, he smiled like an angelic understudy of the villain in
-a play.
-
-“Not much, you didn’t drive down here to tell us that our coke-ovens
-are out of repair, Mr. Thaxter!” he derided joyously, apostrophizing
-the vanished bookkeeper. “You came to see if it were really true that
-we had bought a new engine and were going on with the game! And you are
-jolly well welcome to all that you found out!”
-
-At a little past two o’clock, Carfax, driving the yellow car, tailed
-in behind the machinery procession on the mountain road. Tregarvon had
-been having good luck and was correspondingly jubilant; but the sight
-of Carfax going to keep an appointment with Richardia Birrell gave him
-another set back.
-
-“That’s right; go on and enjoy yourself,” he grumbled sourly, as Carfax
-came up to edge his way past the obstructing raffle of teams and
-machinery. “If you knew how to chock a wheel or handle a pinch-bar, I’d
-pull you out of that joy wagon and set you at work. Since you don’t,
-you’d better trundle along and get out of our way.”
-
-“I shall tell Miss Richardia that I left you in a heavenly temper,”
-threatened the gentle mocker in the driving-seat.
-
-“The less you say about me in that quarter, the better,” was the
-surly rejoinder; and with that, Tregarvon began to shout again at his
-teamsters.
-
-In due time Carfax negotiated his passage and the yellow car
-disappeared in the direction of Highmount. But the sting was left
-behind, and Tregarvon drank deep from the opium cup of fierce labor
-without being able to purchase blessed oblivion. Jagged thoughts came
-uppermost; repinings as old as mankind; as venerable, at least, as that
-prehistoric day when the first friend took it upon himself to smite his
-brother into the straight and narrow path.
-
-Why must civilized man, alone of all sentient beings, be burdened with
-that inconsiderate thing called conscience? The bird of the air, the
-beast of the field, was free to choose its mate; the savage stood
-aside only when some bigger savage compelled him. Environment and the
-stress of the moment have shaping influences mighty in proportion to
-the strenuosities. Tregarvon, fighting for the up-hill inches with a
-load a ton or so heavier than his pulling power, became immune to the
-gentler leadings. Why should a promise, made to a woman who had taken
-it serenely as a conventional matter of course, stand in the way of a
-passion so vital that it laid hold upon the very well-springs of life?
-Why should he stand aside and let Carfax, under a fantastic sense
-of duty, mar three lives, or possibly four, in a foolish attempt to
-preserve the conventional unities?
-
-The materialistic afternoon had done its worst for Tregarvon by the
-time Tryon’s boy, who had been stationed on ahead to give warning
-of the approach of descending teams, waved his hat as a signal that
-some one was driving down the mountain. The moment was inauspicious.
-A pulling-rope had just broken; the heavy load of machinery was
-stalled in a crooked bend in the road, and was for the time immovable.
-Tregarvon yelped out a string of orders to his helpers, and then went
-on past the tangle of mules and rope tackle to meet the descending
-vehicle. Being in the proper frame of mind, he swore crabbedly to the
-world at large when he saw that it was his own car, with Carfax at the
-wheel, Richardia in the mechanician’s seat, and the tonneau thickly
-packed with young women from Highmount.
-
-“You can’t pass,” was his curt denial of the right of way when Carfax
-slowed to a stop. “We have just broken a tackle, and everything is all
-balled up. Couldn’t you find any other road to drive on?”
-
-Carfax laughed and turned to his seat-mate. “You see how inhospitable
-he really is when he isn’t parading his company manners.” Then to the
-young women behind him: “Mr. Tregarvon won’t let us drive down, but
-if you young ladies would care to see the wheels go round at a moment
-when, as it seems, they have just stopped going round, we can walk.”
-
-There was an instant chorus of walking votes, and Carfax got out
-to open the tonneau door. Tregarvon stood aside, scowling as any
-working-boss might when his difficulties are about to be made a
-raree-show for the frivolous. Miss Richardia slipped out of the
-mechanician’s seat on her own side of the car, unassisted, but when
-the sight-seeing contingent marshalled itself for the descent into the
-tangle, she did not join it.
-
-“You are not going with the others?” said Tregarvon ungraciously.
-
-“There are enough of them for you to be spiteful at, without adding me
-to the number,” she returned, adding: “Besides, I wanted to speak to
-you. It was I who asked Mr. Carfax to drive down here.”
-
-She had come around to his side of the car and he looked her squarely
-in the eyes.
-
-“Be careful what you say to me to-day, Richardia: I am not the same man
-that I was a few days ago.”
-
-“_Boo!_” she said, with the little grimace that always set his blood
-afire; “you make me shivery when you look and talk that way. I came to
-try to help you--not to be frozen.”
-
-“Say it,” he commanded.
-
-“How can I, when you won’t let me? I have a piece of news for
-you--something that I imagine you’d like to know. Have you written to
-Miss Wardwell lately?”
-
-“Yes; Sunday night in Chattanooga.”
-
-“And this is Wednesday: have you had a reply?”
-
-“No; not yet. What is your news?”
-
-“I was just wondering whether I’d better not keep it to myself, after
-all. Mr. Carfax said you were in a bad temper, but he didn’t tell me
-that you were utterly impossible.”
-
-Tregarvon’s scowl deepened.
-
-“Impossible? Of course, I am impossible. What would you expect, in the
-circumstances?”
-
-At this, she smiled up at him and said: “I’m beginning to be a little
-deaf now--charitably deaf.”
-
-“I don’t need charity,” he broke out hotly. “All I need is a chance to
-fight for my own hand. Tell me one thing: have you promised to marry
-Poictiers yet?”
-
-“Have you any right to ask me such a question as that?”
-
-“I have; the best right in the world: you know I have.”
-
-She met his half-angry, half-passionate gaze calmly.
-
-“I know that you are about to make a shipwreck of your better self,”
-she averred. Then: “Don’t you know that there are some things that are
-hard for a woman to forgive--or, having forgiven them, to forget?”
-
-“I am in no mood to split hairs with you to-day,” he grated. “You
-are thinking of Elizabeth: she knows already what she will have to
-forgive. I told her in the letter I wrote Sunday night.”
-
-She shook her head sorrowfully.
-
-“You are tearing the anchors loose, one by one. Will nothing make you
-realize what you are doing?”
-
-“What would you have me do? It has come to that, Richardia: I don’t
-care for anything else. A little further along, you may be another
-man’s wife, and I may be another woman’s husband; but it will make no
-difference----”
-
-“_Don’t!_” she cried sharply; and then, before he could add another
-word, she had left him and was walking down the road to meet the
-tonneau party which was stringing along on its return to the car, with
-Carfax in the lead.
-
-Tregarvon tramped moodily away when Carfax began to help his charges
-into the car, going back to the tangle which Tryon had finally
-contrived to straighten out. Taking over the command, he flung himself
-once more into the work, but the fine fire was gone, and when evening
-came and the machinery truck was left blocked at the roadside to wait
-for another day, he trudged back to Coalville at the tail of the mule
-cavalcade, sodden with weariness.
-
-Carfax had not returned when Uncle William served dinner, and Tregarvon
-ate alone, morosely thankful for the solitude. Afterward he went
-directly to his room on the second floor; and Carfax, coming in a
-little after nine o’clock, had no chance to tell him of Thaxter’s visit
-and its probable object.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-Limitations
-
-
-Day following day in the conflict with steepness on the mountain
-road, Tregarvon toiled early and late, breakfasting before Carfax was
-visible, eating at midday out of a basket brought to the scene of the
-activities by Uncle William, and missing the golden youth two evenings
-in succession by reason of Carfax’s continued popularity at Highmount.
-
-Such sacrifices to the morose deities of materialism bring their own
-revenges. By the Friday evening, when the new engine and boiler had
-been dragged painfully up the final ascent and had been halted for the
-night at a point nearly opposite the college campus, Tregarvon had
-become a bitter man-driver and was facing the consequences in a strike
-on the part of his farmer helpers.
-
-John Teppenpaw, a husky young Wehatcheean from the farther side of the
-valley who had brought four of the best-pulling beasts to the job, was
-the first to raise the standard of revolt.
-
-“Ef you-all ’ll thess pay me off, I reckon I won’t come back no more,”
-Teppenpaw announced, after he had thrown the trace-chains over the
-backs of his mules for the descent of the mountain.
-
-“What’s that?--what the devil is the matter with _you_?” Tregarvon
-snapped viciously. “Aren’t you getting enough money?”
-
-“Money ain’t the onliest thing ther’ is in this world,” was the sullen
-retort. “I ain’t allowin’ to let no man hire me to take his cussin’ and
-swearin’ and browbeatin’. I got a li’l piece o’ land and a few head o’
-stock o’ my own, and I allow I don’t _haf_ to!”
-
-“I reckon that’s about the size of it f’r me, too,” put in Jeff
-Daggett, who was Teppenpaw’s nearest neighbor on the north; and from
-this the fire of resentment spread so rapidly that the strike became
-unanimous, passing at once beyond any hope of arbitration.
-
-“You’re quitting on me before the job’s finished?” raged Tregarvon.
-“You are a lot of bally idiots! The money you are getting for this haul
-is more than any one of you will see from now to Christmas! Are you a
-pack of silly women that you can’t stand a little man-sized talk from a
-boss?”
-
-“That’s jist hit,” said Daggett. “Looks like you-all was used to
-rippin’ and tearin’ at them no-account furriners up No’th that ain’t
-got nothin’, and don’t know enough to raise a terruction when you cuss
-’em out. We-all ain’t nuther niggers n’r furriners. I’ll take my pay
-and quit.”
-
-Tregarvon became heavily sarcastic. “Is this your way of telling me
-that you want more money?”
-
-Bickler, the oldest man in the squad, made answer.
-
-“I reckon you-all ain’t got money enough to make us-all come back f’r
-another day like what this’n has been, Mr. Tregarvon. You’ve got a heap
-to l’arn ef ye allow to stay down yere in old Tennessee and get white
-men to work f’r ye.”
-
-“Quit, then, and be damned to you!” Tregarvon exploded. “Show up at the
-office in Coalville to-morrow morning before I leave, and you’ll get
-your pay. I don’t carry your money around with me in my pocket.”
-
-To a clattering of hoofs and a jingling of trace-chains the cavalcade
-moved off down the pike, leaving the deserted boss standing beside the
-stranded machinery truck. Tregarvon knew very well that by another day
-the story of the strike and its cause would be passed from lip to ear
-throughout the length and breadth of the Wehatchee, and there would be
-no hope of recruiting another gang among the farmers. The half-mile of
-sandy wood road still remained to be traversed, and without the teams
-the load could be moved only by means of a block and tackle and winch,
-manned by Tryon’s gang of track laborers; a process which would add
-other exasperating days of delay.
-
-The dusk was thickening under the trees when the discouraged
-hauling-boss took his coat from the truck and struggled into it
-preparatory to setting out upon the long tramp down the mountain. He
-had seen nothing of Carfax since an hour before noon, when the yellow
-car had edged past the road obstructions on its way up the pike. But
-now he heard the purring of a motor and waited.
-
-The car was coming down the cross-mountain road, and Tregarvon could
-see that there were two persons in it. Instead of turning in at the
-campus gates, it came on, and Carfax braked it to a stop opposite the
-loaded truck. “Is that you, Vance?” he called to the figure standing in
-the shadow of the pines.
-
-“Yes.” Tregarvon stepped out of the shadows and crossed to the
-automobile, though the nearer approach was not needed to assure him
-that Carfax’s companion was Richardia Birrell.
-
-“You are coming along beautifully!” Carfax praised, speaking as one who
-holds himself delicately aloof from the toilsome details. “It’s great
-to be a working-man and able to do things. One day more will take you
-over to the drilling ground, won’t it?”
-
-“Half a day was all I asked, with the men and teams; but I am not going
-to have it. They have quit on me.”
-
-“A strike? What was the trouble? Weren’t you paying them enough?”
-
-“It wasn’t a question of more money. They seemed to think that I ought
-to speak softly and say ‘mister’ and ‘please’ when I wanted them to get
-a move.”
-
-Carfax laughed and turned to his companion in the other half of the
-driving-seat.
-
-“He puts it rather--er--diplomatically, don’t you think?” he confided
-to the young woman. “Really, you know, his language has come to be
-something frightful!” Then to the diplomat: “What are you going to do?”
-
-Tregarvon ignored Carfax’s companion, and the derisive confidence to
-which she had made no reply. “If I had the nerve, I suppose I might
-kill another week dragging the thing through the wood by half-inches
-with a block and tackle and man-power,” he offered.
-
-“Dear me! And in the meantime the enemy--whoever he is--will be storing
-up ammunition and getting ready to efface you once more.”
-
-Tregarvon turned away.
-
-“I don’t believe I shall give ‘the enemy’ another chance at me. Will
-you be down to dinner?”
-
-“Oh, hold on; don’t go off in a huff that way!” Carfax protested in
-mock concern. “We have had our little joy-ride, and I was just taking
-Miss Richardia home. Wait a minute and tell us how you are going to
-block ‘the enemy’s’ game.”
-
-Tregarvon was still ignoring Miss Birrell.
-
-“Thaxter sent me a note this morning. Consolidated Coal is ready to do
-business with us.”
-
-“With you, you mean; I am only a good-natured bystander. What does Mr.
-Thaxter say?”
-
-For the first time in the brisk exchange of question and answer,
-Tregarvon took the silent member of the trio into consideration.
-
-“All this doesn’t interest Miss Richardia. I can talk the business
-matter over with you later on.”
-
-If the music teacher had been keeping a vow of silence she broke it now
-with a little laugh.
-
-“I am interested,” she assured him; adding: “I hope you feel better,
-now that you have made me say it in so many words.”
-
-Tregarvon let the small gibe go without retort.
-
-“The offer of a hundred thousand for the Ocoee properties has been
-renewed in my behalf, Thaxter tells me; but if I wish to avail myself
-of it, I must accept immediately.”
-
-“What is the keen rush?” Carfax inquired.
-
-“It is explained reasonably enough. The C. C. & I. people are preparing
-to open other veins on their Whitlow lands to the north of the present
-mine. These plans are being held up, pending my decision. If I sell
-out to them, they will probably abandon these plans for the present;
-opening, instead, the south vein--the one Thaxter told us about--and
-using our tramway and coke-ovens.”
-
-Carfax seemed to have grown suddenly reflective. “It rather puts you
-between two fires, doesn’t it?” he commented. “You don’t wish to lose
-your chance to sell, and you don’t wish to sell before you have seen
-what that unfinished hole over yonder may be going to show you. And
-if you take time to drag this power-plant over by hand, the golden
-opportunity will get by. The question which suggests itself to me is a
-very foolish one, no doubt. I’m asking myself how much the C. C. & I.
-people paid your farmers to induce them to lie down on you.”
-
-Tregarvon’s laugh was brittle. “You needn’t go that far. I’ll be frank
-enough to admit that I gave Daggett and his men plenty of provocation
-for the strike.”
-
-“In other words, you’ve been handing them some of the mule talk.
-Shocking! But that is spilt milk and it can’t be gathered up now. What
-is Thaxter’s time limit?”
-
-“He says in his note that he will expect to hear from me by Saturday,
-at the latest. That is to-morrow.”
-
-At this, Miss Richardia spoke up quickly:
-
-“Does ‘to-morrow’ mean all day to-morrow? Or does it mean to-morrow
-morning?”
-
-“Oh, I should suppose I might take the day for it. Any option holds
-good up to midnight of its day of expiration, unless there is some
-proviso to the contrary.”
-
-“And how long would it take you to do all these things that Mr. Carfax
-says you would like to do first--before deciding?”
-
-“Only a few hours, if the men and teams had stayed with me. But as it
-is, it would probably take a week.”
-
-There was silence for a moment and then Carfax said: “Miss Richardia is
-trying to tell you to postpone your decision as long as you can, only
-she can’t find the words. That is my advice, too. One can never tell
-what a day may bring forth. Wait a minute until I can drive back to the
-college, and then I’ll take you down the hill.”
-
-Tregarvon stood aside while Carfax turned the car and sent it swiftly
-up to and through the Highmount gateway. A few minutes later the golden
-youth came sauntering back, alone and afoot.
-
-“That blessed motor of yours has gone dippy again,” he announced
-coolly, as if the yellow car had lately been acquiring bad habits. “It
-pegged out just as I drove up to the Caswell door. I suppose I shall
-have to send a boy over to our shack after Rucker. Mrs. Caswell rises
-to the occasion and invites us both to dinner while we wait. What do
-you say?”
-
-“Not on your life!” Tregarvon refused sourly. “I’m not fit company for
-anybody to-night. I’ll walk down.”
-
-“All right: then I’ll stay and bring the car after Rucker has
-rejuvenated it. You needn’t sit up for me. And, by the way, that
-reminds me. There were some letters for you last night--Tait brought
-them over after you had gone to bed. Did you find them?”
-
-“Yes; I got them this morning.”
-
-“Anything from--er--from Elizabeth yet?”
-
-“Not yet; no.”
-
-Carfax hesitated a moment and then interested himself
-sympathetically--or seemed to. “I hope you didn’t say too much--or too
-little--in that confession of yours last Sunday night, Vance; in the
-letter you sent from Chattanooga.”
-
-“Why do you say that?”
-
-“Because I suppose I am, as you might say--er--well, I’m a sort of an
-accessory before the fact, don’t you think? I can’t forget that it was
-I who clubbed you into the proper frame of mind.”
-
-“You needn’t worry; you’re safely out of it,” declared the confessor,
-with a laugh which was only half good-natured. “I gave you your just
-due: told her that I owed you my soul’s salvation; which you had safely
-clinched against any backsliding by asking Richardia to marry you.”
-
-For a moment there was a silence like that which precedes the crash
-of summer thunder. Then, in a still, small voice, Carfax said: “You
-told her that, did you? You gave her to understand that, right off the
-bat, and merely in passing, as it were, I had carelessly determined
-to marry your temptation out of your way? There was only one mistake
-made in your education, Vance; the person who first taught you to put
-pen to paper ought to have been instantly hanged, drawn and quartered.
-I--I--” but here, apparently, speech failed him, and he turned abruptly
-to walk rapidly away toward Highmount, leaving Tregarvon standing,
-half-remorseful and wholly bewildered, in the middle of the road.
-
-The bewilderment went with the too highly educated one a good part of
-the way down to Coalville, and it certainly would have been increased
-if he could have known that, five minutes after he had turned the first
-curve in the winding pike below Highmount, the car which had been so
-lately reported out of commission had been mysteriously restored to a
-state of usefulness; that, with a man and a woman in the driving-seat,
-it had whisked through the campus portal, cut a perilous quarter-circle
-at speed in the piked roadway, and had vanished in a thick cloud of
-limestone dust to the westward, leaving Mrs. Caswell’s dinner to wait
-for its return.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-The Clansmen
-
-
-Tregarvon turned out early in the morning of a Saturday, to be known
-afterward as a day of fateful happenings, largely from force of
-habit--since there was no mule cavalcade to be led to the Pisgah
-heights. As on the three previous mornings, he breakfasted alone. In
-reply to his inquiry, Uncle William told him that the motor-car was not
-in its shed, and the inference was that Carfax had spent the night as
-the guest of the Caswells.
-
-“Summa dem po’ white men out yondeh on de po’ch a-waitin’ faw you-all,
-Mistoo Tregarbin,” the old negro announced, after the solitary meal was
-despatched. “Look lak dey’s mighty grumptious erbout somepin, dey does.”
-
-Tregarvon went to the front of the building, where he had established a
-rude excuse for an office, and opened the door. The farmers were there,
-waiting for their pay, and the settlement was made without waste of
-words on either side. But after the money had been handed out, Daggett
-was moved to make peaceful overtures, natural kindliness having gotten
-the better of resentment. They--the farmers--had been talking it over
-among themselves, and Daggett “allowed” that they might have been
-hasty. Without prejudice to the fact that they objected to being sworn
-at, they would come back Monday or Tuesday of the following week and
-finish the hauling job, if the boss so desired.
-
-At this, as was most natural after a night of worry and disappointment,
-Tregarvon’s temper flew into shards.
-
-“Not in a hundred years, you won’t!” he exploded wrathfully. “If I
-can’t move that machinery without your help, it may stand right where
-it is until it rots! You’ve got your money, and I’ve learned my lesson.
-We’re quits.” And with that he shouldered his way through the group
-and went to rally Tryon and the track gang, marshalling the handful of
-laborers for the ascent of the mountain in the tram-car.
-
-Some half-hour beyond this, the handful having taken a short-cut
-through the summit forest from the tramhead, Tregarvon found a sharp
-surprise awaiting him at the point on the pike where the truck load
-had been halted for the night. Scattered along the road or drawn
-up under the trees were a dozen or more teams of all sorts and
-descriptions--raw-boned mules in mismatched pairs, spans in which an
-ancient horse was harnessed with a mule or with another horse to the
-full as venerable, animals with back-bones like ridge-poles, others
-posturing as the halt, the lame, and the blind, and, completing the
-makeshifts, a wagon drawn by a pair of diminutive bulls. The drivers
-of this new levy were harmoniously in keeping with their outworn
-stock, decrepit wagons, and rope-patched harnesses; lank, sallow-faced
-mountain men of the McNabb type, with a toothless patriarch of the
-McNabb name to act as their spokesman.
-
-“We-uns done heerd you-uns wuz a-needin’ holp fer to pull thish-yer
-load thoo the woods,” said the aged spokesman, shrilling in a high,
-cracked voice at Tregarvon. “Me an’ th’ boys ’lowed we’d drap
-erlong an’ gin ye a h’ist. How-all does ye hitch on ter that thar
-kintraption?” with a thumb-jerk over his shoulder toward the loaded
-truck.
-
-Tregarvon recovered from his surprise in a rebound of heartfelt
-thankfulness. Here was manna from the skies, indeed. He asked no
-questions; made no ungrateful effort to pry into the whys and
-wherefores of the miracle. It was enough that the gods had relented.
-Treading softly among the adjectives, he proceeded to set his curiously
-assorted helpers, man and beast, in order, and the advance was begun.
-
-Oddly enough, the task ran smoothly, despite the makeshift pulling
-beasts and the prodigious inexperience of the drivers with any load so
-formidable as the engine-mounted truck. To offset the inexperience,
-there was a quiet and resolute willingness that was heart-warming after
-the exacerbating sullenness of the valley farmers. Tregarvon found that
-his normal good-nature had not been slain; it had only been pushed
-aside; discovered also that hard words may make hard work. Turning the
-new leaf handsomely, he let the agile old patriarch do the bossing, and
-thus, rod by rod, the sandy half-mile was traversed and the goal in the
-old burying-ground was reached.
-
-Just before noon, when the truck load had been pushed and pulled and
-inched into place in the glade, Carfax turned up, walking across from
-the school. His congratulations were profuse, but if he knew anything
-about the manner of the miracle-working, he betrayed neither himself
-nor the secret.
-
-“I was certain you’d find a way out of the strike trouble,” he
-asserted blandly. “I told the folks at the dinner-table last evening
-that I had never seen you knocked out so completely that you were
-obliged to take the count. How did you do it?”
-
-Tregarvon shook his head. “I didn’t do it; it was done for me. When I
-came up this morning with Tryon and the trackmen, the teams were ready
-and waiting. Somebody had rounded them up for me during the night. I
-have been charging it to you.”
-
-Carfax’s laugh was a sufficient negation of the charge. “Do I look it?”
-he demanded. “If I do, I can prove an _alibi_. I spent a very pleasant
-evening with the Caswells and a bunch of the senior girls, and I am
-reasonably sure that I didn’t walk in my sleep afterward.”
-
-“Did Richardia go home for the week-end, as usual?”
-
-“She did; though she stayed and took dinner with us at Highmount. I
-drove her over to Westwood House in the car, later.”
-
-“So the car is all right again, is it?”
-
-“Oh, yes; there wasn’t much the matter with it.”
-
-Tryon had taken over the bossing of the gang, with Rucker for his able
-second, and Tregarvon was free to stand aside and talk with Carfax
-about the miracle.
-
-“You say Richardia went home after dinner?” he queried. Then: “I can’t
-help thinking that this is her doing. These men are all mountaineers.”
-
-Carfax’s chuckle was frankly derisive. “That is mere sentiment on your
-part; the wish the father to the thought. You’d rather like to feel
-that you are indebted to her, wouldn’t you? But I shall have to spoil
-that little day-dream. She was with the rest of us at Highmount until
-after ten o’clock, and it must have been nearly eleven when I drove
-her over to Westwood House--much too late to begin any campaign of
-team-raising for you.”
-
-Tregarvon took this apparent evidence of Miss Richardia’s
-non-complicity at its face value, but he was still shaking his head
-dubiously.
-
-“I can’t understand it, Poictiers. These McNabbs and their cousins
-might very properly have it in for me on the old score of the land
-lawsuit; and, as you know, we have been suspecting them, more or less,
-all along. But now they turn out to give me a lift, just as I am about
-to lose my grip. What’s the answer?”
-
-Carfax’s grin was as nearly impish as his cherubic semblance would
-permit. “Call it an attack of conscience,” he suggested playfully.
-“The other night we decided that it was one of the McNabbs who put the
-dynamite into the old boiler. Perhaps they have all had a change of
-heart, and this is their way of showing it. Will you be ready to go on
-drilling this afternoon?”
-
-“I am afraid not. We shall have the machinery unloaded in another hour
-or so, and I can let these outsiders go home. But it will take the
-remainder of the day to get the engine in working order, so Rucker
-says.”
-
-“How about the C. C. & I. buying offer? The option expires with to-day,
-doesn’t it?”
-
-Tregarvon turned quickly upon the questioner.
-
-“Do you advise me to take the offer, Poictiers? You will remember that
-after our talk with Hartridge a week ago you said I was not to sell.”
-
-“I know; but only idiots and corpses are unable to change their minds.
-You owe it to your people at home not to fall between two stools. After
-all is said, a sure hundred thousand is better than nothing.”
-
-“Hartridge has been working on you again,” said Tregarvon accusingly.
-“And this time he has taken the other tack. Isn’t that so?”
-
-Carfax neither admitted nor denied a later talk with the schoolmaster.
-“He asserts positively that you will find the two thin veins again
-here, with the rock between. He ought to know.”
-
-Tregarvon was silenced for the moment. Then he broke out impatiently.
-
-“I’ve got to know for myself, Poictiers. If I don’t stay with it long
-enough to prove up, I shall be a quitter. I’m all the other things you
-have occasionally called me, but not that!”
-
-“No; I know you are not. I was just thinking: if you could meet Thaxter
-and talk with him? Possibly you could get the option time extended for
-a few days. You have a good reason for asking--apart from the real
-one, which is to find out what this drill-hole is going to say to you.
-You might urge that you’d like to have time to communicate with your
-lawyers. Suppose we drive up to Whitlow this afternoon?”
-
-“We’ll see,” Tregarvon conceded. “It is barely possible that we shall
-get the drill in operation again to-day, and in that case I shall know
-definitely what to do. Do you lunch at Highmount?”
-
-“I do,” laughed the golden youth. “The Caswells have adopted me, and I
-shall get square with them a little further along by financing the new
-gymnasium. How about paying this miracle gang? Have you money enough
-with you?”
-
-“I haven’t, and I was going to ask if you would drive down to the
-office and break into the safe for me.”
-
-“I can do better than that,” said the money-finder, producing a thick
-roll of bank-notes. “Money is the one thing I’m rotten with. I must go
-back and report for luncheon now, but I’ll be over again later on, and
-we can decide about the trip to Whitlow.”
-
-A short time after Carfax’s departure, Tregarvon paid the mountaineers
-and let them go. Singularly enough, some of the volunteers did not wish
-to take money and had to be persuaded. The sums named were ridiculously
-small, and in each instance Tregarvon gave more than was asked, putting
-the larger wage on the ground of the value of the service to him.
-
-In the settlement the beneficiary of the miracle made an attempt to
-find out to whom the timely help was owing, but the effort spent itself
-against a dead wall of mountaineer reticence--or unknowledge. The
-McNabb patriarch had “heerd” of the trouble with the valley farmers
-through “ol’ man Kent”; Kent had got the word from somebody else;
-and so it went, with the first cause either unknown or carefully
-concealed. Tregarvon did not press too curiously for the explanation.
-It was too much like inquiring the age of the proverbial gift-horse.
-
-After the noon halt, with the glade cleared of the men and teams, the
-work of installation was begun. For a time it progressed handsomely.
-Rucker and Tryon were both competent foremen, and by three o’clock they
-had the engine and boiler shifted from the truck to its place behind
-the drill derrick, with only the steam-pipe connections remaining to be
-made.
-
-Carfax had not yet returned, and Tregarvon began to wonder if he had
-forgotten the proposed Whitlow expedition. By this time it seemed
-altogether probable that the drilling could be resumed within an hour
-or two, and the mining gambler’s passion to stay in the game until the
-last card had been turned fought against cool-headed prudence for first
-place in the struggle Tregarvon was making to decide as to what he
-should do.
-
-If he should leave the mountain before the drilling began, the
-uncertainties would still be unresolved. On the other hand, if
-Consolidated Coal meant to hold him rigidly to the terms of the option,
-it became crucially necessary that he should know in advance what this
-final drilling-test was going to prove. If it should prove only another
-failure, the opportunity to sell must not be allowed to lapse. But
-if the test should prove that he had at last discovered the workable
-mother-vein.... Tregarvon gasped at the golden possibility, and the
-offer of a paltry tenth of a million shrank to nothing.
-
-He was wishing, for the hundredth time, that Carfax would come and
-help him to decide, when a buggy drawn by a high-stepping black horse
-appeared among the trees on the opposite side of the glade. Tregarvon
-recognized the equipage at once. It was Thaxter’s, and the round-bodied
-bookkeeper was alone. The victim of indecision pulled himself together
-quickly. Chance, or the kindlier gods, had given him his opportunity,
-and he meant to improve it.
-
-Thaxter came across to the tool shanty with the Cheeryble smile in
-commission.
-
-“Still spending your good money on the kite-flying, are you?” he said,
-with a jerk of his thumb over his shoulder at the new power-plant.
-“I don’t know as I can blame you so very much: I was young and
-enthusiastic once, myself. You’ve worked wonders getting that thing up
-the mountain in such a short time. Somebody told me you were hung up
-with a strike, or something of the sort, and as it was our Saturday
-half-holiday, I thought I’d drive up and condole with you.”
-
-Tregarvon offered the bookkeeper a seat on the shanty step, saying: “We
-were hung up, temporarily, but we are getting into shape now.”
-
-“So I see,” returned the jovial little man; and for a space the talk
-ran upon the difficulties of mountain installations and the drawbacks
-of having to depend upon picked-up labor in a region where labor was
-scarce. After a time, Thaxter broached the option matter of his own
-accord.
-
-“You got my note the other day, I presume?”
-
-“Promptly,” Tregarvon acknowledged. “I was planning to go to Whitlow
-this afternoon.”
-
-“And you changed your mind?”
-
-“I have changed it now, since you have been good enough to drive up.
-I suppose we can talk here as well as in your office. I have been
-considering the offer to purchase, and on some accounts it is rather
-attractive. We all like to bet on a sure thing when we can.”
-
-The genial go-between chuckled sagely. “And, on the other hand, we all
-like to bet upon the possibilities, now and then,” he thrust in. “If
-you only had any possibilities----”
-
-Tregarvon made haste to fight away from that phase of the situation.
-
-“We’ll disregard the possibilities, which I may believe in, and you
-don’t, Mr. Thaxter. This new power outfit was bought before I had your
-letter, and since we had it, we could hardly do less than to go on
-and install it. Let that part of it go, and we’ll attack the business
-affair. As I say, I have been considering Consolidated Coal’s offer to
-buy me out. Since you are buying nothing but the equipment, the offer
-is fair enough. But my father’s estate is concerned, and the option is
-too short. In common prudence, I ought to consult my lawyers, and there
-hasn’t been time.”
-
-The small man shook his head regretfully.
-
-“These matters are all decided for us by the big fellows in New York,”
-he explained. “In my letter I gave you the reasons why they have put
-the hurry speed on in this particular instance. It is really a very
-small detail to Consolidated Coal whether it buys you out or doesn’t
-buy you out--merely a pen-scratch in the day’s work. Of course, you
-know that, as well as I do.”
-
-“Yes,” Tregarvon admitted. “But in spite of that, I am going to ask you
-to take it up with the powers again, suggesting that they give me a
-little more time. A few days, more or less, can make no difference.”
-
-This time the bookkeeper shook his head more firmly.
-
-“I should be risking my poor little job, Mr. Tregarvon. I am only the
-humblest of under-strappers in the big corporation, and if I should try
-to pull strings for you, some nippy chief clerk in the New York offices
-would tell me to pack my grip and get out.”
-
-“Then supposing you turn the papers over to me and let me do my own
-bargaining with headquarters,” Tregarvon ventured.
-
-“It wouldn’t do a particle of good, as you’d know if you had had any
-dealings with the great corporations. These things are mere matters of
-routine, and you couldn’t break that routine with a sledge-hammer, Mr.
-Tregarvon. I’m awfully sorry, but I am afraid the option will have to
-stand as it was made--to expire at midnight to-night.”
-
-Tregarvon had one small shot in reserve and the time had arrived when
-it must be fired.
-
-“In that view of the case, Mr. Thaxter, I am afraid I shall have to
-stay out,” he said, hoping against hope that the shot might find its
-target.
-
-Once more Thaxter made the sign of regretful negation. From where
-he was sitting the bookkeeper had a fair view of the installation
-activities, and Tregarvon could not help wondering if their rapid
-progress toward completion had anything to do with Thaxter’s
-immovability. While he was waiting for the bluffing shot to penetrate,
-if it would, Rucker came across from the new engine, carrying a piece
-of iron pipe with a valve attached; carrying, also, a ferocious scowl
-to emphasize his complaint.
-
-“Them machinery guys over in Chattanooga is a fright!” he rapped out.
-“That boiler dome is tapped for inch-and-a-quarter pipe, and so’s the
-engine; and they’ve gone and sent us this inch-and-a-half throttle and
-pipe connection! Wot t’ ’ell am I goin’ to do about that, I’d like to
-know?”
-
-Tregarvon grasped the new obstacle--and his own fierce
-impatience--firmly by the neck and refused to make a profane show of
-himself for Thaxter’s benefit.
-
-“I suppose there is only one thing to do, Billy; to go down to the
-railroad office and wire the machinery people to make good,” he
-answered placably. Then to Thaxter: “We have hit so many of these
-knock-outs that we are beginning to learn that we must take them as
-they come.” And with that, he scribbled a telegram on a leaf of his
-note-book, tore it out, and gave it to Rucker.
-
-“There is the message,” he said. “Tell Tryon and the men that the jig
-is up for to-day, and that I’ll be down a little later on to pay them
-off. You’d better go down yourself and send that wire. If you can
-persuade the railroad agent to hustle it, we may catch the machinery
-shop before it closes.”
-
-Thaxter sat quite silent during the dispersal of the working gang; did
-not speak again until after the last of the men had disappeared in the
-direction of the tramhead. Then he said: “Well, you are hung up until
-next week safely enough now. Your wire won’t get an answer this late
-Saturday afternoon.”
-
-“No, I suppose not,” Tregarvon agreed. “The order will be filled
-Monday, and the new throttle will get here Tuesday or Wednesday or
-Thursday, at the pleasure of the railroad people. Cheerful layout,
-isn’t it?”
-
-“You certainly have bad luck enough to discourage most young men,” said
-the bookkeeper, as one who would not withhold sympathy where sympathy
-is due. “Do you know, it simply grinds me to be the one to add my bit
-to the aggregation. I’ve half a mind to take a chance on the thunder
-and lightning and ask New York for that extension of time for you.
-You might reasonably hope to hear from your Philadelphia attorneys by
-Monday or Tuesday, don’t you think?”
-
-Tregarvon snatched at the concession avidly. “I’ll wire them
-to-night,” he promised, as if his decision depended entirely upon the
-result of the long-range consultation. But after Thaxter had driven
-away, excusing his haste on the plea that no time must be lost in
-reaching a telegraph office, Tregarvon wondered again; this time
-half-suspiciously. Why had Thaxter changed his tune so suddenly? Was it
-because he had just been given ocular proof that the test-drilling was
-again postponed? The more Tregarvon thought of it, the more plausible
-the assumption grew; and he was almost ready to call it a fact when, an
-hour later, Carfax put in an appearance with the motor-car.
-
-In a few words Tregarvon told the story of the afternoon’s happenings,
-giving the suspicion due standing.
-
-“It is only a guess, as usual,” he offered in conclusion. “But, in
-any event, the strain is off for the present. Thaxter will get the
-extension, and in the meantime we can take our chance to draw a
-comfortable breath or two. After Rucker comes back, we’ll go down the
-hill and get ready to enjoy an old-fashioned restful Sunday. I don’t
-mind confessing that the strain has been getting next to me, Poictiers.
-I’m going to push the whole wretched tangle into the background, for
-one day, at least, and try to catch up with my nerve.”
-
-“Good medicine!” laughed the one who had no nerves; and Rucker
-returning a few minutes later to resume his duties as resident
-watchman, they climbed into the yellow car and Tregarvon took the wheel
-to drive to the valley.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-Out of a Clear Sky
-
-
-The event of the day for Coalville--the arrival of the afternoon
-passenger-train from Chattanooga--was in the near prospect when the
-yellow car rolled down the last of the grades and swept a wide circle
-around the coke-ovens and past the unloading platforms.
-
-The train-time signs were always unmistakable. A little while before
-the hour, and always as if warned by some signal inaudible to alien
-ears, the loungers under Tait’s porch rose, shook their legs to settle
-wrinkled trousers, and filed slowly over to the railroad station.
-Tregarvon’s motor-car, no longer a nine days’ wonder to the army of
-leisure, was slowing to cross the rails of the Ocoee siding when the
-station agent ran out of his office to wave the motorists down with a
-telegram. The message was for Carfax, and the agent explained that it
-had been delayed in transmission by some trouble with the wire on the
-branch line.
-
-While Carfax was opening the envelope, Tregarvon got out and went
-around to see if the brakes had been running cool in the swift drop
-from the summit of Pisgah. For this cause he did not hear Carfax’s, “Ye
-gods and little fishes!” basing itself upon a glance at the delayed
-telegram.
-
-“Vance!” he called, turning in his place to see what had become
-of Tregarvon. But Tregarvon did not hear. A canopy-topped surrey,
-venerable with age and drawn by a great-boned horse of dapple gray, was
-turning out of the Hesterville road to cross the tracks to the station.
-Miss Richardia Birrell was holding the reins over the dapple gray, and
-in the seat beside her was an old man, erect, white-haired, handsome as
-an ancestral portrait.
-
-“Jehu!” said Tregarvon under his breath. “So that is her father. If
-looks count for anything, he is worthy of her; which is more than I
-would say for any other Tennesseean I’ve met.” Then Carfax’s anxious
-call was repeated, and this time Tregarvon answered.
-
-“Not lost--only mislaid,” he returned. Then he saw Carfax’s face: “Why,
-Poictiers!--who is dead?”
-
-Carfax was standing up in his place, clinging to the steering-wheel
-with one hand and waving the telegram like a flag of distress in the
-other.
-
-“Read that!” he commanded tragically, when the inspector of brakes came
-within passing reach.
-
-Tregarvon glanced at the message and became, in his turn, a man
-stricken down without warning. The bolt was dated at Chattanooga, and
-it had been filed for sending at nine in the forenoon. It was addressed
-to Carfax, and it read:
-
- “Here with papa and mamma, and the Pennsylvania battle-monument
- dedicators. If I should run over to Coalville with Clotilde this
- afternoon, will you and Vance put me up at the hotel and show me your
- mine? But, of course, you will.
-
- “ELIZABETH.”
-
-“Oh, good heavens!” groaned Tregarvon, when the paralyzing effect of
-the announcement gave place to the panic of dismay; “E-Elizabeth and
-her maid?--coming here?”
-
-Carfax laughed rather wildly. “Yes; coming here to stop at--at the
-hotel!”
-
-Tregarvon read the message again. “She says ‘this afternoon.’ That
-means to-day--now--this minute; she’s on this train! Poictiers, if you
-are any friend of mine, you’ll climb down here and find a club and put
-me out of my misery!”
-
-Carfax stopped laughing suddenly and sprang out of the car. “It’s no
-joke!” he snapped. “It’s up to us, you wild ass of the desert--do you
-hear? Stop your braying and listen to me: we’ve got to meet her over
-there on that platform just as if we had been watching every train for
-a week! There is the whistle: come along and invent your fairy-tale on
-the run!”
-
-They did not crowd too eagerly to the front when the three-car
-train drew up to the platform. There were terms to be agreed upon;
-things which might be said, and things which must not be said. Thus
-it happened that an exceedingly handsome young woman, in a modish
-travelling hat and a brown coat, and followed by a French maid bearing
-impedimenta, was helped from the car-step by the brakeman.
-
-“Charge!” Carfax commanded, in a hoarse whisper; but before they
-could do it, Miss Richardia slipped through the ranks of the platform
-loungers, put her arms quickly about the handsome young woman and
-kissed her, with an “Oh, you dear thing!” to go with the affectionate
-welcome.
-
-Tregarvon saw, gasped, swallowed hard, and the smile of greeting which
-he had called up for the emergency turned into a shocked grin.
-
-“Get out in the road there and chunk me!” he whispered to Carfax. And
-then: “Poictiers, I’m a ruined man! They were together in the Boston
-music factory. Elizabeth has told me a hundred times how she chummed
-with a charming little Southerner--without naming any names! And I’ve
-been writing her--oh, I tell you, I’m a dead man. All you have to do
-now is to get a wreath to lay on my coffin!”
-
-“You’ll be needing the coffin if you don’t buck up and catch the step!”
-hissed Carfax. Wherewith he dragged his companion masterfully into the
-circle of welcomings.
-
-The golden youth neither gave nor received the kiss of greeting; and
-he pointedly looked another way when Miss Wardwell offered her cheek
-for Tregarvon’s cousinly salute. Then he found himself shaking hands
-with Richardia’s father; realized vaguely that the judge was taxing
-him reproachfully for not having consented to occupy one of the many
-bed-rooms at Westwood House the night before, instead of returning to
-Highmount; realized also that Miss Wardwell was rallying Tregarvon
-gayly upon his discomfiture accomplished by means of the jesting
-telegram.
-
-“Surely, it didn’t mislead you, too, did it, Poictiers?” she
-questioned, turning to Tregarvon’s accomplice. “Vance is trying to
-tell me that you took it harder than he did.” Then she explained to
-Judge Birrell: “I sent a wire to these two from Chattanooga, you know,
-asking them if they could put me and Clotilde up at the Coalville
-hotel--by the way, Cousin Vance, where _is_ the hotel?” Then again to
-the judge: “You see, I guessed, from what Richardia said in her last
-letter, that they didn’t know I was invited to Westwood House. Fancy
-it! they got the telegram only a few minutes ago!”
-
-Tregarvon backed out of the group and fanned himself with his hat.
-There were still traces of the shocked grin to temper the mask of
-feverish anxiety which was slowly displacing it. Everything he had
-ever written to Elizabeth about Richardia--everything he had ever
-told Richardia about Elizabeth--clamored for instant recollection and
-revision in the light of the unnerving fact that the two of them were
-here on the Coalville platform, together, as friends of long standing.
-
-The train had moved on, the loungers were dispersing, and Miss Birrell
-was leading the way to the venerable surrey.
-
-[Illustration: “Poictiers, I’m a ruined man!”]
-
-“Mr. Carfax has promised me that he will drive you up to Westwood House
-to-morrow. I think you will be very sure to come, now,” she said,
-after Tregarvon had flogged himself into some livelier sense of the
-requirements of the moment. Then she added: “You may come as early as
-you please.”
-
-“I think I shall be very ill to-morrow,” he returned gravely, as he
-handed her into the carriage. “These sudden shocks are very bad--for
-the heart.” Then, while Carfax was helping Miss Wardwell to the front
-seat with the judge: “I didn’t believe you could be so wicked!”
-
-“I am not the wicked one,” was the quick retort. “I tried to tell you
-last Wednesday; that was why I asked Mr. Carfax to drive down to where
-you were working. But you wouldn’t let me.”
-
-“If I am not too ill to come, you must let me see you first, before
-I--” Tregarvon was beginning; but Miss Richardia was not willing to be
-dragged even into the vicinity of things confidential.
-
-“Hear him!” she said to Miss Wardwell; “Mr. Tregarvon is intimating
-that we have made him ill, between us!” Then she spoke to her father:
-“Judge Birrell, you will please command these two young gentlemen to
-report to you to-morrow at Westwood House--do you hear?”
-
-The judge gave the invitation in due and courteous form, and Carfax
-accepted promptly for himself and for Tregarvon. After which the big
-dapple gray, mildly urged by his master, began to jog up and down and
-the age-worn surrey crept out of sight around the barrier rank of
-coke-ovens.
-
-“We might have offered to take them up in the motor,” said Carfax, when
-the afterthought had been given time to come to the surface.
-
-“_You_ might have,” Tregarvon returned moodily. “I wouldn’t trust
-myself to drive a wheel-barrow in the present state of things.”
-
-Carfax was about to swing himself behind the wheel to drive the car
-over to its shed and he paused with a foot on the running-board.
-
-“When it comes to wrestling with the fateful tangles, you haven’t so
-much the best of me as you may think you have--thanks to your little
-gift of letter-writing,” he remarked darkly.
-
-Tregarvon walked across to the office-building while Carfax was housing
-the car, went to his room, and was visible no more until Uncle William
-called him to dinner. At table he ate like an ogre--a sure sign of
-disturbment--and refused to rise to any of the small conversational
-baits flung out by Carfax. But afterward, over the tobacco-jar, there
-were things to be said and he said them.
-
-“Poictiers, I believe I’ll write my will to-night and let you witness
-it,” he began. “The easiest thing for me to do now is to go and offer
-myself to the chief of the bureau of tests as a candidate for the
-poison squad.”
-
-“Meaning that Elizabeth is here to answer your letter in person?”
-queried Carfax. “There is nothing so very deadly about that, is there?”
-
-“That remark shows how little you know women. I was perfectly frank
-with Elizabeth, as I told you, but of course I didn’t write as I should
-have written if I had known that she and Richardia were bosom friends.
-Now they will proceed to exchange confidences and compare notes--if
-they haven’t already done both in their letters to each other. And what
-the comparison will leave of me won’t be fit to fling to a starved
-puppy.”
-
-Carfax smoked in silence for quite some time before he said: “How they
-may stick pins into you, to your face or behind your back, seems a very
-inconsiderable factor in the case to me, Vance. The deadly part of it
-is that you are still in love--or you think you are--with Richardia
-Birrell, while you are going to marry Elizabeth Wardwell.”
-
-“No,” Tregarvon objected, staring gloomily into the fire; “that isn’t
-the worst of it. There is a still deeper depth: I can’t help being the
-one or doing the other.”
-
-Carfax began to show signs of becoming restive.
-
-“If Elizabeth only didn’t care so much for you....” Then he took a
-new tack. “You didn’t tell her all you ought to have told her in
-that letter, Vance; if you had, you wouldn’t be dreading the actual
-show-down as you are now. Which means that you still have it to do.”
-
-“That is it, exactly,” said the dejected one. “And I’d much rather be
-shot full of holes.”
-
-Carfax took another dose of his own prescription of silence. Then
-he said: “What is going to come of it?--after you have made her
-understand?”
-
-“The only thing that can come of it. While I have insisted, and still
-insist, that there has never been any sentiment wasted between us, the
-fact remains that Elizabeth is a woman, and she isn’t going to sit down
-meekly and say, ‘All right, Vance, dear; never mind,’ when I make her
-understand that I have been trying my hardest to make love to another
-woman. She has plenty of spirit; she can fairly set you afire with
-those brown eyes of hers when the occasion demands it.”
-
-“Well?” said Carfax.
-
-“It will be all over but the shouting, then. She will doubtless tell me
-what she thinks of me and break the engagement, there and then--or try
-to. But that is the one thing I can’t let her do, Poictiers. She needs
-the Uncle Byrd legacy, and I mustn’t let her lose it.”
-
-Carfax got up and reached for the matches and his bed-room candle.
-“No,” he said slowly; “you mustn’t let her lose the legacy. To a man
-up a tree it would seem that the money is about all she is going to
-salvage out of the wreck.” With which unkind daggering of the sinner
-whose sin had found him out, he went to bed.
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-At Westwood House
-
-
-The autumn Sunday afternoon figured as the flawless half of a day of
-perfection, with the sky a vivid blue and the hardwood forest of the
-mountain top, lately touched by the first sharp frosts, a riot of
-gorgeous coloring. On the broad veranda of the ancient manor-house of
-Westwood the conversation, which had been desultory at best, languished
-in sympathy with the reposeful spell of time and place and the peaceful
-surroundings.
-
-With a gently worded phrase of apology to his daughter’s guest, the
-judge had pleaded an old man’s privilege, dragging his chair to the
-farther end of the veranda and lighting his corn-cob pipe in courteous
-isolation. Tregarvon marked the bit of old-fashioned chivalric
-deference to Elizabeth, and wondered how many men of his own generation
-would be as thoughtfully considerate of the small amenities.
-
-The thought was one of a series emphasizing the gross incredibility
-of the theory involving Richardia’s father in the conspiracy against
-the Ocoee. That the white-haired, ruddy-faced Chesterfield of Westwood
-House might challenge an antagonist, give him the choice of weapons,
-and afterward kill him unflinchingly, was easily conceivable. But
-that he would descend to the methods of the dynamiter or the midnight
-assassin was momently growing more and more unbelievable.
-
-With Elizabeth for his _vis-à-vis_ in her broad-armed veranda
-chair, Tregarvon was finding it increasingly difficult to fix his
-attention upon the Ocoeean mysteries. For some reasons--the unfamiliar
-surroundings, the gap of absence so suddenly and unexpectedly bridged,
-or because there was some subtle change in her--his cousin was
-singularly reticent. While the talk remained general she took her part
-in it; but whenever it threatened to become a dialogue, Tregarvon was
-instantly made to feel the raising of the barrier.
-
-Since the guilty flee when no man pursueth, Tregarvon fancied he
-need be at no loss to account for Miss Wardwell’s attitude. She had
-doubtless received his confession letter--though no mention had been
-made of it--and beyond that, she and Richardia had in all probability
-been comparing notes. He could feel the presence of the Damoclean sword
-suspended above his head, and was looking forward unjoyously to the
-moment when chance, or design on the part of Carfax and Richardia,
-would give Miss Wardwell her reproachful opportunity.
-
-The dreaded moment came when Miss Richardia, who had been discussing
-autumn flowers with Carfax, asked the golden youth if he would like to
-see her chrysanthemums and asters in the sheltered posy-patch in the
-rear of the manor-house. And when they were gone, Tregarvon was left
-alone with his responsibilities.
-
-It was Miss Wardwell who first broke the little silence which followed
-the departure of the flower seekers, and her manner was distinctly at
-variance with her accustomed attitude of serenity and self-possession;
-was rather the manner of one marching reluctantly but firmly up to the
-mouth of a loaded cannon.
-
-“Were you tremendously shocked yesterday afternoon when you learned
-that I was coming?” she asked.
-
-“It is no use to deny it,” he confessed bravely. “It was a complete
-surprise--as you probably intended it to be.”
-
-“No; I didn’t intend it--until just at the last. Richardia has been
-asking me to come down, and she knew a week or more ago that I was
-coming. I supposed, of course, she would tell you, and didn’t know that
-she hadn’t told you until I received her last letter, just as we were
-leaving.”
-
-“You came with your father and mother?”
-
-“Yes. Pennsylvania has been building some monuments on the old
-battle-fields, and papa is one of the commissioners. He and mamma
-didn’t particularly wish to be bothered with me, I imagine, but I had
-to come. Have you guessed why, Vance?”
-
-Tregarvon thought he knew the constraining reason very well, indeed,
-but he was not quite courageous enough to say so. Instead, he
-temporized, as a man will, postponing the instant when the hair-hung
-sword must fall.
-
-“I’m the poorest of mind-readers,” he protested. “I can’t even read my
-own, at times. But I suppose you have my letter, and you thought it
-ought to be answered in person.”
-
-“I have had many letters from you: which one do you mean?”
-
-“The one I wrote a week ago to-day in the hotel in Chattanooga.”
-
-She shook her head slowly. “No; your last letter was written two weeks
-ago, and it was postmarked ‘Coalville.’ I remember you said you were
-writing after Poictiers had gone to bed.”
-
-Tregarvon groaned inwardly. The thing which he thought had been safely
-done had not been done at all; it still remained to be done. He was
-bracing himself to take the plunge when she went on hurriedly:
-
-“You were saying just now that you couldn’t read your own
-mind--sometimes. I wish I might read it now--this moment, Cousin
-Vance!” She was trying to look him fairly in the eyes and was not
-succeeding very well.
-
-“Read my mind?--heaven forbid!” he gasped. Then he came to his senses
-and tried to repair the terrible misstep. “You know--er--you know what
-I mean; a man’s mind is seldom fit for a--a good woman to look into,
-Elizabeth.”
-
-“Yours is, always,” she asserted loyally, and he winced as if she had
-struck him a blow. “I assure you I haven’t known you all my life for
-nothing, Vance. And it was because I had known you as no other woman
-ever will, that I was willing to try to make you happy.”
-
-He was wondering dumbly how much of this he could stand when she
-continued, quite calmly, though the brown eyes were looking past him.
-
-“As I have said, I had to come: there is a crisis; and with your
-letters before me, I couldn’t write. We agreed once, you remember, to
-go around the sentimental field instead of going through it; but--but
-you haven’t been living up to the spirit of that agreement in your
-letters.”
-
-Tregarvon found his handkerchief and mopped his face. The matchless
-autumn afternoon had grown suddenly sweltering for him.
-
-“You mean that I’ve been writing you love-letters? I’m a brute,
-Elizabeth. I----”
-
-“Please don’t make it any harder for me than you are obliged to,” she
-pleaded gently. “If you stop me now, I shall never be able to go on.
-I have come all the way down here to say something to you; something
-that I couldn’t write, and a thing that every added letter of yours was
-making more difficult to say. But one word from you now will make it
-easier--if it is the right word. Tell me, Vance; hasn’t this separation
-proved to you that we couldn’t--that cousins ought not to marry?”
-
-Slowly it ground its way into his brain that the worst had befallen;
-that Elizabeth, really and truly in love with him, now, had guessed,
-either from his letters or from Richardia’s, the true state of affairs;
-and that womanly pride and affection had brought her to the scene of
-action to commit martyrdom.
-
-“Oh, by Jove!--you mustn’t, Elizabeth!” he broke out in a sudden access
-of contrition. “I can’t allow you to outdo me in pure generosity that
-way! And, besides, there is Uncle Byrd’s money.”
-
-“I have thought of that, too,” she said, quite judicially. “But,
-Vance, dear, we must simply rise superior to all the mere money
-considerations. Richardia has been telling me about your prospects
-here--your mine--and your brave struggle to make something out of
-nothing. You will need Uncle Byrd’s money; you are needing it now.
-And I--if we--well, I shall not need it, anyhow,” she ended rather
-incoherently.
-
-“The Lord help me, Elizabeth!” he groaned, entirely ignoring the
-white-haired, white-mustached figure smoking peacefully at the farther
-end of the veranda. “I don’t deserve----”
-
-“I know you don’t,” she agreed instantly; “you deserve ... well, you
-deserve something quite different. But whatever happens, and whatever
-you say, I must do what I came here to do. I--I have made a discovery,
-Cousin Vance.”
-
-“Of course you have,” he said desperately. “I knew you would, sooner or
-later, though I have tried awfully hard to make myself believe that
-there wasn’t any discovery to be made.”
-
-“I know: but seriously, Vance; deep down in your heart, you don’t
-really care, do you?”
-
-“Why, Elizabeth! Of course I care. And I have blamed myself straight
-through from the first.”
-
-“Oh, but you mustn’t do that!” she protested quickly. “It is all my
-fault, or my--no, I simply _won’t_ call it a misfortune.”
-
-“Your fault?” he queried. “You mean because you didn’t suspect it and
-choke it off right at the beginning. But I haven’t give you a chance to
-do that, have I?”
-
-“I didn’t suspect it,” she said musingly; “I was very far from
-suspecting it. It came all at once, like a blow, you know; and then it
-was too late to ‘choke it off,’ as you say.”
-
-The man, the true man, in him rose up in its might to buffet him into
-the path of uprightness and straightforwardness. “No; it is not too
-late, Elizabeth,” he assured her gravely.
-
-“Yes, it is,” she objected with pathetic earnestness.
-
-“No,” he insisted. “We must still make good. Do you know what people at
-home will say if our engagement is broken now? They will say that I
-made it impossible for you to carry out Uncle Byrd’s wishes; and that I
-did it deliberately, to get the money for myself.”
-
-“But you haven’t!” she cried in wide-eyed astonishment. “_I_ am the
-guilty one.”
-
-“You?”
-
-“Yes. This is what I came all the way from Philadelphia to say to you,
-Vance. Do you remember, one time when we were trying to ‘galvanize,’
-I think that was the word you used, ourselves into the sentimental
-ecstasy supposed to be the normal condition of engaged people, I told
-you jokingly that if I ever found any one whom I could really lo--like
-better----”
-
-“_Elizabeth!_”
-
-She nodded, soberly and looked away from him. “Yes; it is true; and I
-had to come and tell you. You may despise me; it is your privilege.”
-
-Tregarvon got up and took the necessary step to the veranda end which
-gave him the view into the rearward flower-garden. They were there,
-Carfax and Richardia, bending together over the chrysanthemums. When he
-turned back to face his cousin he was smiling grimly.
-
-“As our cattle-ranching cousin in the West would say, you mustn’t
-‘rawhide’ yourself too severely, Elizabeth. Leaving the dollars out of
-it--and I’ll find a way to leave them out if I have to throw them to
-the birds--I’m getting about what I deserve; which is the glad hand all
-around the block.”
-
-“You are bitter, and I can’t blame you,” she said, with something
-alarmingly like a sob at the catching of her breath. “But really, at
-the very bottom of it all, you don’t care so very much, do you, Vance?”
-
-“Don’t I? I’d be a mighty good specimen of the superman if I didn’t
-care. Who is this fellow who, coming after me, is preferred before me?”
-
-“I--I can’t tell you that.”
-
-“Why can’t you?”
-
-“Because--oh, you are perfectly savage with me!--because he has had no
-right to speak, nor I to listen. He hasn’t spoken; he may never speak.
-But that doesn’t make any difference.”
-
-“No,” said Tregarvon wearily; “nothing makes any difference now. But I
-told you a moment ago not to reproach yourself too bitterly. I am in
-precisely the same sort of a boat myself, Elizabeth--without your good
-hope of getting ashore.”
-
-“You? _Vance!_”
-
-The grim smile came again, and he said--though rather in shame than
-in malice: “It hurts a little, doesn’t it?--when it is the other way
-about. For nearly a week I have been thinking that you knew. I told
-you all about it, you know, in the letter I wrote last Sunday night in
-Chattanooga; the letter which seems to have gone astray. That is why I
-was so slow in getting your meaning: I was looking for you to dagger me
-the other way around, you know.”
-
-Miss Wardwell was no longer embarrassed, but she was well-nigh tearful.
-
-“I suppose it is one of those horridly pretty Southern girls in the
-school,” she said half-spitefully. “Have you----”
-
-“No,” he hastened to say; “I have been almost as decent as the other
-fellow; the fellow you won’t name for me. I haven’t asked her to marry
-me.”
-
-“And she?”
-
-“She is going to marry a man old enough to be her father--if she
-doesn’t reconsider and marry a young donkey of a millionaire.”
-
-Rucker, following an order which had been given him earlier in the day,
-was tooling the yellow car up the weed-grown carriage approach, coming
-to drive the two young men back to Coalville. Also, Carfax and Miss
-Birrell were returning from the posy-patch. Miss Wardwell stood up and
-put her hands into Tregarvon’s.
-
-“I’m sorry and happy and miserable all in the same breath,” she said.
-“I shall be here for a few days. Papa and mamma are going over to the
-Shiloh battle-field after they leave Chattanooga, and I shall stay
-until they come back. You’ll come again, won’t you?”
-
-He was able to smile down into the brown eyes of beseeching. The
-stabbed-vanity pain was passing--a little.
-
-“Most certainly I shall come, as often as you can get me an invitation,
-and as my job on the Ocoee will permit. I don’t propose to lose my best
-cousin just because I happen to have lost a lot of other things.”
-
-This was the key-note of the cheerful tone which he contrived to
-preserve throughout the leave-takings. But at the car boarding he let
-Carfax have the tonneau to himself, taking the seat beside Rucker for
-the better chance it offered for a needed interval in which to bind up
-the wounds of the pierced _amour-propre_.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-The Unknown Quantity
-
-
-When the yellow motor-car, driven by Rucker with his customary
-disregard for speed limitations, had crossed the mountain and was
-approaching Highmount and the forking of the wood road leading to the
-old negro burying-ground, Tregarvon told the mechanician to stop and
-let him out. To Carfax he made plausible excuse: Tryon was watching at
-the drilling plant and he might have something to report. It was still
-only mid-afternoon, and Tregarvon added that he would walk to Coalville
-by way of the tramhead and the short-cut path.
-
-After the car had gone on, Tregarvon kept the first part of his
-promise, covering the half-mile briskly. Tryon was at his post, killing
-time with the aid of strong tobacco and a railroad man’s clay pipe. He
-had relieved Rucker at noon, in accordance with his orders; there had
-been no Sunday-afternoon visitors--nothing to disturb the peace of the
-day of rest.
-
-Tregarvon listened perfunctorily to the foreman’s report. His object
-in delaying his return to Coalville had been only half formed at the
-moment of car stopping, but it had nothing to do with checking up the
-day-watchman. The talk with Elizabeth and its astounding revelations
-had opened new vistas. With Elizabeth calmly proposing to marry some
-one else, if the some one else should ask her, a full half of the spur
-which had been driving him to fight the Ocoee battle to a finish was
-gone.
-
-Under the changed conditions the sensible thing to do, after all, might
-be to close with the coal trust’s offer. But before committing himself
-finally to this, he was inclined to go to Hartridge with a frank plea
-for a word of friendly advice. From what had transpired it was evident
-that the professor of mathematics knew much more about the Ocoee and
-its mysteries than he had as yet been willing to tell; and though the
-episode of the steel cubes seemed to array him definitely on the side
-of the enemy, his later warning in the matter of bargain and sale was
-unquestionably disinterested, if not actively amicable.
-
-Tregarvon was still considering the half-formed resolve to appeal to
-Hartridge when Tryon fished in the pocket of his overalls and brought
-up three small cubes of metal, the exact counterparts of the one which
-Carfax had taken from the pocket of the schoolmaster’s overcoat.
-
-“I been savin’ these to show you,” said the foreman, handing the bits
-of metal to Tregarvon. “What-all d’you reckon they’re meant for?”
-
-Tregarvon permitted the query to go unanswered. “Where did you find
-them?” he asked.
-
-“In the pocket of an old coat that Jim Sawyer’s been wearin’ here on
-the job. It’s hangin’ up in the tool shanty. I run out o’ matches a
-little spell ago, and went to rummagin’ ’round to see if I couldn’t
-find some.”
-
-“Sawyer’s coat, eh?” said Tregarvon, struck suddenly alert.
-
-Tryon nodded soberly. “An’ that ain’t all,” he went on. “I got a file
-and tried ’em; they’re harder ’n flint--been tempered till you couldn’t
-cut ’em with anything softer ’n an emery-wheel. Rucker’d been tellin’
-me how the drills went all to the bad that time when you was hung up
-before the old b’iler bu’sted. Sawyer’s got a tool-box in the shanty
-where he keeps his wrenches and little traps. It was locked, but I
-happened to have a key that fitted. What d’you reckon I found?”
-
-“More of these?”
-
-“You’ve hit it plumb centre; a tomatter can about half full of ’em.”
-
-“Tell me all you know about Sawyer,” Tregarvon cut in concisely.
-
-“What I know about him wouldn’t get him a job anywheres where I had the
-say-so. Last summer he was workin’ for the C. C. & I. at Whitlow--a
-strike-breaker. Before that he was doin’ time at Brushy Mountain, for
-some sort o’ crookedness, I dunno what. Maybe I ort to ’a’ told you
-this when you hired him, but I allowed you knowed what you was doin’,
-an’ it wasn’t none o’ my business. He’s a good drill boss.”
-
-Tregarvon was examining the bits of steel critically. “Tryon, I’d give
-something to know just where these came from originally,” he said.
-
-“Maybe I might help out a little on that, too. I served my time in the
-shop before I went to work for the railroad. D’you know what kind o’
-steel that is?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“It’s some o’ that new-fangled, high-speed tool-steel that you temper
-by heatin’ it white-hot and coolin’ it in a fan blast. Jenkins, the
-Whitlow blacksmith, was showin’ me a piece of it last Sat’day night at
-Tait’s. Looked like it might ’a’ been cut off the same bar with these
-little chunks o’ Jim Sawyer’s.”
-
-“In other words, you believe that these bits were made in the Whitlow
-blacksmith shop?”
-
-“I ain’t a-sayin’ so, because I can’t prove it. But my boy, Tom, saw
-Thaxter, the Whitlow bookkeeper, stop his buggy in the big road two or
-three days ago whilst a man came out o’ the bushes to talk to him. The
-man was Jim Sawyer. More ’n that, there’s just natchelly only the one
-place in the Wehatchee where that steel _could_ come from. They’ve got
-it at Whitlow, an’ I don’t reckon there’s ar’ another blacksmith shop
-in the valley that ever heerd tell of it.”
-
-“Tryon, you’ve done a good afternoon’s work,” said the master of Ocoee,
-dropping the three cubes into his pocket. “We owe all of our hard
-luck, excepting the blown-up boiler, which may have been due to its
-own rottenness, to the C. C. & I., with Thaxter pulling the strings
-and Sawyer doing the actual dirty work. Isn’t that the way you have it
-figured out?”
-
-“That’s about the way it _ort_ to stack up,” said the foreman. “But
-somehow it don’t gee all the way ’round. You’d say it’s mighty near
-a dead cinch that Sawyer was the one that doped the drill-hole with
-these here slow-’em-downs; but right there the vein pinches out. Them
-two times that the walkin’-beam fell down, Sawyer was the man that
-stood the best chance o’ gettin’ his head bu’sted. Then you an’ Mr.
-Carfax both saw the man that put the dannymite into the old b’iler, an’
-I hain’t heerd neither one of you a-sayin’ it was Sawyer. You’d ’a’
-knowed him, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“It wasn’t Sawyer,” said Tregarvon definitively. “Sawyer has a beard,
-and that man was smooth-faced.”
-
-“Jes’ so,” nodded the foreman. Then he drew his own conclusion. “I been
-knowin’ the C. C. & I. crowd, off an’ on, ever sence they took holt
-here in the Wehatchee. I reckon they’d rough-house you in a holy minute
-if they thought that was the easiest way to get the best o’ you in some
-business fight. I wouldn’t even put the dannymitin’ a-past ’em. But
-they wouldn’t go at it in no such a bunglesome way; n’r they wouldn’t
-put skulls in your fire-box, n’r any such fool monkeyshines as that.
-Them things don’t fit in.”
-
-Again Tregarvon bestowed the meed of praise where praise was due.
-
-“Tryon, you have a pretty level head. I am beginning to suspect that
-we made a mistake in not calling you in as chief detective in this
-muddle. But you still think that Thaxter and Sawyer worked the
-drill-dulling scheme, don’t you?”
-
-“Ez I say, that part of it proves up toler’ble plain. If there was
-ar’ reason, now, why they’d want to be holdin’ you back for a little
-spell----”
-
-“There is a reason. They are trying to buy me out.”
-
-“Now you’re talkin’!” said the foreman sagely. “Maybe you’ve got coal
-here under your feet, ’r maybe you hain’t. _You_ don’t know, yet, an’
-maybe _they_ don’t know. But they’d just as soon you wouldn’t find out
-for sure whilst the dickerin’ ’s goin’ on. They’d like as not call it
-‘good business’ to hold you up for a spell, wouldn’t they?”
-
-“Quite likely,” Tregarvon was glancing at his watch. The call upon
-Hartridge had now become a necessity, if only for apologetic and
-explanatory reasons. True, it was still possible that the professor
-had been in collusion with the planter of steel cubes on the night
-of surprises, but these later developments seemed to exonerate him
-handsomely. “I must go,” he told the foreman. “Rucker will relieve you
-here in time for you to go to your supper. If Sawyer should happen to
-turn up, just keep your own counsel about what we have discovered.
-We’ll deal with him--and his bosses--when the time comes.”
-
-A few minutes beyond this, Tregarvon was at Highmount, inquiring for
-Professor Hartridge. The young woman who answered his ring told him
-that the professor had gone over to the McNabb neighborhood to see a
-sick child. Not wishing to let his opportunity escape, Tregarvon set
-out to walk through the forest, taking a path leading in the general
-direction of the sunken mountain-top valley known locally as the
-“Pocket”; this on the chance of meeting Hartridge and walking back to
-the school with him.
-
-Now it so chanced that Tregarvon had never visited the “Pocket,”
-and though he knew, from Carfax’s description of the locality, that
-it could not be more than a mile or two beyond Highmount, he was
-not aware that the path he had chosen was not the right one. Having
-plenty of other things to think about, he paid little attention to his
-surroundings until, at the end of a half-hour, he found that the path,
-which had been growing indistinct, had disappeared entirely, leaving
-him in a region of deep ravines with their slopes heavily wooded;
-hollows boulder-strewn, in which the old-growth timber stood thickly,
-with only a fallen and rotting trunk here and there to show where the
-tan-bark gatherers had slain some monarch of the forest for the paltry
-stripping of its outer skin--mute testimony to the waste of a nation.
-
-It was not until after he had covered distance enough, as he
-thought, to have taken him all the way across from Highmount to the
-western brow of the mountain, that he saw a man--whom he took to be
-Hartridge--sitting upon a flat stone in the shadow of a great boulder
-on the opposite side of a small mountain brook. Just as he was about
-to call out and make his presence known, the man sprang to his feet
-suddenly, as if in alarm, and whipped a weapon from his pocket.
-
-Obeying the instinct of self-preservation in pure automatism, Tregarvon
-dropped silently behind the nearest boulder on his own side of the
-stream. When he looked again he saw that the man was not Hartridge;
-he was a much younger man; a handsome young fellow, well-built and
-athletic-looking, with nothing in his appearance to connect him with
-the mountain and its natives. The attitude of strained anxiety into
-which the quick leap afoot had thrown him lasted only for a moment.
-While Tregarvon looked, a warbling bird whistle rose shrill and clear
-on the windless air. The watcher saw the young man hastily pocket the
-pistol and heard him whistle a reply. Almost at the same instant the
-figure of a woman appeared at the buried up-hill heel of the great
-boulder. She stood for a moment in the yellow light of the westering
-sun, long enough for Tregarvon to recognize her beyond any question
-of doubt. Then she ran, slipping and sliding, down the leaf-carpeted
-hazard slope, to be caught in the arms of the waiting man.
-
-For a little time Tregarvon sat with his back to the sheltering
-boulder, trying to surround this latest and newest development in the
-maze of mysteries. Slowly it came to him that this was the explanation
-of Richardia’s attitude; the reason why she had slipped aside, masking
-the true state of affairs and rebuffing him by seeming to accept the
-attentions of Carfax. One by one the corroborative inferences fell into
-place, each fitting with exact nicety: Richardia’s piquant reticences;
-her half-confidences which had always stopped short of revealment;
-her little flights to the shelter of detachment whenever the talk
-threatened to lean toward sentiment; all these were signs which might
-have been read--which were plainly readable now in the light of the
-small tableau staging itself in the shadow of the great rock on the
-opposite hillside.
-
-Tregarvon peeped again. It was most obviously a lovers’ meeting.
-The young man had drawn the judge’s daughter to a seat beside him
-on the flat stone, and he still had his arm about her. They were
-talking eagerly in low tones; Tregarvon could hear only a murmur of
-voices, but Richardia’s face was toward him, and in it he re-read his
-complete effacement. In a series of revealing flashes more of the
-corroborative fragments whisked into place; he had been blind not to
-see the pointing of certain playful allusions made now and then at the
-Caswells’ dinner-table and aimed at the music teacher. Doubtless, to
-the small world of the mountain top, these Sunday-afternoon trysts in
-the forest were an old story. But why were they clandestine? The answer
-fitted itself promptly. By all accounts Judge Birrell was a person of
-shrewd prejudices; quite possibly he disapproved of this young man who
-had stolen his daughter’s heart; and perhaps the disapproval was not
-entirely without reason. Tregarvon recalled the signs of perturbation
-and the sudden pistol drawing which had preceded Richardia’s appearance.
-
-In deference to a prompting which took its color more from complete
-and hopeless chagrin than from any charitable scruples, Tregarvon
-squared his back against the concealing boulder and refused to look
-any more. While the pair across the streamlet kept their places, it
-was impossible for him to retreat undiscovered. The waiting interval
-was not unduly long. When he could no longer distinguish the murmur of
-voices he ventured to peep again. The flat-stone seat was empty and
-they were gone.
-
-The sun had dropped behind the mountain, and Tregarvon was tramping
-soberly through the lengthening wood shadows toward Highmount, when the
-frock-coated figure of the professor of mathematics loomed suddenly in
-the path ahead. At Tregarvon’s call, Hartridge stopped and waited.
-
-“This is a pleasant surprise,” said the schoolmaster, with his genial
-smile. “Are you walking my way?”
-
-“Very pointedly,” said Tregarvon. “They told me at the college that
-you had gone to one of the McNabbs’, and I came out on the chance of
-meeting you.”
-
-“That was neighborly, I’m sure,” returned the master of arts, catching
-the step. “Am I to infer that you are going to let me be of some
-service to you?”
-
-Tregarvon’s laugh was a trifle strained. “It’s a little that way,” he
-confessed. “But first I wish to say that I believe we have been doing
-you an injustice--Carfax and I.”
-
-“About the small cube of the metal known commercially as steel?” was
-the gentle inquiry.
-
-“Precisely. I’m sorry we were not broad-minded enough to take your word
-in explanation.”
-
-“Then you have discovered the real culprit?”
-
-For answer Tregarvon briefed the story of Tryon’s findings.
-
-“Ah!” said the listener; “then my own impression wasn’t at fault, after
-all. I saw the man under the drill derrick: I thought it was Sawyer,
-but I couldn’t be certain. I assume you don’t need to be told why he
-did it, or who bribed him to do it?”
-
-“No. For some reason best known to themselves, the C. C. & I. people do
-not wish me to drill that test-hole in the old burying-ground. Do you
-know the reason, Professor Hartridge?”
-
-It was too nearly dark for Tregarvon to see the quizzical smile which
-this query evoked, but he knew it was there.
-
-“You are asking me as man to man, Mr. Tregarvon?”
-
-“I am--just that. I have been condemning you unjustly, and you now have
-a most excellent chance to heap coals of fire upon my head.”
-
-“You are making it impossible for me to hold malice,” was the genial
-response. “I wish I could answer your question definitely; but I
-cannot. I do _not_ know why Thaxter should wish to prevent you from
-drilling that particular test-hole.”
-
-“You mean that I am not going to find the paying vein of coal under the
-old burying-ground?”
-
-“I am practically certain that you are not.”
-
-“Would you mind giving me your reasons?”
-
-“They are geological--and conclusive. The strata under the glade are
-precisely the same as those occurring at your tramhead. Moreover, if
-you will take the trouble to examine the ground at the foot of the
-cliff below your present location you will find the coal outcrop: a
-single vein, not over twenty inches thick. A little lower down you will
-find another, still thinner.”
-
-Tregarvon laughed mirthlessly. “I asked you for bread, and you have
-given me a stone,” he protested. “Am I to assume that Consolidated Coal
-is better informed than you are, professor?”
-
-Hartridge’s reply was guarded. “No man is infallible, Mr. Tregarvon. I
-speak only of the things I know.”
-
-“Then there is a chance that, in spite of your geological deduction,
-Thaxter and the men he represents have more accurate data?”
-
-This time the professor’s rejoinder was fairly cryptic. “The earth
-holds many secrets. During the long interval in which the Ocoee
-properties were allowed to lie idle and uncared for, it was anybody’s
-privilege to investigate them. I am violating no confidence in saying
-that the people who are now trying to induce you to sell have made a
-number of surveys. They probably know your ground foot by foot.”
-
-Once more Tregarvon found himself confronted by the dead wall of
-Hartridge’s reservations. That the professor was making reservations
-he did not doubt for an instant. There was still some bar to perfect
-frankness, and he seemed powerless to break it down. In sheer
-desperation he shunted the talk to the field of the obstacles.
-
-“It seems to be conclusively proved that the drill-dulling is
-chargeable to Thaxter, acting through the man Sawyer,” he said. “But
-Tryon refuses to believe that the other harassings have been inspired
-by the trust.”
-
-They had reached the Highmount boundary, and Hartridge paused with his
-hand on the gate latch.
-
-“I am entirely at one with your foreman in that belief, Mr. Tregarvon,”
-he rejoined. “Now that we are again upon amicable terms, I may
-confess that I have been greatly interested in the problem which
-these harassments have presented--the solving of problems being one
-of my small recreations. Did you leave an enemy at home who would be
-vindictive enough to follow you here?”
-
-Tregarvon shook his head. “So far as I know, I hadn’t an enemy in the
-wide world when I came here.”
-
-“Then you have developed one _in situ_, as it were, and a very
-unscrupulous one. Have you formed any theory of your own?”
-
-“None that is worth considering. At first, I suspected the McNabbs,
-fancying that their enmity might be a holdover on account of the old
-lawsuit about the land titles. That was before I knew that I had two of
-them working for me in the drill-gang. Later--I am ashamed to confess
-it--I thought that possibly Judge Birrell might have passed the word
-that I was to be driven out. That was a pure absurdity, of course.”
-
-“Quite so,” said the professor. “The judge is entirely incapable of
-doing such a thing, bitter as some of his prejudices are. It need not
-be denied that he was prejudiced against you at first. One evening,
-when he was driving with his daughter, he visited your drilling plant
-and was greatly incensed at finding it in the old Westwood slave
-burying-ground. But now you and Mr. Carfax have met him and have eaten
-at his table, and this, to a man of his characteristics, salves all
-wounds. Besides, as a matter of fact, you owe the help which enabled
-you to place your new power-plant directly to the judge. It was he who
-sent word to the mountain-folk to turn out with their teams.”
-
-“You surprise me!” said Tregarvon. “How did he know?”
-
-Hartridge smiled amiably. “You are not wholly in Mr. Carfax’s
-confidence, it would seem. On the evening when you had the trouble with
-the valley farmers, he and Miss Richardia drove over to Westwood House
-in your car while we waited dinner for them here at the school. And the
-next morning, presto! you had your help.”
-
-“You are guessing at this?”
-
-“Not wholly. I have just been to the ‘Pocket’ to see Sill McNabb’s
-little daughter, who is sick--doctoring people being another of my
-small recreations. When I pressed him, Sill told me that the order to
-help you came from Judge Birrell, and that it was put upon the score of
-common neighborliness.”
-
-“But the idea of helping me originated with the judge’s daughter,”
-Tregarvon put in soberly. “Why should she wish to return good for evil,
-Professor Hartridge?”
-
-This time Hartridge’s smile was less amiable.
-
-“Miss Richardia’s motives are not to be questioned by either of us,
-Mr. Tregarvon. But why should you call her interest in your affair
-returning good for evil?”
-
-Tregarvon fought away from the edge of the pit into which his
-incorrigible ingenuousness was about to precipitate him.
-
-“Oh, there isn’t any reason why she should consider me. Within the past
-hour I have had the best possible proof of that.”
-
-Hartridge was silent for a moment. Then he said: “Mr. Tregarvon, I
-trust you are a gentleman in all that the much-misused word implies.”
-
-“A man may hardly assert that of himself,” was the quick retort. “But
-why?”
-
-“What you have just said implies a knowledge of a secret which has been
-most carefully guarded by Miss Richardia’s friends. I am not in her
-confidence, but I shall take it upon myself to say that whatever she
-does is right.”
-
-“Who is the man?” Tregarvon asked bluntly.
-
-“That is a question which Miss Richardia herself will doubtless answer
-at the proper time. Until she chooses to answer it, neither you nor I
-have any right to ask it.”
-
-Tregarvon was turning away to continue his walk to Coalville. But at
-the leave-taking instant he faced about for a final word.
-
-“Has it ever occurred to you, Professor Hartridge, that this is a hell
-of a world?” he asked gloomily.
-
-“It has--many times. Won’t you stop and take pot-luck with us at the
-faculty table? No? Then I wish you a pleasant walk to the valley. Good
-night.”
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-The Mangling of Poictiers
-
-
-Upon leaving Highmount, Tregarvon took the short-cut path down the
-mountain, and was only a few minutes late for the dinner for two served
-by Uncle William in the office dining-room at Coalville. Though he had
-plenty of thought material of his own to work upon, he could hardly
-help observing that Carfax ate abstractedly and was unusually silent.
-While the old negro was coming and going, the talk, what little there
-was of it, touched lightly upon the visit to Westwood House; but after
-the table was cleared Carfax got up to stand with his back to the open
-fire and the commonplaces were thrust aside.
-
-“When is it to be?” he asked abruptly.
-
-Tregarvon, who was still dallying with the black coffee, looked up with
-a crooked smile.
-
-“When is what to be?” he asked.
-
-“You know what I mean. We gave you your chance with Elizabeth--Miss
-Richardia and I. I hope you’re not going to tell me that you flunked
-it.”
-
-The wry smile broke into a short laugh. “Oh, no; I didn’t flunk it. But
-it’s all over, Poictiers. I’m down and out.”
-
-Carfax was trying to light a cigarette, but the match went black and he
-did not seem to realize that he had no fire.
-
-“So your crime has found you out, has it?” he said, and the gentle tone
-seemed to accentuate rather than to soften the accusing assumption.
-
-Tregarvon shook his head. “It was the other way about. Elizabeth came
-down here for the express purpose of asking my permission to fall in
-love with some other fellow--no names named.”
-
-“_Wh-what!_”
-
-“It is even so.”
-
-“And--and you believed her? You didn’t have sense enough in that thick
-head of yours to know that she was merely trying to save your face?”
-
-“Oh, no; you’re off on the wrong foot altogether. She didn’t get that
-letter I wrote her from Chattanooga, and she hadn’t given me a chance
-to tell her about Richardia. It was perfectly straight. She has simply
-found the other man--the right man--and she is honest enough to say so.”
-
-“Do you mean to say that you didn’t tell her anything about your
-crookedness down here?”
-
-“Oh, yes; we talked about that later on, though, again, there were no
-names named. She jumped to the conclusion that my ‘crookedness’, as you
-call it, was with one of the pretty undergraduates at Highmount, and
-I let it go at that. There was no use of making a bad matter worse by
-dragging Richardia’s name into it.”
-
-Carfax took a pacing turn up and down the room, broke it to go and
-stand for a full minute staring out of a window at Uncle William’s
-cook-house, and then faced about to say, almost pleadingly: “You are
-_sure_ she meant it, Vance?”
-
-“Of course she meant it. She wouldn’t tell me much about the other
-fellow, except to say that it was some one whom I knew, and who was too
-decent to try to break in while our engagement still held good.”
-
-“And she--she really would give the--the other fellow a chance, if--if
-he had the nerve to ask for it?”
-
-“It would be something better than ‘a chance’, I should say.”
-
-Again Carfax took a pacing turn, coming back from it to drop into the
-chair opposite Tregarvon.
-
-“Vance, _I_ am the ‘other fellow,’” he said softly. “You didn’t
-suspect it, did you? It began last summer when we were at Lake Placid
-together. I thought it was all on my side of the house; I didn’t dream
-that she wasn’t in love with you in the--in the way she ought to have
-been. But----”
-
-The interruption was the entrance of a softly padding Uncle William,
-bearing a neatly tied packet of letters.
-
-“Dey’s for dat lily-white missy fr’m de Norf what’s staying with Miss
-Dick up at de ol’ place,” he explained. “Mistoo Tait, he brung ’em
-over, an’ ast would you-all gemmen please to send ’em up when you had
-de chanst.”
-
-Tregarvon had found the wry smile again by the time the old negro had
-shuffled away.
-
-“I suppose I ought to congratulate you, Poictiers, but I can’t just
-now; I’m too new a widower. You’ll have to hug your happiness alone for
-the present. You’ll excuse me, won’t you? But, see here--how about this
-little side-play with Richardia? You’re not going to be allowed to play
-fast and loose with her--not while I’m here to prevent it.”
-
-Carfax was absently fingering the packet of letters.
-
-“Hold on, Vance,” he broke in, “you’ve been saying, all along, that
-this last attack of yours--with Richardia--was the real thing; that
-there was no sentiment between you and Elizabeth.”
-
-“That’s all very well,” said the attacked one, in a fresh thrill of
-self-pityings; “but I’m like the little kiddie who dropped his candy to
-reach for another piece and lost both. Just the same, it seems that you
-are due to get yours, too; you’ve proposed to one woman when you were
-in love with another. What did Richardia say to you when you asked her
-to marry you? That’s what I want to know now.”
-
-The cherubic smile which was waiting for its chance in Carfax’s eyes
-turned slowly into an impish grin.
-
-“As nearly as I can recall it, she said: ‘Most certainly not. Why
-should I?’ Of course, you have guessed that I asked her merely to give
-you a chance to be decently loyal to Elizabeth. Miss Richardia took it
-as it was meant, and we have been very good friends, playing the game
-at odd moments for your benefit when you seemed to be needing a bit of
-help.”
-
-“Oh, yes; you were very kind; you are all very kind. But that doesn’t
-mend any broken bridges for me now. Do you want me to tell you why
-Richardia turned you and your ridiculous fortune down so easily? I can,
-you know,” and with that he told the story of his chance surprising of
-Miss Birrell’s secret.
-
-Carfax heard him through patiently and did not seem unduly surprised at
-the new development.
-
-“That accounts for a good many things,” he commented. “I have had
-a feeling for some time that Miss Richardia had something on her
-mind--something not altogether joyous. Once or twice she has seemed on
-the verge of confiding in me. It’s a case of the obdurate father, isn’t
-it?”
-
-“I suppose so; though Hartridge didn’t hint at anything of that sort.”
-
-“So Hartridge knows, too, does he?”
-
-“They all know at Highmount, I fancy. And that reminds me: I’ve done
-it again--talked too much, as usual. I met Hartridge after I had seen
-the pair of them together, and we spoke of the love affair. Hartridge
-said it was Richardia’s secret, and that her friends had been carefully
-keeping it for her. I shouldn’t have told you.”
-
-“It is safe enough with me, as you ought to know: you will be the one
-to go and tell it all over the lot,” was the unkind retort. And then:
-“These letters of Elizabeth’s; she ought to have them, don’t you think?
-Do you suppose I might----?”
-
-Tregarvon waved him away.
-
-“The letters will be all the excuse you will need for making two calls
-in the same half-day. Take the car and go and do what you’re aching to
-do. After you have sung your little song, you may give Elizabeth my
-love and my blessing. No, don’t stop to talk any more; just make your
-little bow and vanish, before I get to thinking too pointedly of all
-the things you’ve done to me.”
-
-Carfax took his cue promptly, and before Tregarvon had finished filling
-his pipe the roar of the yellow car’s motor told him that the golden
-youth had begun his flight to the mountain top. A short half-hour
-later, at a second filling of the pipe, the motor roar was repeated,
-and while the solitary smoker was wondering what had brought Carfax
-back so soon, the dining-room door opened to admit Wilmerding.
-
-“You are responsible,” said the young superintendent, explaining the
-motor-car clamor. “You gave me the fever, flaunting that big yellow
-devil of yours in my face, and I was obliged to go and buy. Want to
-take a little spin in the new wagon to see how she handles?”
-
-Tregarvon pushed a chair into the fire-warmed semicircle for his
-visitor and shook his head.
-
-“Some other time--if you’ll be good enough to let the invitation hang
-over. To-night I’d rather sit here before the fire with you and have a
-little heart-to-heart talk, Wilmerding. Will you indulge me?”
-
-“Sure,” was the ready response. “The joy-ride can wait. Can you find me
-another pipe?”
-
-The pipe was found and filled, and at its lighting Tregarvon began
-without preface, giving the steel-cube facts as they had been developed
-by Tryon and linking them up with Thaxter’s apparently disinterested
-effort to promote the sale of the Ocoee to Consolidated Coal. “I’m
-telling you this, Wilmerding, because I know you’re not implicated,” he
-said in conclusion. “Also, because it seems no more than fair that you
-should know. I’m not specially vindictive, you understand. I suppose
-Thaxter and the men behind him are calling it nothing more than a bit
-of sharp practice on purely legitimate business lines.”
-
-“That might do for the drill-dulling,” the superintendent conceded
-thoughtfully, “though I’d take pretty violent exceptions to that, if I
-were you. But doesn’t this one proved rascality imply the authorship of
-all the others?”
-
-“No. Hartridge thinks not, and so do I. By a good, vigorous stretch
-of imagination you could call the drill-dulling something less
-than criminal. But that can’t be said of the attempt to wreck my
-motor-car, or of the risk taken of killing somebody by the smashing
-of the machinery and the planting of a dynamite cartridge in the
-engine-boiler.”
-
-While the evening lengthened they discussed the various phases of the
-mystery in all their bearings, and in the end Wilmerding came around to
-the Tryon-Hartridge hypothesis, namely, that Thaxter, unscrupulous as
-he may have been in bribing Sawyer, was not the instigator of the more
-serious barbarities.
-
-“Not that I’m excusing Thaxter or the New York office from which he has
-his instructions,” he added. “The ‘Big Business’ methods are all more
-or less crooked, and I’d give half of my salary if I didn’t have to
-work for an outfit that simply won’t fight in the open, as men ought to
-fight. Do you know, Tregarvon, I’ve been hoping against hope that you’d
-strike it, and strike it rich, on the Ocoee. In that case, I had made
-up my mind to ask you to hire me.”
-
-“If I had a mine, you couldn’t ask anything that would please me
-better,” said Tregarvon, warming to this expression of friendly
-loyalty. “But the thing looks pretty hopeless just now. As I have said,
-Professor Hartridge knows more about the Ocoee than anybody else seems
-to--and he won’t tell all he knows. But he did assure me this afternoon
-that we are not going to find the big vein where we are drilling in
-the old burying-ground, and I have every reason to believe that he was
-telling the truth. That lets me out. Thaxter ’phoned me this morning
-that he had got the option extended until to-morrow midnight. I stand
-to lose a hundred thousand dollars if I take the time to move the
-drilling plant and try again.”
-
-Wilmerding rose to go, returning the borrowed pipe to its place on the
-mantel.
-
-“It’s a hard proposition,” he admitted. “I’m not going to advise you to
-throw up the chance to get the hundred thousand. But if I were in your
-shoes, I’d be just reckless enough to gamble another throw or two. In
-this talk we’ve had, you have convinced me of one thing, Tregarvon, and
-that is that the Ocoee has a workable vein somewhere in the property.
-Hartridge knows it, and Consolidated Coal knows it. And what they
-know, some other fellow can find out. You have twenty-four hours, and
-a little better, in which to think it over. I said I wouldn’t advise,
-but I shall: don’t close with Thaxter one minute before you are obliged
-to.”
-
-Tregarvon got out of his chair to shake hands with the departing
-visitor.
-
-“You’re a man, Wilmerding, and I wish I had your nerve. But a couple
-of things have happened to-day--things that I can’t talk about, even
-to so good a friend as you are--and they have knocked me out. At the
-end of the ends, I’m afraid I shall weaken and sell out to your hog of
-a trust. It was good of you to come down and let me unload on you. If
-anything new turns up I’ll get you on the wire. Good night, and good
-luck to you.”
-
-After Wilmerding had gone, Tregarvon sat for another hour before the
-fire, smoking abstractedly and hardly noting the passing of time. In
-due course there was another flurry of gas-engine noises, and when the
-clamor died away, Carfax came in to fling himself into the chair where
-Wilmerding had been sitting.
-
-Tregarvon broke the silence morosely.
-
-“Well? You are not measuring up very strikingly with the commonly
-accepted idea of the happy lover. What’s the latest?”
-
-Carfax had taken a cork-tipped cigarette from his case and was absently
-trying to set fire to the wrong end of it.
-
-“Vance,” he said, in his gentlest tone, “you deserve to be murdered
-in cold blood. You told me that Elizabeth hadn’t gotten that frenzied
-letter you wrote her the day you were in Chattanooga. She hadn’t, but
-it was merely delayed; it was in that lot of forwarded mail that I took
-up to-night, and I--_I_ gave it to her!”
-
-“So that’s the latest, is it? Where does the tragedy come in?”
-
-“Don’t say another word or I shall explode! You have probably forgotten
-that you wrote her that I was as good as engaged to Richardia
-Birrell--it would be quite like you to forget. She excused herself to
-go and read her letters, and when she came back I knew that the heavens
-had fallen. Oh, no; there wasn’t any scene; she just simply wouldn’t
-give me a chance to get a word in edgewise, though I tried for a solid
-hour to make the chance. I’m ruined for life--and you, with your nimble
-little pen and your neat facility for telling all you know, and then
-some, _you_ had to be the one to mangle me!”
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-Tryon’s News
-
-
-Tregarvon awoke on the Monday morning with the feeling of the putative
-bankrupt who is facing his final day of grace. Before midnight the
-bargain-and-sale decision must be made; and he knew perfectly well that
-there would be no chance in the short interval which still remained
-of adding to the facts as they stood. Nevertheless, after Carfax had
-disappeared, walking, in the direction of Hesterville, Tregarvon
-plunged into the routine, entering into a wire correspondence with
-the Chattanooga machinery firm and trying to extort a promise that
-the needed valve and steam-pipe should be shipped without fail by the
-afternoon train.
-
-Since Carfax did not put in an appearance for the noon meal, Tregarvon
-ate alone. While he was at table Tryon came in to report. Early in
-the morning the man Sawyer had turned up at the drilling ground
-with a one-horse wagon and had taken his belongings, including the
-working-coat, and the tool-box, containing among other things the
-reserve supply of steel cubes. Tryon was of the opinion that the drill
-boss was preparing to vanish, and suggested the taking of preventive
-measures. Though Sawyer would doubtless be a most unwilling witness, it
-might be needful to make sure that he could be found when wanted.
-
-Tregarvon concurred mechanically, telling the foreman to spread an
-unofficial drag-net for Sawyer, and agreeing to swear out a warrant
-for the man’s arrest if he should attempt to run away. Beyond this,
-he sent one of the laborers up to the drilling-stand to give Rucker
-a chance to sleep; and, later in the afternoon, sent word to Tryon’s
-house directing the foreman to share the coming night-watch with the
-mechanician; all this also as a matter of routine, since, with the
-suspension of working operations, there had been no threats of further
-aggressions.
-
-Just before the evening meal Carfax returned abstracted and silent,
-and saying nothing as to the manner in which he had spent the day.
-Immediately after dinner he asked Tregarvon if he might have the
-motor-car.
-
-“Going up to Westwood House to try again?” queried the motor-car’s
-owner, not too sympathetically.
-
-“I’m no good to you here,” was the non-committal rejoinder; and a
-little later Tregarvon found himself facing the approaching crisis
-alone and still undecided.
-
-Thaxter had telephoned during the afternoon, calling attention once
-more to the terms of the offer to purchase. The message had taken the
-tone of a friendly warning. There was no hope of securing further
-delay, but the bookkeeper would give Tregarvon the benefit of all the
-time that remained. He would stay in his Whitlow office, or be within
-call, up to midnight, and he hoped that Tregarvon would be sensible and
-remember the old saw about the bird in the hand.
-
-Tregarvon was remembering the canny proverb--and a good many other
-things--when he lighted his after-dinner pipe. Throughout the entire
-day he had been wavering and postponing the moment of action. One
-hundred thousand dollars, judiciously invested, would provide an
-income for his mother and sister, which, however far it might fall
-short of the former Tregarvon lavishnesses, would still place them
-securely beyond the hazard of want. On the other hand, a certain innate
-obstinacy, grown now to a passion which threatened to drive cool-blood
-reason to the wall, refused to yield.
-
-Apart from this, there was a question of pure ethics to be considered.
-Quite early in the attempt to develop the Ocoee he had secretly
-determined, if his efforts should prove successful, to reorganize the
-company, taking in those who had suffered loss; in other words, to make
-restitution to Parker’s victims. But if the property should be sold to
-the trust there was an end of the generous intention, and the nail of
-injustice driven by Parker would be irrevocably clinched.
-
-These were some of the perplexities, but there was another which also
-demanded a hearing. Carfax had been most generous and loyal, spending
-not only his money but himself. But now the conditions were changed--or
-changing. Carfax had another interest, suddenly grown imperative. Would
-it not be most unfair to drag him still deeper into the discouraging
-fight, allowing him to spend more money which might never be repaid?
-
-At this point in the reflective probings Tregarvon began to argue
-that he must see and talk with Carfax again before he could decide
-finally and definitely; and he had no sooner reached this conclusion,
-and was casting about for the means to translate it into action, when
-Wilmerding appeared--a veritable god-in-the-machine, since he was
-driving his new car.
-
-“Thaxter was telling me that you’d most likely be making him a
-business call this evening, and I thought I’d drive over and take you
-back in my car,” said the newly made motor enthusiast. “If I’m butting
-in, don’t scruple to chase me away.”
-
-Tregarvon was already taking his driving-coat from its closet in the
-fireplace corner. “You have come precisely in the nick of time,” he
-returned. “Carfax has taken my car to drive to Westwood House, and I
-must have a few minutes’ talk with him before I fight the final round
-with Thaxter. Will your car climb the big hill?”
-
-“If it won’t, I’ll scrap it and buy another,” laughed the Pittsburgher;
-and five minutes later the new, high-powered roadster was storming up
-the Pisgah grades.
-
-Eight minutes was the time to the Highmount gates, and Tregarvon
-called it a beat, though he had never timed his own car over the same
-distance. Eight other minutes covered the cross-mountain run to the
-western brow; and it was not until Wilmerding had tooled the roadster
-up the Westwood House driveway and was parking it beside the yellow
-touring-car that Tregarvon began to wonder if, with Elizabeth as her
-guest, Richardia would not be breaking her school routine by spending
-her evenings at home. In that case ... but it was now too late to
-retreat, and, with Wilmerding at his elbow, he ran up the steps to
-set the old-fashioned knocker of the great door clanging its drumbeat
-through the echoing interiors.
-
-When Aunt Phyllis, the solemn-faced old negress who was the sole
-survivor of the once numerous household retinue, opened the
-drawing-room doors for the two callers, the judge’s daughter was at the
-piano, the judge was listening luxuriously in a deep, calico-covered
-armchair, and Carfax was sitting with Miss Wardwell in a window-seat at
-the farther end of the room.
-
-Wilmerding made his own and Tregarvon’s apologies when the judge got
-upon his feet to welcome the newcomers.
-
-“We were taking a spin in my new car,” he explained, tactfully leaving
-Tregarvon’s errand unmentioned. “Of course, we couldn’t pass your
-hospitable door, Judge Birrell.”
-
-“No, suh; most suttainly you couldn’t,” was the ready response. “The
-do-ahs of old Westwood House may creak a little on thei-uh hinges,
-suh, but they still swing wide enough to let the guest enter at his
-pleas-yuh. Find yo-uh places, gentlemen, if you please; my daughtuh is
-giving us a little music.”
-
-Miss Wardwell had risen, with Carfax backgrounding her because he
-was obliged to, and Tregarvon introduced Wilmerding as a fellow
-Pennsylvanian from the Pittsburgh end of the State. Elizabeth was
-pleasantly gracious to the young superintendent of coal mines, seeming
-to welcome him as in some sort a saver of situations; at least, so it
-appeared to Tregarvon. In the readjustment the judge sank back into
-the depths of his armchair, and Carfax surrendered his place in the
-window-seat to Wilmerding and wandered to another window to stand with
-his back to the room and his hands in his pockets. This was Tregarvon’s
-opportunity to say the needed word to the golden youth, but at its
-offering a sudden passionate impulse seized him and he crossed quickly
-to the piano alcove. “I see you have my nocturne,” he whispered,
-bending over the pianist and indicating the Chopin on the piano-desk;
-“please play it for me.”
-
-As if his masterful mood were not to be safely denied, her fingers
-fell upon the keys in the opening chords of the nocturne; and this was
-the beginning of what gradually grew to be an interval of suspended
-possibilities. Almost at once, Tregarvon realized that Richardia was
-playing only from the fingers outward--faultlessly, but mechanically;
-that Carfax was wandering from one window to another in a sort of
-aimless unrest; that Elizabeth was setting all her serene traditions
-at defiance by chatting eagerly, like an escaped school-girl, with
-Wilmerding.
-
-A few minutes further along, when Carfax dragged a chair into the
-window recess and deliberately broke in upon Miss Wardwell and her
-companion, the spirit of disquietude seemed to seize upon the judge,
-also, since he wheeled his armchair to face the window group and did
-violence to all the Westwood House musical unities by joining in the
-low-toned conversation. This gave Tregarvon his excuse; and when the
-nocturne ran away at its close into delicate little improvisations, he
-spoke again in the guarded undertone.
-
-“Hartridge may have told you that I accidentally surprised your secret
-yesterday afternoon. I did, you know; but I want you to be assured that
-it is as safe with me as it is with the professor, or with any of your
-friends who know it.”
-
-If he were expecting any manifestation of surprise it was not
-forthcoming. So far from it, there was no break in the improvisation
-harmonies.
-
-“Some day I hope it won’t be necessary to make a secret of it,” she
-replied evenly, matching his low tone.
-
-“Does Elizabeth know?”
-
-“Not yet. But I shall tell her.”
-
-“Has she told you that our engagement is broken?”
-
-Her nod was barely perceptible.
-
-“I hope she told you that I didn’t break it.”
-
-“Yes; she told me that, too.”
-
-“You are not saying it, but deep down in your heart you are telling
-yourself that I have got only what was coming to me. Isn’t that true?”
-
-The answer came from lips that were paling a little. “Ask yourself.”
-
-“It _is_ true. And it is also true, perhaps, that I should have had
-this other whipping; the one I got yesterday afternoon when I was
-trying to meet Hartridge on his way back from the ‘Pocket.’”
-
-She was still keeping her face averted.
-
-“I can’t talk about that now, to any one--least of all, to you.”
-
-He bent lower to make sure that the group at the other end of the room
-should not overhear.
-
-“I want to meet the man. If I stay here on Mount Pisgah--if I don’t
-throw it all up and go home--I mean to do what I can to help. Once
-I shouldn’t have been big enough to say such a thing, Richardia;
-but--thank God--I’ve grown a little in the past few months. May I add
-that it is you who have shown me how to grow?”
-
-She ignored the query and for the first time let him see her eyes:
-they were swimming, and there was a note in her voice that he had
-never heard before when she said: “You must not talk of giving up and
-going away; you are the one who can do the most to help when the time
-comes--if only----”
-
-A clamorous banging of the door-knocker interrupted, and Aunt Phyllis
-put her turbaned head into the drawing-room to say, with her fat chin
-in the air and a fine scorn in her tone: “Po’ white man at de front
-do’, comed to ast faw Mistoo Tregarbin.”
-
-Tregarvon obeyed the summons rather reluctantly and found Tryon on the
-veranda. The foreman had been running and was short of breath.
-
-“You’d better come over--you an’ Mr. Carfax,” he broke out hurriedly.
-“We’ve done caught the dannymiter. He was aimin’ to blow us all to
-kingdom come, this time!”
-
-“Who is it?” Tregarvon grated.
-
-Tryon wagged his head mysteriously. “Hit ain’t Sawyer; hit’s the same
-skunk I been a-suspicionin’ ever sense we had that talk yisterday.
-You’ll see when you get thar’.”
-
-Tregarvon went back to the drawing-room, meaning to cut Carfax out if
-possible without giving a general alarm. But Wilmerding overheard his
-whispered explanation to Carfax and so did Miss Wardwell; whereupon he
-spoke up quickly, briefing the story of the Ocoee troubles, and adding
-its latest sequel. The effect upon the master of Westwood House was
-instantaneous and militant.
-
-“What’s that, suh? Tryin’ to dynamite yo-uh machinery whilst you
-and Mistuh Carfax are makin’ us a friendly visit heah at Westwood
-House?” he demanded, his deep voice rumbling in the wrath of outraged
-hospitality. “Richa’dia, daughtuh, get me my coat and hat; I’m goin’
-oveh yondeh with these young gentlemen. No, Mistuh Tregarvon; don’t
-deny me that privilege, suh; yo-uh bein’ undeh my roof at the precise
-moment makes yo-uh quarrel _my_ quarrel, suh! You’ll give me a seat in
-yo-uh steam-wagon, and--daughtuh, my coat and hat, immediately, if you
-please. And fetch me the old shot-gun, too, my deah.”
-
-By this time Wilmerding was declaring that he must not be left out; and
-in the momentary confusion Tregarvon saw that the judge’s daughter,
-while she was obeying her father’s commands, was pitiably agitated.
-Assuming that her anxiety was for her father’s safety, he ventured a
-word of assurance while she was holding the overcoat for the sleeves of
-which the judge was hastily fumbling.
-
-“You mustn’t distress yourself--we are not going to let your father get
-hurt,” he protested.
-
-“It’s--it’s not that!” she gasped; “it is something far worse.” Then,
-in an agonized whisper that he had to bend lower to hear: “This man
-they have taken; promise me that you will let him go before my--before
-any one else has seen him!”
-
-Tregarvon promised blindly, striving to ignore this last of the
-maddening mysteries in an effort to be wholly loyal to the woman he
-loved. But as he committed himself the difficulties in the way of
-performance suddenly magnified themselves. With the judge taking part
-in the descent upon the scene of the capture, how was he to be kept
-from seeing and questioning the culprit? Tregarvon saw that he had
-promised that which he would most probably be unable to perform, but in
-the confusion of the hurried departure there was no chance to add the
-qualifying word, and it was left unspoken.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-Cloud-Wraiths
-
-
-With Judge Birrell urging haste, the start for the burying-ground
-glade was made at once. Since Tregarvon’s car was large enough to hold
-them all, Wilmerding’s roadster was left behind. Carfax drove the
-touring-car, with Tryon clutching for handholds in the mechanician’s
-seat beside him. This arrangement left the broad tonneau seat for the
-other three; and the judge, with the gun between his knees, sat in
-the middle. When the big car shot away with its loading the master of
-Westwood was still calling down maledictions upon the heads of those
-who would besmirch the fair fame of the Southland by resorting to the
-methods of the assassin and the anarchist.
-
-“Who are these scoundrels, Mistuh Tregarvon?” he demanded. “Just name
-me thei-uh names, suh!” And then, with the charming inconsistency of
-his kind: “This is a law-abiding community, suh, and you have wronged
-us by keeping silence so long; you have, for a fact, suh! But now we
-shall vindicate ou’selves. A little taste of a rope and a tree limb for
-this grand rascal yo-uh men have caught will make him tell us the names
-of his confederates and accomplices; and then, by the Lord Harry, suh,
-we’ll run these lawbreakuhs down with the dogs and hang them higheh
-than Haman!”
-
-During the hurried cross-mountain run Tregarvon wrestled manfully
-with the problem thrust upon him by Richardia Birrell’s whispered
-appeal. How was he to prevent a meeting between the judge and the as
-yet unnamed man whom Tryon and Rucker had captured? The query was
-still unanswered when the yellow car skidded and slued around the turn
-into the old wood road. Despite the promise given by a fair day and a
-measurably clear evening, the night had suddenly thickened, with cloud
-wracks flying low over the mountain top to wrap the forest in mantlings
-of fleecy vapor silver-shot by the rays of a gibbous moon, but opposing
-a wall of blank opacity to the headlamps of the car. Tregarvon would
-have welcomed help from the chapter of accidents, but now that they
-were off the main road there was a fair chance that the accident might
-be too destructive.
-
-“Easy, Poictiers!--you’ll scrap us if you don’t look out!” he
-cautioned, leaning forward to warn Carfax, who was boring into the
-cloud bank at reckless speed.
-
-The words were scarcely uttered before there came a crunching of dry
-tree limbs under the wheels, a hiss of escaping air, and a jolting
-stoppage of the car as the brakes were applied.
-
-“Punctured!” exclaimed the cautioner, and they all got out to
-investigate cause and consequence. The obstruction proved to be what it
-had seemed--the dry limb of a tree--and the result was a flat tire.
-
-“It is dead wood, and it may have fallen of its own accord; or it may
-mean that your dynamiter has friends who would like to delay us,”
-Wilmerding offered. “On the bare chance, hadn’t we better sprint along
-and not wait to change tires? Your man, Rucker, may easily be having
-the time of his life trying to hold on to his prisoner.”
-
-They sprinted accordingly, the judge taking the dog-trot as actively
-as his younger pace-setters, and stubbornly refusing to let Tregarvon
-relieve him of the burden of the heavy deer-gun. So running, they came
-in a few minutes to the site of the old burying-ground, and to the door
-of the tool shanty. Rucker admitted them at Tregarvon’s knock and call,
-and his report was brief and unenlightening. “No; nothin’ doin’ since
-we took him in--and the cuss won’t talk. But maybe you can make him
-loosen up.”
-
-Tregarvon still saw no way of keeping the judge out of it, and he held
-himself absolved from his promise by the sheer impossibility of doing
-what Richardia had begged him to do. The captive, wrist-bound with a
-turn or two of cord, was sitting hunched upon the edge of Rucker’s
-cot-bed. It was Carfax who picked up the lantern and flashed its light
-into the man’s face. “By Jove!” he exclaimed; “Morgan McNabb!” and
-Rucker nodded.
-
-Judge Birrell sat upon the spare coil of rope and wiped his face with
-his handkerchief. His hands were trembling and he was breathing hard,
-but the smart run from the disabled automobile might have accounted for
-these disturbances. When he spoke to the prisoner his tone was sternly
-accusing.
-
-“So it’s you, is it, Mo’gan McNabb?--turnin’ yo-uh teeth upon the hand
-that’s been feedin’ you? By the Lord Harry, you make me mighty sorry
-that I once saved you from going to the penitentiary, where you belong!
-Now, then, open yo-uh mouth and tell these gentlemen why you come heah
-dynamitin’ thei-uh machinery!”
-
-The mountaineer’s lips were drawn back in a doglike snarl.
-
-“I’ll see ’em damned befo’ I’ll open my haid to ’em, now, Judge
-Birrell! Lookee at this yere,” and he wrenched his tied hands around so
-that the judge might see.
-
-“You don’t like the rope?” said the judge evenly. “Listen to me,
-Mo’gan; you McNabbs have lived on Westwood land, father and son, for
-fo’ generations, and you’ll open yo-uh head to me, suh! What quarrel
-have you got with the owneh of the Ocoee property? Ansuh me, if you
-don’t want anotheh tu’n o’ that rope taken around yo-uh neck, suh!”
-
-The answer was as prompt as it was disconcerting. “I allow I got thess
-the same sort o’ quarrel ez you have, judge. Didn’t they-all steal the
-Ocoee f’om you in the first place?”
-
-“That’s neithuh heah nor there!” was the stern rejoinder. “Would you
-give these gentlemen to understand that _I_ am yo-uh principal in these
-scandalous outrages? See heah, Mo’gan, we all know that you haven’t
-been actin’ on yo-uh own responsibility. Who has been puttin’ you up to
-all these deviltries?”
-
-“If you don’t know, I reckon _I_ ain’t a-goin’ to be the one to tell
-you,” said the prisoner, relapsing into his former attitude of
-sullenness. Then, as if upon a second thought: “You ask Miss Dick,
-judge; I allow _she_ knows.”
-
-The little pause of consternation which this statement precipitated was
-broken by an exclamation from Rucker.
-
-“Look out yonder! Somebody’s set the leaves afire! My God! we left the
-dynamite out there!”
-
-Carfax, who was standing beside the mechanician, wheeled quickly to
-face the open door. Out beyond the drill derrick a thin line of fire,
-driven by the freshening west wind and showing orange-colored under the
-mist-wraiths, was sweeping down upon the clearing. “Show me where you
-left the stuff!” he snapped at the mechanician, but even as he spoke,
-a fuse squibbed and the thunder of a terrific explosion shattered the
-forest silences, the concussion smashing the glass in the small square
-window, rocking the lightly built tool-house like the heaving of an
-earthquake, and bombarding it an instant later with a rain of falling
-_débris_. The judge, sitting upon the coil of rope, was not thrown
-down, but the five men who were standing were flung in a heap on the
-floor.
-
-Tregarvon was the first to regain his feet and to reach the open. The
-cloud mantlings had been thrust aside for the moment, but the stir
-was full of gray dust and acrid with the fumes of the explosive. Where
-the derrick and the new power-plant had stood there was a mass of
-tangled wreckage, and the burying-ground glade looked as if it had been
-swept by a tornado. In the wan moonlight Tregarvon caught a glimpse
-of something moving under the trees beyond the wreck; then the moving
-object erected itself into the stature of a man.
-
-One glance at the tall, frock-coated figure was enough. With a mad yell
-of rage, Tregarvon snatched the gun from the judge’s hands and gave
-chase, calling to the frock-coated man to stand or he would shoot.
-There was an instant of hesitation, seemingly of indecision; then the
-man turned and fled. And, as if to favor him, another scudding cloud
-settled upon the mountain top, burying forest and glade, the tangled
-wreck and the two runners in its fleecy depths.
-
-Tregarvon raced on for a breath-cutting space; guided solely by the
-crashing of the fugitive through the brier tangles and dry-leaf beds.
-Then he began to get his second wind, and again he shouted the command
-to halt. Since this seemed only to have the effect of hastening the
-thudding footsteps on ahead, he fired the gun, holding the muzzle
-high, as he thought and intended, but apparently not high enough,
-as the dreadful sequence immediately indicated. For, almost exactly
-coincident with the report of the gun, there was a shriek, the crash of
-a falling body, and silence.
-
-At this the pursuer came down from the transporting heights of berserk
-rage with a shock that was sickening. “Oh, good Lord!” he gasped; “I’ve
-killed him!” Whereupon he flung the offending weapon afar and ran to
-confirm the horrifying conclusion.
-
-He was still running in the direction from which the cry had come when
-the curious happening befell. As if the solid earth had been whisked
-away from beneath his feet he found himself whirling through empty
-space; falling through unfathomable depths of it, it seemed, before he
-collided with another world--a world of shocks and coruscating pains,
-of beatings and bruisings, and presently of grateful forgetfulness.
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-The Ocoee’s Answer
-
-
-When Tregarvon recovered consciousness he knew at once what had
-happened to him. In the blind and hurried search for the body of the
-man he had presumptively shot he had fallen from the cliff edge; how
-far was still problematical, but far enough, as a painful roaring
-in his ears, a tightening agony in his forehead, and a bruised and
-stiffening ankle sufficiently testified.
-
-His first thought was for his victim. The man might not have been
-killed outright; in which case he might be even now dying for the lack
-of timely help. The thought was insupportable and Tregarvon tried to
-rise. But the ankle, broken or twisted, he could not determine which,
-gripped him like a fanged wild beast and he fell back with a groan.
-None the less, in some way he must contrive to bring help. He felt in
-his pockets for matches. A heap of dry leaves furnished the kindling
-and a clear flame leaped up, hollowing out a small cavity of yellow
-light in the misty gloom. At this the fire-lighter saw that he was
-at the bottom of a deep, water-worn cleft opening back from the outer
-scarp of the cliff, and at right angles to it; a ravine which was
-little more than a crevice, save that it was large enough to have trees
-and shrubs growing in it.
-
-He knew the crevice, though he had never explored it. It lay at a point
-almost exactly half-way between the glade and the tramhead. Knowing
-that the sound would not carry upward and backward over the cliff,
-he did not waste his breath in vain shoutings. The alternative was a
-fire signal. If the cloud would but lift a little, and he could gather
-enough of the dry leaves to make a glow, the light would guide those
-who must certainly, by this time, be searching for him.
-
-This was his thought while he was nursing the handful of fire and
-adding more leaves to it. The blaze rose higher and the cavity in the
-gloom grew larger until it became a hemisphere, with the black scarp of
-the crevice wall for its flattened side. A thickly matted vine covered
-the face of the precipice, completely concealing the perpendicular
-surface upon which it climbed. At its roots in the crevice bottom the
-dry leaves were bedded a foot deep. Tregarvon was reaching painfully
-for the mass of fresh fuel when the fire licked out and caught it
-first. There was a puff of dense smoke, a fierce blaze, and then the
-climbing vine took fire and was brightly outlined in a network of
-short-lived flame.
-
-All this was normal enough, but what followed was curiously abnormal.
-As the fire glowed hotter small fragments of the cliff face began to
-split off, and these fragments, falling into the burning leaf-bed,
-sprang alight with hissings and sputterings and much pungent smoke.
-Tregarvon, ignoring the throbbing ankle, dragged himself an agonizing
-foot or so nearer and secured one of the splintered fragments. _It was
-coal!_
-
-Almost beside himself with excitement, he heaped more leaves upon the
-fire. By the light of the fresh upblaze he could make out the upper
-line of the great coal seam. It was at the height of a tall man’s head
-above the bottom of the cleft, well-defined, unmistakable; the roof
-shale of a vein fully six feet thick. Here, discovered in the moment of
-defeat, disaster, and woundings, was the Ocoee’s lavish answer to all
-the costly questionings.
-
-“My heavens!” gasped the discoverer; and a voice, apparently at his
-elbow, said: “Quite so; if the heavens may be purchased with the gifts
-of the earth. The gifts are yours, Mr. Tregarvon; first by the right
-of inheritance, and now by the right of discovery.”
-
-Tregarvon twisted himself into a sitting posture, gritting his teeth
-at the ankle’s protest and holding his head in his hands. At a
-little distance away sat the professor of mathematics, one long leg
-jack-knifed for a support, and the other stretched awkwardly upon a
-makeshift cushion of the fallen leaves.
-
-“You?” Tregarvon cried. “Did you fall over the cliff, too?”
-
-“I think it was I who showed you the way,” Hartridge amended. “You are
-a very apt pupil, Mr. Tregarvon. I was scarcely well down here before
-you played the part of Jill.”
-
-“Are you--are you hurt?”
-
-“Not by your shot-gun charge, happily; but my leg is broken. And you?”
-
-Tregarvon winced. “I have a cracked skull, I think, and an ankle that
-won’t let me get up. But about that gunshot; I didn’t fire at you; I
-shot into the air to make you stop. Just the same, you gave me a quick
-fit of the horrors. When you yelled, I thought I had inadvertently
-killed you. What made you run?”
-
-The professor’s smile was a little rueful, and also a little
-shamefaced.
-
-[Illustration: “My heavens!” gasped the discoverer; and a voice,
-apparently at his elbow, said: “Quite so.”]
-
-“What made you chase me?” he asked.
-
-“Because I was hot--fighting mad. I wanted to drag you to an accounting
-on the spot. I don’t suppose you will be foolish enough to deny that
-you set the leaf fire that caused the explosion?”
-
-“Since I was near enough to be blown up myself such a denial might
-have the weight of circumstantial evidence to support it,” was the
-quiet reply. “But I do not make the denial. It was I who set the leaves
-afire. I shall be greatly relieved if you can tell me that nobody was
-injured.”
-
-“So far as I know the dynamite didn’t kill any of us. But tell me, did
-you start that fire knowing that the explosion would follow?”
-
-“By no means. I may confess that I knew the dynamite had been placed;
-but I supposed, as the most ordinary matter of course, that your men
-had taken care of it when they captured their prisoner.”
-
-“Then why did you light the fire?”
-
-Again the quaint smile flitted across the face of the man who had
-always contrived to tell less than the sum total of all he knew.
-
-“Once again, Mr. Tregarvon, you are going into the question of motives,
-which is a very large field, indeed. Let us say that I wished to make
-a diversion of some sort. Will that satisfy you?”
-
-“No,” was the blunt reply.
-
-“I am sorry; I am afraid it will have to suffice for the present.”
-
-Tregarvon’s head was throbbing so painfully that he found it next to
-impossible to think clearly. But he would not desist.
-
-“Hartridge, it has come to a show-down between us. I’m giving you fair
-warning. Once I did you an injustice--or thought I did--but this time
-you’ve given yourself away. When I get up and around again, I’m going
-to sift this thing to the ultimate bottom and somebody will be made to
-sweat blood for what has been done to-night. As matters stand now, you
-seem to be the man the officers will want first.”
-
-Once more the professor smiled. “And yet you can’t say that I have ever
-wittingly done anything to harm you,” he offered mildly.
-
-“That remains to be proved,” was the angry retort. “Meaning to, or
-not meaning to, you fired that dynamite a little while back; and you
-certainly have never strained yourself in any effort to help me. You
-knew that this big vein was here--you have known it all along!”
-
-“This time you are not my guest, Mr. Tregarvon, and I may contradict
-you without blame. I did not know it.”
-
-“Then why did you carve the Greek letter _pi_ on those two oak-trees
-below the glade? Or do you deny that, as well?”
-
-“It is you who have found the value of _pi_,” said the one who was
-under accusation. “I am ashamed to confess that it baffled me. Some
-three years ago, two strange surveyors acting, as I learned afterward,
-in the interests of Consolidated Coal, ran many lines over this
-property of yours, which was then practically abandoned. I had no
-access to their note-books, of course, so I was obliged to work out my
-conclusions as best I could from their stakes. One of these conclusions
-was that the true vein would be found somewhere in this locality. Can
-you believe me thus far?”
-
-“I’m trying to,” said Tregarvon. “Go on.”
-
-“It is humiliating to have to acknowledge that, while all the
-line-running on the part of these strangers pointed to this immediate
-locality, I could never discover the outcrop. True, I never thought
-of looking in this particular crevice. But to preserve a record for
-possible future investigation, I made the marks on the two trees. The
-distance between the oaks, carefully measured and multiplied by _pi_,
-or three and the decimal one thousand, four hundred and sixteen, gives
-the distance around the cliff from the lower oak to the point somewhere
-below us where the intruding strangers drove their final stake.”
-
-Tregarvon heaped more leaves upon the fire, which was threatening to
-die out.
-
-“You are still miles beyond my comprehension,” he complained moodily.
-“On one hand, you stop at nothing to prevent me from finding out what
-you have just told me, and on the other you make what appears to be a
-very worthy and earnest effort to keep me from flinging myself into the
-maw of Consolidated Coal. How am I to reconcile such things?”
-
-“When you are older, Mr. Tregarvon, and come to know human nature
-a little better, you will apprehend the truth of that worldly wise
-beatitude, ‘Blessed are they who expect little, for, verily, they shall
-not be disappointed.’ Consider a moment: you came here, the legal owner
-of the Ocoee, to be sure, and the innocent owner, inasmuch as your
-father was the unsuspecting purchaser of stolen goods. Yet you were
-none the less the legitimate successor of the bandit who had looted
-us. You wouldn’t expect much from those who had been so ruthlessly
-defrauded, would you?”
-
-“Since I was not even constructively to blame, yes,” Tregarvon insisted
-stubbornly. “Your motive went deeper than that.”
-
-“It did,” the professor admitted gravely. “Almost from the first I saw
-the slight chance of a reward, the attainment of which has been the one
-thing desirable in a rather drab-colored life, slipping away from me;
-taken away from me in sheer wantonness, as it seemed, since, I had been
-given to understand, you were already pledged to marry Miss Wardwell.
-It was not in human nature to be entirely unresentful, Mr. Tregarvon.”
-
-“Oh; so that was it?” said Tregarvon shortly. Then: “What I saw
-yesterday afternoon in the forest back of Westwood House seems to prove
-that I am as far out of the running as you are with Judge Birrell’s
-daughter.”
-
-The professor’s face became, for the moment, a study in astoundment.
-
-“Ah--yes,” he said, stumbling over the words; and then: “I am to
-infer that you didn’t recognize the young man whom you saw with Miss
-Richardia yesterday afternoon?”
-
-“No; he was a stranger to me. Doesn’t the judge approve of him?”
-
-This time the professor’s smile was rather grim.
-
-“He does not--most decidedly.”
-
-“But Richardia loves him; and that is enough--for you and for me.”
-
-“Assuredly she loves him--very loyally,” was the grave reply; and a
-moment later, as if the mention of the judge had evoked a new train of
-thought: “I am curious to know if my leaf-fire diversion--which had
-such unlooked-for and disastrous results--came soon enough. How much
-had Morgan McNabb confessed?”
-
-Tregarvon ignored the brow-wrinkling of pain which accompanied the
-question.
-
-“I am beginning to believe that you are a very hardened criminal, Mr.
-Hartridge. If you know that McNabb had a confession to make, it follows
-that you were his accomplice.”
-
-The answer was a suppressed groan, for which the schoolmaster instantly
-apologized.
-
-“You--you must forgive me if I say that I can’t go into the matter
-of culpability with you just now. This leg--of mine--grows a bit
-insistent. But it will be the greatest possible satisfaction to me if
-you will answer my question.”
-
-“All right; you shall have it. Just before the explosion came McNabb
-had admitted that he was acting for somebody else.”
-
-“But he did not name the person?”
-
-“The judge was trying to make him do so, but he was still refusing.
-The last thing he said, as I remember it, was something which seemed to
-implicate Miss Richardia as the one who could tell if she chose. Which
-was absurd, of course.”
-
-“Quite so,” was the low-voiced reply. “Shall we let the matter rest
-there--for the present?”
-
-Tregarvon was holding his head in his hands again. The throbbing pain
-was so intense that he could only grit his teeth and endure. When
-speech became possible he gave his answer.
-
-“It may rest until I am able to take hold again. Then I shall make
-somebody pay for this night’s work if it takes every dollar I can dig
-out of the Ocoee for the next ten years!”
-
-Once more Hartridge bent in apparent agony over the broken leg. But
-when the paroxysm had passed he looked up with a face that was gray
-with a deeper suffering than that inflicted by the broken bone.
-
-“If you do; if you strike back in the spirit of reprisal, which seems
-so justifiable to you now, you will carry the woundings of your own
-vindictiveness to your grave, Mr. Tregarvon,” he said solemnly.
-
-Tregarvon did not comment upon the sober prophecy. He was heaping more
-leaves upon the fire and wondering irritably why it was taking the
-rescuers so long to find them. The hammering agony in his head climaxed
-now at shorter intervals and the recurrences were blinding, but he
-contrived to keep the leaf glow alive until a welcome shout from the
-cliff above announced the presence of the searchers.
-
-The hauling of the two injured men out of the deep cleft proved to be
-a difficult undertaking, this though there were five in the rescue
-party, which included the freed McNabb. Once it was done, a stretcher
-was quickly improvised for Hartridge, with Rucker, Tryon, and McNabb
-to take turns as bearers; and Tregarvon made shift to help himself a
-little, with Wilmerding and Carfax to shoulder him on either side.
-
-On the slow progress back to the glade Tregarvon realized vaguely that
-his companions were gravely silent; and as the lagging procession
-issued from the wood he saw the cause. Rucker, or some one, had
-replaced the deflated tire and the motor-car had been brought upon
-the scene. The white glare of its headlamps focused upon the open
-space in front of the tool shanty. Judge Birrell, bowed and shrunken,
-was sitting upon the tool-house door-step with his face hidden in
-his hands; and on Rucker’s cot-bed, which had been placed under the
-light of the headlamps, lay the body of a man covered with one of the
-blankets.
-
-“Who is it?” Tregarvon muttered, leaning more heavily upon his helpers.
-
-He thought it singular that no one answered him, and the thought
-swiftly became an irritation too keen to be borne.
-
-“What the devil is the matter with you all?” he rasped, with a curious
-idea that he had to shout to make his voice heard above the deafening
-thunder of many cataracts in his brain. Then, as in a dream, he seemed
-to hear Wilmerding saying to Carfax, almost savagely: “Ease him down
-and we’ll carry him. Can’t you see he’s gone off his head?”
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-Beyond the Gap
-
-
-It was a full fortnight before the Hesterville physician, driven at
-breakneck speed to Coalville in Wilmerding’s roadster on the night of
-woundings, pronounced Tregarvon out of danger and in a fair way to
-recover from the broken head.
-
-Whatever the lapse of time may have meant for others, it had little
-significance for the man who tossed and rolled in his bed in an upper
-room of the Ocoee office-building. Dim pictures there were of people
-coming and going; of grotesque attendants lifting him about, these
-sometimes parading as liveried Merkleys with Uncle William heads, or
-the reverse; of faces, affectionately sorrowful, hanging over him,
-now hopefully, and again with sharp anxiety in eyes which were never
-completely recognizable.
-
-But for the greater interval, what with thundering brain cataracts to
-attend to, and a thousand dancing lights which had to be wheeled in
-vanishing spirals, checked, stopped, and wheeled the other way around
-precisely three hundred twirls a minute, he was so pressed for time as
-not to be aware of the lapse of it. Hence, when he finally opened eyes
-of full consciousness upon the walls and ceiling of the familiar room,
-he was sadly out of touch, his latest clear recollection being of a
-cloud-banked night, of a glade in the mountain-top forest, and of two
-great white eyes of artificial light staring down upon a cot-bed bier
-supporting a blanketed body.
-
-At first he thought he was alone in the bare-walled upper room, but at
-his earliest conscious stirring Carfax came to stand beside the bed.
-
-“That’s better--much better!” said the golden one, noting the
-turning-point improvement at once. “You certainly had us guessing,
-old man. Our only comfort has been in the fact that you could eat
-and didn’t seem to be losing too much flesh. Have the wheels stopped
-buzzing?”
-
-“They weren’t wheels; they were lights and waterfalls,” said the sick
-man meticulously.
-
-“All right; call ’em anything you like, so long as they’re gone. We
-had one doctor, a specialist from Nashville, who gave us a fit of
-seasickness; said you’d live, and be all right physically, but that you
-would most probably never recover your reason. Nice cheerful prospect
-for the friends and relatives, wasn’t it?”
-
-“How long have I been knocked out, Poictiers?”
-
-“Two solid weeks.”
-
-“My mother and sister--has anybody written them?”
-
-“Sure! Elizabeth has been writing them every day or so. They wanted
-to come down, of course, but we decided that it wasn’t best. You were
-getting all the care you could stand.”
-
-“Then Elizabeth hasn’t gone home?”
-
-“Not yet. Her father and mother have gone to Florida, and she has been
-staying on at Westwood House--what time she hasn’t been down here
-coddling you. She’s an angel, Vance; one of the kind you read about.
-But I mustn’t let you talk too much.”
-
-“If I can’t talk, you’ll have to. Have you made it up with
-Elizabeth--about that silly side-play of yours with Richardia?”
-
-Carfax’s smile began on the cherubic lines but it ended in a mere
-face-wrinkling of soberness.
-
-“We have had too much else to think about; too many little diversions,
-as you might say. But I’m hoping she isn’t going to insist upon making
-a horrible example of me for my apparent fickleness.”
-
-“‘Too many little diversions’,” Tregarvon echoed. “That reminds
-me: I can remember you and the others pulling us out of the
-crevice--Hartridge and me--and after that, a stretcher was made for
-Hartridge and we used up an age or so getting back to the glade. Am I
-right, so far?”
-
-“It was something like that; yes.”
-
-“And when we came into the old burying-ground the motor-car had been
-run down opposite the tool-house, and its headlamps made everything
-look ghastly. The judge was sitting on the door-step with his face
-hidden in his hands, and Rucker’s cot was standing in the open under
-the lights with a blanketed corpse lying upon it. Who was the dead man,
-Poictiers?”
-
-Carfax shook his head. “Call it a bad dream,” he said soothingly. “The
-cracked skull was beginning to get in its work. You didn’t see any dead
-man.”
-
-Tregarvon closed his eyes wearily. “It’s passing strange how a little
-knock on the head can mix things. I could swear that I saw the judge
-and the dead man and the car just as I have described them. Let it go,
-and tell me about Richardia.”
-
-Carfax seemed suddenly embarrassed. “I--I don’t know as there is much
-to tell,” he stammered. “She--she is well, I believe.”
-
-Tregarvon raised himself on an elbow.
-
-“You’re keeping something back,” he protested. “Is she--is
-she--married?”
-
-“Oh, no; nothing of that sort,” was the hasty reply. “She has been
-here to see you--she and her father--quite often; that is, as often
-as possible. I have fetched them in the car, you know. They have left
-nothing undone that could be done.”
-
-Tregarvon still felt the presence of a reservation; of many of them;
-but he was too weak to fight for the clearer explication.
-
-“How is Hartridge getting along?” he asked, sinking back upon the
-pillows.
-
-“Rather slowly. It was a bad fracture. But the doctor says he won’t be
-a cripple.”
-
-“That’s good. I want him to get well so that I can drag him into court.
-He set the leaf fire that blew us up. Did you know that?”
-
-The golden youth nodded gravely. “I know a good many things that I
-didn’t know before you got your knockout.”
-
-“Bring me down to date,” said the sick man impatiently. “What have you
-done about the mine?”
-
-Carfax seemed to welcome the change to the more material field.
-
-“Any number of things,” he answered cheerfully. “In the first place
-we--the judge and I--swore everybody to secrecy on that Monday night
-of smashing catastrophes, and the secret has been kept from the world
-at large, and from Consolidated Coal in particular. The wrecked
-drilling plant has been left just as it was; your laboring force has
-been discharged; and the impression has been given that if you ever
-recovered your wits, you’d go straight away back to Philadelphia, a
-sadder and much wiser young man.”
-
-“Fine!” approved the listener. “But that isn’t all?”
-
-“Not by a jugful. Two days after you were hurt, Wilmerding resigned
-from the C. C. & I. service and disappeared. He has been North buying
-machinery and material and shipping it in as far as Hesterville by
-littles. The explanation given and accepted is that a new company has
-been formed to develop some coal lands in the Hesterville vicinity, and
-the C. C. & I. people are running around in circles and uttering loud
-cries in their effort to find out where the lands are and who is going
-to develop them.”
-
-“Good!--ripping good!” the sick man applauded.
-
-“We have been only waiting for you to get upon your feet, and we
-didn’t wish to give Thaxter and his backers any chance to tangle things
-for you in the meantime. The moment you are able to take hold you will
-find everything in train--material and machinery where you can rush it
-in with motor-trucks, labor all engaged, coke-burners from Pennsylvania
-ready to take the first train south, and all that.”
-
-Tregarvon doubled the pillows under his head and his eyes were
-flashing. “Poictiers, you’re a miracle!” he declared.
-
-The professional idler smiled his denial. “I didn’t do any of it. I
-merely stood aside and told the others to go ahead and we’d pay the
-bills. Wilmerding was fully competent to take charge of the business
-part of it, and I have retained old Captain Duncan for the engineering.
-All you have to do now is to rise up and say the word, and you’ll have
-a mine that will make the Whitlow proposition compare accurately with a
-last year’s almanac.”
-
-Tregarvon closed his eyes again and kept them closed so long as to give
-the impression that he had fallen asleep. But when Carfax was about to
-tiptoe away the heavy-lidded eyes opened.
-
-“I’ll build upon the foundation you have laid, Poictiers; you and
-Wilmerding and Duncan. There are three things that I mean to do before
-I quit and go West to look for another job: to stand the Ocoee upon
-its feet as a paying proposition, to make provision for my mother
-and sister with a part of the property and to divide the remainder
-equitably among those who were frozen out in the Parker robbery, and
-after this is done to turn heaven and earth over until I have found and
-punished the man or men who have tried so hard to smash me. When I’ve
-squared up I’ll vanish.”
-
-Carfax laid a hand as slender and shapely as a woman’s upon the hot
-forehead. “I’ve let you talk too much and you are getting the ‘wheels’
-again,” he said gently. “You mustn’t be vindictive; and there is no
-reason on earth why you should talk of throwing things up and running
-away.”
-
-“There are good reasons for both,” was the stubborn insistence. “I owe
-it to common justice, no less than to myself, to dig up the criminal or
-criminals and bring them to book. If they should prove to be Thaxter
-and his backers, after all, the world needs the example; and if it was
-pure outlawry on the part of the McNabbs and Hartridge and some other
-scoundrel that McNabb wouldn’t name there is all the more reason why
-I should send for the best detectives the country affords and run the
-outlaws down. And as to running away after it is all over, that says
-itself, Poictiers. I couldn’t stay on here after Richardia is married
-to another man. It isn’t in human nature. Now go away and let me sleep.
-I want to hurry and get well, so that I can stand up and straighten
-things out.”
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-A Grounded Wire
-
-
-The small world of Coalville, centring socially under Tait’s store
-porch, had its vivifying shock when it awoke one morning to find that
-in a single night, as one might say, the entire face of nature had
-changed for the sleepy little hamlet at the foot of old Pisgah. In
-the instant of transformation the Ocoee of many disappointments had
-suddenly leaped into the foreground as a coal discovery of unlimited
-possibilities; an army of workmen was massing to shift the old tramway
-to the new opening; motor-trucks, piled high with material, were
-trundling over the valley pike from Hesterville; carpenters were
-rushing up new buildings at top speed; and at the centre of all these
-stirring activities, directing and driving them, was the young man whom
-rumor had been bulletining as dead or dying in his room on the second
-floor of the old office-building, or at best destined to pass the
-remainder of his life in an asylum.
-
-Taking one thing with another, the gossips at Tait’s found it
-difficult to recognize the convalescent Tregarvon. The brief period
-of his illness had seemed to mature him curiously; to make him a man
-of a single idea--the idea being to turn the Ocoee into a producing
-industry in the shortest possible time. Also, they missed the genial
-and mollifying influence of the young New York millionaire, who, though
-still nominally an inmate of the Ocoee headquarters building, spent
-most of his time on the mountain, presumably as a guest of the Caswells.
-
-As it chanced, the store-porch gossips were not the only persons who
-were finding a changed Tregarvon sitting at the desk of overlordship in
-the hastily remodelled Ocoee office-building. There were others, among
-them Barnby, travelling freight agent for the railroad, who had come
-all the way from his own headquarters to find out why the Ocoee was
-hauling its new material from Hesterville in motor-trucks.
-
-“You will find the reason in the correspondence files of your general
-office,” was the curt reply of the Ocoee organizer. “I asked for a
-rate from Hesterville to Coalville on the material and was told that
-the shortage of cars would make it impossible for your road to handle
-the freight save as it might be transported a little at a time by the
-daily way-train. I don’t propose to be held up by a railroad company,
-the policy of which seems to be dictated by the C. C. & I., Mr. Barnby.”
-
-Barnby was a fleshy young man with an easy smile, and he gave the smile
-its blandishing opportunity.
-
-“You will have to ship your product out over our road when you get in
-operation, won’t you?” he asked mildly.
-
-“Not necessarily. We have all the capital we need, and if you don’t
-give us an equal show with the C. C. & I. we shall build a ten-mile
-industrial track, for which we have already secured a right of way, to
-a connection with the South Central at Midvale. It’s up to your people.
-Talk it over with them when you go back to headquarters. Glad to have
-met you. Drop in again when you are going over the line. Good morning.”
-
-Touching this intimation that the coal trust had already begun a new
-series of impeding activities, speculation was rife. Some said that the
-C. C. & I. would buy the new mine, lock, stock, and barrel, and close
-it; others hinted that the trust would put the price of coke so low
-that the new company would be bankrupted in short order; still others
-suggested that Consolidated Coal would conspire with the railroad and
-call Tregarvon’s bluff to build the industrial cut-off.
-
-Wilmerding or Duncan, or both of them, brought these rumors to
-Tregarvon, and were amazed to find that he refused to be either
-disturbed or greatly interested. In many ways the superintendent and
-the old Scotch engineer were discovering daily that they had to do with
-a man who had developed suddenly into a master of himself and others.
-The light-hearted young fellow who had thrown himself so joyously
-into the fray at the beginning had given place to a modern captain
-of industry, alert, strong-willed, a bit dictatorial, perhaps, but
-entirely capable.
-
-“Never mind what the C. C. & I. is doing, or will try to do,” he told
-his oddly assorted lieutenants. “Our job is to get the mine open and
-the ovens fired. Consolidated Coal will neither buy us nor break us,
-nor force us to build a railroad to Midvale. I’ll take care of all
-those details at the proper time.”
-
-It was on the day when the first tram loads of Ocoee coal were coming
-down the mountain to be dumped into the oven-filling hoppers that
-another caller discovered the new Tregarvon. Late in the afternoon
-a neat, rubber-tired buggy, drawn by a black Hambletonian, stopped
-in front of the Ocoee office-building, and a round-bodied little man
-descended and hitched the horse.
-
-Somewhat to his chagrin, it may be supposed, Mr. Onias Thaxter was
-allowed to cool his heels for a full quarter of an hour in the outer
-office before he was admitted to the presence of the new overlord;
-and the waiting was doubtless the harder to endure since he came
-bearing the olive-branch of peace. Tregarvon sat back in his chair and
-listened coldly while the peace branch was getting itself waved to an
-accompaniment of placative speech.
-
-“There is no such thing as personal vindictiveness in business, Mr.
-Tregarvon,” was the summing-up of the Thaxter argument. “Without
-admitting it as a fact, let us assume, for the moment, that the man
-Sawyer was employed as a sort of scout for our people. This is a thing
-that is done every day; it’s business, and good business. You might
-do it yourself, if you had a competitor. We are hearing it asserted
-here and there and everywhere that you are charging us with a lot of
-outlawry with which we had nothing to do, and that you are going to
-press the charges in the courts. Will you pardon me if I say that that
-isn’t playing the game?”
-
-“You may say anything you wish to say, if you will only make it
-sufficiently brief,” was the discouraging rejoinder.
-
-“I have already made my suggestion. It must be evident to you that a
-consolidation of interests with us is by far the most sensible plan you
-can adopt. You can hardly hope to do business here, as an independent
-coal operator, in the heart of a region which we have developed. There
-would be constant friction; in the market, with your labor, with the
-transportation companies. I am not authorized to make a definite
-proposal, but if you will organize your new company on a conservative
-basis with a modest capitalization, I feel sure that our people would
-take you in as a subsidiary, share for share at par value.”
-
-“Are you quite through?” asked the new Tregarvon, when the emissary
-paused to take breath. “If you are, you may have my answer in one
-word--No.”
-
-“I am sure you are deciding too hastily, and because you haven’t given
-the plan sufficient thought. As I have pointed out, there is no such
-thing as vindictiveness in business; but when you deliberately set up
-that standard for yourself, you mustn’t expect the other fellow to lie
-down and let you run the truck-wheels over him.”
-
-“By which you mean that if I refuse to let you swallow me peaceably,
-you will do it the other way?”
-
-“That is your own deduction--not mine,” said the bookkeeper in the tone
-of one trying to soothe a wayward child.
-
-“Then listen to me, Mr. Thaxter. Some scoundrels--possibly you and
-your people--have harried me like a lot of pirates. Nothing has been
-left undone in the effort either to swindle me out of my property on
-the one hand, or to force me out of it on the other. But now the shoe
-is on the other foot”--he was leaning across the corner of the desk
-and emphasizing the words with a clenched fist beating softly upon the
-oak--“we have Sawyer where we can make him talk. We know that he can
-implicate you, individually, in one of the criminalities; and perhaps
-he can tell us something about the others. Mr. Thaxter, I am going to
-sift these bushwhackings to the bottom, and you know best whether or
-not you or the combination you represent can afford to heap more fuel
-on the fire now by fighting me in the manner you have suggested. That
-is all I have to say, I believe, and I shall have to ask you to excuse
-me. This is my busy day.”
-
-In the early evening of the fourth day after Thaxter’s visit,
-Carfax made one of his infrequent descents of the mountain, driving
-a ridiculously high-priced car, the purchasing of which had been his
-latest extravagance. The coke-ovens in the long rank were aglow with
-the fires of the initial charging, and the air of the valley was murky
-with the smoke of the new industry. Wilmerding and Duncan were at the
-mine, and Tregarvon had just finished his dinner when Carfax entered
-the dining-room.
-
-“You do turn up once in a while, don’t you?” said the solitary diner
-not too hospitably. “You’re late for dinner, but doubtless Uncle
-William can find you something. You will have to eat alone. I have some
-work to do.”
-
-Carfax followed the worker into the front office and, when the lights
-were turned on, dropped into a chair.
-
-“I don’t want any dinner,” he said. “Or rather I should say, I’m due to
-show up at Mrs. Caswell’s at the proper dinner-hour.”
-
-Tregarvon had a telegraph pad under his hand and he took time to write
-a brief message before he said, half-absently: “We keep working-men’s
-hours here.”
-
-“Which is a delicate way of intimating that I’d better go chase myself
-and quit bothering you?” put in the intruder with a gentle chuckle.
-“All right; I’ll vanish presently. But first I’d like to ask if you are
-still clinging to your fantastic idea of making somebody suffer for the
-dynamiting?”
-
-“I am; and I don’t see anything fantastic about it. A number of crimes
-have been committed, and I have no notion of compounding a felony by
-letting the perpetrators get away. Morgan McNabb is the key to the
-situation, and I have never understood why you and Judge Birrell turned
-him loose and gave him a chance to disappear. It has cost me a pretty
-penny to trace him, but I’ve got him now. He is under arrest in Dallas,
-Texas.”
-
-“And you are going to have him brought back and given the third degree?”
-
-“Precisely. I have just written the telegram.”
-
-Carfax was feeling in his pockets for his cigarette-case, going about
-it leisurely as one who would gain time.
-
-“McNabb is only a poor devil of a mountaineer, too ignorant to be held
-fully accountable, don’t you think?” he ventured at the match-lighting.
-
-“That may be. But he knows the real criminal or criminals who employed
-him. I’ve been an easy mark all my life, Poictiers, but that is a
-thing of the past now. I’ve turned over a new leaf.”
-
-The golden youth was blowing delicate little smoke rings at the ceiling.
-
-“So you have, and the new leaf isn’t as pleasant reading as some of the
-old ones, Vance,” he commented, speaking slowly and without a trace of
-the lisp. “Some of the things you are writing down on it are rather
-sordid, don’t you think? You are a bigger man in some ways, and a much
-smaller one in some others.”
-
-“‘Faithful are the wounds of a friend,’” quoted the one under criticism
-with a short laugh. “Suppose you elucidate.”
-
-“I will. Up to the time of your father’s death you were as much of
-a _flâneur_ as I’ve always been. You didn’t have to ask for your
-blessings; you merely reached out and took them--if they didn’t happen
-to be handed you on a silver platter. During the past few months you’ve
-been chucked up against life as it really is for the greater part of
-mankind; a fight, a frantic scramble for a foothold. You’ve made the
-fight, because you have the good old Cornish fighting blood in you; but
-while you have been growing on one side you have been shrinking on the
-other.”
-
-“Go on.”
-
-“Real magnanimity was one of the strongest and most lovable qualities
-of the man you’ve put off; you’ve lost it completely. Cheerful optimism
-was one of the other good points, and you’ve dropped it. Just now you
-are planning first to get square with your enemies, and next to shirk
-your responsibilities by effacing yourself. What have you done about
-the new incorporation?”
-
-“I have done exactly what I told you I should. The new company is
-formed, and the papers for the division of the capital stock are
-prepared. I am looking for Peters, the family lawyer, on every train,
-and when he comes the deal will be closed.”
-
-“You tried to tell me the other day what the property arrangement is to
-be, but I didn’t get it very clearly fixed in my mind,” Carfax offered.
-
-“It is simple. Since you say you don’t want any of the stock, you will
-be reimbursed for your cash advances out of the first money earned by
-the mine. The stock is to be divided, sixty per cent to my mother and
-sister and forty to Judge Birrell for distribution among the original
-minority stockholders who were swindled out of their holdings by
-Parker.”
-
-“Parker,” said Carfax musingly. “He will never swindle any more. Did
-I tell you? I read an item in the New York _Times_. Parker was found
-dead at his desk in his Broad Street office one day last week.” Then he
-came back to the matter in hand. “Where do you come in, in the property
-distribution?”
-
-“I don’t come in; I go out. Wilmerding and Duncan can operate the mine,
-and I shan’t be needed. I shall go West and try for an engineering job
-in one of the gold camps.”
-
-“But not before you have had your revenge upon the dynamiters?”
-
-“No; I shall stay long enough to see that part of it through to a
-finish.”
-
-“You are proving my contention very handsomely, don’t you think?” said
-the critic quietly; “that you are bigger in some ways and smaller in
-others? You are telling yourself that this generous thing you are going
-to do is perfectly magnanimous, and that you are merely raising the
-magnanimity to the _nth_ power by conserving the ends of pure justice
-in the prosecution part of it, and by obliterating yourself afterward.
-But, really, at the bottom of it all there are two rather dismal
-motives. You want your revenge, and you wish to show the woman in the
-case that you can turn your back upon her without half trying. Isn’t
-that true?”
-
-Tregarvon’s grin bordered upon the saturnine. “It’s next to impossible
-to resent anything you choose to say, Poictiers; that is your one
-little gift--to be able to flay your friends without getting yourself
-disliked. Let’s talk of something else. How long is Elizabeth going to
-stay at Judge Birrell’s?”
-
-This time the golden youth was able to call up the cherubic smile in
-all its glory.
-
-“Not very much longer now. She, too, is going West.”
-
-“What? Elizabeth? You don’t know her as well as I do. Her ‘West’ begins
-and ends at the summit of the Alleghenies.”
-
-“Nevertheless, she is planning to make the grand tour--in a private
-car.”
-
-Tregarvon reached suddenly across the corner of the table-desk and
-grasped the hand of many helpings.
-
-“There is enough of the old Vance Tregarvon left in me to wish you all
-the joy there is in the world, Poictiers!” he exclaimed, with some
-touch of the old-time heartiness. “You two were made for each other; I
-can see it now.”
-
-“You are quite sure there aren’t any inward daggerings behind that,
-Vance?” said the successful one half wistfully.
-
-“Not in the least. I’m glad. If you or Elizabeth had only told me at
-first who the other fellow was ... but it is all right now. How did
-you contrive to persuade her to overlook your bit of play-acting with
-Richardia?”
-
-The persuader shook his head. “That part of it was pretty serious. It
-was one of the things that couldn’t very well be explained in cold
-words. I think Miss Richardia has helped out some. She knew well enough
-what I did it for.”
-
-“You didn’t do it for me,” Tregarvon interposed bluntly.
-
-“Not at all,” was the quiet rejoinder. “As I have said before, I
-assumed most naturally that Elizabeth’s happiness was involved, and I
-didn’t propose to stand by and see you make ducks and drakes of it if I
-could help it.”
-
-“Never mind; it’s all over now, and you two at least are in a fair way
-to get what is coming to you. How is Hartridge getting along by this
-time?”
-
-“Quite well. He is walking with a crutch, and is able to hear his
-classes.” So much Carfax said in the matter-of-fact manner of one
-who answers a commonplace categorically. Then he sat up suddenly and
-snapped his fingers, and the lisping drawl had returned when he went
-on: “By Jove! that reminds me, don’t you know. Hartridge would like to
-see you.”
-
-“Why does he wish to see me?”
-
-Carfax spread his hands. “My dear boy, I’m no mind-reader. But I’m sure
-it’s rather urgent. Will you go?”
-
-Tregarvon sat frowning down upon the papers on the desk for a full
-half-minute before he looked up to say: “I can’t go, Poictiers. I don’t
-care especially to meet Hartridge, or to listen to the begging-off
-plea which he is probably going to make. He as good as told me that
-he was jealous, and was trying to get square. Besides, I haven’t seen
-Richardia since this mad-work whirl began, and--and it will be easier
-for me if I don’t see her again.”
-
-Carfax had his answer ready. “You’ll not meet Richardia at Highmount.
-Elizabeth is staying with the Caswells for a few days, and Richardia
-went home to Westwood House at three o’clock. I know, because I drove
-her in my car. Hartridge has his rooms in the laboratory building, and
-you needn’t show up at the president’s house at all if you don’t wish
-to.”
-
-Tregarvon hesitated a moment and then glanced at his watch.
-
-“I’ll go--a little later,” he decided abruptly. “I don’t know that I
-owe the professor anything but an action at law for helping to destroy
-my drilling plant, but I’ll give him a chance to say what he has to
-say. Now run along and keep your dinner engagement. I can drive up in
-my own car when I am ready.”
-
-“About what time will that be?” queried Carfax, hanging upon the
-threshold of the door of leave-takings. “I ought to let Hartridge know
-when to expect you.”
-
-Again Tregarvon looked at his watch. “Say eight o’clock. Will that do?”
-
-“Perfectly, I should think.” It was the golden youth’s cue to
-disappear, but still he lingered. “That telegram you have just written,
-Vance; are you going to send it to-night?”
-
-Tregarvon answered without looking up. “Certainly. And to-morrow I
-shall notify the sheriff to send a deputy after McNabb.”
-
-Carfax went out, closing the door softly behind him. But when the
-big expensive motor-car had cut its half-circle to head toward the
-mountain pike it was brought to a stand at the railroad station, and
-the driver left it for a minute or two while he had speech through the
-ticket-window with Orcutt, the night telegraph operator. Daddy Layne,
-with nothing better to do, was warming his shins at the waiting-room
-stove, and though he listened, after the manner of his kind, he caught
-only one sentence of the low-toned talk. That was Orcutt’s, spoken
-after Layne’s keen old eyes had glimpsed the passing of something that
-looked like a yellow-backed bank-note through the window. “It’ll be as
-much as my job’s worth, Mr. Carfax, but I’ll do it.”
-
-A half-hour later, while Layne was dozing in a corner of the
-superheated waiting-room, Tregarvon came in with his message to the
-Dallas chief of police. This time there was no effort made to keep the
-talk from being overheard.
-
-“I’m mighty sorry, Mr. Tregarvon, but I can’t get it off to-night,” was
-the operator’s deprecatory protest when the message was handed in. “The
-commercial wires are grounded--been that way all the evening. Mighty
-sorry, but these things will happen once in a while. Yes; sure! first
-thing in the morning, if I have to put it through the despatcher’s
-office. Good night.”
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-On Pisgah’s Height
-
-
-Professor William Wilberforce Hartridge was reading before the cheerful
-grate fire in his sitting-room when his visitor was brought up by the
-old negro janitor.
-
-“Come in, Mr. Tregarvon, and be at home,” he said, rising, with the
-aid of his crutch, for the welcoming, and making difficult work of it.
-“Draw your chair to the fire and be comfortable. It was kind of you
-to----”
-
-“Carfax brought me your message,” Tregarvon interrupted, rather
-more brusquely than he meant to. “In a certain sense I suppose I am
-responsible for your present condition, and since you wished to see
-me----”
-
-“Ah, yes; but I didn’t wish to give myself the opportunity of
-reproaching you for the accident, I assure you,” was the deprecatory
-rejoinder. “You were not even constructively to blame for my cowardly
-legs.” Then he added, with a touch of naïve humor: “I trust they have
-sufficiently learned their lesson.”
-
-“You are having a pretty long siege of it,” Tregarvon offered, finding
-himself sympathizing where he had meant to be coldly self-contained.
-
-“Old bones,” returned the schoolmaster, with his quaint smile. “They
-haven’t knitted quite as rapidly as they might. But let us hope that
-there is nothing worse than broken bones in store for any of us. May I
-be very frank with you, Mr. Tregarvon?”
-
-“I shall set you the example. I can conceive of only one reason why
-you should wish to see me, Mr. Hartridge. You have been told that I am
-still determined to exact an eye for an eye in the matter of bringing
-certain criminals to justice, and you would like to forestall your
-arrest as an accessory. Am I right?”
-
-At this the quaint smile became quizzical. “Partly; but only partly.
-Have you taken any steps as yet?”
-
-“I have. After a good bit of trouble and expense I have at last
-succeeded in tracing the man Morgan McNabb. He is under arrest in
-Dallas, Texas, and I shall have him brought back as soon as the
-necessary papers can be obtained.”
-
-“And your object in bringing him back?”
-
-“Is to make him give the name of the man who hired him to put
-the dynamite under my drilling plant. That man is going to the
-penitentiary, Mr. Hartridge, if any effort of mine can send him there.”
-
-The schoolmaster removed his spectacles to polish them, and for a time
-sat staring with unshielded eyes into the heart of the coal fire in the
-grate.
-
-“You have all the precedents on your side,” he admitted at length.
-“It is your right to prosecute if you choose to do so. Yet I venture
-to predict that you will be exceedingly sorry if you bring Morgan
-McNabb to Tennessee and extort his confession--a confession which will
-necessarily be made public. Besides, there is a much easier way in
-which you can apprehend his principal.”
-
-“Are you willing to indicate the way?” snapped Tregarvon.
-
-“Not altogether willing; no. You are at heart a much flintier young
-man than you appeared to be when we first met, Mr. Tregarvon. It is an
-inheritance from some one of your Cornish forebears, I imagine. But I
-have allowed myself to be overpersuaded. You have your car here?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I shall ask you to drive me. Will you trust me that far?”
-
-Tregarvon rose, smiling grimly. “I shall have you for my hostage. If
-you are about to have me ambushed, I shall make you share my risk. Do
-we go at once?”
-
-Hartridge limped to a closet and found his overcoat, and Tregarvon
-helped him to put it on. Then he gave the temporary cripple an arm
-through the laboratory corridor and down the stair. At the steps he
-lifted Hartridge bodily into the mechanician’s seat of the car. As yet
-there had been no hint given of their destination, but when he took his
-place behind the wheel Tregarvon asked for driving directions.
-
-“Westward, on the cross-mountain road,” was the brief reply, and
-no other word was exchanged until the swiftly driven machine was
-approaching the intersection of the cross-road with the west-brow pike.
-Then Hartridge said: “To your left,” and Tregarvon had a sudden sinking
-of the heart. A mile away he could see the lights of Westwood House,
-and a great fear rose up to unsteady his hand as he made the turn out
-of the cross-road.
-
-Tregarvon’s fear was realized in some measure when, at Hartridge’s
-direction, the car made a second left-hand turn into the Westwood
-grounds and was brought to a stand before the door of the old mansion.
-“I have obeyed you blindly thus far,” he said, as he was lifting
-Hartridge out of the car. “But now you must tell me. Is it Judge
-Birrell?”
-
-“Wait,” said the schoolmaster, and Tregarvon helped the lame man up
-the steps and steadied him while he groped for the knocker. Before he
-could knock, the door opened silently under the hand of the judge’s
-daughter, and Tregarvon again gave Hartridge an arm to help him over
-the threshold.
-
-Though the hall was but dimly lighted he saw at once that there had
-been a pitiful change in Richardia. There was the shadow of a deep
-grief in her eyes when she greeted him, and the hand that she gave him
-was nerveless and cold. He had never seen her in black before, and
-that, and the chill of the great hall and the grave silence of his car
-companion, made him feel as if he had entered a house of mourning.
-
-Without a word in explanation the changed Richardia led him to the
-stair and signed to him to precede her. Tregarvon hesitated only long
-enough to see that the professor was hobbling away toward the lighted
-library. Then he stood aside and slipped an arm under Richardia’s.
-“They hadn’t told me you had been ill,” he said reproachfully; and as
-they went up together the nearness of her set his blood afire and for
-the moment he forgot the scene in the deep wood timing itself in the
-Sunday afternoon of revealment.
-
-At the stairhead a door stood ajar, with the flickering light of an
-open fire in the room beyond shining through the narrow opening. With
-a quick premonition that a tragedy was about to be revealed, Tregarvon
-followed his guide into the room. It was a huge chamber, spacious
-enough to belittle the few pieces of old-fashioned furnishings, and
-in the great four-poster bed lay a young man with an arm in a sling
-and his bandaged head propped high among the pillows. Though the face
-of the sick man was haggard and emaciated, Tregarvon recognized it
-instantly. It was the face of the handsome young fellow who had kept
-the Sunday afternoon tryst with Richardia.
-
-It was only natural that he should be checked by a sudden feeling of
-antagonism, but before it could find expression it was swallowed up in
-an astoundment too great to be measured. Richardia had led him to the
-bedside and she was saying quietly: “Mr. Tregarvon has come, brother.
-Shall I leave him alone with you?”
-
-The sick man roused himself with an effort that was plainly
-distressful. “Yes,” he said shortly. And after Richardia had gone:
-“I’m the man you’re looking for.”
-
-Tregarvon dragged a chair to the bedside and sat down. In the rush of
-conflicting emotions one exultant fact was hammering itself into his
-brain and dominating all others: Richardia’s secret had not been her
-lover’s secret; it was her _brother’s_. In the turmoil of readjustment,
-it was inevitable that the generous impulses of former days--the days
-before the _débâcle_--should come swiftly to the surface.
-
-“I’m glad to be here, Mr. Birrell; and that is entirely apart from
-anything you may be going to tell me,” he said quickly. “Are you quite
-sure you are able to talk?”
-
-“I’ve got to talk; it’s up to me now. Sister told me a little while
-ago that you had caught Morgan McNabb; that you’re going to have him
-brought back here so that you can give him the third degree. I’m the
-man you want. Morgan did only what I made him do.”
-
-Tregarvon was beginning to understand a little. “Perhaps you’d better
-tell it all, if you feel equal to it,” he suggested soberly. Then he
-added: “I’m not going to be your judge, Mr. Birrell.”
-
-The sick man rocked his head on the pillows.
-
-“You won’t understand; I couldn’t make anybody understand. But it’s got
-to be told. Do you know what that crook Parker did to my father?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“All of it?”
-
-“Yes; all of it.”
-
-“Well, it made a devil of me. I was only a kid then, but it seemed as
-if I grew to be a man between two days. I tried to kill Parker. Maybe
-you know that, too.”
-
-“Yes; I have heard about it.”
-
-“He didn’t die; and he spent his money like water until he got me
-indicted. Then I broke my father’s heart by showing the yellow
-streak--running away. I’ve been hid out down in Arizona ever since, but
-I always meant to come back and stand the gaff some day.”
-
-“Go on,” said Tregarvon gravely.
-
-“I didn’t come back by the railroad. The yellow streak showed up again,
-and I dodged the sheriff by walking in over the mountain from Piketown.
-The McNabbs hid me out in the ‘Pocket.’ They told me you were Parker’s
-man, and that you had come to finish what he’d begun. Afterward they
-told me you were making love to my sister, and that settled it.”
-
-“I see,” said Tregarvon. Then: “Why didn’t you come out in the open
-like a man and find out a few things for yourself?”
-
-“I couldn’t. The indictment was still hanging over me; as it is yet.
-And I was crazy mad. I swore I’d run you out of the country or kill you
-if you didn’t go. I made Morgan McNabb help me. He’d been mixed up in a
-feud years ago and had ambushed a man, and I was the only one who knew
-it. I told him I’d give him away if he didn’t help me run you off.”
-
-“Your sister knew you had come back?”
-
-“Yes; but she didn’t know anything else. She thought I was afraid to
-show myself on account of the old trouble--as I was. She was trying to
-fix things so that I could come back here to my father and Westwood
-House. I did come, but they brought me on a stretcher. Somebody set
-the leaves afire that night in the old negro burying-ground, and the
-dynamite went off and caught me while I was trying to stamp the fire
-out. The jig’s up now. All you’ve got to do is to send for the sheriff.”
-
-Tregarvon saw that it was time to intervene. The sick man’s breath was
-coming in gasps and his face was livid.
-
-“You mustn’t try to talk any more now,” he said, rising and taking the
-thin hand that was so much like Richardia’s in his own. “For a good
-many reasons you have nothing to fear from me. Of course, you know now
-that I am in no sense Parker’s representative. So far from it, the
-papers are already drawn which will restore to your father and his
-friends the property that Parker stole from them. I meant to do that
-from the first, if I should be lucky enough to find the coal.”
-
-The grip of the thin fingers tightened upon the hand of reassurance.
-“My God!” breathed the prodigal, “and I’ve been trying to kill you!
-Mr. Tregarvon, can you go one step farther and--and turn Morgan McNabb
-loose? That’s what made me frame it up with sister and Hartridge and
-Mr. Carfax to bring you here to-night.”
-
-“McNabb will not be brought back; I promise you that. Shall I send your
-sister up to you?”
-
-“Not--not right now; tell her to play something; something low and soft
-that’ll make the devil let me alone. I want to think. I--I reckon I’m
-willing to go to the convict camps now for trying to square up with
-Parker; I reckon I _ought_ to go!”
-
-Tregarvon went out softly, closing the door behind him and groping his
-way down the stair. Richardia was waiting for him in the hall below,
-as he hoped she would be, and she led him across to the drawing-room
-where there were lights and a wood-fire purring and crackling in the
-big stone fireplace.
-
-“Tell me,” she entreated.
-
-“There is nothing to tell--nothing that you haven’t already guessed.
-I am completely disarmed, as you knew I would be. I have assured your
-brother that he has nothing to fear from me.”
-
-“It has been very dreadful,” she said, moving aside to hold her hands
-out to the fire.
-
-“How badly was he hurt in the explosion?”
-
-“So badly that it is only within the past few days that we have dared
-to hope. Mr. Carfax hasn’t told you?”
-
-“Not a word. Your secret has been guarded very carefully.”
-
-“But now it is a secret no longer. If he gets well it will only be to
-face a trial for the attempt upon Mr. Parker’s life.”
-
-“Nothing will come of that,” Tregarvon predicted confidently. “Parker
-is dead; he died suddenly in his New York office a few days ago. And no
-twelve Tennesseeans could ever be found who would convict your brother
-for trying to avenge his father’s wrongs.”
-
-“We are your poor debtors--all of us,” she went on. “You are heaping
-coals of fire on our heads, and--and they _burn_! Of course, you know
-now that I was my brother’s accomplice?”
-
-“I know nothing of the sort; of course, you were not!”
-
-“But I was--in a way. All along, I feared that it was he who was
-making, or at least planning, all the trouble you were having. He was
-_so_ bitter!”
-
-Tregarvon nodded complete comprehension. “I knew you were anxious about
-somebody; I thought, at first, that it was Hartridge, and later that it
-was your father. You have had a heavy burden to carry; and I have been
-doing what I could to make it heavier.”
-
-“You have,” she said quite frankly.
-
-He did not affect to misunderstand.
-
-“You knew all the time that Poictiers and Elizabeth were held apart
-only by Elizabeth’s engagement to me?”
-
-“I guessed it. But that didn’t excuse you for--for----”
-
-“For making love to you? I know it didn’t. But I had my punishment
-the Sunday afternoon when you met your brother in the wood above the
-‘Pocket.’ I had gone out to meet Hartridge, and I saw you two together.
-I took it for granted that the man was your lover who, for some
-reason, couldn’t come here to Westwood House to meet you.”
-
-“Others took it for granted, too, and I did not deny it--for Richard’s
-sake.”
-
-“Is his name Richard?”
-
-“Yes; Richard and Richardia. My father named us so, after a brother and
-sister of his own who were twins.”
-
-Tregarvon glanced at his watch. There were other things to be
-said--many of them, but a suddenly recrudescent sense of the fitness of
-things told him that the moment was unauspicious.
-
-“I suppose I’ll have to consider Hartridge and take him back to
-Highmount,” he offered. Then he added quite irrelevantly: “He’s in love
-with you, too. Speaking of accomplices, how much or how little did he
-have to do with the bushwhacking?”
-
-“Nothing at all. It was only on the day of the explosion that he
-learned that Richard had come back, and was hiding with the McNabbs in
-the ‘Pocket,’ and heard, through Sill McNabb, that something was going
-to happen that night at your drilling plant. He suspected Richard at
-once, and went over to try to prevent the happening. Then your men
-caught Morgan McNabb, and Professor Billy hardly knew what to do. He
-guessed that Tryon had come over here after you and Mr. Carfax, and
-when you took father back with you he was afraid Morgan would be made
-to confess, and so make a bad matter infinitely worse. His idea in
-lighting the leaf fire was to give Morgan McNabb a chance to escape. Of
-course, he supposed the dynamite had been removed.”
-
-“It has been a tragedy of errors from the beginning,” said Tregarvon
-soberly. “But I am going to expiate my part of it. Has Poictiers told
-you anything about my plans?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“I made them while I was lying in bed in the old office-building at
-Coalville, trying to get well enough to crawl out and take hold with my
-hands. It came to me then what an egregious ass I had made of myself,
-all the way round. I had blundered in ahead of Poictiers and didn’t
-have sense enough even to suspect it; and I had deliberately killed any
-little regard you might have had for me by showing myself up as a man
-who would make love to one woman while he was engaged to another. I was
-eaten up with shame, Richardia, and I am yet.”
-
-“It hurt me; I think you will never know how much it hurt,” she said
-slowly. “A man asks utter and absolute loyalty of the woman he loves.”
-
-“And the woman can ask no less of the man, you would say. That
-is true. I am no defender of the double standard; still less an
-apologist for my sex. I have only one excuse, Richardia; it wasn’t
-merely propinquity--as you and Poictiers seemed to think. I had never
-known what love was until I met you. Elizabeth is going to marry
-Poictiers, and you must believe me when I say that I think just as
-much of her--and in the same way--as I did before. But let that pass.
-I had found my coal mine, and had lost pretty nearly everything else,
-including my own self-respect. You were lost to me; doubly lost, as I
-thought then; so it seemed that the only thing for me to do was to set
-the Ocoee house in order, and after that was done to go away and try to
-forget.”
-
-“You are still meaning to go away?”
-
-“Yes. I meant to stay long enough to make somebody suffer for the
-bushwhackings, but that is past. I have sent for Peters, our family
-lawyer, and when he comes we shall settle the property affair.
-Three-fifths of the stock in the mine will go to my mother and sister,
-and the remainder will be turned over to your father to be distributed
-among the Parker victims. This is what I have been meaning to do all
-along, if I should be fortunate enough to discover the coal.”
-
-She shook her head. “You are reckoning without my father. He won’t take
-the money.”
-
-“He must be made to take it. It is only just and fair. When it comes to
-that, you must help me, Richardia; for his sake and for your brother’s.”
-
-“Poor Dick!” she murmured. “He needs a friend much more than he needs
-the money; some one who would care enough for him to stand by and hold
-him up to the best there is in him. There _is_ good in him; you may not
-believe it now, but there is, really--lots of it.”
-
-“I can very readily believe it, since he is your brother and the son of
-your father. And he has proved it to-night by climbing into the breach
-for McNabb. He will have his chance on the Ocoee, and Wilmerding will
-be his friend.”
-
-“Then you are determined to go away?”
-
-“Yes. I owe it to you and to everybody else, not less than to myself.
-But some day, Richardia, after I have done penance for the sin of
-loving you before I had a right to I am coming back. But I had
-forgotten; your brother wished me to ask you to play for him; something
-that would drive the devil away. He said he wanted to think.”
-
-She went to the piano at once. Alone among the old-fashioned house
-furnishings it was modern; an artist’s instrument, full-toned and
-responsive. Tregarvon sank into an armchair before the blazing logs and
-gave himself up to the quiet ecstasies of the music-lover. From the
-first her playing had stirred him as no other chamber-music ever had.
-For a time he knew that she was improvising; then there were gentle
-themes from Mendelssohn, shading one into another so deftly that he
-could never mark the changes. And at the last there was the Chopin
-nocturne.
-
-While the closing chords of the night-song were still lingering in the
-air she came to sit in a chair at the opposite corner of the hearth.
-
-“You played the Chopin for me; was that your way of telling me that I
-might come back some day, Richardia?” he asked quite humbly.
-
-Her hands were clasped over one knee and her gaze was fixed upon the
-blue and yellow flames in the great fireplace, when she said softly:
-“You are very human--and very blind; so blind that you haven’t seen
-that I have had to fight for two--for myself no less than for you. And
-there have been times when--when I almost _hated_ Elizabeth!”
-
-The Tregarvon blood was not sluggish; at least, he had never found it
-so before; but for the moment he was like a man stricken suddenly dumb.
-Then the gift of speech came back, laboring as it could in the turmoil
-of new ecstasies.
-
-“_You had to fight for two_; God help me, Richardia--if I had known
-that----”
-
-She rose quickly and came to stand beside his chair.
-
-“If you had known it, you would have been the strong one, Vance, dear.
-I know it; I knew it all the time; but I--was afraid--to trust--myself.
-You are not going away, now, are you?”
-
-There was the sound of an opening and closing door and the stumping of
-the professor’s crutch on the bare floor of the hall. Tregarvon sprang
-up and took the small black-gowned figure in his arms.
-
-“Going away?” he broke out passionately; “you couldn’t drive me away
-with an axe! I’m going to stay forever, and let you make a complete man
-of me. We’ll _marry_ your father’s share of the Ocoee back to him, and
-together we’ll make a man of your brother. There are a million other
-things to say, but Hartridge is coming to look for his chauffeur and I
-must take him back to Highmount. Richardia--sweetheart!... If I don’t
-wreck the car on the way it will be a miracle.”
-
-Very gently she disengaged herself. “You--you needn’t smother a
-person,” she protested, with the quaint little grimace that he loved.
-And then: “That is father, calling me to go to brother. Please heap
-some more coals of fire and be good to Professor Billy--for the sake of
-his loyalty to me and mine.... Yes, daddy, dear; I’m coming.”
-
-
-
-
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-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of After the Manner of Men, by Francis Lynde</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: After the Manner of Men</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Authors: Francis Lynde</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Arthur E. Becher</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 29, 2021 [eBook #66631]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AFTER THE MANNER OF MEN ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>AFTER THE MANNER OF MEN</h1>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="center"><span class="large">BOOKS BY FRANCIS LYNDE</span></div>
-
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Published by</span> CHARLES SCRIBNER&#8217;S SONS</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-
-<div class="verse"><b>After the Manner of Men.</b> Illus. 12mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.35</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>The Real Man.</b> Illus. 12mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.35</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>The City of Numbered Days.</b> Illus. 12mo<span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.35</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>The Honorable Senator Sage-brush.</b> 12mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.30</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>Scientific Sprague.</b> Illus. 12mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.25</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>The Price.</b> 12mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.30</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>The Taming of Red Butte Western.</b> Illus. 12mo &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <i>net</i> $1.35</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>The King of Arcadia.</b> Illus. 12mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> $1.35</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>A Romance In Transit.</b> 16mo <span class="floatright"> <i>net</i> &nbsp; &nbsp; .75</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;Did you really think that some one was shooting
-at <i>you</i>?&#8221;<br />
-
-
-<span class="illoright">(<i><a href="#shooting">Page 7</a>.</i>)</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xxlarge">After the Manner<br />
-of Men</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="large">FRANCIS LYNDE</span></p>
-
-<p><i>ILLUSTRATED BY</i><br />
-
-ARTHUR E. BECHER</p>
-
-<p><span class="large">CHARLES SCRIBNER&#8217;S SONS<br />
-NEW YORK&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;:&nbsp;1916</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1916, by</span><br />
-
-
-CHARLES SCRIBNER&#8217;S SONS</p>
-
-<p class="center">Published September, 1916</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_publogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="large">TO<br />
-<br />
-JOSEPH FRATER,</span><br />
-<br />
-LOYAL FRIEND OF MANY YEARS,<br />
-TO WHOM MUCH OF THE MATERIAL AND ALL OF THE<br />
-ATMOSPHERE OF THE STORY IS OWING<br />
-<br />
-<span class="large">THIS BOOK</span><br />
-<br />
-IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED,<br />
-WITH GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS FROM<br />
-THE AUTHOR</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Townlander</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Sow&#8217;s Ear</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_16"> 16</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Golden Youth</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_30"> 30</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In Which Carfax Enlists</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_47"> 47</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Partly Sentimental</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_59"> 59</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Daddy Layne, and Others</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_73"> 73</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Company Come</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_82"> 82</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Stubborn Rock</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_96"> 96</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Bad Night for Rucker</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_114"> 114</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Blind Alleys</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_125"> 125</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Rosemary and Rue</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_148"> 148</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Dull Steel</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_164"> 164</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Burnt Child</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_177"> 177</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Logic of Fact</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194"> 194</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Mammy Ann&#8217;s Grave</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207"> 207</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Friend at Need</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_230"> 230</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">An Anticlimax</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_248"> 248</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Evolutionary</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_261"> 261</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Human Equation</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_278"> 278</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Limitations</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_294"> 294</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Clansmen</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_305"> 305</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Out of a Clear Sky</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_323"> 323</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">At Westwood House</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_334"> 334</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Unknown Quantity</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_346"> 346</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Mangling of Poictiers</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_365"> 365</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Tryon&#8217;s News</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_377"> 377</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Cloud-Wraiths</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_389"> 389</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Ocoee&#8217;s Answer</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_397"> 397</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Beyond the Gap</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_410"> 410</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Grounded Wire</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_419"> 419</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXXI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">On Pisgah&#8217;s Height</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_436"> 436</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;Did you really think that some one was shooting at <i>you</i>?&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_0"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>FACING</small><br />
-<small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Carfax stopped abruptly and said no more </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_162"> 162</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;Poictiers, I&#8217;m a ruined man!&#8221; </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_328"> 328</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;My heavens!&#8221; gasped the discoverer; and a voice, apparently
-at his elbow, said: &#8220;Quite so&#8221; </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_400"> 400</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-
-<p class="ph1">After the Manner of Men</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">I<br />
-
-
-<small>The Townlander</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">COINCIDENT with a miniature thunderclap
-shattering the summer afternoon silence of
-the mountain forest a bullet whipped through the
-foliage, leaving a half-severed twig to flutter and
-dangle within easy arm&#8217;s reach. Tregarvon had
-never before been under fire, and he was a product
-of twentieth-century civilization and the
-cities. Yet his colonial ancestor, figuring as a
-seasoned Indian fighter in Braddock&#8217;s disaster,
-could scarcely have picked his sheltering tree with
-better judgment or dropped behind it with more
-mechanical celerity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Great Peter!&#8221; he exclaimed, under his breath,
-struggling to draw the pocket-entangled weapon
-which he had persuaded himself to add to his
-impedimenta before leaving Philadelphia, under
-the impression that it would be a necessary part
-of a land-looker&#8217;s equipment in the Tennessee
-mountains; &#8220;Great Pete&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>The pocket yielded with a sound of tearing
-cloth, and the first shock of panic subsided.
-Crouching behind his tree, the Philadelphian
-twirled the cylinder of the revolver to make sure
-that all the chambers were filled. While he was
-doing this there was another report, and this time
-the bullet scored the sheltering oak. Tregarvon
-edged himself into position, with due regard for
-the enemy&#8217;s line of fire, and cocked his weapon,
-not, however, with any reassuring confidence in
-it, or in his own steadiness of nerve.</p>
-
-<p>Peering judiciously around the buttressing knees
-of the barricade oak, he could see nothing save a
-matted tangle of briers, blackberry bushes, and
-laurel. But being the possessor of a fairly active
-imagination, he fancied he could see more&mdash;the
-sunlight reflecting from the polished barrel of a
-rifle, for example, and, by another turn of the
-imaginative screw, the indistinct figure of his assailant
-far back among the trees.</p>
-
-<p>While he was thus reconnoitring, a third shot
-ripped through the screening laurel and clicked
-spitefully into his oak. Since the click came first,
-with the report a fraction of a second later, he reserved
-his fire. It was evident that the hidden
-marksman was well beyond pistol range, and he
-decided to save his ammunition against a time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-when it might stand a chance of being more effective.
-The target-practice part of his education
-had been neglected, and he especially distrusted
-his marksmanship with the nickel-plated house
-weapon, the more since he had never as yet fired it.</p>
-
-<p>Harboring this distrust, he was content for the
-moment to make himself small behind his tree,
-sitting between two of the flanking root buttresses
-with his back against the barrier trunk, and wincing
-in spite of himself while other bullets, following
-now in rapid and measured succession, whined
-to right or left, or buried themselves in the solid
-wood. Oddly enough, the misses, though he
-could feel the wind of them on either side, were
-less disquieting than the hits. At each impact
-of lead against wood there was a jarring little
-shock quite thrillingly transmissible to quick-set
-nerves in sympathetic contact with the other side
-of the target.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By Jove! if Elizabeth could only see me
-now!&#8221; he chuckled broadly; &#8220;Elizabeth, or the
-<i>mutterchen</i>, or even my rough-riding little sister!
-This fusillading miscreant of mine must be one
-of the McNabb outlaws, trying in his elemental
-fashion to settle the old feud about our title to
-the coal lands. By and by, I suppose&mdash; Whew!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The spine-tingling thrill was so real this time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-that he was half minded to look and see if the
-impacting bullet had not come all the way through
-the tree to bulge the bark on his side of it. But
-he restrained the prompting and went on talking
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By and by, I suppose, he&#8217;ll get tired of blazing
-away at a safe distance and come charging
-down upon me. Then I shall be most unhappily
-obliged to kill him; which will be about the
-crassest misfortune that could happen, next to
-his killing me. Confound their barbarous feuds,
-anyway! Why can&#8217;t these out-of-date mountain
-people wake up and realize that they are
-living in the twentieth century of civilization and
-Christian enlightenment? That&#8217;s what I&#8217;d like
-to know!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The only reply to this very reasonable query
-being the vicious &#8220;ping&#8221; of another rifle-bullet,
-he went on discontentedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As if matters were not hopeless enough without
-adding a scrap with these silly mountaineers
-about the land titles! Everything torn up at
-home, the family anchor pulled out by the roots
-in the steel merger, two women to be taken care
-of&mdash;with Elizabeth presently to make a third&mdash;and
-nothing to make good on but this failure of a
-Cumberland Mountain coal mine! And now,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-before I&#8217;ve had time to turn around, the spirit
-moves this rifle-popping moonshine-maker to
-turn his grouch loose until I feel it in my bones
-that I shall have to kill him to make him
-quit!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then, the <i>zip-zip</i> of the bullets beginning again
-after a momentary pause, the soliloquy went on:
-&#8220;That&#8217;s right; keep it up, you pin-headed barbarian!
-I&#8217;ve got you for an excuse to commit
-manslaughter&mdash;that&#8217;s the surest thing there is.
-Which brings on more talk. I wonder how it
-feels to kill a man? I&#8217;d give all my old shoes if
-I didn&#8217;t have to find out experimentally. Then
-there is Elizabeth: it is two completed generations
-back to her Quaker forepeople, but she is
-quite capable of flatly refusing to marry what
-they would have stigmatized as &#8216;a man of blood.&#8217;
-Say, you bloodthirsty assassin&mdash;that was an uncomfortably
-near one!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After the glancing shot, which had flicked a
-handful of bark chips into Tregarvon&#8217;s lap, the
-firing ceased. Assuring himself that the battling
-moment at short range was approaching, the
-young man from the North sat tight, gripping the
-house pistol in nervous anticipation, and listening
-tensely for the sound of advancing footfalls.</p>
-
-<p>The suspense was short. Some one, several<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-persons, as it presently appeared, were pushing
-through the tangle of low-hanging undergrowth
-toward the oak-tree. Tregarvon wondered that
-there should be no attempt cautionary on the
-part of the enemy; wondered again, this time
-with nettle pricklings of foolishness, when a voice,
-cheerfully exultant and unmistakably feminine,
-cried out close at hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you people&mdash;come here and see! I <i>did</i> hit
-it&mdash;<i>lots</i> of times; not that trifling little sheet of
-paper, of course&#8221;&mdash;scornfully&mdash;&#8220;but the tree, I
-mean. Just come and&mdash; <i>Ee-e-ow!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The shrill little scream of surprise and alarm
-was for Mr. Vance Tregarvon, issuing cautiously
-from behind the bulwark oak, still mystified, and
-still absently gripping the pistol.</p>
-
-<p>The Philadelphian found himself confronting a
-young woman gowned in stone-blue linen, and
-wearing an embroidery hat to match, the hat
-shading a face too unaffectedly winsome to be
-called beautiful, perhaps, but yet the most piquant
-and expressive face he had ever looked upon.
-This young woman was carrying a target-rifle;
-and pinned upon the bullet-punctured side of the
-oak was the square of white paper at which she
-had evidently been shooting.</p>
-
-<p>There were others coming up to join the pretty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-markswoman: a lean-faced, mild-eyed, spectacled
-gentleman of middle age, whose coat suggested
-the church or the schoolroom; a vivacious lady
-in black, with strongly marked eyebrows and eloquent
-hands and shoulders; a young woman who
-wore an artist&#8217;s smock over her walking-gown;
-and another who was girlish enough to wear a
-red tarn, and to be the prettier for it. But by
-preference Tregarvon made his stammering apologies
-to the blue embroidery hat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah&mdash;er&mdash;please don&#8217;t mind me,&#8221; he begged,
-acutely conscious that his abrupt and pistol-bearing
-entrance was handicapping him prodigiously.
-&#8220;I thought&mdash;that is&mdash;er&mdash;you see, I really
-couldn&#8217;t know that it was merely a peaceful target
-practice, and I&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of all things!&#8221; gasped the young woman, her
-slate-blue eyes emphasizing her shocked amazement.
-&#8220;<a id="shooting"></a>Did you really think that some one
-was shooting at <i>you</i>? But, of course, you must
-have! How perfectly dreadful!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was trying ineffectually to hide the
-ornamental revolver in his coat pocket when the
-others closed in.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are sure you are not hurt?&#8221; the mild-eyed
-escort made haste to inquire, and Tregarvon
-grinned sheepishly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>&#8220;Only in my self-esteem,&#8221; he confessed. &#8220;I
-was silly enough to think that somebody was trying
-to mark me down, though I might have known
-better after the first shot or two.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how could you know when you were behind
-the tree and couldn&#8217;t see us?&#8221; protested the
-one who had been doing the shooting. &#8220;I&#8217;m sure
-it speaks libraries for your self-control that you
-didn&#8217;t retaliate in kind! Don&#8217;t you think so,
-Madame Fortier?&#8221; and she appealed to the lady
-with the Gallic eyebrows and the eloquent shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ciel!</i> but the <i>sangfroid</i>&mdash;what you call the
-cold blood&mdash;of these American zhentlemen is of
-a grandeur the moz&#8217; magnificent!&#8221; exclaimed
-madame. &#8220;Mees Richardia she is shoot a hondred
-time at zis zhentleman, and he is say he is
-injure&#8217; onlee in hees <i>amour-propre</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point that the humor of the
-situation overtook the chief offender, and she
-laughed, the sweetest and most delectable laugh
-that ever gladdened the ears of a young man
-keenly sensitive to the charms of heavenly slate-blue
-eyes, a piquant face, and a voice remindful
-of wood-thrushes and song-sparrows and golden-throated
-warblers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;After this, there is nothing left for us but to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-declare ourselves,&#8221; she submitted ruefully, turning
-to the spectacled escort. &#8220;It is the least we
-can do to save the gentleman the trouble of describing
-us if he wishes to have us taken before
-Squire Prigmore.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But now Tregarvon was regaining some measure
-of equanimity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me be the one to begin the identifying
-process,&#8221; he amended. &#8220;My name is Vance
-Tregarvon, and I have the misfortune to be the
-present owner of the valueless piece of property
-known as the Ocoee Mine. You are more than
-welcome to make a rifle-range of my landscape
-any time you wish. I am quite certain it is the
-only useful purpose it has ever subserved.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The gentleman whose coat was either clerical
-or schoolmasterish, bowed gravely and took his
-turn, prefacing it with a question.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you ever heard of Highmount College
-for Young Women, Mr. Tregarvon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon, in deference to piquancies and
-slate-blue eyes and the like, was tempted to
-quibble and say that, of course, every one knew
-of Highmount College. But the heavenly eyes
-were holding him, and they promised intolerance
-of anything but the pellucid truth. So he shook
-his head regretfully.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>&#8220;Such is fame&mdash;the fame of an old, a great,
-and a noble institution of learning!&#8221; said the spectacled
-one, in mock deprecation. &#8220;With a foundation
-laid over half a century in the past, with
-the most healthful and charming location on the
-entire Cumberland Mountain for its site; with
-a corps of instructors second only to those of the
-richly endowed colleges of the North&mdash;correct
-me, Miss Richardia, if I am not quoting the prospectus
-accurately&mdash;with all these splendid advantages,
-and with a student body drawn from
-the oldest and most distinguished families of the
-South.... Mr. Tregarvon, can it be possible&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Spare me!&#8221; laughed the victim. &#8220;You must
-remember that I am only a poor, ignorant provincial
-from Philadelphia, less than a fortnight
-out of the shell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are merely trying to impress you properly
-so that you will think twice before having
-us arrested for trespass and attempted assassination,&#8221;
-broke in the laughing markswoman. &#8220;We
-may not look it, but we are a majority of the
-faculty of Highmount College for Young Women.
-Let me present you to Madame Fortier, Modern
-Languages; to Miss Longstreet, Art; to Miss
-Farron, Assistant Mathematics; and to Professor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-William Wilberforce Hartridge, M.A., Vanderbilt,
-Higher Mathematics and the Natural
-Sciences.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon bowed in turn to the Gallic eyebrows,
-to the artist&#8217;s smock, to the red tam-o&#8217;-shanter,
-and shook hands cordially with the
-M.A., Vanderbilt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is fine, you know; it&#8217;s like Robinson
-Crusoe&#8217;s meeting with his rescuers,&#8221; he asserted
-joyously. &#8220;This is my first real hearing of the
-English tongue since I began doing time down
-yonder in Coalville, with my old ruin of an
-office-building for a dungeon, and Mrs. Matt
-Tryon for my jail matron. Is it very far to
-Highmount College? And may I hope sometime
-to&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The three younger women laughed at this, and
-Madame Fortier hastened to be hospitable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We shall be moz&#8217; charm&#8217;, Monsieur Tregarvong.
-I will spik for President Caswell and hees
-good madame.&#8221; But Tregarvon waited for Miss
-Richardia&#8217;s confirmation, which was given unhesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly, you must come, if you can spare
-the time,&#8221; she affirmed. &#8220;We were speaking of
-you, and of the Ocoee prospects, at dinner the
-other evening, and Doctor Caswell was even then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-threatening to look you up. I think he said he
-had met your father in years gone by.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure that was exceedingly kind and hospitable&mdash;to
-think of taking the stranger up before
-he had made himself known,&#8221; said Tregarvon,
-with the hearth-warmed exile&#8217;s glow at his
-heart. They were moving over to the rifle-rest,
-and he had fallen a step or two behind with Miss
-Richardia. &#8220;You would have to be a castaway
-in a strange land yourself to know how good it
-feels to be counted in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been both&mdash;the castaway and the
-counted-in,&#8221; she returned. &#8220;I was four years in
-Boston; two of them without knowing a single
-soul outside of a limited little Conservatory
-circle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; he said, with the air of one who pats
-himself on the back for his own perspicacity.
-&#8220;You didn&#8217;t introduce yourself a moment ago,
-as you may remember, but I was sure you were
-Music.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why were you?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because you look it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Harmony or discord?&#8221; she queried, with the
-bright little laugh remindful of the bird songs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How can you ask! Celestial harmony&mdash;no
-less!&#8221; It was only a matter of a hundred yards,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-between the oak-tree target and the firing-stand,
-but they were getting on very well, indeed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Following that line of reasoning, you might
-say that Miss Longstreet looks picturesque, I
-suppose? And Miss Farron&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Miss Farron is far too charming to warrant
-any allusion to figures, mathematical or other,&#8221;
-he retorted lightly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And how about Professor Billy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon chuckled. &#8220;Is that what you call
-him? I&#8217;m glad I have a Christian name that
-can&#8217;t very well be nicked entirely out of all resemblance
-to the original. Which reminds me:
-have I got to call you &#8216;Miss Richardia&#8217;? It
-sounds awfully formal&mdash;don&#8217;t you think?&mdash;in the
-mouth of a man who has been familiarly shot at
-by its possessor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You had better,&#8221; she replied calmly. &#8220;I am
-&#8216;Miss Dick&#8217; in the classrooms; but that is the
-student body&#8217;s privilege. Other people have to
-earn it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Consider me an employee from this moment,
-if you please. I&#8217;m good at earning things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you earned the Ocoee property?&#8221; she
-asked, altogether, as it appeared, by way of making
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; but my father did&mdash;very bitterly, as it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-turned out. May I ask what you know about
-the Ocoee?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only what every one knows: that it brings
-sorrow and ruin to everybody who has anything
-to do with it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the rifle-stand, and Hartridge
-was reloading the target-gun for Miss Farron.
-There was still a little isolation for Tregarvon
-and his companion, and the young man
-made the most of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your words imply a lot more than they say,&#8221;
-he suggested. &#8220;I shall take an early opportunity
-to make my Highmount call, and when I do, perhaps
-you will tell me some of the things I need
-to know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Professor Hartridge or President Caswell can
-tell you better than I can,&#8221; she demurred, as one
-dismissing an unpleasant subject. &#8220;I only know
-that the mine has always been a wretched failure;
-first a thing of broken promises, and afterward a
-cunningly devised pitfall for the unwary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If Tregarvon had for his major weakness the
-love of women, he was not lacking such other
-qualities as may go with broad shoulders, good
-gray eyes set wide apart, a clean-cut face, and a
-resolute jaw. The squareness of the jaw was emphasized
-when he said: &#8220;This is the time when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-the Ocoee quits being a failure, Miss Richardia.
-It is up to me to make it a success, and I mean to
-do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was at this conjuncture that Miss Farron,
-trying vainly to sight the rifle over the fallen-tree
-firing-stand, broke in upon the <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dickie, dear, do come here and hold your
-hand over my left eye,&#8221; she called plaintively.
-&#8220;It just persists in coming open to see what the
-other one is trying to do.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">II<br />
-
-
-<small>The Sow&#8217;s Ear</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE rough-hewn world of mountain and
-valley had taken on a distinctly cheerful
-aspect for the young man from Philadelphia
-when, late in the afternoon, he reluctantly separated
-himself from the rifle-shooting party and
-turned his steps valleyward to keep an appointment
-made two days earlier with one Angus
-Duncan, an old Scotch mining expert, upon whom
-the great Southern title company, unlimited, had
-long since conferred the brevet of &#8220;captain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the Tregarvon gray eyes and resolute
-jaw promised in the way of decisive action
-and stubborn determination, their possessor was
-never born to be a contented anchorite. Not
-even the matchless beauties of nature, arrayed
-in all the glories of a Tennessee mountain September,
-could atone for the solitude imposed by
-the dead-alive hamlet of Coalville, and the newly
-opened prospect of an occasional escape to the
-congenial social atmosphere of the mountain-top
-school was like the shadow of a great rock in a
-thirsty land.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>Tregarvon was planning the first of these
-escapes, and forecasting the time which would
-be consumed in freighting his motor-car down from
-Philadelphia, when the forest path ended and let
-him out among the deserted slope-foot buildings
-and empty coke-ovens of the Ocoee. He glanced
-at his watch. The up-train on the branch railroad
-was due; it had doubtless announced its approach
-by some distant crossing whistle, since the
-little squad of village idlers had left its cantonments
-under the porch of Tait&#8217;s store to straggle
-across to the station platform.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon remained on his own side of the railroad-tracks
-and waited. He knew that Captain
-Duncan&#8217;s visit would be discussed in all its possible
-bearings in the idlers&#8217; caucus at Tait&#8217;s, and
-he was willing to disappoint the country-store
-gossips when it came in his way.</p>
-
-<p>There were but few passengers to get on or off
-at Coalville when the branch-line train rolled up
-to the platform, and Tregarvon had no difficulty
-in identifying his man; the stocky, ruddy-faced,
-shrewd-eyed mining engineer who had been named
-to him as the foremost coal expert in the Tennessee
-field. He cut Duncan out of the group of
-loungers at the instant of hand-shaking, and took
-him across to the dilapidated building which had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-once been the superintendent&#8217;s office and the commissary
-of the Ocoee Company, seeking, and securing,
-as he imagined, ear-shot privacy for the business
-conference.</p>
-
-<p>But privacy in a Southern country hamlet,
-where gossip is as the breath of life to the isolated
-few, is only to be bought with a price. From his
-post of observation in Tait&#8217;s doorway, a lank,
-bristly-bearded man in grimy jeans that had once
-been butternut, marked the direction of the retreat
-across the railroad-tracks, made a dodging
-d&eacute;tour around the engine of the standing train,
-and was safely hidden behind a thick clump of
-althea bushes at the corner of the office-building
-when Tregarvon and the Scotchman came leisurely
-to sit on the door-stone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ye&#8217;re paying me for an expert opeenion, Mr.
-Tregarvon, and that&#8217;s what I&#8217;m bound to gie ye,&#8221;
-the engineer was saying. &#8220;I&#8217;ve known the Ocoee
-ever since the first pick was piked intil it, and
-ye&#8217;ll be wasting your time and money if you try
-to develop it. That&#8217;s what I told your father,
-and it&#8217;s what I&#8217;m telling his son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor coal? Or not enough of it?&#8221; Tregarvon&#8217;s
-manner was that of a man desirous of knowing
-the exact facts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good coal&mdash;fine! It makes a coke that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-would run everything this side of Pocahontas,
-or maybe Connellsville, out o&#8217; the market. And
-there is enough of it if the two veins could be
-worked as one. But there&#8217;s the bogie, Mr. Tregarvon;
-two well-defined veins, each a foot and
-a half thick, one above the other, and with six
-foot of solid rock between. If you had twenty
-such veins it wouldn&#8217;t pay to work them in this
-part of the country.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that the digging out of the rock
-between the two coal seams would eat up all the
-profits?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was pulling ineffectually at his
-short pipe. When he stooped to pluck a spear
-of grass for a stem-cleaner he said: &#8220;Wasn&#8217;t it
-the notion of the earliest promoters that the two
-veins would merge into one, farther back in the
-mountain?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The expert waved his hand toward the long
-and costly inclined tramway running straight up
-the steep slope of the mountain to the two black
-openings at the foot of the cliff-line.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ye&#8217;d think they believed in it&mdash;wouldn&#8217;t ye
-now&mdash;to build that tramway on the strength of
-it? Two hunner&#8217; thousand and better they put
-in here, first and last; on the tramway and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-coke-ovens, the miners&#8217; houses, and this fine
-office-building that&#8217;s crum&#8217;ling down behind our
-backs! And with every practical coal man in
-the country telling them that such a thing as two
-veins&mdash;two separate veins, mind ye&mdash;coming into
-one was a geological impossibeelity. Parker&mdash;the
-man who set the trap and caught everybody&mdash;he
-knew, I&#8217;m thinking; but Judge Birrell and all
-the rest of &#8217;em were crazy&mdash;fair crazy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But is it a geological impossibility, Captain
-Duncan? That is one of the questions I got you
-up here to answer for me,&#8221; Tregarvon put in.</p>
-
-<p>The Scotch engineer was too cautious to be
-definitely oracular.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s never been h&#8217;ard of yet,&#8221; he replied
-shrewdly, &#8220;and there&#8217;s a many to tell ye that the
-day o&#8217; merricles is past. But that isn&#8217;t all, Mr.
-Tregarvon. Besides being a sow&#8217;s ear that ye
-canna hope to make into a silk purse, the Ocoee
-has another handicap. If ye had your coal in
-profitable shape and quantity, ye&#8217;d never be allowed
-to mine and coke and market it; never in
-this warld.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who would stop me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The C. C. &amp; I. Company, which is another
-name in this part o&#8217; the warld for Consolidated
-Coal&mdash;the trust. The combine owns all the producing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-mines hereabouts; they&#8217;ve got one in
-full blast at Whitlow, five miles above this. If
-you should develop into anything worth while,
-it would be another case of the lion and the lamb
-lying down in peace together&mdash;with the Ocoee
-lamb inside of the trust lion. They couldn&#8217;t
-afford to lat ye operate. Your coke, for as much
-of it as ye could make, would drive theirs out o&#8217;
-the market.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; said the Philadelphian.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;d buy ye, if they could haggle ye down
-to sell at a bargain; and, failing in that, they&#8217;d
-break ye. I&#8217;m not questioning your resources,
-ye unnerstand; that part of it was none of my
-business after I&#8217;d had your check for my fee safely
-in my pocket,&#8221; he threw in cannily. &#8220;But tell
-me, now: if ye had your four or five or even six
-foot of coal, are ye big enough in the way o&#8217; backing
-and capital to fight Consolidated Coal wi&#8217;
-any hope of coming out alive?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is as it may be,&#8221; said Tregarvon, wishing
-neither to deny nor to affirm publicly. Then he
-asked casually if the engineer could give chapter
-and page proving the Cumberland Coal and Iron
-Company&#8217;s policy of extermination.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can I no?&#8221; said the Scotchman, with a snap
-of the shrewd eyes. &#8220;I can show ye wrecked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-mines by the handfu&#8217; in a day&#8217;s ride up and down
-this same Wehatchee Valley we&#8217;re sitting in.
-&#8217;Tis the power o&#8217; money, Mr. Tregarvon. When
-ye get between the jaws o&#8217; that crusher, ye&#8217;re like
-this&#8221;&mdash;picking up a bit of friable sandstone and
-crumbling it in his palm.</p>
-
-<p>The younger man smoked on thoughtfully for
-a time. Then he said: &#8220;Two of the points upon
-which I wished to have your opinion have been
-covered pretty conclusively, it would seem. But
-there is a third. What about this trouble with
-the McNabbs over the land title?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Scotchman waved the third point away as
-if it had been a buzzing fly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The McNabbs are just a whiskey-making lot
-of poor bodies living back in the Pocket beyond
-Highmount. An unscrupulous lawyer-scamp got
-hold of them when the second Ocoee Company
-was fair rolling in money, and showed them how
-they could trump up a claim to a wedge-like slip
-o&#8217; land on the top o&#8217; the mountain which, if the
-claim could be made good, would cut off the mine
-a hundred feet or so back from the cliff. There
-was neither sense nor justice in it, and the courts
-said so. Ye&#8217;ll be having no trouble wi&#8217; the
-McNabbs, unless one o&#8217; them might be taking a
-pop at ye wi&#8217; his squirrel-gun some fine day.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>Tregarvon smiled, recalling his sensations while
-Miss Richardia&#8217;s bullets were snipping bark
-souvenirs from his sheltering oak.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One wouldn&#8217;t be scared out by a little thing
-like that,&#8221; he remarked half humorously. Then
-he asked, quite abruptly, another question&mdash;the
-chief question for an answer to which he had paid
-the expert&#8217;s fee.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been told, Captain Duncan, that you
-have made an analysis of the Ocoee coals. Also,
-I have been given to understand that no two
-veins in these Tennessee coal-measures have exactly
-the same characteristics; that the quality
-of the coal varies with its distance from the original
-surface, though the depth difference between
-any two deposits may be very slight. If you
-didn&#8217;t know of the existence of the six-foot layer
-of stone lying between my two coal seams, would
-you, or would you not, say that they were one
-and the same?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Duncan took time to consider before answering
-the crucial question.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see what ye&#8217;re driving at, now,&#8221; he said at
-length. &#8220;Ye&#8217;ve paid me for a true answer, Mr.
-Tregarvon, and much as I&#8217;ll hate to see your
-father&#8217;s son banging his head against a stone wall,
-I&#8217;ll give it ye. I&#8217;ve made half a dozen analyses:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-so far as they prove anything, the coal in the two
-seams is the same.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; returned Tregarvon, drawing a
-free breath as if a burden had been lifted from his
-shoulders by the answer. And then, as a quavering
-whistle blast announced the approach of the
-down freight train on the branch: &#8220;There is your
-return train, Captain Duncan. If I had any
-hospitality to offer you, you shouldn&#8217;t go back
-to Hesterville to-night. As it is, I know you&#8217;ll
-be glad you don&#8217;t have to stop over in Coalville.
-Even the name is a misnomer, it would seem.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The grizzled Scotchman had discharged his
-duty and earned his fee. But the cravings of
-a purely Caledonian curiosity were still unsatisfied.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what&#8217;ll ye be doing, think ye, Mr. Tregarvon?&#8221;
-he asked inquisitively.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s answer was pointedly and purposefully
-indifferent. &#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know definitely
-yet. I may take a notion to butt my head against
-the stone wall, and I may not. If I should, you&#8217;ll
-doubtless hear of it. Good-by; it was mighty
-good of you to take the trouble to come and talk
-with me when you might have put me off with
-a letter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Though the leave-taking at the door of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-office-building was a fact accomplished, Tregarvon
-prolonged it a little by walking across to the
-station with Duncan. Thereby he missed a possible
-chance of seeing the retreat of the man who
-had been crouching behind the althea bushes,
-the dodging run, first to the shelter of the row of
-coke-ovens, and later to the lower fringe of the
-Mount Pisgah forest, darkening now in the early
-valley twilight.</p>
-
-<p>Late that night, in his room in the cobwebbed
-and dismantled office-building, Tregarvon wrote
-two letters. The first was to a certain golden
-youth in New York, a young man rejoicing in
-the ancient and honorable name of Poictiers Carfax,
-and whose father had left him more money
-than he knew what to do with. Upon Carfax
-Tregarvon leaned as upon a brother, having
-shared rooms with the golden one in the university
-at a period in which the Tregarvon family
-check could also have been drawn for seven
-figures.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are always howling and taking on about
-living the simple life,&#8221; was the opening phrase in
-the letter to Carfax. &#8220;I wish you could be with
-me to-night and have a taste of what it really is&mdash;ten
-thousand miles from the Great White Way
-or a decent beefsteak. I&#8217;d describe it for you if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-this were anything but a begging letter&mdash;which
-it isn&#8217;t.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;First, I wish you&#8217;d send your machinist over
-to Philadelphia and have him ship my car to me
-here. Tell him to put in extras of everything,
-from spark-plugs to tires, just the same as if he
-were sending it to a man in Darkest Africa.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Next (and this is of more importance to me,
-and perhaps less to you), I am going into a scheme
-here which promises to leave me stony broke
-before I shall have pulled half-way through the
-experimental stage, and will possibly bankrupt
-even the Carfax strong box when it fairly gets its
-second wind. I may have to sell you some stock,
-later on, and to that end I&#8217;ll be glad if you&#8217;ll keep
-in touch&mdash;so that you may be &#8216;touched&#8217;&mdash;or at
-least keep yourself within reach of a wire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is all I&#8217;m going to write, for the time
-being, except to say that I&#8217;ve thought of you
-about five times a minute during the past week,
-and have tried to picture you in Coalville, hesitating
-between suicide and a lingering death from
-disgust. Come down and try it. I&#8217;ll go bail it
-will give you an entirely new set of sensations.
-What do you say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The second letter was to Miss Elizabeth Wardwell,
-and it was a masterpiece in its way&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-way of a man who writes as he would talk, and
-who talks when he would much better hold his
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The adventures began to-day,&#8221; so ran the
-words of unwisdom. &#8220;While I was clambering
-around on the mountain above the Ocoee opening,
-<i>zip!</i> came a bullet&mdash;yes, an indubitable leaden
-bullet fired from a gun&mdash;near enough to make me
-dodge. What will you think of me when I write
-it down in muddy black ink on white paper that
-I hid behind a tree! I did, you know, and immediately
-had plenty of reasons for being thankful
-that the tree was big enough to cover me, and
-thick enough through to stop a rifle-bullet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For fifteen minutes, or such a matter&mdash;though
-it seemed a moderately long lifetime&mdash;my assassin
-kept busy with the sharpshooting, and I
-could feel myself growing smaller with every
-fresh spat of a bullet into my tree. What did I
-think? I thought of you, my dear Elizabeth,
-and wondered if you&#8217;d keep your promise to
-marry me in accordance with the terms of Uncle
-Byrd&#8217;s will if I should be obliged to kill a man.
-Would you?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When it was all over, my assassins&mdash;it turned
-out that there was a bunch of them&mdash;proved to
-be a party of school-teachers from Highmount<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-College shooting at a mark, which the same&mdash;though
-I hadn&#8217;t seen it, and didn&#8217;t remotely suspect
-its existence&mdash;was affixed to the farther side
-of my tree. There were five people in the party;
-three attractive young women, a French lady of
-uncertain age, and a middle-aged professor in
-spectacles doing escort duty. Of course, there
-were explanations and apologies all around: I
-had slipped out, cocked revolver in hand, with a
-sort of &#8216;Now I&#8217;ll get you!&#8217; expression on my face,
-I suppose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They were all very kind to me, especially
-the young woman who had been doing the actual
-shooting. I wish you could hear her laugh. It
-is the sweetest thing in Tennessee. She has the
-soft Southern voice, and a face that can be perfectly
-wooden one minute and a whole insurrectionary
-passion-stirring volume in the next.
-No, Miss Wardwell, I didn&#8217;t make love to her.
-How could I, with all the others standing about
-and looking on and listening in?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m to make myself free of the college, they
-say, and perhaps I shall&mdash;later on. Please don&#8217;t
-lift those matchless eyebrows of yours and ask
-if I&#8217;m not going to wait at least until I have met
-these people properly. If you could see my
-present surroundings, and realize for one little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-instant what an elemental ruffian these same surroundings
-are likely to make of me, you&#8217;d urge
-me to go.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please write often. You can&#8217;t imagine how I
-hang upon the arrival of your letters&mdash;how much
-they mean to me.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">III<br />
-
-
-<small>The Golden Youth</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was on the day following Captain Angus
-Duncan&#8217;s visit that the hamlet of Coalville,
-nestling at the foot of Mount Pisgah, took a fresh
-start as an industrial centre. Word went out
-from Tait&#8217;s store, which served as a general intelligence
-exchange for the country roundabout,
-that Tregarvon wanted laborers and would pay
-good wages.</p>
-
-<p>The men came; some from the half-tilled valley
-farms, a few from the C. C. &amp; I. mines farther
-up the railroad, and two or three mountaineers.
-Two of the mountain dwellers, long-haired, unshaven
-backwoodsmen, gave their names as Morgan
-and Sill, suppressing, for some reason best
-known to themselves, their surname of McNabb.
-Also there came the lean, bristly-bearded man
-who had squatted behind the althea bushes at
-the corner of the office-building during Tregarvon&#8217;s
-talk with Captain Duncan; James Sawyer,
-by name. Tregarvon knew nothing of this man&#8217;s
-antecedents; of the forehistory of any of them,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-for that matter. What he demanded was work,
-and he went about securing it in the best of all
-possible ways: by stripping off his coat and acting
-as his own foreman.</p>
-
-<p>In strenuous toilings fled the first two weeks,
-during which period the old machinery was overhauled,
-the tramway up the mountain repaired
-and put in running order, and the <i>d&eacute;bris</i> of disuse
-cleared away. For the aggressive campaign a
-deep-well drilling plant was secured in Chattanooga,
-and upon its arrival all things were made
-ready for transporting it to the top of the plateau
-mountain.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s plan, which he thought was original
-with him, was to go back on the level mountain
-top with his test-drill, and to sink a series of
-holes down to the coal-measures. If the first
-test should show the two veins still separated
-by the stubborn ledge of intervening rock, he
-would move the machinery farther back and try
-again&mdash;and yet again, if need be; though of all
-this he said no more to his workmen than was
-necessary to enable them to help intelligently.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the second week the drilling
-machinery was hauled up the mountain, and
-two days later, Uncle William, a solemn-faced old
-negro with a narrow fringe of white wool ringing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-his otherwise perfectly bald head, made his appearance
-at Coalville.</p>
-
-<p>He was waiting for Tregarvon on the Thursday
-morning when the Philadelphian turned out to go
-up the mountain with his working gang; waiting
-to doff his battered hat and scrape his foot, and
-to announce in honeyed tones that he had come
-&#8220;ter tek cha&#8217;ge of de young marsteh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Quite naturally, Tregarvon thought there must
-be some mistake, and said so; but the old man
-persisted with the velvety sort of pertinacity
-which refuses to be denied, vaunting himself as a
-body-servant of &#8220;the quality,&#8221; and acquiring, or
-seeming to acquire, a curious hardness of hearing
-when Tregarvon questioned him as to where he
-had come from and who had sent him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yas, suh&mdash;yas, suh; cayn&#8217;t hear ve&#8217;y good on
-dat side o&#8217; my haid&mdash;no, suh. But I&#8217;se suttin sho&#8217;
-gwine tek mighty good keer o&#8217; you-all; I is dat,
-marsteh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But a body-servant is the last thing on earth
-that I am needing here, uncle!&#8221; protested Tregarvon,
-firing his final shot of objection. &#8220;If I
-could find a good cook now, that would be more
-to the point.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dat&#8217;s it&mdash;dat&#8217;s it, suh. You-all jes&#8217; go &#8217;long
-up de mounting and boss dem po&#8217; white trash,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-and lef&#8217; ol&#8217; Unc&#8217; Wilyum ter fix up dat cook-house.
-He gwine show you what quality cookin&#8217;
-is; yas, suh; he will dat!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon left the old man bowing and scraping
-and backing away to take possession of the
-deserted office-building and its detached cook-shanty;
-and when he came back to the valley
-in the evening he gasped to remember how near
-he had come to incurring the penalty imposed
-upon those who refuse to entertain angels in
-disguise.</p>
-
-<p>The old office-building was swept and garnished,
-above and below. Out of the lumber-room in
-the basement Uncle William had rescued a dining-table,
-chairs, napery of a sort, and dishes; and
-in the rear room, which had once been the office
-of the Ocoee superintendent, a supper was spread,
-hot, smoking, and appetizing enough to tempt a
-sick man. Even the napkins, improvised for the
-moment out of pieces of a flour-sack washed to
-snowy whiteness, were not lacking; and when
-the master would sit down, Uncle William was
-behind him to whisk the chair away and to replace
-it, with all the deftness of a trained butler.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon ate and drank in grateful and heartfelt
-silence down to the black coffee, which was
-served, for the want of the proper crockery, in an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-egg-cup, with a small fruit dish for a saucer.
-Then he made the amende honorable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know who you are, or where you came
-from, Uncle William, but I owe you an apology,
-none the less,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Consider that I belong
-to you for as long as you care to keep me&mdash;at
-your own price.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yas, suh; dat&#8217;s it&mdash;dat&#8217;s jes&#8217; de way de quality
-talk to ol&#8217; Unc&#8217; Wilyum, eve&#8217;y time&mdash;<i>hyuh! hyuh!</i>
-&#8217;Long erbout an hour o&#8217; sun, white woman comed
-ercross f&#8217;om dat white-niggah cabin turrer side
-de big road, and she say: &#8216;I gwine fix up Mistoo
-Tregarbin&#8217;s suppeh.&#8217; <i>I</i> say, &#8216;Mistoo Tregarbin
-&#8217;sents his compliments an&#8217; say t&#8217;ank you kin&#8217;ly,
-but he done got he own body-sarvant!&#8217; Yas,
-suh; dat&#8217;s what I done tol&#8217; <i>huh</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s eyes twinkled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll be getting yourself disliked, Uncle
-William, if you put on your quality manners with
-Mrs. Tryon and her kind. They tell me that this
-county was Republican during the war.&#8221; Then
-he added: &#8220;Are you ready to tell me now who
-sent you here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old man was clearing the supper-table, and
-he seemed to have entirely misunderstood the
-query.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dat ol&#8217; cook-house? Yas, suh; it sholy did<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-try me for to git dat ol&#8217; chimley ter mek de fiah
-bu&#8217;n for de supper-fixin&#8217;s. Ter-morrer I gwine
-chink him up some; yas, suh, I sholy is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After Uncle William&#8217;s mysterious advent the
-work on the mountain progressed the more rapidly
-by precisely the difference between a well-fed
-leader and an ill-fed. Tregarvon and his pick-up
-crew wrought manfully, and on the eighteenth
-day&mdash;the day of fresh surprises&mdash;the drilling
-machinery had been safely transported to the
-plateau, had been set up, and was ready to be
-started on the test upon which the Tregarvon
-hopes were building airy structures of future
-affluence.</p>
-
-<p>At quitting-time on this eighteenth day of
-preparatory toil Tregarvon came down in a tram-car
-with his men and, after the dispersal at the
-mountain foot, stood for a moment on the office-building
-porch to let the quiet grandeur of the perfect
-autumn evening soak in and wash the work-weariness
-out of his jaded brain and muscles.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had gone behind the mountain for all
-the lower reaches of the valley, but its level rays
-were still pouring in a flood of yellow light across
-the flat-topped promontory crowned by the buildings
-of Highmount College. Pisgah, densely forested
-on slope and summit, loomed vast as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-early shadows rose like silently drawn curtains to
-soften its rugged detail, and on the sky-line Tregarvon&#8217;s
-gaze sought and found the derrick skeleton
-of his drilling plant struck out in rigid lines
-of black against the hazy blue. Just above him
-the tramway cut its steeply ascending gash through
-the forest of the slope, and in his mind&#8217;s eye he
-could see the cars descending, each with its load
-of the reopened mine&#8217;s largesse, to be dumped
-upon the receiving-platform beside the row of
-coke-ovens.</p>
-
-<p>From the outlined derrick to the sun-illumined
-college buildings was an airy leap of a mile or
-more. Tregarvon had not as yet used his invitation,
-though the French teacher&#8217;s giving of it
-had been promptly confirmed by a cordial note
-from the president&#8217;s wife. The social hunger rose
-strong in the expatriated townlander as he let
-his eyes make the leap from the industries, typified
-by the derrick skeleton, to the possible relaxations
-harboring on Highmount. He meant to
-go; he promised himself afresh that he would go,
-the moment his motor-car should arrive and be
-put into commission to make the five-mile climb
-up the mountain pike from Coalville something
-less than an added weariness after a hard day&#8217;s
-work.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>He was still looking longingly up to the sun-shot
-heights and wondering why he had heard
-nothing from Poictiers Carfax, when a sound,
-breeze-blown up the valley, made him start and
-listen. When he heard it again it was nearer;
-the unmistakable roar of an automobile&#8217;s engines
-with the muffler cut out. To confirm the witness
-of the ear, a big yellow car presently topped the
-rise in the valley road below the village and
-came bounding over the roughnesses of the country
-wagon track toward the railroad crossing.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon immediately recognized his own car
-and the cacophonous thunderings of it; but it
-was only a guess that the slender young man in
-dust-coat and goggles behind the steering-wheel
-was Carfax; that the square-shouldered fellow in
-a leather jacket and closely fitting cap beside him
-was the machinist; and that the liveried person
-sitting bolt upright with folded arms in the exact
-centre of the tonneau seat was Merkley, Carfax&#8217;s
-imported valet.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon gasped, and his hands went up in
-the gesture of a man vainly striving to avert a
-crash of worlds. &#8220;Great Heavens!&#8221; he ejaculated.
-And at that moment Jefferson Walters,
-acting chairman of the convention of idlers in session
-under the awning of Tait&#8217;s store porch, made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-himself an imaginary errand to Tryon&#8217;s, across
-from and a little beyond the Ocoee office-building,
-timing his saunter to bring him upon the scene as
-an interested onlooker when the yellow car rolled
-up to Tregarvon&#8217;s door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hit do beat the Dutch&mdash;what-all gits up in
-the big woods when you ain&#8217;t totin&#8217; a gun,&#8221; he
-remarked to the executive session when he returned
-to the other side of the railroad. &#8220;Young
-feller with the eye-glasses&mdash;he must be powerful
-nigh blind to have to wear sech big ones&mdash;he
-pulls up the team with a jerk at a han&#8217;le, and
-says: &#8216;Hello, Vance! Here we are; the dog and
-the tail, and the tail wagging the dog.&#8217; And Tregarvon,
-he jest shets his fists tight and says, sort
-o&#8217; hoarse-like, &#8216;My Lord, Putters&#8217;&mdash;&#8217;r some sech
-name as that&mdash;&#8216;did you tool that car all the way
-down here from Philadelphia?&#8217; &#8216;Sure, I did,&#8217;
-says Goggles; and all the while that there circus
-ringmaster was a-settin&#8217; up like he&#8217;d growed with
-a hick&#8217;ry saplin&#8217; down his back, lookin&#8217; straight
-out ahead of him as if he didn&#8217;t know that anything
-was happenin&#8217;,&#8217;r was ever goin&#8217; to happen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;President o&#8217; the new Ocoee Comp&#8217;ny, d&#8217; ye
-reckon?&#8221; queried one of the listeners.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;President o&#8217; nothin&#8217;! I&#8217;m comin&#8217; to him,
-right now. &#8216;And you brought Merkley?&#8217; says<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-Tregarvon, speakin&#8217; right low and soft, and
-chokin&#8217; some more. &#8216;Naturally,&#8217; says Goggles,
-as cool as a cucumber, and then he climbs out and
-goes in with our man, with the ringmaster feller
-<i>totin&#8217; the carpet-bags</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know,&#8221; chirruped the oldest man in the
-circle, a wizened veteran of the Mexican War.
-&#8220;I seed &#8217;em in the army; the West Pointer
-gin&#8217;rals had &#8217;em&mdash;called &#8217;em val-lays.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wonder what-all our young feller over
-yander&#8217;ll turn up next?&#8221; mused Jabez Layne,
-bringing his huge jack-knife to bear upon a
-pocket-worn nugget of plug tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;ll turn up a heap o&#8217; trouble ef he don&#8217;t
-quit hirin&#8217; them McNabbs,&#8221; volunteered one of
-the valley men who had hitherto been speechless.
-&#8220;He&#8217;s got two of &#8217;em in his gang now&mdash;Morgan
-an&#8217; Sill; an&#8217; ef they don&#8217;t git him afore he gits
-the coal&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, then, the C. C. &amp; I.&#8217;ll git him about
-five minutes afte&#8217;wards,&#8221; laughed Walters, breaking
-in to complete the sentence in his own way.</p>
-
-<p>Thus ran the leisurely comment in the gray of
-the evening, working its way from man to man
-among the loungers on Tait&#8217;s porch. But in the
-dilapidated office-building across the railroad-tracks
-there was consternation.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>&#8220;Why, Poictiers, old man, you can&#8217;t endure it
-for twenty-four hours!&#8221; Tregarvon was protesting
-anxiously. &#8220;Look at this place&mdash;a dusty,
-cobwebby ruin that a self-respecting tramp
-wouldn&#8217;t lodge in! Heavens, man! couldn&#8217;t you
-see a joke when it was written out plain with a
-pen and ink? I would have as soon invited
-Elizabeth&mdash;meaning it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had slipped out of his dust-coat and
-goggles, the valet assisting, and stood revealed
-as a handsome young fellow, a shade too well-groomed,
-perhaps, but with smiling good-nature
-atoning for the Carfax millions in every line of his
-beardless and almost effeminate face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now that is what I call downright inhospitable,&#8221;
-he laughed, with the faintest suspicion of a
-lisp on the sibilants, &#8220;after you had written me to
-come. Your letter is out in the go-cart, if Merkley
-didn&#8217;t forget to put it in my letter-case. Also,
-after I&#8217;ve driven that unspeakable car of yours
-over a thousand miles of the worst roads the rain
-ever rained on&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, good Lord, Poictiers&mdash;you&#8217;re welcome;
-as welcome as the sunshine! Don&#8217;t rub it into
-me that way. But the place; the&mdash;the&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile was cherubic; or rather it would
-have been if the womanish lines of his face had
-not made it seraphic.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>&#8220;No apologies, you inexpressible old coal-digger.
-I knew you were only joking when you
-asked me&mdash;or rather dared me&mdash;to come down.
-But the notion seized me, and here I am. Here,
-likewise, is Rucker, the machinist, who will happily
-shift for himself; and what is more serious,
-perhaps, here also is Merkley. In all human
-probability I shall bleat like a sheep at the corn-pones
-and the hardtack, and all that; but Merkley
-was once in the service of the Duke of Marlford
-and his agonies&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon laughed, and the stresses came off.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Luckily, I have acquired Uncle William, or,
-perhaps I should say, he has acquired me, since I
-wrote you, and you won&#8217;t starve, whatever happens
-to Merkley. Find your way up-stairs and
-take possession, while I tell the old uncle what he
-is up against in the way of supper-getting. You&#8217;ll
-find a bath, with ice-cold mountain spring water&mdash;my
-one luxury&mdash;at the end of the upper corridor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Considering his resources, which were few and
-strictly limited, Uncle William shed a lustre all
-his own upon the dinner for two, which was served
-in the makeshift dining-room as soon as Carfax
-came down.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure you needn&#8217;t find fault with your
-table,&#8221; was the guest&#8217;s comment, when the snowy
-biscuits and the egg-bread, the fried chicken and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-the riced potatoes had passed in review. &#8220;I only
-wish I could induce an Uncle William to adopt
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thus the master; but the London-bred man
-was not faring so well. It was Uncle William&#8217;s
-effort to orient the valet&mdash;an effort vocalizing itself
-through the screened windows of Tregarvon&#8217;s
-dining-room&mdash;that reopened the question of the
-practicabilities.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is you-all dat gemman&#8217;s white niggah?&#8221; was
-the blunt demand, made when Merkley, dinner-inclined,
-ventured into the sacred precincts of
-Uncle William&#8217;s detached cook-house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;H-I am Mr. Carfax&#8217;s man, and h-I&#8217;ll trouble
-you to serve my dinner,&#8221; was the lofty reply, returned
-in Merkley&#8217;s best tone of aloofness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;s askin&#8217; ef you is dat gemman&#8217;s white niggah!&#8221;&mdash;scornfully.
-&#8220;Ef you is, you jes&#8217; sots
-youse&#8217;f down on dat door-step an&#8217; waits, same as
-any turrer niggah. When de quality folks gets
-t&#8217;rough, an&#8217; <i>I</i> gets t&#8217;rough, den you kin have
-what&#8217;s lef&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax waved a shapely hand toward the open
-window.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The irrepressible conflict has begun,&#8221; he remarked.
-&#8220;What do you do in such cases in&mdash;er&mdash;Coalville?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>&#8220;We go down on our knees, metaphorically
-speaking, and plead with an outraged and righteously
-indignant Uncle William,&#8221; Tregarvon
-laughed; and when the old negro made his next
-appearance in the dining-room, the Philadelphian
-did it so skilfully that Merkley was provided for
-at a side table in the hall; not of grace, as certain
-mumblings from the cook-house proved, but because
-the master desired it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That settles our status,&#8221; said Carfax, with the
-cherubic smile, &#8220;at least down to Rucker, the
-mechanician. I wonder what has become of
-him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If he is the same mechanical barbarian you
-had last year, he&#8217;ll not go hungry,&#8221; Tregarvon
-ventured; and then, with the assurance of a tried
-friend: &#8220;Whatever possessed you to come down
-here <i>en suite</i>, Poictiers? Did I give you the impression
-that the Ocoee headquarters was a summer-resort
-hotel?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax laughed joyously. &#8220;You certainly did
-not. But I was tired of Lenox, and it was too
-early for the shooting. Moreover, you said you
-wanted your car, and the fit took me to drive it.
-That accounts for Rucker; and I suppose I account
-for poor Merkley. He is due to have the
-time of his gay young life&mdash;don&#8217;t you think?&mdash;with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-Uncle William and the elemental environment?
-But tell me more about your affair.
-What have you been letting yourself in for, down
-here in the Southern backwoods?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Uncle William had removed the cloth, and had
-put a tobacco-jar and two pipes on the table.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is the best we can do, even for you,&#8221; said
-Tregarvon, indicating the tobacco aftermath
-apologetically. &#8220;Nobody has ever seen a bottle
-of wine in Coalville, and the whiskey of the country
-isn&#8217;t fit to drink.&#8221; Then he plunged abruptly
-into the story of the Ocoee, so far as he knew it,
-giving the last-resort reasons why he was trying
-to make a family windbreak of it, and Carfax
-heard him through patiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then it sums itself up about like this: You
-haven&#8217;t anything at present, and if you succeed
-in getting anything, the other fellows will nab it,&#8221;
-he said, when Tregarvon had finished. &#8220;Is that
-about the size of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have surrounded it completely. Only I
-am eliminating the &#8216;if.&#8217; I mean to get something,
-and I don&#8217;t mean to let the other fellows
-get away with it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Any move made yet?&#8221; queried Carfax, between
-delicate little puffs at the pipe of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not visibly. The trust people will scarcely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-move in the matter until after I have proved my
-first proposition, which is that the two veins of
-coal become one farther back in the mountain.
-But the McNabbs may not wait that long.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who are the McNabbs?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon explained again, at some length,
-not omitting mention of a mysterious leaf fire
-which had threatened to destroy a tramway trestle,
-and other small accidents which had somewhat
-impeded the work of the past fortnight, and
-which were blankly unaccountable save upon a
-theory of somebody&#8217;s malice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you buy &#8217;em off?&#8221; said Carfax
-casually. Money was his cure-all for most human
-ills.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For one reason, they haven&#8217;t given me a
-chance. For another, I don&#8217;t propose to be held
-up and robbed. They haven&#8217;t any title to the
-land; they have never had a shadow of a title.&#8221;
-Then he broke off suddenly, glanced at his watch,
-and changed the subject. &#8220;How much too tired
-are you to take a five-mile spin with me up the
-mountain in the car, Poictiers?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s eyebrows went up in mild surprise.
-Nevertheless, he said: &#8220;Call it a go&mdash;if you can
-find Rucker.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind Rucker; I&#8217;ll drive you myself,&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-said Tregarvon, and a few minutes later the big
-car, with its dazzling headlamps picking out the
-way, was storming up the steep grades of the
-Pisgah pike to Highmount.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">IV<br />
-
-
-<small>In Which Carfax Enlists</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON the broad veranda of the administration
-building at Highmount, which looked down
-sidewise upon the twinkling light or two of Coalville
-and faced on even terms an opposing shoulder
-of the mountain where the newly erected
-drill derrick stood, Carfax was holding Miss
-Farron and four privileged members of the
-senior class at bay, while Tregarvon contentedly
-monopolized Miss Richardia Birrell.</p>
-
-<p>The two thus comfortably isolated had quickly
-exhausted the commonplaces. Tregarvon was
-made to know thus early that one of Miss Richardia&#8217;s
-charms was her ability to plunge at once
-into the heart of things; and the talk had turned
-upon Carfax, distance and the hubbub of the
-others sanctioning personalities.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you don&#8217;t know him yet,&#8221; Tregarvon
-protested, in refutation of a remark of Miss Birrell&#8217;s
-based upon Carfax&#8217;s apparent satisfaction
-with his present besetment. &#8220;He is anything but
-a butterfly, in the meaning you imply; and I say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-this in spite of his pretty face and airy gabble,
-and the lisp and his bad habit of slipping instinctively,
-as you might say, into the easiest
-chair in sight. I&#8217;ve summered him and wintered
-him, and I know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I like loyalty,&#8221; said Miss Richardia, with
-the air of one to whom abstractions are as daily
-bread. &#8220;Are you going to winter him in Coalville?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No such good luck as that for me, I&#8217;m afraid.
-After the shooting begins, I don&#8217;t imagine he has
-a week untaken. You may not believe it, but
-Poictiers is in demand&mdash;where he is known and
-appreciated.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure we shall appreciate him,&#8221; was the
-half-mocking rejoinder. &#8220;Young men who come
-to Highmount driving their own tonneau cars
-are not so plentiful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s laugh was not more than decently
-boastful.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This particular tonneau car happens to be
-mine,&#8221; he explained. &#8220;Besides, Carfax might
-discount your praise. His latest purchase is an
-imported Dumont-Sillery, I believe. It probably
-cost three times as much as mine; and on
-the other side of the water, at that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How easily and familiarly you talk of imported<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-luxuries and &#8216;the other side&#8217;,&#8221; she commented,
-still in the mocking vein. And then,
-with an exactly proportioned touch of wistfulness:
-&#8220;I wish I might have a glimpse into your
-world; the world you have turned your back
-upon&mdash;temporarily.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon slid into this little pitfall without
-realizing that it had been digged especially for
-him, thus proving that social hunger may be as
-blind as any of the other appetites. So far from
-suspecting pitfalls, he was thinking that there
-were many less enjoyable diversions than sitting
-in a moderately secluded corner of a dimly lighted
-veranda in the company of a young woman who
-was kind enough to evince an interest in a chance
-visitor&#8217;s proper sphere.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is not such a very high-planed world, the
-one I&#8217;ve left behind, Miss Richardia; not nearly
-as human as this of Coalville and Mount Pisgah,&#8221;
-he returned. &#8220;I believe I have seen more real
-human nature in the past three weeks than I
-had ever seen before.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that the other world is artificial?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is; without intending to be, especially.
-We are not elemental any more; not even in
-our passions. We do things in a certain well-defined
-way because that is the way other people<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-do them. We are afraid, or at least disinclined,
-to strike out on new lines.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have struck out on a new line, haven&#8217;t
-you?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been pushed out, in this Ocoee matter.
-There is enough of the elemental surviving in
-me to make me break with traditions and become
-a hustler when it is a question of bread
-and meat for my mother and sister. But apart
-from that, I suppose I am quite as hidebound
-as other men of my world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Mr. Carfax?&#8221; she queried. &#8220;Is he a
-slave to conventions, too?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poictiers is a law unto himself in a good many
-ways; but on the whole, he&#8217;s tarred with the
-same stick. You will remark his regalia: I
-couldn&#8217;t have pulled him up here to-night with
-a three-inch hawser if he hadn&#8217;t happened to
-have evening clothes in his kit. And he has
-brought his man; a typical Cockney valet, knee-smalls,
-Oxford ties, and all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia&#8217;s quiet laugh fitted the incongruity.
-But when she spoke again it was of the
-business affair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are at work on the Ocoee?&#8221; she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed! I am going to make a spoon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-or spoil a perfectly good horn. You must all
-come over and see my test-drilling outfit when
-we get it going.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it your machine that we can see over beyond
-the glen? I wonder if you could make me
-understand what you are going to do?&#8221; she
-said, with interest real or so skilfully feigned
-that Tregarvon could not distinguish the difference.</p>
-
-<p>He expressed himself as being very willing to
-try; did try at some considerable length. And
-Miss Birrell, notwithstanding an air of abstraction
-that seemed to come and go, appeared to
-grasp the mechanical details.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have no doubt that you will succeed?
-It will be fine to prove to everybody that all that
-was needed was for some one to come from the
-other world&mdash;your world&mdash;to show them how
-to do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon winced, seeing now the pitfall into
-which he had suffered himself to be led.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is that the impression I&#8217;ve been giving you?&#8221;
-he asked. &#8220;Do I advertise myself as such a
-blooming bounder as that would signify?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Forgive me,&#8221; she said, with a little laugh
-which might have meant anything from veiled
-ridicule to a keen appreciation of a palpable hit.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-&#8220;I suspect it is the way of your world to be
-austerely sufficient unto itself. You may contradict
-me if I am wrong.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense!&#8221; he exclaimed generously. &#8220;You
-are as much of my world as I am.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no!&#8221; she objected: &#8220;we are only poor
-outlanders. I was called that once, in Boston;
-not spitefully, of course, but rather as an excuse
-for my shortcomings, I fancy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whoever said it was a snob,&#8221; he exploded.
-&#8220;Boston is horribly provincial, at times, you
-know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Philadelphia never is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t dare to make the claim too broad.
-But I am sure we recognize the fact that there is
-an America west of the Alleghenies&mdash;and south
-of Mason and Dixon&#8217;s line.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is charitable, at least,&#8221; she conceded.
-&#8220;Still, you think it is left for you to demonstrate
-success where others have failed&mdash;in the Ocoee
-undertaking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t thought of it in that way,&#8221; he answered,
-with due modesty. &#8220;Indeed, I know
-little or nothing about the early history of the
-mine. My father became interested in it some
-years before he died, and I think he always regarded
-it as a dead loss. But he bought the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-stock, or rather, I should say, had it forced upon
-him, when it was pretty cheap, and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she interrupted, a little forbiddingly,
-he thought; and then she began to speak of
-other things as if groping for a more congenial
-common ground. It was found when Tregarvon
-confessed to an amiable weakness for good music.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll play for you if you wish,&#8221; she said almost
-abruptly; and it was an hour later when
-Carfax entered the music-room to break the
-spell which Miss Richardia had woven about
-her single listener.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must do this again, but not too often,&#8221;
-was Tregarvon&#8217;s half-jesting warning to his
-entertainer at the moment of leave-taking; a
-moment snatched while Carfax was giving the
-privileged seniors a spin around the campus
-drive in the yellow car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not often?&mdash;or as often as you care to
-come?&#8221; the musician asked indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I am much too impressionable.
-You could very easily make me forget some
-things that it is up to me to remember.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For example?&#8221; she prompted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a long story, and Poictiers won&#8217;t give
-me time to tell it now. But some other evening,
-if I may come?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>&#8220;Why shouldn&#8217;t you come when you feel like
-it? I hope you won&#8217;t go away underestimating
-your welcome&mdash;you and Mr. Carfax. You owe
-it to us to come frequently, so that the novelty
-will wear off&mdash;for the student body. I&#8217;ll venture
-to assert that Miss Longstreet has been
-having the time of her life keeping order in the
-dormitories this evening. Good night; and give
-my love to Uncle William.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To Uncle William? Then you know him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed and showed him that Carfax was
-waiting for him. &#8220;Uncle William will know who
-sent the message if you say &#8216;Miss Dick&#8217;,&#8221; she
-explained; and he was obliged to accept this as
-an answer to his eager question.</p>
-
-<p>The road down the mountain was a speeding
-track only in spots, and between stretches the
-big car crept at a snail&#8217;s pace on the brakes, and
-so permitted conversation.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax began it in genial raillery, congratulating
-Tregarvon upon the accessibility of Highmount
-and the very evident heartiness of his
-welcome.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t desiccate entirely down here,
-Vance, with such a well-spring of youth and
-beauty as that within shouting distance,&#8221; he
-remarked.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>But Tregarvon was thinking pointedly of Miss
-Richardia when he rejoined: &#8220;She is a puzzle
-to me, Poictiers; nothing less.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The charming music teacher, you mean?
-Peaches-and-cream, I&#8217;d call her, if she&#8217;d let me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re blind; blind as a mole!&#8221; retorted
-Tregarvon. &#8220;Why, man! she is anything but
-that&mdash;or those.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Doubtless,&#8221; Carfax laughed. &#8220;They are all
-&#8216;anything but that&#8217; when you get down under
-the pose. But &#8216;peaches-and-cream&#8217; is Miss Birrell&#8217;s
-pose, just the same; not the conventional
-kind they serve you at the Waldorf or Ritz-Carlton,
-of course, but the sort you get when
-the cream comes thick and rich from your own
-dairy, and the peaches are picked, sun-warm,
-in your own orchard. You may tell her that,
-if you like, and palm it off as original with you.
-Strikes me it&#8217;s rather neat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you go hang!&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-have to work in your compliments, second-hand.
-I can turn &#8217;em myself, at a pinch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this point a half-mile of good road beckoned
-for speed, and the talk was interrupted. When
-it was resumed at the next curving hazard in
-the pike, Carfax had somewhat to say about the
-Ocoee.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>&#8220;What do you know about the ancient history
-of your mine, Vance?&#8221; he asked, when the
-topic was fairly launched.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing much, in detail. Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was asking for information. President Caswell
-was speaking of it while you were in the
-music-room with Miss Birrell. He came out and
-sat with us for half an hour or so. There is a
-mystery of some sort connected with the Ocoee.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure!&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;The mystery is
-six feet thick, and it consists of a layer of good
-solid sandstone. I&#8217;m about to penetrate it with
-a test-drill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I didn&#8217;t mean that,&#8221; Carfax objected.
-&#8220;It is another kind of mystery. I&#8217;ll tell you what
-Doctor Caswell said, and you may draw your
-own conclusions. We had been talking about
-superstitions and their hold upon humanity. I
-was scoffing, as usual, but the president seemed
-inclined to a belief that Providence or fate, or
-whatever you wish to call it, does interfere sometimes;
-and that these interferences form a basis for
-some of the convictions we call superstitions.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All of which would seem to be a good many
-miles from a pair of coal seams made profitless
-by a stone &#8216;horse&#8217; between them,&#8221; suggested
-Tregarvon mildly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>&#8220;I&#8217;m coming to that; the distance isn&#8217;t so
-great as it may seem. The doctor rode his notion
-as if it were a hobby. He spoke of the well-grounded
-belief in the saying that &#8216;murder will
-out,&#8217; and insisted that the facts proved the truth
-of this saying; facts which were often mysterious.
-Then he referred to that other pet notion of the
-bulk of mankind: that misfortune pursues the
-possessor of ill-gotten gains. To my astonishment,
-he pointed to your Ocoee property as an
-example.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The dickens he did!&#8221; exclaimed Tregarvon,
-with interest suddenly awakened. &#8220;How did he
-make the Ocoee fit in?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is the peculiar part of it. When I betrayed
-my complete ignorance of matters Ocoeean
-by beginning to ask questions, he shut up like a
-clam. All I could get out of him was an assertion
-that misfortunes had accompanied every
-succeeding attempt to open the mine, and that
-they would doubtless continue to follow until
-justice was done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But justice to whom?&#8221; queried Tregarvon.
-&#8220;You didn&#8217;t let it rest at that, I hope.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I tried not to, but he gave me a dignified
-cold shoulder and referred me to you; said you
-doubtless knew all the circumstances, and would,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-he hoped, take proper steps toward removing
-the curse.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The descent of Pisgah was accomplished, and
-Tregarvon steered the yellow car into an empty
-warehouse which was to be its garage.</p>
-
-<p>Later, when he was showing his guest to the
-sleeping-room made ready for him by Uncle
-William, he said: &#8220;I don&#8217;t wish to pull you into
-this thing with me blindfolded, Poictiers. If
-there is a skeleton in the Ocoee closet, I&#8217;ll have it
-out and give it decent Christian burial before I
-ask you to back me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But at this, Carfax appeared at his multi-millionaire
-best.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll do nothing of the sort, old man. You
-will find me some old clothes to-morrow morning
-and we&#8217;ll go up and set your test-drill at work.
-Further along, when more money is needed, I&#8217;ll
-go somewhere to a bank and turn the fortunate
-spigot. We&#8217;ve got to make a go of your mine
-now, if only to show Doctor Caswell that the
-superstitions can&#8217;t prove up on this particular
-homestead.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">V<br />
-
-
-<small>Partly Sentimental</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CARFAX&#8217;S promise to stay and see the
-Ocoee experiment fairly on its feet was
-made in good faith, as the idlers at Tait&#8217;s store,
-and more than these, a London-bred and disconsolate
-Merkley, were shortly given to understand.
-Moreover, the golden youth&#8217;s threat of
-wearing old clothes and dipping into the crude
-mechanical processes of the experiment was also
-carried out; which not only deepened Merkley&#8217;s
-conviction that he had attached himself to a
-mild-mannered lunatic of a peculiarly American
-type, but left him without an occupation&mdash;a
-mere fragment of urban flotsam eddying in the
-backlash of a rude current of bucolic unfamiliarity.</p>
-
-<p>Unlike Rucker, the mechanician, who promptly
-donned overalls and jumper, pulled his tight-fitting
-burglar&#8217;s cap down to his ears, and put
-himself at the head of Tregarvon&#8217;s drilling squad
-on the mountain top, Merkley took to drink and
-the company of the loungers on Tait&#8217;s porch.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-Here he became (though unhappily without
-knowing it) a target for the shrewd wit of the
-idlers, and, what he was even further from suspecting,
-the gossip circle&#8217;s chief source of information
-touching the daily progress of the
-latest attempt to make a silk purse out of the
-Ocoee sow&#8217;s ear.</p>
-
-<p>At first there was little for Merkley to tell, and
-the army of leisure, smoking its corn-cob pipes
-and whittling the corners of the packing-boxes
-on Tait&#8217;s porch, looked on and amused itself by
-slyly baiting the disconsolate Londoner.</p>
-
-<p>Day by day, Tregarvon, Carfax, and the promoted
-chauffeur turned out early in the morning,
-took their places with the native laborers
-in the tram-car, and were lifted to the scene of
-their labors on high Pisgah. At sunset they
-came down, ate much, smoked a little, talked
-less, and, save for an occasional evening when
-Tregarvon and his guest got out the yellow automobile
-and drove to Highmount College, went
-early to bed as those who had earned their rest
-by good, honest muscle-weariness.</p>
-
-<p>But when the smoke plume streaming bravely
-from the stack of the mountain-top drilling plant
-announced the actual beginning of the experiment,
-Merkley brought news to Tait&#8217;s. Something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-had gone wrong on the mountain summit;
-something was continually going wrong. The
-two young men inhabiting the tumble-down
-office-building across the railroad-track no longer
-went to bed immediately after their evening meal.
-Instead, there were prolonged conferences behind
-the closed door of the dining-room in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to this, Rucker, characterized by
-Merkley as a despised, greasy-handed mechanic,
-whose burglarish aspect would earn him the
-attentions of a plain-clothes policeman in any
-properly Scotland-Yarded city of the world, was
-sometimes called in to these dining-room conferences,
-while he, Merkley, once the confidential
-and trusted valet of his Grace the Duke of
-Marlford, was excluded. At this point in his
-narrative, Merkley, being the worse for two or
-three tiltings of Jeff Walters&#8217;s or old man Layne&#8217;s
-jug of corn whiskey, would become tearful and
-despondent.</p>
-
-<p>These Merklean hints of a changed condition
-of affairs on Mount Pisgah were well buttressed
-by sundry discouraging facts. During the making-ready
-of the drilling plant everything had
-gone on fairly well. But dating from the hour
-when Rucker had first sent live steam whistling
-into the cylinder of the small portable engine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-which furnished the power, a stream of disaster
-had trickled discouragingly and persistently upon
-the experiment.</p>
-
-<p>First the drills went dull and refused to cut
-the fine-grained sandstone of the plateau; and
-when Rucker had retempered them, the engine
-worked water and started a cylinder-head. After
-the cylinder was repaired, one of the natives
-who was firing the boiler let the water get too
-low&mdash;to the loosening of some of the boiler-flues,
-and to the imminent risk of an explosion.</p>
-
-<p>Rucker, handiest of mechanics, calked an
-entire day on the loosened flues, and the machinery
-was started again. Two hours later the
-pivot-bolt of the big timber walking-beam which
-imparted the up-and-down motion to the drill
-worked loose, and the walking-beam came down,
-one end of it narrowly missing Tregarvon, and
-the other wrecking the machinery to the tune of
-a hundred dollars and an indefinite interval of
-waiting for renewals.</p>
-
-<p>It was after this last and most disheartening
-of the disasters, the only one thus far that Rucker
-had not been able to repair on the spot, that the
-two young men once more shut the door of the
-back-office dining-room upon a disappointed London
-serving-man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>&#8220;By George! I&#8217;m beginning to come around
-to your view of it, Poictiers,&#8221; said Tregarvon,
-cramming his pipe with dry tobacco from the jar
-set out by Uncle William. &#8220;These setbacks are
-knocking us too regularly to fit decently into
-any chapter of accidents. I&#8217;m beginning to believe
-they are inspired.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is precisely what I have been trying
-to tell you and Rucker all along, but neither of
-you would have it that way,&#8221; rejoined Carfax
-coolly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, carry your theory to a conclusion;
-who&#8217;s doing it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah! now you are getting out to a place where
-the water is over my head,&#8221; Carfax admitted,
-toying delicately with a pipeful of strong
-&#8220;natural-leaf&#8221; tobacco. &#8220;According to Captain
-Duncan&#8217;s prophecy, you have two possible ill-wishers&mdash;haven&#8217;t
-you?&mdash;the C. C. &amp; I. people
-and the McNabbs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; but it is rather incredible on both
-counts, don&#8217;t you think? You can hardly imagine
-a great corporation getting down on its hands
-and knees to chuck pebbles into the wheels of
-our little mechanism up on Pisgah.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax nodded. Then he said: &#8220;How about
-the McNabbs?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>&#8220;It seems rather more in their line, you&#8217;d say.
-And yet I haven&#8217;t a shadow of right to accuse
-them. So far, they are entirely mythological; a
-mere name mentioned by Captain Duncan and
-a few others. So far as I am aware, I have not
-yet seen a McNabb.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whoever it is who is setting these little traps
-for us is deucedly clever,&#8221; remarked Carfax, who
-was still toying half-heartedly with his long-stemmed
-pipe. &#8220;Rucker is fooled, all right; he
-still insists that it is mere hard luck.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, and that is another argument against the
-McNabb hypothesis,&#8221; Tregarvon put in. &#8220;It
-would take a pretty skilful mechanic to fool
-Rucker; and from what I can hear, these title-claimants
-are ignorant mountaineers whose mechanical
-gifts most probably don&#8217;t rise beyond
-the lock action of an old-fashioned squirrel-rifle
-or the simple intricacies of a ten-quart whiskey-still.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Which brings us back to the original proposition&mdash;the
-C. C. &amp; I.,&#8221; suggested Carfax reflectively,
-and, after a pause: &#8220;How long is this
-last smash going to hang us up?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three or four days. If Rucker gets back
-from Chattanooga with the new gears by Monday,
-he will be doing well.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>&#8220;All right. To-morrow morning I shall ask
-you to lend me your yellow chug-wagon. I have
-a premonition that the spirit will move me to
-go and run this little mystery of yours into a
-corner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon laughed good-naturedly. &#8220;You&#8217;d
-much better go back to your own stamping-ground
-and begin to take up your shooting engagements.
-You can&#8217;t afford to stay down here
-monkeying with this last-resort hustle of mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The golden youth was looking shrewdly over
-the smoke wreaths at his companion.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it a last resort, Vance?&#8221; he asked quietly,
-adding: &#8220;You have never told me much about
-the family smash.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was complete, Poictiers; an up-to-date,
-finished product of modern high-finance methods.
-The Vanderburg crowd got father against the
-wall in the steel merger, and&mdash;well, you&#8217;ll know
-how bad it was when I tell you that it killed him.
-The doctors said pneumonia, but it was really a
-Wall Street sand-bagging. He didn&#8217;t leave a
-will; and when we gathered up the fragments
-afterward, we knew why he didn&#8217;t; there wasn&#8217;t
-enough to make it worth while. So, you see, the
-Ocoee <i>is</i> a last resort, for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was musing again.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>&#8220;Yet you are going to many a comfortable
-little gold mine,&#8221; he said, after a time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Uncle Byrd&#8217;s Colorado millions?&mdash;yes. And
-I am rather sorry; for Elizabeth&#8217;s sake, not less
-than for my own. We were engaged before Uncle
-Byrd died, and he knew it. It was entirely unnecessary&mdash;not
-to say cruel&mdash;for him to leave
-his fortune to Elizabeth on the condition that
-she shouldn&#8217;t change her mind and marry somebody
-else, and to me in case she did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax did not comment upon the cruelty.
-He was perfectly familiar with the terms of Mr.
-Byrd Tregarvon&#8217;s will. Instead, he said: &#8220;You
-hear from Elizabeth regularly, I suppose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, certainly. Duty is always written out
-in large capitals for Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you think she writes to you from a sense
-of duty?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We needn&#8217;t put it just that way. But I have
-no doubt she conceives it to be her duty to a
-man she has promised to marry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You shouldn&#8217;t say such things as that, Vance,
-not even to me,&#8221; corrected the other man quickly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know I shouldn&#8217;t. It is only one of the
-many ways in which Uncle Byrd&#8217;s millions corrode
-things. Without meaning to, the old uncle
-stood matters upon an entirely different, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-most difficult, footing for us two. We meant to
-marry: we had passed our word to the various
-members of the clan that we were going to marry;
-and the clan was glad because it had always
-counted upon that outcome for us. So far as a
-man up a tree might discern, it was a perfectly
-free choice for both of us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go on,&#8221; said Carfax, when Tregarvon stopped
-to refill his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then one day, out of a clear sky, <i>zip!</i> comes
-Uncle Byrd with his will and his millions. After
-which, of course, Elizabeth can&#8217;t throw me over
-without impoverishing herself; and it is equally
-out of the question for me to let her do it. Moreover,
-it is imperatively up to me to make good
-before I marry her. If I don&#8217;t, uncharitable people
-will say that I let go of the business end of
-things because I knew that my wife&#8217;s money
-would stop all the holes to keep the wind away.
-There you have it&mdash;sermon length.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax smoked in sober silence for quite a few
-minutes. Then he said mildly: &#8220;Do you know,
-Vance, I don&#8217;t more than half like your attitude&mdash;as
-you&#8217;ve just expressed it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s smile was a grin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me what there is about it that you don&#8217;t
-like, and I&#8217;ll change it, Poictiers. You are by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-long odds the best friend I have in the world, and
-I&#8217;d change a dozen attitudes for you, any day in
-the week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t lover-like,&#8221; Carfax objected.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that it is too purely cousinly? I
-can&#8217;t very well help that phase of it, you know;
-we <i>are</i> cousins, and we have been trotting around
-together, more or less, ever since Noah walked out
-of the ark. Nothing like that for killing sentiment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But sentiment shouldn&#8217;t be killed, if you are
-going to marry Elizabeth,&#8221; insisted the purist.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have threshed all that out, time and again,
-down to the final spear of straw, Elizabeth and I,&#8221;
-Tregarvon explained carelessly. &#8220;At first we did
-try to galvanize ourselves into some of the sentimental
-throes, but it was such a ridiculous little
-comedy that Elizabeth herself called it off. We
-are sufficiently fond of each other; Uncle Byrd&#8217;s
-will is mandatory, and we shall be able to live
-together without quarrelling. What more could
-you ask?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Carfax thoughtfully.
-&#8220;Your summary fits in pretty accurately with the
-way of the world. Yet, if I had to change places
-with either of you, I fancy I should ask a good
-bit more.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>&#8220;If you were Elizabeth Wardwell, you wouldn&#8217;t
-ask any more; and if you were Vance Tregarvon,
-you couldn&#8217;t. So there you are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again there was a smoke-beclouded silence, and
-into the thick of it Carfax launched a pointed
-query:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you told Elizabeth anything at all
-about the girls&#8217; school on the mountain&mdash;Highmount?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, sure; and about the bewitching Miss
-Birrell, as well. I always tell Elizabeth everything;
-I haven&#8217;t sense enough not to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And her comment?&#8221; asked the golden one
-half-absently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On Miss Birrell, you mean? To tell the
-brazen truth, I expected a wigging; not anything
-like a jealous outbreak, you understand&mdash;Elizabeth
-is miles above that&mdash;but some nicely worded,
-cool-lipped advice about not pitching the conventions
-out at the window just because I happen
-to be living a thousand miles from real civilization&mdash;Philadelphia
-civilization.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you didn&#8217;t get it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, indeed. She didn&#8217;t say a word about
-Miss Birrell, specifically, but she wrote me a
-good cousinly letter in which she told me how
-glad she was that I needn&#8217;t deny myself all of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-social mitigations, and urging me not to let my
-job on the Ocoee make a one-sided hermit of me.
-That letter came nearer to making me sentimental
-over her than anything else she has ever
-said or done. It did, for a fact.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax did not vote Aye or No on this. He
-appeared content to let the sentimental matter
-rest, since he went back to the business difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About this last-resort tussle of yours, Vance,
-I see now why it is mighty necessary for you to
-make it win, and I wish you had a little better
-assurance that you are not up against a brace
-game; that Old Pisgah hasn&#8217;t stacked the cards
-on you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t very well afford to think of that possibility,&#8221;
-said Tregarvon grimly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I suppose you can&#8217;t. Yet if the genially
-cynical attitude of the native bystander counts
-for anything&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The loafers over at Tait&#8217;s, you mean? They&#8217;d
-scoff at anything that smelled of good, honest
-work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wasn&#8217;t thinking of them particularly, though
-they help swell the grand total. But the entire
-countryside seems to think that you are barking
-up an empty tree. President Caswell says you
-are wasting time and money; and that mild-eyed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-clerical-looking professor of sciences, Hartridge,
-fairly chortled when I told him what we were
-doing. You may remember that he strolled over
-from Highmount the day we started the drill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did he say?&#8221; Tregarvon demanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He very pointedly said nothing. But there
-was a look in his skim-milk eyes that recalled the
-villain in a play.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was laughing appreciatively. &#8220;You
-have an eye for the dramatic possibilities, always,
-haven&#8217;t you, Poictiers? Why should Mr. William
-Wilberforce Hartridge have it in for me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can only make a crude guess. Even a mild-eyed
-professor of sciences may turn, like the
-trodden worm. You umpire him out of the game
-pretty ruthlessly when we spend an evening at
-Highmount.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;With Miss Richardia? Pshaw! you don&#8217;t
-suppose that dried-up old stick of a pedagogue&mdash;why,
-it would be Beauty and the Beast!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile was truly angelic, but it betrayed
-a wisdom far beyond his years.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he rejoined reflectively, &#8220;Hartridge may
-be all of ten years your senior&mdash;possibly fifteen.
-No doubt he ought to be quietly chloroformed
-and carried behind the scenes. But, as I say, he
-chortled&mdash;with his eyes&mdash;when I told him that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-you were planning to drill a series of test-holes,
-continuing the series until you find the place where
-your two coal seams come together as one. He is
-a geologist, among other things, and they tell me
-he knows this region like a book. I believe I&#8217;d
-cultivate him a little, if I were you; even if it did
-cost me an occasional <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> with Miss Richardia
-Birrell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon scoffed hardily at the suggestion,
-and the scorn was not thrown away upon his companion.
-Perhaps that was the reason why Carfax,
-going to bed a little later, without the ministrations
-of a lachrymose and whiskey-breathing
-Merkley, opened the back of his watch to gaze
-long and earnestly at a picture therein, closing
-the case finally with a little sigh. Millions are
-good things in their way, but there be pearls,
-trampled thoughtlessly underfoot by the millionless,
-which millions cannot buy.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VI<br />
-
-
-<small>Daddy Layne, and Others</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON the morning after the crash of the walking-beam
-and the consequent halting of the
-mountain-top activities, Carfax took the yellow
-car out of its warehouse garage; and after driving
-for a half-hour or so up and down the valley
-road with a tonneauful of speechless but highly
-delighted children picked up at Tryon&#8217;s and
-Jeff Walters&#8217;s, he pulled up in front of Tait&#8217;s
-and went in, ostensibly to buy smoking tobacco,
-but really to make friends with the country-store
-idlers.</p>
-
-<p>Cursory observers from an alien North, penetrating
-now and then to unhackneyed regions in
-the Cumberlands or the Great Smokies, are apt
-to find the country folk, either valley or mountain
-bred, reticent by nature and notably shy of
-strangers. But there was no resisting the genial
-and childlike affability of the young man who
-had been giving the village children joy-rides,
-who recklessly bought a box of Tait&#8217;s best two-for-a-nickel
-cigars and distributed them generously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-as one among friends, and who presently
-had the hood lifted from the yellow car&#8217;s motor
-installation and was explaining, in words of one
-syllable, the workings of the driving mechanism
-to a group of curious and deeply interested onlookers.</p>
-
-<p>The small lecture explanatory gave Carfax a
-chance to pick his man, and the choice fell upon
-the elder Layne. Would Mr. Layne like to take
-a little ride up the road in the car?&mdash;just to see
-how much more easily manageable it was than a
-horse-drawn vehicle?</p>
-
-<p>Daddy Layne was overwhelmed with embarrassment,
-and was also secretly puffed up with
-pride, though he did not yield too easily, a disposition
-to haggle and make terms being a ruling
-passion in the Layne nature.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I &#8217;low I warn&#8217;t thinkin&#8217; none o&#8217; takin&#8217; a trip
-this mornin&#8217;,&#8221; he mused reflectively. &#8220;Man
-ortn&#8217;t to go projeckin&#8217; &#8217;round on his&#8217;n travels
-when thar&#8217;s sech a heap o&#8217; work to be done on
-the place. But then, thar&#8217;s my married daughter
-Malviny&mdash;her man&#8217;s coal-diggin&#8217; for the C. C.
-&amp; I., up yander at Whitlow; ef ye could git me
-thar an&#8217; back&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax assured him that there was nothing
-easier, and by dint of holding the big car down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-to its slowest speed on the five-mile run to Whitlow
-he accomplished his purpose, which was to
-beguile Layne into telling him all that the countryside
-knew about the C. C. &amp; I., its methods,
-its local managers, and whether or not the report
-was true that it made industrial war upon the
-smaller companies and individual mine owners.</p>
-
-<p>Layne gave him the countryside point of view,
-which was, of course, inimical to the corporation&mdash;to
-any corporation. The C. C. &amp; I. paid its
-men next to nothing for digging the coal and
-then sold it for fabulous prices to the people
-in the cities; it ran company stores and the
-miner who refused to buy his supplies thereat
-was likely to find himself out of a job; when a
-coal-digger was hurt or killed in an accident, the
-company&#8217;s long purse defeated the ends of justice
-in the damage suit; and so on to the end of the
-accusative category.</p>
-
-<p>Pinned down to the particulars about the
-Whitlow, Layne admitted that the young engineer
-in charge as superintendent was a &#8220;squar&#8217;&#8221;
-man; but Connolly, the local manager under this
-superintendent, was, in Layne&#8217;s description, a
-man-killer. As to the company&#8217;s policy toward
-its competitors, Layne could say nothing definite,
-the countryside point of view not being penetrative<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-of hidden corporation methods. But it
-was true that the only mines in operation in the
-valley belonged to the C. C. &amp; I. Company.
-Others had been opened from time to time, but
-they were usually short-lived.</p>
-
-<p>This drawing of Daddy Layne on the drive to
-Whitlow, and, later, an interview with Connolly,
-a hard-mouthed Irishman whose crass brutality
-apparently justified Layne&#8217;s descriptive epithet
-of &#8220;the man-killer,&#8221; gave Carfax a clue which
-he followed patiently until it was time to take
-Layne back to Coalville; a clue which led to a
-scraped acquaintance with the local leaders of
-the Amalgamated Mine Workers, to affable and
-seemingly pointless talks with all who dared to
-talk, and finally to a friendly conference with
-the miner Dockery, Layne&#8217;s son-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The kindling-wood for your obstruction fire
-is all cut and stacked at Whitlow, Vance,&#8221; was
-his dinner-table announcement to Tregarvon at
-the close of this day of investigation. &#8220;I have
-discovered a number of things. First, that the
-C. C. &amp; I. methods of benevolent assimilation
-as directed toward possible competitors have
-varied from instigating all sorts of trouble in
-the mines to be squelched up to swallowing them
-whole in forced sales of stock.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>&#8220;That sounds cheerful,&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;Go
-on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Next, they leave it to the local managers to
-nip any new venture in the bud as effectually and
-quietly as possible, without bothering the trust
-headquarters. I took a long chance on Connolly,
-the assistant superintendent at Whitlow,
-and got that much of it pretty straight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean to say that he admitted any
-such thing as that to you, when it is known all
-up and down the valley that you are interested
-here with me!&#8221; exclaimed Tregarvon, wholly
-incredulous.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile would have made a blushing
-debutante envious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In Mr. Connolly&#8217;s office, I was a lost lamb of
-the flock, looking most pathetically for somebody
-to lead me home,&#8221; he rejoined. &#8220;A fellow
-named Tregarvon had got me down here from
-New York with a view to pulling my financial
-leg as an investor in some coal property a few
-miles down the valley&mdash;at Coalville, in fact. I
-enlarged somewhat upon this part of it; kept it
-up until I was reasonably sure that I had convinced
-Connolly that I am a woolly sheep, merely
-waiting for somebody to come along with a pair
-of sharp shears.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>&#8220;Good&mdash;ripping good!&#8221; Tregarvon chuckled.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve missed your calling, Poictiers, by all
-the distance lying between Riverside Drive and
-the city detective department down-town. But,
-as you say, you took a long chance; unless Connolly
-is a bigger fool than he looks to be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t I? But Connolly is simply an abysmal
-brute; a man-driver without any of the little
-gifts of perspicacity. He took me under his wing
-like a stepfather-in-law; advised me bluntly to
-put my money into Consolidated Coal at one-forty
-rather than to go gunning on my own hook,
-or yours, or anybody&#8217;s, in Consolidated Coal&#8217;s
-intimate back yard. Pressed a little harder, he
-hinted that you wouldn&#8217;t be allowed to dig any
-real coal out of the Ocoee, providing there were
-any worth digging&mdash;which there wasn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Wouldn&#8217;t be allowed, Mr. Connolly?&#8217; said
-I, as lamb-like as possible. &#8216;How could Tregarvon
-be prevented?&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;There&#8217;s manny a way, Misther Carfax,&#8217; he
-scowled up at me; and then he let the cat out
-of the pillow-case: &#8216;These young min widout
-practical experience&mdash;&#8217;tis manny a blunder they&#8217;ll
-be making, and they&#8217;re soon discouraged entirely.
-I&#8217;m hearing that this same Misther Tregarvin is
-having throuble to beat the band, and him not
-fair at the beginning of it yet.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>Tregarvon was absently spilling a spoonful of
-sugar into his after-dinner coffee&mdash;a sufficient
-measure of his interest in Carfax&#8217;s story.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;From all of which you have argued that there
-is a C. C. &amp; I. spy in our camp, haven&#8217;t you,
-Poictiers?&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the remedy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is to find and fire him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The firing part of it will be easy; but the
-finding is a horse of another color. All of my
-squad save one or two, I believe, have worked
-at odd times for the C. C. &amp; I. Every able-bodied
-man in this region digs coal a little now
-and then; &#8216;huckleberry miners,&#8217; the regulars call
-them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll simply have to watch and sift; that&#8217;s
-all,&#8221; said Carfax.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve done a good day&#8217;s work, anyway,&#8221;
-was Tregarvon&#8217;s summing-up of the amateur
-detective&#8217;s report. &#8220;Candidly, I didn&#8217;t
-think you had it in you, Poictiers. You don&#8217;t
-look it, you know&mdash;to the naked eye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The angelic smile came and sat upon the clean-shaven,
-womanish face of the golden youth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you know, Vance,&#8221; he drawled lispingly,
-&#8220;I believe that is my strong point: not
-looking the ready-made, hand-me-down villain.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-It is foolishly easy to make people take me for a
-harmless, good-natured scrap-bag into which
-they can tuck any old thing they don&#8217;t happen
-to be needing at the moment. Why, even old
-Daddy Layne confided in me. Coming home,
-he told me all about the feud of the family of
-one of his sons-in-law with the McNabbs. By
-the way, that reminds me: did you know that
-you have two of the McNabb cousins in your
-working gang?&mdash;the fellows who call themselves
-Morgan and Sill?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had not known it; and a new field
-of conjecture as to the disasters was promptly
-opened. Why charge the coal trust with the
-campaign of obstruction when two of the avowed
-enemies of Ocoee progress were right on the
-ground day by day?</p>
-
-<p>Carfax rather sheepishly confessed that his
-brain had not been capacious enough to entertain
-two ideas at once. Having fixed upon the
-coal trust as the trouble source to be investigated,
-he had completely overlooked the McNabb
-alternative.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do time for it, though,&#8221; he promised.
-&#8220;To-morrow will be Saturday; and if you&#8217;ll
-lend me the car again, I&#8217;ll find out something
-more about those moonshiners in the Pocket.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>&#8220;Not alone, you won&#8217;t,&#8221; Tregarvon objected
-joyously. &#8220;It is going to be my Saturday off,
-too&mdash;and a holiday at Highmount. I&#8217;ll go with
-you, as far as the college, anyway.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VII<br />
-
-
-<small>Company Come</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON the day following Carfax&#8217;s journey of
-investigation to Whitlow, Tregarvon did
-not keep his promise to accompany the amateur
-Vidocq. There were still some repairs to be
-made on the tramway, and since a working
-squad of the laborers turned up to round out
-the week, Tregarvon stayed with his men and
-became a track foreman again.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax, too, had apparently changed his mind
-overnight. Instead of driving off up the mountain
-after breakfast, he headed the yellow car
-down the valley road and was gone all day.
-When he returned, late in the afternoon, it was
-evident that he had discovered some other way
-of ascending Pisgah. The committee of leisure,
-sitting, as usual, on Tait&#8217;s porch, and amusing
-itself, also as usual, at the expense of an expatriated
-London serving-man, marked the yellow
-car returning by way of the mountain pike;
-observed, further, that Carfax was accompanied
-by two men, one of whom sprang from the car<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-at the turn in the road nearest to the railway
-and ran to catch a northbound train of coal-empties,
-so escaping unidentified by the idlers.
-Carfax&#8217;s other passenger, well-known to Coalville
-as &#8220;The Bug Professor&#8221; at Highmount,
-descended from the auto more deliberately and
-went across to the coke-ovens to shake hands
-with Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Comp&#8217;ny come, over yander,&#8221; Daddy Layne
-remarked to Merkley. &#8220;Better hump yo&#8217;self
-acrost the track an&#8217; git ready to curl yo&#8217; boss&#8217;s
-ha&#8217;r, hadn&#8217;t ye, English?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Merkley adjourned himself accordingly, reaching
-the office-building in time to be sent to
-show Hartridge the way to the bath-room on the
-second floor. Carfax made no explanation to
-Tregarvon about the guest-bringing other than
-to say that he had captured the professor on the
-mountain, and had brought him down to take
-pot-luck of Uncle William&#8217;s preparing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We can eat him all right,&#8221; said the young
-mine owner hospitably; &#8220;but if we have to sleep
-him as well&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We shan&#8217;t,&#8221; Carfax asserted. &#8220;I have promised
-to drive him back to Highmount in the car
-after dinner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s better. Who was the other fellow?&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-one who jumped out and sprinted for
-the up freight?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; said Carfax mysteriously; &#8220;wait and
-you&#8217;ll find out.&#8221; And Tregarvon, having no
-alternative, had to wait.</p>
-
-<p>The dinner for three in the back-office dining-room
-followed in due course, and Tregarvon,
-who brought a working-man&#8217;s appetite to the
-table, let the other two do most of the talking.
-Carfax proved to be at his captivating best; solicitous
-for the guest&#8217;s entertainment, ingenuous,
-eager to be informed. Wouldn&#8217;t Mr. Hartridge
-have some more of the&mdash;er&mdash;rabbit, he thought
-it must be? And was it really a fact that the
-entire Cumberland region was underlaid by a
-vast sheet of bituminous coal?</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon ate and listened, and presently became
-aware of two things: that Carfax was
-persistently threshing the talk around to the
-coal-measures, and that the professor seemed
-equally determined to escape from them. A
-little later, he observed that in this verbal ball-passing
-Carfax was proving himself the better
-player. Hartridge was coerced inch by inch;
-first into talking about the Southern coal-fields
-in the abstract, and finally into relating the ancient
-history of the Ocoee; which was the purpose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-for which Carfax had baited and set the
-dinner trap.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suspect Mr. Tregarvon can tell you more
-about the history of the Ocoee than I can,&#8221; Hartridge
-demurred modestly, after Carfax had fairly
-pushed him over the brink; and upon Tregarvon&#8217;s
-monosyllabic disclaimer, he went on reflectively:
-&#8220;Let me see; I believe it was about
-ten years ago that the first company was formed&mdash;to
-the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut,
-psaltery, and dulcimer, as you might say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A promoter&#8217;s scheme?&#8221; queried Carfax,
-alertly inquisitive now.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. A man from New York&mdash;Parker was
-his name&mdash;launched the enterprise; bought a
-little land, obtained free-will donations of a
-great deal more, and, as a favor to the benighted
-natives who had contributed the land, consented
-to part with about forty-five per cent of the
-stock of his company at half-price, payable in
-money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear, dear; what a world this is!&#8221; sighed
-Carfax gently. &#8220;Sold them their own land back
-again, did he? And then what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge&#8217;s smile was genially cynical.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think it took the able Mr. Parker all of
-four months, or possibly a little longer, to squeeze<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-the local stockholders&mdash;the only investors who
-had contributed any real values&mdash;out of his
-scheme; after which he sold the reorganized
-Ocoee to a New England syndicate. The Yankees&mdash;pardon
-me; the word is no longer a term
-of reproach with us&mdash;the Yankees meant honestly
-by the Ocoee; though, of course, they were under
-no obligation to recognize the frozen-out natives.
-They spent money liberally in development and
-on a costly equipment. But it proved to be a
-bad investment for them&mdash;as it had for the
-natives.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; murmured Carfax. &#8220;Now I am better
-able to understand President Caswell&#8217;s attitude.
-In strict justice, he would say, the mine belongs
-to those earliest investors who contributed the
-land and bought the stock; or at least these
-early people should have an equity in it. These
-later&mdash;er&mdash;Yankees had no ethical rights; hence
-their venture was bound to be ill-starred. By
-Jove, Tregarvon,&#8221;&mdash;and here Carfax&#8217;s lisp became
-quite apparent&mdash;&#8220;that puts the black mark
-on you, too, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If Carfax had any diplomatic designs on the
-dinner-guest, Tregarvon was not a party to them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I only know that my father paid good money
-for the Ocoee,&#8221; he said bluntly; &#8220;paid it to these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-same Yankees you are telling us about, Mr.
-Hartridge, when they were ready to lie down.
-It is up to me to prove that they didn&#8217;t stick
-him as bad as they doubtless believed they were
-sticking him when they pulled him into it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax, who was observing the dinner-guest
-narrowly, saw the sign he had been watching for
-flit into the pale-blue eyes of Mr. William Wilberforce
-Hartridge; a half-smile of gratified derision.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think Vance isn&#8217;t very likely to make
-good on his little brag, professor?&#8221; he put in,
-firing a pointblank shot at the target.</p>
-
-<p>There was no indication that the shot had
-gone home, unless it lay in the quick veiling of
-the pale-blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who am I, that I should take out a license
-as a prophet of evil, Mr. Carfax?&#8221; was the quiet
-rejoinder. &#8220;He is a brave man nowadays who
-has the assurance to deny anything whatever
-to youth, vigor, and the spirit of modern industry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Still, you believe that Tregarvon isn&#8217;t going
-to win out?&#8221; persisted the golden youth.</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As Miss Richardia might put it, I haven&#8217;t
-any think coming to me, have I?&#8221; he parried.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax gave it up. There was a point beyond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-which he could not press a man who was dipping
-with him into the common salt-dish, and
-he felt that the point had been reached.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is a pity you can&#8217;t stay and spend the
-evening with us, Mr. Hartridge,&#8221; he said, a
-little further along, when Uncle William came
-in to bare the table; but he added nothing to
-the conventional protest when the professor declared
-that he must go: on the contrary, he
-sped the parting guest so nimbly that Tregarvon
-was scarcely at his third pipe-filling when
-the purring of the yellow car&#8217;s motor announced
-Carfax&#8217;s return from Highmount.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I told you so!&#8221; was the New Yorker&#8217;s first
-word, as he came in to take his place before the
-handful of fire on the dining-room hearth.
-&#8220;Where is my pipe?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you tell me?&#8221; queried Tregarvon,
-finding the pipe and pushing the tobacco within
-reach.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That Hartridge knows, or thinks he knows,
-that you are on a false scent up yonder on the
-Pisgah cliffs: also, that he is deuced glad of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can see farther into the millstone than
-I can, if you can draw any such conclusion as
-that,&#8221; Tregarvon remarked. &#8220;I thought he
-bluffed you good and plenty.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>&#8220;He did; and then again he didn&#8217;t. I insist
-that there is something doing, and that this
-mild-mannered gentleman who teaches mathematics
-and the natural sciences is in on it. I
-have just had an experience that was an eye-opener.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unload it,&#8221; said Tregarvon briefly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Somebody tried to kill one of us a few minutes
-ago, and&mdash;and I&#8217;m afraid Hartridge knew
-it was due to come off!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense&mdash;you&#8217;re joking!&#8221; Tregarvon had
-come out of his pipe-musings with a bound.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you just what happened, and then
-you shall judge for yourself. You know that
-stretch of good road about two-thirds of the
-way up the mountain?&mdash;the longest one there
-is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, just as we turned into it, going up,
-Hartridge twisted himself in the seat, looked
-back, and made some sort of a motion with his
-hand. I was talking; trying to pump him some
-more; and I don&#8217;t know why I should have noticed
-the bit of pantomime. Neither do I know
-why, coming down a few minutes later, I should
-have hit that piece of road at a ten-mile-an-hour
-gait instead of a thirty or forty. It was mighty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-lucky I wasn&#8217;t speeding. For about two shakes
-of a dead lamb&#8217;s tail you stood to lose a good
-friend and a twenty-five-hundred-dollar car.
-There was a tree lying across the road at precisely
-the correct angle to shoot me out into
-space if I had hit it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heavens!&#8221; exclaimed the listener. &#8220;Done
-while you were going and coming?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Done while I was going and coming. And
-that tree was lying at the exact spot where Hartridge
-turned in his seat and made the little signal
-with his hand to somebody that I couldn&#8217;t see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, good Lord, Poictiers! It&#8217;s unbelievable.
-Why, the man wasn&#8217;t ten minutes away from his
-bread-breaking with us!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t help that. You have the facts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I stopped, skirmished under the tonneau
-seat and found your towing rope, and took a
-hitch on the obstruction. The car was good for
-it, and I dragged the tree around and rolled it
-over the embankment. Then I examined the
-place where it had stood: it had been partly
-undermined by the road grading, and probably
-didn&#8217;t require much of a push to tip it over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then it might have been a sheer accident?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was shaking his head. &#8220;I thought so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-at first. But when I turned the flash-light on the
-gap it had left in the upper bank, I saw that it
-had not fallen accidentally. There are pick
-marks in the clay, and a crowbar had been thrust
-in behind the roots to pry with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You didn&#8217;t see or hear anybody?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a sign. I even went so far as to make
-a circuit in the woods along the upper embankment.
-There wasn&#8217;t a leaf stirring.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But think a minute, Poictiers: whatever
-crazy grudge any one might have against me or
-the Ocoee, it couldn&#8217;t be made to lap over on
-you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all right; it is your car, and you have
-usually driven it. You are doubtless the one
-who had the narrow escape, and I was only your
-happen-so proxy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a thoughtful half-hour they sat before the
-dying embers of the fire and discussed the murderous
-attempt in all its bearings, Tregarvon
-stoutly maintaining to the last that Hartridge
-could not possibly have been an accomplice. But
-disregarding that single slight clue, they were
-left completely in the dark as to the identity
-or motive of the man or men who had tried to
-wreck the car.</p>
-
-<p>In the early stages of the discussion Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-had suggested the McNabbs; and after every
-other guess had been exhausted he returned to
-them. But Carfax demurred at this.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he said. &#8220;As I told you yesterday, you
-have two of the McNabbs in your working gang,
-and they have had a thousand chances to extinguish
-you since you came down here. Besides,
-I&#8217;ve been over in the Pocket neighborhood to-day,
-and have found out a lot about the clan McNabb.
-They&#8217;re perfectly harmless, I should say. I ran
-across both Morgan and Sill, and they took me
-in and fed me fat bacon and corn pone. It is all
-of ten miles to their shack in the Pocket, and they
-would have had to walk out to get on this side of
-Pisgah. Besides that, Wilmerding gave me a lot
-of pointers about the McNabb tribe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who is Wilmerding?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is the man who rode down the mountain
-with Hartridge and me, and made the quick dash
-for the up-train. He is the chief of staff for the
-C. C. &amp; I. in the Wehatchee Valley; has the oversight
-of all the various mines of the company.
-He is a fine fellow; a mining engineer with a few
-German university finishing touches.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did you happen to meet him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hunted him up this morning; drove down
-to the Cardiff Mine for that purpose. They told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-me yesterday at Whitlow that he was at the
-Cardiff. I found him, and we foregathered on the
-spot. He is having some labor troubles, and was
-about to drive over the mountain to the Swiss
-settlement at New Basel to see if he couldn&#8217;t
-pick up a little new blood. I didn&#8217;t have to
-persuade very hard to get him to abandon his
-horse and buckboard, and I drove him over and
-back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is all right, you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As straight as a string. If the C. C. &amp; I. is
-crooked, he is no party to the underhand work.
-Also, he told me a lot about the McNabbs. He
-seems to be quite certain that they have no grudge
-of their own to work off. Laster McNabb, who
-is the grandfather of the outfit and the chief of
-the clan, has talked very freely with Wilmerding
-about the Ocoee lawsuit, and if the McNabbs
-have it in for anybody, it is for the lawyer who
-dragged them into the fight with the New Englanders.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon stood up to rest an elbow against
-the rough stone mantel. &#8220;If your estimate of
-Wilmerding is correct, the C. C. &amp; I. can&#8217;t be
-held responsible; and, on the other hand, it
-doesn&#8217;t seem to be the mountaineers. Yet we
-have had the accidents with the drilling machinery,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-and somebody has just tried to assassinate you.
-You may say it&#8217;s Hartridge, but I can&#8217;t follow
-you there. The motive is lacking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is the motive altogether lacking?&#8221; Carfax
-queried gently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that Hartridge may be asinine
-enough to think that I am trespassing on his
-preserves at Highmount? That is nonsense.
-Miss Richardia Birrell and I are merely good
-friends. Besides that, I don&#8217;t believe she has ever
-given the &#8216;bug professor&#8217; a second thought, sentimentally.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Maybe not. But a woman as a factor in any
-problem is always the unknown quantity,&#8221; Carfax
-remarked half musingly. Then he added: &#8220;It
-would be a real charity, both to you and to Professor
-William Wilberforce, if some outsider would
-step in and marry Miss Richardia out of the game,
-don&#8217;t you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s frown was morose. Slowly but
-surely the light with the difficulties, material and
-mysterious, was working a change in the young
-man whose chief characteristic had hitherto been
-finding its principal expression in the light-hearted
-optimism of those who neither toil nor spin. For
-the first time in his wealth-smoothed saunter he
-was coming to hand-grips with the primitive, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-the quick glance shot at Carfax was almost a
-challenge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps you&#8217;d like to be the outsider, Poictiers?
-Is that what you had in mind?&#8221; he threw
-in bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax, gazing reflectively into the heart of the
-fire embers, took the demand, or assumed to take
-it, at its face value.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A chap might do a lot worse,&#8221; he replied, as
-one who weighs the pros and cons judicially.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s a broken family, to be sure, as to its fortunes,
-but it&#8217;s good blood. They say that the
-old judge is as fine as they make &#8217;em; a gentleman
-of the old Southern school, land-poor, but
-as proud as Lucifer. The two McNabb boys were
-telling me about him to-day. They are squatters
-on Birrell land, as their forefathers were before
-them, and they&#8217;d fight for the old judge at
-the drop of the hat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t answered my question,&#8221; said
-Tregarvon pointedly.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax rose and stretched his arms over his
-head like a man who has put in a full day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; and I&#8217;m not going to answer it to-night.
-Later on, if you still insist on needing a guardian
-angel, there may be a different story to tell.
-Where&#8217;s my candle? I&#8217;m going to bed.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VIII<br />
-
-
-<small>The Stubborn Rock</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">BY the time Rucker returned from Chattanooga
-with the repairs for the broken drilling
-plant, the Saturday-night attempt to wreck the
-yellow car on Carfax&#8217;s run down the mountain
-had become a past danger-signal, and was in a
-fair way to be overlaid and forgotten in a fresh
-upturning of the activities.</p>
-
-<p>After the arrival of the new gears one day
-more was needed for their installation; then the
-smoke plume began to wave again from the top
-of the stack on lofty Pisgah, and the drill resumed
-its interrupted jouncings in the sandstone.
-In due course, and with no added untoward
-happenings to delay the work&mdash;this though the
-two McNabbs, identified now and closely watched
-by Tregarvon, were still retained in the gang&mdash;the
-drill reached the first coal seam, penetrated it,
-plunged again into rock, and, a few hours later,
-into and through the second and lower coal
-layer; net result&mdash;failure.</p>
-
-<p>With the new-found fighting resolution now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-fully aroused, Tregarvon did not waste a minute.
-In the intervals afforded by temporary pauses in
-the drilling he had found time to select a location
-farther back on the plateau for the next trial;
-and while the boiler of the portable engine was
-still hot from the fire-drawing of failure, the transfer
-of the plant was begun.</p>
-
-<p>The second trial was a mere repetition of the
-first, save that the layer of rock separating the
-two coal seams gained six inches in thickness
-for the added distance from the original mine
-opening in the cliff face at the head of the tramway.
-Wilmerding, the genial young superintendent
-of the C. C. &amp; I. subsidiaries was on
-the ground when the sand-pump tests of this
-second hole were made, and he shook his head
-doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose I oughtn&#8217;t to throw cold water;
-it doesn&#8217;t come with very good grace from the
-boss in the enemy&#8217;s camp,&#8221; he said deprecatingly.
-&#8220;But I&#8217;m mightily afraid you gentlemen are
-chasing fireflies. You have two distinct seams,
-instead of one that has been split by a horizontal
-wedge of the sand-rock, and I believe a careful
-analysis of the coal in the two seams will prove it.
-Going to move still farther back and try again?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the surest thing there is,&#8221; said Tregarvon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-who had already set his men at work striking the
-derrick. &#8220;I may be licked, but I&#8217;m too big a fool
-to know it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; laughed Wilmerding; &#8220;I like your
-courage immensely. But while you are tapping
-it again, send me some samples and let me analyze
-the two veins for you. I have a laboratory up
-at Whitlow, and I&#8217;ll be glad to help out to that
-extent.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are an enemy, right, Mr. Wilmerding!&#8221;
-said Tregarvon heartily. &#8220;A fighting friend
-couldn&#8217;t make a fairer offer than that. But you
-will find that the two seams are one and the
-same. I made even canny old Captain Duncan
-admit that he couldn&#8217;t detect any difference in
-the coal taken from the two veins.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Wilmerding nodded. &#8220;The captain is canny,
-as you say, though you can hardly prove it by me.
-I don&#8217;t know him very well&mdash;haven&#8217;t been down
-here long enough. Thaxter knows him from
-away back, however, and he has told me a good
-bit about the old Scotchman, who has the reputation,
-by the way, of being at the top of the
-heap as an analytical chemist.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thaxter?&#8221; put in Carfax interrogatively.
-He had been an attentive listener; his usual attitude
-in any three-cornered conference.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>&#8220;Yes. Don&#8217;t you know Thaxter, my bookkeeper?
-Not to know Thaxter is to argue yourself
-unknown in the Wehatchee. The rank and
-file at Whitlow think I&#8217;m the boss, and that
-Connolly comes next. But Thaxter is the real
-power behind the throne.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax made the necessary effort of memory
-and recalled a pursy little man, round-faced,
-gray-haired and genial, who had beamed up at
-him through a pair of thick-lensed spectacles on
-the day when he had invaded the C. C. &amp; I.
-stronghold at Whitlow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I remember him,&#8221; he told Wilmerding. &#8220;Reminded
-me of one of the Brothers Cheeryble,
-and I caught myself unconsciously looking about
-for the other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Not having read Dickens, Wilmerding lost the
-point of the comparison.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;Thaxter is It, all right
-enough. More than anybody else in this neck
-of woods he is Consolidated Coal: has every
-coal detail of this entire region down in black
-on white, neatly docketed and labelled and
-put away for future reference. I carry him on
-my pay-roll, but I couldn&#8217;t any more fire him
-than I could fire the President of the United
-States. On the other hand, I shouldn&#8217;t be surprised<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-if he could have my head any minute he
-chose to hold up his finger to the big guns in
-New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nice kind of a bombshell to be rolling around
-under a man&#8217;s feet,&#8221; Carfax commented.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Thaxter is harmless; he doesn&#8217;t explode.
-He is like the assistant secretaries of the Departments
-in Washington, you know; the fellows
-who really have the run of the business and
-stay on the job while the political chiefs come
-and go. They are like the cat: harmless and
-necessary and full of wisdom. Which reminds
-me: I&#8217;ll bet my wind-broken old nag, here,
-against your gas-car, Tregarvon, that Thaxter has
-an analysis of these coals of yours filed away
-somewhere this very minute. If he has, I&#8217;ll get
-it for you. It will be a lot more conclusive than
-any I could make, offhand, in my laboratory.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So offering, Wilmerding betook himself and his
-promise to the road leading to Whitlow, leaving
-the two undismayed coal prospectors on
-high Pisgah patiently removing their testing
-plant to a point still farther back from the cliff
-face. By this time the working gang had acquired
-the practice which makes perfect; and
-before the news of the failure of the second attempt
-had spread beyond the comment of Tait&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-store the drill was churning away in the third of
-the testing holes, with the lean, bristly-bearded
-Sawyer acting as drill-master&mdash;a post which he
-had claimed and filled from the first.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t care how much other people may laugh
-at you; <i>I</i> think your perseverance is beyond
-praise,&#8221; said Miss Richardia, on an afternoon
-when Tregarvon, scamping his job and snatching
-a few moments for himself, had driven her and a
-group of the Highmount young women over in
-the yellow car to the new location. &#8220;I am sure
-you deserve to succeed&mdash;if perseverance by itself
-ever deserves anything.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do you say, &#8216;by itself&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean sheer, dogged persistence, without
-any of the justifying reasons.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have the reasons; I&#8217;m obliged to succeed,&#8221;
-was the answer rather gloomily given. Carfax
-had taken the tonneau party around to the
-derrick, and the two in the driving-seat of the
-car had their bit of the mountain-top world
-momentarily to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You say that as if you were sorry,&#8221; laughed
-the music teacher. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you want to succeed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To want is to desire and need,&#8221; he explained
-meticulously. &#8220;Heaven knows, I need success;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-need it awfully. Yet the very reason for needing
-it is vicarious on one hand, and an exhibition of
-the meanest sort of purse-pride on the other.
-But you know all about that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Truly, Miss Richardia did know. It was during
-his third evening visit to Highmount, while
-Carfax was trundling the entire school in batches
-up and down the cherted pike in front of the
-college grounds in the auto, and Miss Richardia
-had been playing to him in the otherwise deserted
-music-room, that Tregarvon had told her
-all about the family fortunes, and Elizabeth, and
-his engagement, and the Uncle Byrd millions.
-He did not regard it as a breach of confidence at
-the time; of Elizabeth&#8217;s confidence or his own.
-He had merely yielded to an attack of a purely
-masculine desire to tell all he knew to the nearest
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You still think it is necessary to keep Miss
-Wardwell waiting?&#8221; Miss Richardia was always
-able to answer his unspoken thought without
-apparent effort, as he had already learned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t have me do anything else,
-would you?&#8221; he retorted discontentedly. &#8220;Put
-yourself in Elizabeth&#8217;s place: what would you
-think of me if I should take advantage of your
-good-nature, and so give everybody a chance to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-say that I didn&#8217;t need to be in love with you&mdash;that
-your money was a sufficient bait?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Birrell was not at all past blushing, and
-she did it very prettily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are so boyishly personal!&#8221; she laughed,
-and the fact that she did not resent the personality
-was an ample measure of the degree to which
-their intimacy had progressed. And then: &#8220;You
-promised me that you were going to be sensible
-and straightforward, and all those things. You
-said you were going to be entirely frank with
-Eliz&mdash;with Miss Wardwell, telling her that you
-haven&#8217;t insisted upon her naming the day because
-you think you ought to have means of
-your own, first. Have you done this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I haven&#8217;t&mdash;not yet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why haven&#8217;t you? You owe it to her, don&#8217;t
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps; but I owe something to myself, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia seized upon the admission
-swiftly and turned it as a weapon against him.
-&#8220;You do, indeed! You owe it to Mr. Vance
-Tregarvon not to keep any of the anchors in
-reserve. As you once said, yourself, you are too
-impressionable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A light o&#8217; love,&#8221; he laughed. &#8220;I must tell
-Elizabeth what an eloquent special pleader she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-has unconsciously acquired down here in the wilds
-of Tennessee. What have I done that I ought
-not to have done?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not your conscience,&#8221; was the cool-voiced
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you are,&#8221; he retorted accusingly. &#8220;You
-tell me what I ought to do, and I promise to go
-and do it. My intentions are always good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not sure of even that much, now. You
-have changed very remarkably in the past few
-weeks, and you must forgive me if I say that the
-change hasn&#8217;t been altogether for the better.
-You were just a nice, cheerful boy when you
-came to Tennessee, and you&#8217;re not that any
-more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have good reasons, and plenty of them,&#8221;
-he blurted out. &#8220;Do you want to hear them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not when you talk that way,&#8221; said Miss
-Birrell, and her attitude became suddenly indifferent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You shall hear them, whether you want to
-or not,&#8221; he broke in almost roughly. &#8220;I have
-the whole world against me on this Ocoee proposition;
-I have given my word to Elizabeth when
-I don&#8217;t love her as the man who is going to marry
-her ought to love her; and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is quite enough,&#8221; she interposed quietly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-&#8220;It only proves what I said a minute ago. You
-can&#8217;t afford to hold any of your anchors in reserve.
-I think we had better join Mr. Carfax
-and the young women. Don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. And I call that downright cruel, when
-we see so little of each other, and I almost never
-have you to myself any more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is your saying such things as that that
-makes me think I ought to be cruel. There are
-times when you need cruelty. Nothing milder
-would do any good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You may as well say the remainder of it,&#8221;
-he prompted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall. It is really serious. You must come
-to a better understanding with Miss Wardwell;
-and you must stop coming so often to Highmount.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The first time I went to Highmount you told
-me that I might come as often as I pleased. You
-needn&#8217;t worry about the school-girls. If you say
-the word, I&#8217;ll never speak to one of them again
-unless she is duly chaperoned at the moment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We were speaking of Miss Wardwell,&#8221; was
-the rather chilling reminder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, we will speak of her, then. She isn&#8217;t losing
-any sleep on my account. If you only knew
-Elizabeth as well as I do&mdash;but what&#8217;s the use!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>&#8220;There appears to be no use at all, and I have
-already said more than your nearest friend ought
-to say. Suppose we talk of something else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon refused flatly to accept the invitation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I want to know about my welcome at
-Highmount. I have had Mrs. Caswell&#8217;s warrant
-in the past. I have it yet. You can&#8217;t make me
-stay away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia&#8217;s pretty chin went up a quarter
-of an inch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you will compel me to be disagreeable;
-and I don&#8217;t like to be that. I always have plenty
-of work to do in the evenings; quite a number
-of the young women would like to take extra
-music lessons, and I have a piano in my rooms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon gasped. &#8220;You don&#8217;t mean that
-you&#8217;d be hard-hearted enough to shut yourself
-up? to refuse to see me? That would be&mdash;but
-I simply can&#8217;t contemplate it. You&mdash;you don&#8217;t
-know what your confidence and your clear insight
-have come to mean to me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;On the contrary, it is because I do know, or
-rather because I know how you are justifying
-yourself, that you must&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I shall not! It is just a frank, open
-friendship that has grown very precious to me,
-Richardia. Put it upon the lowest possible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-grounds; say that it amuses you and doesn&#8217;t
-hurt Elizabeth&mdash;I could show you letters from
-her in which she actually encourages it&mdash;and
-add to these that it does me a whole lot of good.
-Why should you freeze up right in the midst of
-it, just when I am needing all the encouragement
-I can get?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Birrell did not wish to laugh, but his
-protest, the shocked pleading of a little boy who
-fears he is about to be deprived of his customary
-piece of bread and butter with sugar on it, was
-too much for her self-control. None the less, she
-would not yield a hair&#8217;s-breadth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t convince me, and you needn&#8217;t try,&#8221;
-she declared. &#8220;Granting what you say&mdash;that it
-amuses me and doesn&#8217;t hurt any one else&mdash;there
-are still the conventions to be considered. Perhaps
-you think, because you are a thousand miles
-from Philadelphia, that there are no conventions.
-If you do, you are greatly mistaken. Highmount,
-for example, has a complete equipment of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Confound the conventions!&#8221; growled Tregarvon.
-Carfax was leading his following back
-to the car, and the end of the confidential talk
-was approaching.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, you needn&#8217;t swear at them,&#8221; said Miss
-Richardia, with honey in her tone. &#8220;More than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-that, you would be the last person in the world to
-want to have them confounded. In your proper
-environment, I can picture you as an exceedingly
-correct person; one who would protest most vigorously
-if his sister should&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did not finish, because the others were
-within hearing distance; but the sentence was
-sufficiently complete to point the comparison for
-Tregarvon. He bent over the steering-wheel and
-pretended to be trying the connections of the
-substitute battery coil. The feint permitted him
-to say in low tones: &#8220;You are altogether right&mdash;as
-you always are. I&#8217;ll be as decent as I can:
-and it will cost more than you think.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After which he descended from the driving-seat
-and shifted the responsibility of the return of
-the party to Highmount over to Carfax, saying
-that since the drill was doubtless nearing the
-coal depth, he would better stay on the job.</p>
-
-<p>He was late getting down the mountain that
-evening, having worked his crew overtime to settle
-a disputed point with Rucker. The dispute,
-or rather its outcome, was sufficiently explained
-in his announcement to Carfax when he tramped
-into the office dining-room and dropped wearily
-into a chair before the fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One more slap in the face, Poictiers. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-found the coal about two hours ago, and a little
-later the drill landed upon the sandstone layer
-again. I&#8217;m too tired to know whether it&#8217;s discouragement
-or just plain leg-weariness and back-ache,
-but I feel as if something had gone out of
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax rose to the occasion with his customary
-cheerful alacrity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re not going to say die, yet a while, Vance,
-old man. It merely means another try. If you
-are running low in the ammunition-chest&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, it isn&#8217;t that; it isn&#8217;t costing so terribly
-much. But to tell the blank truth, I don&#8217;t know
-where to go with the drill for another try. We
-are a good quarter of a mile back from the tramway
-head now; an almost impracticable distance,
-even if we had found the big vein.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what is the matter with swinging
-around the circle a bit? You have latitude as
-well as longitude, haven&#8217;t you?&#8221; said Carfax
-the comforter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes; there is Ocoee land enough. And
-I guess that is about the last hope.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Which way had you thought of moving, north
-or south?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whichever way you say,&#8221; was the spiritless
-reply.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>Carfax took a coin from his pocket and balanced
-it upon his thumb. &#8220;Heads, Highmount
-way; tails, toward Whitlow,&#8221; he called, and
-flipped the coin.</p>
-
-<p>It fell heads uppermost, deciding for the Highmount
-direction; and when Tregarvon would
-have picked the coin up to return it, Carfax
-stopped him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let it alone; I&#8217;m superstitious to-night.
-Uncle William will be in with your warmed-over
-dinner in a minute: let him pick it up and keep
-it&mdash;for good luck.&#8221; And a little while afterward,
-when the old negro shuffled in with the covered
-tray: &#8220;There is a dollar on the floor which we
-are both afraid to touch, Uncle William. Don&#8217;t
-you want it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old man scraped a foot and said: &#8220;Sarvent,
-suh,&#8221; but he arranged the table to the
-final nicety before going around to look at the
-money on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Marsteh Poictiers, whut-all is de marter
-wid dat dollah?&#8221; he asked, bending, hands on
-knees, to eye it suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is nothing the matter with the dollar,
-uncle; the trouble is with us. We are afraid of
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sho&#8217; now! Is you? Dat look lak a mighty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-rightchus dollah to me. Dat ain&#8217;t no debbil&#8217;s
-money, is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll have to settle that for yourself. Since
-the dollar came out of my pocket a few minutes
-ago, I shall be justified in refusing to answer so
-personal a question as that relating to its righteousness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Hyuh! hyuh!</i> It comed out of yo&#8217; pocket,
-an&#8217; yit you is skeered of it? Dat look mighty
-cur&#8217;is to me. Look lak you-all is tryin&#8217; to play
-trick on de ol&#8217; man, Marsteh Poictiers. I ain&#8217;t
-seed no white folks&#8217; money yit dat I&#8217;s skeered
-of,&#8221; and he bent cautiously to pick it up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look out, Uncle William; it might burn you!&#8221;
-said Carfax suddenly; and quite as suddenly the
-old negro dropped the coin and started back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bless gresshus! but dat <i>wuz</i> hot!&#8221; he exclaimed,
-blowing upon his fingers. And then:
-&#8220;Des you keep yo&#8217; eye on dat dollah, ef you
-please, suh, twell I come back, an&#8217; I&#8217;ll fix &#8217;im,&#8221;
-and a little later he returned from the cook-house
-with a small tin pan which he turned
-down over the piece of money.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ef dat won&#8217;t be in you gemmans&#8217; way, an&#8217;
-you-all &#8217;ll des leab &#8217;im dah, I gwine come back
-bimeby an&#8217; tek de cunjer off &#8217;im. I ain&#8217; gwine
-lef de ol&#8217; debbil hab dat dollah, not ef it <i>is</i> his&#8217;n.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>The little diversion did for Tregarvon what
-Carfax had hoped it might; and after the belated
-meal was eaten and the pipes were lighted,
-the atmosphere of disheartenment was changed
-somewhat for the better.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is one thing we have to be thankful
-for,&#8221; the disappointed one volunteered, when
-his reflections began to mellow in the tobacco
-smoke. &#8220;We haven&#8217;t heard from the enemy
-since the attempt was made to ditch the car,
-and there haven&#8217;t been any more of the unaccountable
-accidents to the machinery.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is so,&#8221; said Carfax. &#8220;And I have been
-trying to guess, all along, why he&mdash;or they&mdash;stopped
-so abruptly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There wasn&#8217;t any good reason why he&mdash;or
-they&mdash;should have begun,&#8221; said Tregarvon musingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Somebody evidently thought there was a
-reason, and afterward changed his mind. Why
-should he change his mind? That is the question
-that has been puzzling me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps he has found out what a good fellow
-I really am, and is no longer bloodthirsty,&#8221; put
-in Tregarvon, who was too tired to make any
-very heavy drafts upon his mentality.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t any notion that the fight, if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-there is one, is personal to you, have you?&mdash;excluding
-Professor Hartridge, of course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no; I was only joking. And we&#8217;ll always
-exclude Hartridge, if you please; I&#8217;m still
-refusing to believe it of him. It was probably
-somebody&#8217;s intention to drown the blind kitten
-of an Ocoee before it had time to get its eyes
-open; but the somebody couldn&#8217;t, by any stretch
-of imagination, be Hartridge.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But why has the somebody&mdash;who isn&#8217;t Hartridge&mdash;called
-the fight off so suddenly? By
-Jove, Vance&mdash;I have an idea! It has dawned
-upon the enemy, whoever he is, that it wasn&#8217;t
-worth while to efface us at a time when we were
-perseveringly going the right way about it to
-efface ourselves! I&#8217;d like to make a bet with
-you: when we begin drilling in the right place&mdash;if
-there is any right place&mdash;the trouble will blossom
-out again. What do you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t a thought left that isn&#8217;t too leg-weary
-to keep up with you,&#8221; Tregarvon confessed;
-whereat he fell to talking of Miss Richardia Birrell,
-dribbling on until Carfax, groaning in spirit,
-got up to light the bed-room candles.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">IX<br />
-
-
-<small>A Bad Night for Rucker</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">AFTER the drilling plant had been moved to
-the chance-chosen, fourth trial site a short
-half-mile south of the original line of prospect
-holes, the work of reinstallation was begun. At
-its completion, it was at Rucker&#8217;s suggestion that
-the small tool-house was fitted with a single-sashed
-window and a folding cot-bed, and that
-the duties of night-watchman were added to his
-daytime oversight of the drilling machinery.</p>
-
-<p>Just why the plant, which had been left unguarded
-since the first week of the campaign,
-and had been unmolested, should now need a
-night-watchman, the mechanician did not attempt
-to explain. His reasons for wishing to
-transfer his lodgings from the valley to the
-mountain top were entirely personal. He had
-been taken as a boarder at the Tryons&#8217;, and to
-wear out the dull evenings after working hours,
-he had been drawn first into the lounging circle
-at Tait&#8217;s store, and later into the smaller circle
-of the Layne household on the lower valley road.</p>
-
-<p>The loadstone at Layne&#8217;s was a granddaughter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-of the patriarch&#8217;s, a black-eyed, red-lipped girl
-of primal passions and impulses; and in the beginning
-Rucker had been given a fair field and
-no questions asked as to his eligible state and
-standing. Evening strolls on the country roads
-with Nancy Layne for a companion were not to
-be compared with a night off on Broadway under
-the bright lights; but such diversions were made
-to suffice until a day when Daddy Layne, abruptly
-pointing to the long-barrelled squirrel-rifle resting
-on its pegs over the kitchen fireplace, assumed
-the aggressive. &#8220;Git yo&#8217; license an&#8217; yo&#8217;
-preachuh, &#8217;r let Nan alone an&#8217; quit projec&#8217;in&#8217;
-round this yer valley o&#8217; nights,&#8221; was the old
-man&#8217;s ultimatum; and Rucker, having a wholesome
-fear of consequences, and the best of reasons
-for not applying for a marriage license,
-asked permission to sleep at the drilling plant.</p>
-
-<p>The first night on the mountain was frankly
-harrowing to the city-bred mechanic, whose burglarish
-aspect did not insure him against the still
-alarms of the forest intensified by moon-flung
-shadows of solemn trees, by scurryings of fallen
-leaves rattling like dry bones under the autumn
-night-wind, and, more than all, by a sense of complete
-and lonely isolation.</p>
-
-<p>Each unfamiliar sound brought Rucker out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-his cot-bed blankets with a bound and sent him
-groping to the square window. First it was a
-little screech-owl, perching on the walking-beam
-of the drill, and chattering out its blood-curdling
-cry. Next it was a slow and measured crashing
-in the undergrowth, sound mysterious and unnerving
-to a degree until the night-prowling cow
-responsible for it lowed gently and crossed the
-clearing to snuff suspiciously at the boiler and
-machinery.</p>
-
-<p>The tension once more relieved, Rucker tumbled
-into the blankets again, calling himself shop
-names and swearing by all the gods of the metalworkers
-that nothing short of a forest-fire or an
-earthquake should make him lose any more sleep.
-Yet, while he was still only eye-deep in his first
-doze a new alarm brought him leaping to his feet
-and sent him, blinking and breathing hard, to
-the square of moonlight framed by the small window.</p>
-
-<p>What he heard this time sounded like the
-measured hoof-beats of a horse. Rucker had a
-pocket flash-light, and he turned it upon the face
-of his watch. He had gone early to bed, and it
-was still early, barely ten o&#8217;clock. A by-road,
-the one by which the drilling plant had been
-brought in, ran through the wood a little distance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-to the left of the glade. Staring wide-eyed,
-Rucker made out the shadowy bulk of a wheeled
-vehicle standing in this road, with a white horse,
-seemingly of incredible size, looming gigantic between
-the thills.</p>
-
-<p>The mechanician got his breath, and his heart
-began to pump in steadier rhythm. A horse and
-buggy betokened the presence of humankind, and
-Rucker was not a coward of men. Moreover,
-the ball-peen machinist&#8217;s hammer, lying within
-easy reach, was no mean weapon of defense in
-the grasp of a man who knew how to swing it.</p>
-
-<p>Obsessed by the idea that he might shortly
-have to resort to the hammer, the mechanician
-was wholly unprepared for what followed. Slowly,
-and as if they were materializing out of the
-shadows of the wood, two figures glided into the
-watcher&#8217;s field of vision: a man, tall, stately,
-wearing the long coat and the wide-brimmed soft
-hat which even an unobservant Rucker knew to
-be the garmentings of the old-fashioned Southern
-gentleman. And, hanging on the man&#8217;s arm, a
-woman, small and trimly clad.</p>
-
-<p>They came only to the edge of the open glade.
-The woman&#8217;s hat left her face in shadow, so
-that even if the light had been better, Rucker
-could not have seen what she looked like. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-man&#8217;s back was turned to him, and here, again,
-he was at fault. Nevertheless, he was presently
-able to postulate the man&#8217;s gestures as those of
-anger, and to understand that the woman was
-pleading with him. It was etched out wholly in
-pantomime; Rucker could hear nothing. Twice
-or thrice the man made an inclusive motion with
-his free hand as if indicating the glade as the
-subject of whatever he was saying; and finally
-he balled his hand into a fist and shook it wrathfully
-at the unoffending drill derrick.</p>
-
-<p>This went on for some moments, the woman,
-Rucker fancied, trying to end it and draw the
-man away. Whether as the result of her efforts,
-or for some other reason, the scene ended as
-abruptly as it had begun. The two figures turned
-and faded into the wood shadows as mysteriously
-as they had come out of them; and while Rucker
-was still straining his eyes to keep them in sight,
-the horse and buggy vanished to a soft thudding
-of hoofs on the sandy road.</p>
-
-<p>After this apparition had disappeared, the
-machinist filled his black cutty pipe, opened the
-door of the tool-house, and sat upon the step to
-smoke and ruminate and strive for a better collecting
-of things into their normal groupings.
-Later, he strolled out to the by-road to see if the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-hoof and wheel marks were really there; to satisfy
-himself beyond question that he had not been
-dreaming. The ocular demonstration convinced
-him that he was sane, sober, and awake. The
-hoof-prints were there, though they were by no
-means so gigantic as he had expected to find them;
-and so were the wheel ruts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess I needn&#8217;t be botherin&#8217; my head about
-who they was,&#8221; he muttered to himself as he
-went back to his seat on the tool-house door-step.
-&#8220;Th&#8217; bosses&#8217;ll know that, all right, all
-right. But if there&#8217;s goin&#8217; to be a whole lot of
-this ghost business up here, it&#8217;s me for the downstairs,
-even if I do have to duck every time I see
-old man Layne comin&#8217; up th&#8217; road. These moonlight
-picture-shows get next to my gizzard-nerve.
-I ain&#8217;t no ghost-killer&mdash;not me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His pipe was smoked out and, knocking the ash
-from the bowl, he got up, having fresh designs
-upon the tool-house bed-room and the blanketed
-cot. But he was scarcely afoot before the sounds
-of wheels and hoofs came again, this time from
-the opposite direction.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My gosh!&#8221; he complained, &#8220;are they comin&#8217;
-back? Or is it a torchlight procession of &#8217;em?
-No, by jing! it&#8217;s somebody else: that horse is a
-black one!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>More to be out of harm&#8217;s way than for any spying
-purpose, he slipped into the tool-house and
-softly closed and fastened the door. When he
-tiptoed to the window two other figures had entered
-the glade; two men, and both of them with
-burdens.</p>
-
-<p>Their movements were even more mysterious
-than those of the earlier visitors. The shorter of
-the two carried a square box, handling it by a
-buckled strap which encircled it, and the other
-had a shoulder load which Rucker could liken
-only to a small bundle of poles. Both burdens
-were quickly put down; and at Rucker&#8217;s final
-glimpse, obtained just as the moon was passing
-behind a cloud, the shorter man had gone down
-on his knees beside the box, and was apparently
-opening it.</p>
-
-<p>Everything turned to a blurred gray for the
-watcher at the square window while the cloud
-obscured the direct rays of the moon; and when
-a better light came, the taller of the two men had
-disappeared, and the other was standing motionless
-under a great oak, whose spreading branches
-were sadly obstructing Rucker&#8217;s line of sight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, what the devil is he doin&#8217;?&#8221; was Rucker&#8217;s
-demand, whispered to the inner darknesses.
-&#8220;And where has t&#8217; other guy skipped to, all of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-sudden. By jinks! I b&#8217;lieve the short one&#8217;s
-sightin&#8217; a gun; no, it ain&#8217;t a gun, either; it&#8217;s a
-kodak. No, I&#8217;m off again, and I hain&#8217;t got any
-more guesses. Now, what t&#8217; &#8217;ell&#8217;s the sawed-off
-doin&#8217;, wavin&#8217; his arms up and down that way?
-By gollies, this whole mountain&#8217;s gone bug-house,
-&#8217;r else I have!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker watched the arm-waving for a full
-minute before it dawned upon him that the short
-man who seemed to be sighting something was
-making signals. The small square window of
-espial commanded nothing but the glade. The
-watcher crept cautiously to the end of the room
-facing toward the near-by brow of the mountain.
-The moonlight helped him to find the knot-hole
-he was looking for, but for a time the contracted
-field of vision revealed nothing but a forest tangle
-of moon-spattered shadows.</p>
-
-<p>Rucker had the patience of his craft, and the
-practical reasoning power that goes with it.
-The man under the oak was evidently signalling
-to some one to the eastward of his position at the
-edge of the glade: Rucker&#8217;s knot-hole in the planking
-at the end of the tool-house covered the same
-field: hence the eye at the knot-hole should be
-able to descry what was apparently visible to
-the eyes under the spreading oak.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>The mechanician stuck to his hypothesis until
-finally the fact proved it to be the true one.
-Far down among the trees, almost at the cliff&#8217;s
-edge, Rucker thought, a dancing light, such as
-might be made by a flaring pine torch, flashed
-up, flickered, and disappeared. The general
-aspect of the mystery remained as impenetrable
-as before, but one point became clear. The man
-under the tree was waving to the man with the
-torch, and some purpose, quite well understood
-by both, was getting itself forwarded.</p>
-
-<p>Rucker stayed at his peep-hole until the torch
-reappeared, flared steadily in one place for a
-few seconds, and then went out as suddenly as
-if a gust of wind had extinguished it. After which
-he tiptoed back to his window, and was there,
-looking on curiously, when the torch-bearer came
-tramping up from the eastward. There was a
-little delay when the upcomer joined the man
-under the oak. The watcher saw them taking
-the sighting mechanism, whatever it might be,
-apart and depositing some portion of it carefully
-in the square box; saw the two men resume
-their respective burdens and thread their way
-rapidly among the trees to the waiting vehicle.
-Then came the grinding protest of buggy wheels
-cramped short to turn in the narrow by-road,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-the <i>shough</i> of a horse, minishing hoof-beats, and
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>By this time Rucker was beginning to stand
-somewhat less in awe of a forest wilderness which
-seemed, after all, to be anything but an uninhabited
-solitude. A fresh filling of the short
-black pipe was the preliminary to a careful scrutiny
-of the ground under the spreading oak-tree.
-There was but a thin layer of sandy top-soil
-overlying the rock through which the drill was
-to be churned on the morrow, but it sufficed to
-reveal what Rucker was looking for&mdash;three conical
-indentations made by the sharply pointed ends
-of a tripod, the stand of the sighting mechanism,
-level, transit, or telescope, used by the shorter
-of the two men.</p>
-
-<p>This much proved, Rucker went back to the
-tool shanty, found and lighted a lantern, and
-with it steered a course between the trees to the
-eastward point where the torch-bearer had stood.
-It took him several minutes to discover the exact
-spot; but when it was found and identified
-by the remains of the extinguished pine-knot
-torch, he whittled a small stake and with a stone
-for a hammer drove it to mark the place.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There, by heck!&#8221; he said, when he was once
-more sitting on the tool-house door-step to finish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-his pipe. &#8220;If I hain&#8217;t got funny business enough
-to keep the bosses guessin&#8217; f&#8217;r a week &#8217;r so, I&#8217;ll
-sit up a few minutes longer and pull down some
-more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was far past midnight when he found himself
-nodding over the smoking lantern, and got
-up to go and tumble sleepily into his bed. And
-this time neither the shrilling of the katydids
-and tree-toads nor the screeching of the little
-owl that came once more to perch upon the drill
-walking-beam, kept him awake.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">X<br />
-
-
-<small>Blind Alleys</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THERE was a council of war, held without
-preliminaries, to follow Rucker&#8217;s report
-made to his two employers on the morning after
-the night of mysterious alarms. The small tool
-shanty served as the council-chamber, and the
-councillors were only two, Rucker having been
-heard and dismissed to take his place as chief
-mechanician in the drilling squad.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Talk about fourteen-fifteen puzzles and the
-fourth dimension: this masquerade puts the
-kibosh on them all,&#8221; remarked Carfax, opening
-his pocket-case of freshly imported cigarettes.
-&#8220;Or are you wiping the slate clean by charging
-Billy Rucker with a bad supper or a drink or so
-too many?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is too circumstantial to be a nightmare.
-Besides, there are the two sets of wheel tracks
-in the road, and the marks of the tripod under
-the oak; likewise the burnt pine torch and
-Rucker&#8217;s stake to mark the place of it. It&#8217;s no
-pipe-dream&mdash;more&#8217;s the pity.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>&#8220;Then what the deuce is it?&mdash;or they?&mdash;since
-there seem to have been two distinct sets of
-phenomena.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again the owner of the Ocoee shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think we may safely assume that Rucker
-saw two acts in the same play. But what the
-play may have been is beyond my wildest guess.
-Rucker&#8217;s suggestion that we&#8217;ve dropped down
-into a neighborhood of crazy people seems to
-fit better than anything else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was sitting on the cot with his hands
-locked over one knee. &#8220;It is rather pointedly
-our job to chase the shy guess into a corner,
-don&#8217;t you think? There is mischief in it. One&#8217;s
-bosom friends would hardly come here at night
-to shake their fists at things, or to run surveyors&#8217;
-lines by moonlight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon got up to tramp the floor, but
-there was no room in the cluttered tool shanty
-and he sat down again upon a coil of rope.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Damn this crazy Southern mining country!&#8221;
-he rapped out. &#8220;Rucker is right: I believe
-it&#8217;s peopled with escaped lunatics fresh
-from Bedlam! You&#8217;ve got a theory, Poictiers;
-I can see it in your eye. Put it in words. Whom
-do you suspect?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Small minds suspect: larger ones reason<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-calmly,&#8221; said the golden youth in mild irony.
-&#8220;The thing for us to do first is to establish a few
-identities, if we can. Who were these late-in-the-evening
-visitors? Let&#8217;s take them in their
-natural order; first come, first served. Rucker
-seems to have had a fair eye-shot at the man in
-a soft hat and long-tailed coat. Doesn&#8217;t his description
-of the man&#8217;s clothes and figure throw
-at least a suggestion into you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon frowned. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got Hartridge
-on the brain,&#8221; he retorted. &#8220;You can travel
-anywhere in the South and still find plenty of
-men who wear soft hats and full-skirted Prince
-Alberts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; quite so. But we have met only one
-on Mount Pisgah, thus far, and his name is William
-Wilberforce Hartridge. And if we take Mr.
-Hartridge for the fist-shaking gentleman, the next
-step&mdash;the identity of the lady&mdash;is simplified.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see it,&#8221; Tregarvon objected sourly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean you won&#8217;t see it. What woman,
-from Highmount, would be most likely to be Mr.
-Hartridge&#8217;s companion on a moonlight evening
-drive? Don&#8217;t let your prejudices, or rather your
-prepossessions, make a blind mule of you,
-Vance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you mean that the woman was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-Richardia Birrell. It doesn&#8217;t necessarily follow,
-and I don&#8217;t believe it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t so dreadfully hard to believe. There
-is no reason why she shouldn&#8217;t go driving with
-the professor of mathematics, if she feels like
-it. Neither is there anything especially culpable
-in the fact that she walked down here with him
-when he came to shake his professorial fist at
-your drilling-machine. When you have cooled
-down sufficiently, we&#8217;ll go and see if my little
-primary guess won&#8217;t prove out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m cool enough,&#8221; was the answer to this;
-and together they went to seek the proof.</p>
-
-<p>The buggy tracks in the damp sand of the
-little-used road were not hard to trace, and there
-were places where the hoof-prints of the horse
-which had been driven toward Highmount were
-clean-cut and distinct. Carfax was a spoiled
-son of fortune only in his affectations. Beneath
-the carefully cultivated fopperies there was a
-keen, active mentality which rarely missed its
-mark and never fumbled. He made pencil
-sketches of the hoof-prints on the back of an old
-letter in passing, and it was he, and not Tregarvon,
-who noted the single peculiarity in the
-horse&#8217;s shoeing; a missing corner from the toe-calk
-on the left hind foot.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>As the New Yorker&#8217;s hypothesis had assumed,
-the buggy tracks led directly to Highmount; or
-at least the assumption seemed a fair one. The
-two investigators did not follow the vehicle trail
-all the way to the college gates; could not, since
-the trail-recording wood road came out into the
-hard-metalled mountain pike a few hundred yards
-below the Highmount grounds, and the wheel
-marks were no longer visible. But there seemed
-to be no reasonable doubt of the correctness of
-Carfax&#8217;s guess; and Tregarvon admitted as much
-on the way back to the starting-point.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mind you, I&#8217;m not admitting that Richardia
-was a party to anything underhanded or crooked,&#8221;
-he added in qualification. &#8220;She may have been
-driving with Hartridge; as you say, there isn&#8217;t
-any particular reason why she shouldn&#8217;t go buggy-riding
-with him if she wishes to; and she may
-have walked down to the glade with him. I
-don&#8217;t say that she didn&#8217;t; but I do say that she
-isn&#8217;t tangled up in any of the disreputable mysteries,
-knowingly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no; I&#8217;d be as loath to admit that as you
-are,&#8221; said Carfax gently. &#8220;In fact, it is barely
-possible that I have the better right to defend
-her. We&#8217;ll put it all up to Hartridge. The next
-thing is to find out, if we can, where Hartridge<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-got his two surveyors on such short notice, and
-what it was that could be proved or disproved
-by a transit sight taken in the moonlight under
-conditions which must have barred anything like
-mathematical accuracy. Where are your blue-prints
-of the Ocoee property?&mdash;down below, or
-up here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The map copies were in the tool-house, one
-set of them; and when they were found, Carfax
-spread them out on the cot and pored over them
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are not trespassing on somebody else&#8217;s
-land, at all events,&#8221; was the verdict, rendered
-after he had verified the position of the glade in
-which the fourth test-hole was being driven. &#8220;It
-is all Ocoee in every direction; your land covers
-all this part of the mountain. By the way, what
-is this name, &#8216;Westwood,&#8217; written across these
-mountain-top plats?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon did not know, and he said so; adding
-that he supposed it might be the name of
-the original owner of the land.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who is he? Ever hear of him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t recall that I have. But that is not
-singular. I haven&#8217;t had occasion, or the time,
-to dig very deeply into ancient history.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, there doesn&#8217;t seem to be anything very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-illuminating about these blue-prints, save that
-they establish your perfect right to bore holes
-almost anywhere you please,&#8221; said Carfax. &#8220;Suppose
-we go now and take up the trail of the two
-surveyors.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The track of the second buggy proved to be a
-short scent soon lost. Within a hundred yards
-of its turning-point opposite the glade the buggy
-had left the wood road, the tracks swerving to
-the right in a direction opposite to that taken by
-the earlier vehicle; and neither the wheels nor
-the hoofs of the horse had left any impress on the
-thick carpeting of fallen leaves under the trees;
-or none that amateur trailers could see and follow.</p>
-
-<p>They were returning down the by-road when a
-crash and a hoarse roar of escaping steam notified
-them that once more something had gone
-wrong with the machinery. Carfax threw up his
-head like a thoroughbred starting in a race.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have been hunting for causes,&#8221; he snapped:
-&#8220;there is effect number one, right now! I can
-outrun you to the home plate!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They came upon the scene, neck and neck,
-just after Rucker had stopped the engine and
-opened his fire-door. The walking-beam had
-fallen again, carrying down a portion of the derrick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-framework; and the mountaineer whose name
-on the pay-roll appeared as &#8220;Morgan,&#8221; and who
-had been drill-turning in Sawyer&#8217;s place at the
-moment, was caught and held under the wreckage.</p>
-
-<p>Happily, the man was neither killed nor very
-severely injured. A few minutes&#8217; quick work,
-to which everybody lent a hand, sufficed to extricate
-him from the mass of broken timbers;
-and a rather ugly scalp wound, which Carfax
-proceeded deftly to wash and dress and bandage,
-figured as the worst of his hurts.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon sent the man home in charge of the
-other masquerading McNabb; and then came
-the reckoning with the smashed drilling plant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are we in for this time, Rucker?&#8221; was
-the owner&#8217;s question, put after the machinist
-had measured the damage with a critical eye.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mostly a couple o&#8217; days&#8217; hang-up, I guess.
-Leave me a man or two to help me blacksmith,
-and I&#8217;ll see what I can do. But what&#8217;s eatin&#8217;
-me is, what done it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There seemed to be no categorical answer to
-this, the cause of the breakdown being as yet
-well hidden in the <i>d&eacute;bris</i> of the effect. Tregarvon
-was willing to charge it to the chapter of
-accidents, but Carfax was less easily satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If it were the first,&#8221; he demurred; &#8220;but it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-isn&#8217;t. There is an entire series behind it. And,
-coming right on the heels of the little mysteries
-of last night ... I&#8217;m of the opinion that this
-is the beginning of more hostilities, Vance.&#8221;
-Then to Rucker: &#8220;How far did you get the hole
-down, Billy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not more than a couple o&#8217; feet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Drilling hard?&#8221; asked Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um-m-m; middlin&#8217; hard; &#8217;bout like the one
-we put down over yonder at the head of the
-tramway&mdash;the first one we drilled.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon told off three of the laborers to help
-Rucker, and sent the remaining three back to
-Coalville to report to Tryon, who, with another
-small squad, was replacing rotted cross-ties on
-the lower end of the tramway. After this, he
-beckoned to Carfax, and they went together
-down the shallow glade ravine to the spot where
-Rucker had found the burnt pine-knot torch
-and had driven his marking stake.</p>
-
-<p>Out of hearing of the four men left at the drilling-stand,
-Tregarvon said: &#8220;Well, the McNabbs
-are eliminated, definitely. It is fair to assume
-that a man wouldn&#8217;t be so careless as to get
-caught in a trap of his own setting.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You would think not,&#8221; was Carfax&#8217;s rejoinder;
-but he did not say that it was impossible.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>On the ground where the torch-bearer of the
-previous night had stood they searched carefully
-for something that might give a working clue
-to the mystery of the moonlight survey. There
-was nothing, unless an oak-tree, with a half-overgrown
-&#8220;blaze&#8221; and some ancient markings
-cut in it, might be called a clue.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three hundred feet below the scarred
-oak lay the cliff edge, at this point something
-less than a precipice. Tregarvon stood on the
-brink, looking down over the rough, broken talus.
-A hundred yards below his perch the gray ribbon
-of the mountain pike leading to Coalville
-wound in and out among the trees and huge
-boulders. Farther around to the left, and almost
-on a level with the broken talus, he could see
-the head of the Ocoee tramway. At once he called
-Carfax&#8217;s attention to the favoring topographies.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If we should find our big vein anywhere between
-here and the tramhead, it would be almost
-as accessible as the old opening,&#8221; he said. &#8220;The
-track could be continued on an easy curve and
-grade, and there is drop enough to give us the
-gravity haul. I wonder if any one has ever
-looked along here for the outcrop?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Viewed from the summit, the rough declivity,
-rocky, wooded, and thickly-covered with a matted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-tangle of brier, laurel, and undergrowth, looked as
-if it had never been trodden by the foot of man.
-Carfax, leaning against a tree which grew on the
-extreme edge of the cliff, gave it as his opinion
-that the rocky slope had never felt the prospector&#8217;s
-pick.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They have to dig trenches or holes or something,
-in prospecting for coal, don&#8217;t they?&#8221; he
-asked; and when Tregarvon confirmed the surmise:
-&#8220;I should say that this toboggan-slide is
-just as old Madam Nature left it, shouldn&#8217;t you?
-Can we get from here to the tramhead without
-going back and around and over the mountain?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Easily,&#8221; said Tregarvon, and he swung out
-and dropped over the low cliff to lead the way
-along the broken ledges.</p>
-
-<p>It was while Carfax was lowering himself with
-more care than Tregarvon had taken, with the
-leaning tree to help, that he made a small discovery
-and called Tregarvon back. On its outer
-or valley-facing side the leaning tree carried a
-&#8220;blazed&#8221; scar with markings similar to those on
-the white-oak half-way between the cliff and the
-glade. Like the other scar, this one was old, and
-the bark had long since healed around the edges
-of the ax-wound. But the markings, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-were cut into the heart-wood, were still quite
-distinct.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; said Tregarvon, after they had examined
-the scar together, &#8220;what do you make of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was pencilling the mark on the back
-of the letter upon which he had sketched the
-damp-sand hoof-prints.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. It looks something like the
-Greek letter &#8216;<i>pi</i>&#8217;, a capital &#8216;T&#8217; with two stems,
-don&#8217;t you think? But, of course, that is only a
-coincidence.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it, though?&#8221; queried Tregarvon thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It must be. What woodsman in this part
-of the world would ever mark a tree with a Greek
-letter?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No woodsman, perhaps; but a schoolmaster
-might. Poictiers, I am slowly coming around to
-your point of view. Hartridge is at the bottom
-of all these smash-ups and mysteries. I hate to
-believe it of him, but everything leans in his
-direction.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It looks that way, doesn&#8217;t it? But the admission
-of the fact doesn&#8217;t clear up the mysteries.
-Say that, for some reason, sentimental or other,
-Hartridge wishes to drive you out&mdash;make you
-quit. That might explain the smash-ups and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-hindrances; but it doesn&#8217;t begin to explain why
-we should find these marks of his&mdash;if they are his&mdash;made
-on these two trees years and years ago;
-or why he should send a pair of surveyors up here
-to make monkey motions in the moonlight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was leading the way along the ledge
-toward the tramhead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We shall probably find out more about all
-these things before we are much older on the
-job,&#8221; he replied; and then, vengefully: &#8220;If I
-can catch him at it, I promise you I&#8217;ll make him
-sorry!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After they reached the head of the inclined
-track and had signalled to Tryon at the foot to
-let them down in the tip-car, Tregarvon outlined
-his plan for the broken day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll go down and get out the auto and my
-engineering instruments, motor back to the drilling
-plant, and do a little surveying on our own
-account. Beyond that, you may take the car
-and kill time with it as you please. I&#8217;ll stay and
-help Rucker.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The programme was carried out in due course.
-By ten o&#8217;clock they were back on the mountain
-top with the surveying instruments. Placing the
-transit upon the tripod marks under the tree on
-the edge of the glade, Tregarvon took a forward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-sight to the eastward, with Carfax holding the
-target-staff on the spot where the burnt torch was
-found. Then, without changing the position of
-the instrument, Tregarvon signalled Carfax to
-go back, halting him at the cliff edge, and moving
-him to right and left until the target was once
-more in line with the cross-hairs of the telescope.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What developments?&#8221; he inquired, when the
-staff-bearer came up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing startling. Your line of sight merely
-picked up the second of the two marked trees,
-whatever significance that may have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You may be sure it has some significance, if
-we were shrewd enough to figure it out,&#8221; Tregarvon
-asserted. Then: &#8220;What will you do with
-yourself until dinner-time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t know; chase around in the car
-awhile, maybe, if you can&#8217;t use me here. Perhaps
-I may be able to pick up a clue or so&mdash;if I
-can find anybody to talk to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon stripped off his coat and went to
-work with Rucker and the helpers, and in this
-manner the better part of the day was accounted
-for. Late in the afternoon, when the blacksmithing
-of new irons left him without an occupation,
-he yielded to a prompting which had been urging
-him all day, and went for a long tramp which took<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-him over the route covered by the drilling plant
-in its several removals.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had gone behind the mountain when
-he finally came out at the tramhead and signalled
-for the cable-car to take him down. Tryon answered
-the signal and started the machinery, and
-in a few minutes Tregarvon was landed at the
-Coalville level, where he found Carfax waiting for
-him on the porch of the office-building.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I beat you to it,&#8221; said the golden youth; and
-then, whimsically: &#8220;What do you know now
-more than you knew before you knew so little as
-you know now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon cast himself down upon the porch-step.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you, after a bit. Did you find
-out anything new?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing very conclusive. Item number one
-is that there are only two horses in the Highmount
-stables; neither of them white, and neither
-with a broken toe-calk on the left hind foot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon smiled wearily. &#8220;More negative information;
-it&#8217;s always negative.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; and you may put into the same basket
-the item that no one of the half-dozen people I
-asked knew of any white horse owned on the
-mountain. But I picked up one little pointer that
-belongs in the other basket&mdash;the positive. I had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-luncheon at Highmount&mdash;upon Mrs. Caswell&#8217;s
-very pressing invitation. At table, Miss Richardia
-wanted to know how you came to plant
-your drilling-machine right in the middle of the
-old burying-ground.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that?&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;You don&#8217;t
-mean to say that the glade is a graveyard!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It seems that it used to be, many years ago&mdash;for
-the slaves. You will remember that you remarked
-the sunken spots in the only bit of soft
-earth there is, and wondered what made them.
-They are graves. Do you suppose Rucker would
-sleep any better to-night than he did last night
-if he knew that? If he had known it last night,
-perhaps it might have accounted for some of his
-restlessness. But I&#8217;m drifting from the point,
-which is that Miss Richardia&#8217;s question betrayed
-her: she was the young woman who drove
-with the man behind the white horse; otherwise
-she would not have known about the location of
-the drilling plant in the glade.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That doesn&#8217;t follow,&#8221; Tregarvon objected.
-&#8220;Some one might have told her. But let that
-part of it go. Did you discover anything else?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. After school hours I took Miss Farron,
-Miss Longstreet, and the French teacher out for
-a spin in the car. Miss Richardia said she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-couldn&#8217;t go because she had another engagement.
-We made a rather long round to the south and
-came back to Highmount by a road which parallels
-the western brow of the mountain. Are you
-paying attention?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Breathless attention,&#8221; said Tregarvon ironically.
-&#8220;Joy-ride stories always make me sit up.
-Go on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Over on the west-brow road we passed a place
-which looked as if it might be&mdash;or might some
-time have been&mdash;a gentleman&#8217;s country house.
-It is walled in from the road, with a magnificently
-groved lawn, a box-bordered, weed-grown carriage
-drive, and a great, rambling, porticoed mansion
-needing the repair-man pretty savagely. Still
-sitting up and taking notice?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just as were rolling up to pass the stone-pillared
-lodge-gates a horse and buggy came out,
-with a young woman driving. The horse was
-old and countrified, and he didn&#8217;t take kindly to
-the auto. So I stopped and got out to lead him
-past the machine. You won&#8217;t want to believe
-it, but the young woman driver was Miss Richardia;
-and the horse&mdash;well, no horseman
-would call it white, to be sure. It was a dapple-gray,
-light enough to pass for white in the moonlight,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-and with a mechanician like Rucker for the
-color expert.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon came out of his listless mood with a
-snap.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let it be said, once for all, Poictiers, that I
-won&#8217;t stand for any theory that involves Richardia
-Birrell in the crooked part of it,&#8221; he declared
-firmly. &#8220;I&#8217;d trust her with anything I own;
-with my life, if she cared to borrow it. That
-dapple-gray suggestion of yours makes my back
-ache! It isn&#8217;t worthy of you. Rucker said
-&#8216;white,&#8217; and white isn&#8217;t gray; not by a long shot!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; said Carfax, evenly. &#8220;After I had
-led the horse safely past the car, I made sure.
-&#8216;Hold on a minute, Miss Richardia,&#8217; said I, &#8216;let
-me see if your horse hasn&#8217;t a pebble in his shoe.&#8217;
-That gave me an excuse to lift his near hind foot.
-There wasn&#8217;t any pebble, of course, but the shoe
-was badly worn, <i>and the toe-calk had a piece broken
-out of it</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon maintained a stubborn silence for a
-full minute. Then he denied again, with more
-heat than the occasion seemed to demand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t care what evidence you bring. I&#8217;ll
-believe nothing against Richardia; <i>nothing</i>, you
-understand? And, after all, what does it amount
-to? We agreed this morning that she might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-blamelessly take an evening drive with Hartridge.
-The fact that they were driving behind her
-father&#8217;s horse cuts no especial figure that I can
-see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She might have been driving with Hartridge
-blamelessly; we agree on that. Or even still
-more blamelessly with&mdash;her father.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Put it in words,&#8221; snapped Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two or three people to whom I have spoken
-saw them together behind the dapple-gray, her
-and her father.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t stand for it!&#8221; was the angry retort.
-&#8220;You are hinting that her father is behind these
-bushwhackings, and that she is a party to them.
-That doesn&#8217;t go!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was spoken very much like a lover,&#8221;
-said Carfax slowly. And then: &#8220;You mustn&#8217;t
-let your major weakness get away with you,
-Vance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what do you call my &#8216;major weakness&#8217;?&#8221;
-Tregarvon inquired, with a rasp to the words
-that made them sound like a challenge.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax did not mince matters. &#8220;The inability
-to be off with the old love before you are on with
-the new,&#8221; he said crisply. &#8220;Elizabeth has some
-rights which you ought to respect, don&#8217;t you
-think?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>&#8220;Go on,&#8221; Tregarvon jerked out. &#8220;You haven&#8217;t
-said it all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I haven&#8217;t; but I shall say it all. You
-are a changed man, Vance. Either this coal-mine
-fight or your infatuation for this young
-woman, or both, are bringing out the worst
-there is in you. Don&#8217;t you realize it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I realize that this is a devil of a world!&#8221; was
-the gritting rejoinder. &#8220;First Richardia puts
-the knife into me and twists it around, and now
-you&#8217;re doing it. I suppose it will be Elizabeth&#8217;s
-turn, next!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You deserve all that is coming to you, I venture
-to say,&#8221; suggested the mentor evenly. &#8220;You
-are engaged to one woman, and you come here
-and make love openly to another.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was lost now to all sense of proportion.
-&#8220;I shall do as I please!&#8221; he retorted hotly.
-&#8220;If you want to write to Elizabeth, it&#8217;s your
-privilege. If you do, I shall tell her that
-you&#8217;ve had Richardia out in the car twice to
-my once!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s mentor mood slipped away, and he
-laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Miss Richardia is a dear girl, and worthy of
-the best that any man can give her, Vance,&#8221; he
-said gently. &#8220;Somebody ought to save her from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-the machinations of a William Wilberforce Hartridge,
-don&#8217;t you think? You can&#8217;t, you know;
-and sometimes I&#8217;ve wondered if that doesn&#8217;t put
-it pretty squarely up to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon rose and stood over his friend, and
-for an instant there were black passions to blaze
-in the wide-set gray eyes. But there was manhood
-enough underlying the tumult to enable
-him to throttle the worst of the impulses.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I guess I&#8217;m just a jealous dog in the manger,
-Poictiers,&#8221; he confessed gratingly. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-had a hunch that it was going that way, and I&#8217;ve
-been resenting it&mdash;like the damned scoundrel I&#8217;m
-coming to be. But it&#8217;s all over now, and&mdash;and I
-wish you joy. Can I say more than that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax looked up with a quaint twinkle in his
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m thinking you might say a good bit more,
-only you are too charitable to turn the whole
-menagerie loose. Shall we go in and get ready
-to eat? Uncle William will be calling us in a
-minute or so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not until after the dinner had been eaten,
-and they were smoking bedtime pipes before the
-dining-room fire, that Tregarvon went back to
-the discoveries of the day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About the time you were going for your drive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-this afternoon, I took a walk,&#8221; he said, by way
-of prefacing the story of the last of the discoveries.
-&#8220;I went over the ground we have been covering
-with the drill, examining every inch of it as if I
-had lost the set out of a diamond ring. I know
-now why we have been permitted to go on drilling
-holes in the rock without interference.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax nodded. &#8220;I&#8217;ve had a hint of my own:
-I wonder if you are not going to confirm it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps. At any rate, I found that somebody
-else had been over precisely the same ground
-with a test-drill a good while ago. I located five
-holes in all, each of them filled to the top, of
-course, with sand and washings. One of these
-holes isn&#8217;t twenty feet from the last one we drilled
-before we moved to the present location in the
-graveyard glade.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um,&#8221; said Carfax, absently rolling a cigarette
-between his palms. &#8220;That was my guess,
-based upon a word that Hartridge let drop the
-day I drove him down here to eat with us. I
-suppose the corollary to that is&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That the accident that smashed things this
-morning was &#8216;assisted,&#8217; as the others have been.
-So long as we went on drilling in dead ground it
-wasn&#8217;t worth while to interfere. But now that
-we are trying a new wrinkle&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>Carfax got up and returned the softened cigarette
-to its place in his pocket-case.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think we&#8217;d better sleep on that corollary
-of yours, Vance,&#8221; he suggested mildly. &#8220;If it
-looks as plausible in daylight as it does now, I
-don&#8217;t know but we had better call out the militia
-and give Rucker more help in the night-watching.
-Anyway, we&#8217;ll see how it stacks up in the morning.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XI<br />
-
-
-<small>Rosemary and Rue</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE better impulses had been all to the fore
-when Tregarvon had wished his friend a
-fair field and no favor at Highmount. But between
-a burst of generosity on the spur of a repentant
-moment and a day-by-day renouncing of
-a pearl of price there is apt to lie a <i>via dolorosa</i>
-plentifully bestrewn with stone bruises for misguided
-feet. On the day following the evening
-of plain speech Tregarvon toiled manfully with
-Rucker and the laborers in the repairing of the
-damaged machinery; but he did it without prejudice
-to a good many sharp-pointed reflections
-basing themselves upon Carfax&#8217;s blunt accusation,
-upon the golden youth&#8217;s calm interference, and
-upon the fact that, late in the forenoon, Carfax,
-apparently tired of looking on and doing nothing
-at the scene of the repairing activities, had
-strolled away through the forest in the direction
-of Highmount.</p>
-
-<p>There was more than one disturbing string to
-the bow of reflection. At first, Miss Birrell had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-openly made a good-natured mock of Carfax,
-with his small affectations to point her gibings;
-but Tregarvon was now impecunious enough
-himself to appreciate the potency of money.
-Miss Richardia had told him a little about the
-Birrell fortunes&mdash;or the lack of them; of the
-vanishing of the family possessions in the aftermath
-of the Civil War; of the fact that her
-father, once the leading jurist of the Cumberland
-counties&mdash;Miss Richardia did not say this,
-but Tregarvon easily inferred it&mdash;had found
-himself out of touch with the later and more
-pushing spirit of the New South, and had withdrawn
-more and more until he had become almost
-a hermit. The Carfax millions were enough
-to tempt any young woman; and Carfax himself&mdash;Tregarvon
-admitted it without bitterness&mdash;was
-a man to whom most women were attracted
-and whom all women trusted.</p>
-
-<p>But was Carfax really in love with Judge
-Birrell&#8217;s daughter? Tregarvon boasted that he
-had summered and wintered the golden youth;
-yet there were depths in him that the Philadelphian
-suspected no one had ever fully plumbed.
-In Tregarvon&#8217;s knowing of him he had always
-been, or appeared to be, immune to sentiment;
-his attitude had been that of a gentle-natured<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-soul who was willing to be used, or even abused,
-without detriment to an impartial affection for
-the entire sex. Would such a man be able to
-make Richardia as happy as she deserved to be?
-In the intimacy which Tregarvon had pressed
-to its ultimate limits he had come to know that
-behind the cool, slate-blue eyes and the lips that
-lent themselves so readily to playful mockery
-there was a passionate soul which would give all
-and demand all; which would starve on a diet of
-mere affection, however kindly and indulgent.
-Would the Carfax millions outweigh this demand?
-It was an irritating question, refusing
-to be answered.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon, driving bolts into the patched
-derrick frame, strove dejectedly to put his own
-huge misfortune aside as a matter definitely
-settled. He admitted, with pricklings of shame,
-the truth, or at least the half-truth, of Carfax&#8217;s
-accusation&mdash;the charge of fickleness. In a light-hearted
-way he had been devoted to many
-women, for the moment, and the nearest woman
-had always been the loadstone. He excused the
-weakness by saying that it was common to all
-men&mdash;thereby touching a truth larger than he
-knew; excused it further by laying down the
-broad principle that Richardia Birrell, though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-numerically the last, was really the first woman
-who had ever broken through to the inner depths
-of him.</p>
-
-<p>Just here he had a saving glimpse of the workings
-of the normal masculine mind, and it jogged
-his sense of humor. Was not the latest charmer
-always the pearl of great price; the one altogether
-lovely? Perhaps; but in this case, he
-told himself, it was different. The Richardias
-are few and far between; and he had discovered
-one of the precious few only to realize that he
-was bound in honor to relinquish her without a
-murmur to a Carfax, or even to a Hartridge.
-It was a part of the irrefrangible vanity of the
-male to regard the relinquishment as a voluntary
-virtue on his part. In all the gnawings of
-the worm of reflection, girdings at his hard lot,
-questionings as to Richardia&#8217;s future happiness,
-gratulatory back-pattings at his own magnanimity
-in leaving the field to Carfax, it did not occur
-to him that Richardia, herself, might have had
-something to say to his own suit&mdash;if he had been
-able, as a man of honor, to press it. Like many
-other men, he comforted himself with the cheerful
-assumption that, in the absence of the abnormal
-obstacles, any man may win any woman,
-if he shall only put his mind to it; a doctrine, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-may be said, which is still lacking proof in certain
-isolated instances.</p>
-
-<p>Thus giving himself over to the bitterness&mdash;and
-the self-glorification&mdash;of the afterthought,
-Tregarvon wore out the day, deferring to Rucker
-as boss of the repairing job, and trying not to
-speculate too pointedly upon the doings of the
-absent Carfax. That the golden youth was once
-more a drop-in guest at the near-by school was
-not to be doubted; and the caviller at an unkind
-fate steeled himself against another disloyalty&mdash;a
-temptation to rail at the New Yorker for
-making such unseemly haste. The ill-natured
-thought would have likened Carfax&#8217;s haste to
-that which prompts the heir-at-law to open and
-read the will while the testator is as yet merely in
-the throes of the death-agony&mdash;only Tregarvon
-would not yield to the temptation.</p>
-
-<p>If the murmurer against fate could have seen
-beyond the half-mile of forest which intervened
-between the old slave burying-ground and
-Highmount, he would have concluded sorrowfully
-that Carfax&#8217;s haste was well on the way
-to its reward. Miss Richardia&#8217;s duty hours in
-the afternoon were short, and at three o&#8217;clock she
-was free to join the golden one, who, as Tregarvon&#8217;s
-prefiguring had assumed, had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-Mrs. Caswell&#8217;s luncheon guest, and was now
-making himself at home on the broad veranda
-of the administration building. For a time the
-talk rambled through Boston byways and was
-reminiscent of Miss Richardia&#8217;s sojourn as a
-Conservatory student and of Carfax&#8217;s quickly
-abandoned attempt to take a postgraduate
-course in the School of Naval Architecture.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see, I didn&#8217;t have the spur,&#8221; was Carfax&#8217;s
-excuse for the abandoned attempt. Then,
-in an apparent burst of enthusiasm: &#8220;Vance is
-the lucky fellow! He is obliged to work. He
-thinks it is pretty hard lines, but he doesn&#8217;t
-know how jolly good it is for his soul. It is precisely
-what he is needing, don&#8217;t you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Work? yes; but the many disappointments:
-are they also good for the soul?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile was entirely amiable. &#8220;In due
-proportion, they are, I should say. Vance has
-been like a bit of soft steel, needing the forge
-fire and the tempering brine bath. I presume
-you know that he is engaged to be married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia&#8217;s smile was of the sort that
-no mere man may interpret.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think he has told me all there was to tell.
-Are you acquainted with Miss Wardwell?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well acquainted, indeed. She is all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-that any man could ask&mdash;and more,&#8221; said Carfax,
-with more warmth than he usually permitted
-himself. &#8220;Last summer she was a member of
-a Lake Placid outing-party in which I had the
-good fortune also to be included. We became
-quite chummy. She swims, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again Miss Birrell&#8217;s smile was a charming
-little mask of impenetrability.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;These athletic young women!&#8221; she sighed.
-&#8220;It is their day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t mean that Eliz&mdash;that Miss Wardwell
-is offensively athletic. I wouldn&#8217;t have you
-think that. She&mdash;she is musical and all the other
-things that a young woman ought to be; but she
-enjoys the outdoor things, too. And so do I.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Mr. Tregarvon doesn&#8217;t enjoy them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just in a way,&#8221; was the qualifying rejoinder.
-&#8220;Vance&#8217;s misfortune has been, that, until quite
-recently, he has never wanted anything that he
-couldn&#8217;t simply reach out and take; he has
-never been obliged to throw himself whole-heartedly
-into anything. He is doing it now,
-though.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Into the Ocoee, you mean? I am afraid there
-is nothing but disappointment for him there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was silent for a moment. Then he
-said: &#8220;There are times, Miss Richardia, when I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-have the feeling that every one who knows what
-he is trying to do wishes him to be disappointed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Including us here at Highmount?&#8221; she
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps you would be willing to make it even
-more definite. Do you include me with Mr.
-Tregarvon&#8217;s ill-wishers?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sometimes I&#8217;ve been tempted to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure I don&#8217;t know why you should say
-that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have said it,&#8221; Carfax returned, with the
-gentle doggedness which he could assume when
-the need was sufficiently pressing. &#8220;I shall be
-delighted to be assured that I am mistaken.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Now came Miss Richardia&#8217;s opportunity to
-fall silent, and she improved it. When she spoke
-again the playful mockery was laid aside.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My father was one of the sorriest of the
-losers in the Ocoee in the promoting period,&#8221;
-she began soberly. &#8220;This entire mountain top
-was once a part of the Birrell estate; my grandfather
-gave the site for this school. When Mr.
-Parker was promoting the Ocoee, father went
-into the plan, heart and soul, giving a large part
-of the land, and putting all the money he could
-rake and scrape into the stock of Mr. Parker&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-company. Worse than that, he was so firmly
-convinced of the future success of the undertaking
-that he persuaded his friends to invest. You
-mustn&#8217;t expect us to be very enthusiastic now,
-Mr. Carfax. It isn&#8217;t in human nature to rejoice
-when others are preparing to reap where we have
-sown.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile was angel-compassionate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor Vance isn&#8217;t reaping very successfully
-as yet,&#8221; he pointed out. Then he added: &#8220;I
-hope your good father doesn&#8217;t feel vindictive
-toward him. I think we may safely say that
-Vance is the innocent third party in the transaction&mdash;if
-there ever is such a thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t know my father; if you did, you
-would hardly accuse him of vindictiveness, even
-in your thoughts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can you say as much for yourself?&#8221; asked
-the accuser gently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Indeed, I can!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t put a straw in Vance&#8217;s way, if
-you could?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish you would listen!&#8221; she laughed. &#8220;Do I
-look like a&mdash;a subterranean plotter, Mr. Carfax?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You always look charming. But you don&#8217;t
-want Vance to succeed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure I don&#8217;t know why you should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-think such a thing. Perhaps you don&#8217;t think it.
-I can never tell when you are really in earnest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Strange that you should have noticed that.
-Others have said it of me, too, at times. But I
-am very much in earnest this afternoon. It lies
-in your hands to make Vance fail most conspicuously,
-you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are fond of riddles, and I am not. I
-wish you would be more explicit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax stole a glance aside at his veranda
-companion and it was borne in upon him that he
-would have to choose his words carefully. The
-slate-blue eyes had grown a trifle hard, and Miss
-Richardia&#8217;s tone was no longer sympathetic.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Vance can&#8217;t mix business and sentiment very
-well,&#8221; he ventured. &#8220;He has been spending a
-good bit of time here at Highmount, forgetting
-some things that he ought to remember. Surely
-you have discovered his one weakness by this
-time, haven&#8217;t you?&#8221; he went on, gravely pleading.
-&#8220;Not that it isn&#8217;t tremendously excusable
-in the present instance, you know. You&mdash;er&mdash;you
-are enough to turn any man&#8217;s head, Miss
-Richardia; you are, indeed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her little shriek of laughter was sufficient to
-break any thin skim of ice which may have been
-congealing between them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>&#8220;You can be quite as absurd as Mr. Vance,
-himself, when you try!&#8221; she mocked. Then,
-with the frankness which was all her own: &#8220;Are
-you trying to tell me that I have been playing
-the part of a modern Delilah, Mr. Carfax!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, dear, no! But&#8221;&mdash;he swallowed hard
-once or twice, and then took the plunge&mdash;&#8220;but
-Vance simply couldn&#8217;t help falling in love with
-you. Er&mdash;hardly any man could. And it&#8217;s&mdash;it&#8217;s
-smashing him to perfection. I don&#8217;t say
-that he is admitting the&mdash;the little lapse, even
-to himself; he is too honorable to do that, after
-he has given his word to Eliz&mdash;to Miss Wardwell.
-But the fact remains.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia laughed again, but now the
-laugh scarcely rang true.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are making me out a poor, miserable
-sinner; though I am a most innocent one, I do
-assure you,&#8221; she protested, not without a suggestion
-of sarcasm. &#8220;What is it you wish me to
-do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax needed no one to tell him that he was
-wading in deep waters, and that another step
-might put him in over his head. Yet he could
-not retreat; he had gone too far.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been trying to hammer a little common
-sense into Vance; perhaps I have said more than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-even a good friend has a right to say. Hitherto
-it hasn&#8217;t done much good; but last night I had
-a perfectly brilliant inspiration. I wonder if you
-could be induced to help me carry it out?&mdash;just
-in the interests of a&mdash;of a square deal all around,
-you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another absurdity?&#8221; she queried, half scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, just that; a&mdash;a most ridiculous absurdity.
-Will you&mdash;er&mdash;will you marry me, Miss
-Richardia?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Most certainly not,&#8221; she returned, with a
-strained little laugh. &#8220;Why should I?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t any reason at all, of course,&#8221; he
-hastened to say. &#8220;But if you would make your
-answer not quite so&mdash;er&mdash;so positive: if you
-would be so generous as to&mdash;er&mdash;to seem to take
-it under consideration; just until Vance can get
-on his feet again&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This time her laughter was wholly mirthful;
-an abandonment of all hamperings.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of all preposterous askings!&#8221; she gasped.
-&#8220;Are there many more like you, Mr. Carfax&mdash;in
-New York?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Plenty of them,&#8221; he assured her, not too seriously.
-Then: &#8220;It wouldn&#8217;t be such a dreadful
-thing, would it? I can make love very nicely,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-you know; honestly, I can. And we shouldn&#8217;t
-have to do anything more than to keep up appearances.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to humor you far enough to
-even pretend to take you seriously,&#8221; she declared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not even for Vance&#8217;s sake? Of course, I
-know you don&#8217;t care for him, particularly, but
-I do; he has been like a brother to me, Miss
-Richardia; really he has. And we ought to make
-him realize what he is about; it&#8217;s&mdash;er&mdash;it&#8217;s a sort
-of duty, don&#8217;t you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I should tell you what I think I am afraid
-it might sound dreadfully unkind, Mr. Carfax.
-You seem to have had very little experience with
-women.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, but I have, you know,&#8221; he burst out.
-&#8220;I&mdash;I&#8217;m in love, myself&mdash;with&mdash;with some one I
-can&#8217;t possibly marry. That ought to make you
-feel sorry for me, and I&#8217;m sure it does. Perhaps
-you are in a similar situation yourself; in love
-with some one else, I mean. In that case&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia had risen, and the mocking
-mood was once more firmly intrenched behind
-her laughing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have given me a most delicious half-hour,
-Mr. Carfax, and in the days to come, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-I feel particularly blue, I shall always have it to
-look back to and remember. You are not expecting
-me to say any more than that, are you?
-I can&#8217;t, you know, because I have an appointment
-with a pupil, and I shall have to go and keep it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had risen with her. &#8220;I&#8217;m perfectly delighted
-to be your laughing-stock,&#8221; he asserted
-gently. &#8220;You&#8217;ll let me come and be it again?
-Thanks, awfully.&#8221; And when she was gone he
-sat down like a man who has been through a
-pass perilous, and smoked three of the imported
-cigarettes in rapid succession.</p>
-
-<p>That evening, returning from the hard day&#8217;s
-work on the repairs, the owner of the Ocoee found
-Carfax awaiting him in the office headquarters
-at the foot of Pisgah. Uncle William&#8217;s dinner,
-served as soon as Tregarvon had taken his bath,
-was not provocative of conversation; and even
-afterward the talk, revolving around the repairs
-and the mystery, was only desultory. It was not
-until Tregarvon was smoking his bedtime pipe
-that he dug the one important thing out of his
-mind and flung it at his companion.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You spent the day at Highmount, I suppose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, dear, no; not quite so bad as that. I&#8217;ve
-been down here since half-past four or such a
-matter.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>&#8220;But you went to the college after you left
-us?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; and Mrs. Caswell was good enough to
-give me something to eat at the proper time.
-She makes one believe all the old-time stories of
-Southern hospitality. Which reminds me: we
-are both invited there to dinner to-morrow evening.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon refused to be turned aside.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You didn&#8217;t go to Highmount to visit with
-Mrs. Caswell,&#8221; he suggested sourly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not altogether; no.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you see Richardia?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had lighted his candle and was preparing
-to beat a hasty retreat, did retreat as far as
-the door before he turned to say: &#8220;Yes, I saw I
-Miss Richardia. You wished me joy, last night,
-Vance, and I hope you are going to do it again.
-I&#8217;ve asked her to marry me, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>What!</i>&#8221; shouted Tregarvon, springing from
-his chair. And then, with a mighty effort to
-keep the words from choking him: &#8220;What did
-she say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax smiled like a winning angel. &#8220;She&mdash;well,
-it seemed to strike her as being a bit sudden,
-as you might say, and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_162.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Carfax stopped abruptly and said no more.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had dropped into a chair beside the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-table, and was hiding his face in the crook of an
-elbow. Carfax stopped abruptly and said no
-more; and when he closed the door behind him
-it was done so gently that the latch made no
-sound.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XII<br />
-
-
-<small>Dull Steel</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">RUCKER proved as good as his word in the
-matter of estimating the delay, two days
-sufficing for the work of restoration. Having
-made a test run in the evening after Tregarvon
-had gone down the mountain, the mechanician
-had the machinery whirling merrily to the <i>chug
-chug</i> of the drill by the time his two bosses came
-on the ground the following morning.</p>
-
-<p>Among his better qualities Tregarvon was able
-to number a certain degree of resilience which,
-given time to take the full impact of a blow,
-could recover and rebound and make the best
-of the inevitable. Whatever might have come
-of the intimacy with Richardia Birrell&mdash;and he
-told himself that nothing could have come of it
-in any event&mdash;it was now an episode ended; and
-after a night of very much mingled emotions, he
-had risen up with the determination to play the
-man, for Carfax&#8217;s sake if not for his own, and to
-let the industrial battle fill all the horizons for
-one Vance Tregarvon. With this determination
-firmly seated in the saddle, he had constrained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-himself to meet Carfax at breakfast without bitterness;
-to motor with him up the mountain in terms
-of good-fellowship; and, upon their arrival, to
-shout cheerfully to Rucker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got her going all right again, have you,
-Billy? Any more puzzle people come to see you
-last night?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker grinned sheepishly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to lie about it, Mr. Tregarvon.
-What with pushin&#8217; the job so bloomin&#8217; hard
-yesterday, and losin&#8217; so much sleep between
-whiles, I guess they might&#8217;ve come and lugged
-me off bodily without my knowin&#8217; it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you didn&#8217;t find anything wrong this
-morning?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, no; not to say just wrong; only sort o&#8217;
-spookerish.&#8221; Then, in a tone that the men at
-the drill might not hear: &#8220;There was somebody
-here again last night&mdash;humans &#8217;r ghosts. I had
-a fit o&#8217; the jumps a while back that everlastin&#8217;ly
-swiped my appetite for breakfast.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How was that?&#8221; asked Tregarvon, looking
-up from his inspection of the yellow car&#8217;s motor;
-and Carfax said: &#8220;It must have been something
-pretty fierce, Billy, if it crippled your pneumogastric
-nerve.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was this way,&#8221; Rucker explained. &#8220;Last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-night, after we got the derrick rigged again, I
-starts and runs the engine for a little while, just
-to make sure everything is in workin&#8217; order.
-When I shuts down, I banks the fire under the
-boiler so it&#8217;ll keep overnight. &#8217;Long about sunrise
-this mornin&#8217; I hikes over to stir her up for
-business, and when I yanks the fire-box door open,
-it&#8217;s me for throwin&#8217; that fit o&#8217; the jumps. There
-was the yallerist, cockiest-lookin&#8217; skull you ever
-see, settin&#8217; on top o&#8217; the banked fire, ready to
-pull a grin on me when I opens the door.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A skull?&mdash;a human skull?&#8221; exclaimed Tregarvon
-incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yep; a yaller one; all teeth and eye-holes,
-and with a sort of greasy black smoke comin&#8217;
-out o&#8217; the place where its nose ought to &#8217;a&#8217; been.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did it get there?&#8221; Carfax asked the
-question and then answered it himself by adding:
-&#8220;But, of course, you don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker was wiping his face with a piece of cotton
-waste&mdash;the machinist&#8217;s handkerchief. The
-autumn morning was cool and bracing on the
-mountain top, yet the perspiration stood in fine
-little beads on his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t know; and if you was to search
-me all day, you&#8217;d never get it out o&#8217; me where it
-come from, &#8217;r who put it there,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-ain&#8217;t what you&#8217;d call jumpy, but after it was
-all over, I didn&#8217;t want no breakfast.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you do with it?&#8221; Tregarvon
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Me? I jammed it back into the coals with
-the clinker hook, and put the blower on, quick!
-Says I, &#8216;All right, my bucko! You make me throw
-a fit, and I&#8217;ll make you make steam!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Heavens! You burned it?&#8221; Tregarvon was
-still conventional enough to be half horrified,
-and Carfax shuddered in sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I certain&#8217;y did. But he got back at me,
-right now! In less &#8217;n five minutes by the watch
-that old boiler was red-hot and blowin&#8217; off steam
-to beat the band. She was sweatin&#8217; black smoke
-at every joint; and when I chases &#8217;round to
-open the fire-door&mdash;Well, you needn&#8217;t believe me
-if you don&#8217;t want to, but them grate-bars was
-drippin&#8217; something &#8217;r other that looked like
-burnin&#8217; blood!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There is a point beyond which the thread of
-sympathetic horror snaps, and the ball rebounds
-into the field of the ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That will do for you, Billy,&#8221; Tregarvon
-laughed. &#8220;We&#8217;ll allow you the skull, but you
-needn&#8217;t embroider it for us. Somebody played a
-grisly joke on you&mdash;with no particular object,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-that I can see. Just the same, it has its significance.
-Some prowler was sneaking around here
-while you were asleep. Are you sure the drill
-is working all right?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can see for yourself,&#8221; said Rucker, not
-unboastfully. &#8220;She&#8217;s jumpin&#8217; up and down to
-the old tune of forty to the minute, same as I
-promised you she&#8217;d be this mornin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But a closer inspection proved that Rucker&#8217;s
-boast was loyal to the eye but a traitor to the
-fact. The drill was merely &#8220;jumping up and
-down.&#8221; It was hardly cutting its own clearance;
-had gained in depth less than half an inch
-in half an hour, according to the report of Sawyer,
-who was at his customary post, &#8220;churning and
-turning&#8221; at the hole.</p>
-
-<p>Rucker looked on critically for a few minutes
-and then laid a listening ear to the steel, bowing
-and recovering in unison with the stroke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s hit a bone o&#8217; some kind,&#8221; was his verdict;
-and he stopped the churning machinery
-and threw in the hoist by means of which the
-heavy cutting-bar was lifted from the hole.</p>
-
-<p>An examination of the drill point amply verified
-the mechanician&#8217;s guess that something
-much harder than the fine-gritted sandstone of
-the mountain top had been encountered in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-bottom of the test-hole. The cutting edges of
-the drill burr were completely gone, broken
-down and gnawed smooth until the steel cutter-bar
-was no more than a blunt-ended ram.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon swore painstakingly, anathematizing
-the demon of ill luck by bell, book, and candle,
-thereby further emphasizing the distance he had
-travelled on the road toward things elemental.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Scrap it,&#8221; he snapped, meaning the ruined
-drill point. &#8220;How many more have you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; put another one in and drive it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker got out a fresh point, mounted and
-lowered it, and the churning was resumed.
-Three hours of steady thumping showed a gain
-of less than two inches in the depth of the hole,
-and at the end of that time the second drill burr
-was worn as smooth as the first.</p>
-
-<p>This went on until the last of the four cutters
-was put in service. For a wasted day of patient
-churning the hole had gone down only a few
-inches, and Rucker was in despair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When this cutter goes, we&#8217;re hung up for
-more &#8217;n any day &#8217;r two,&#8221; he announced. &#8220;I can
-sharpen these points all right enough, but it&#8217;ll
-take scads o&#8217; time with the tools we&#8217;ve got here
-on the job. You two bosses hain&#8217;t made up your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-minds what t&#8217; &#8217;ell it is we&#8217;re tryin&#8217; to chew through
-down yonder, have you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had taken an engineering course in
-the university, but he was no geologist; and Carfax&#8217;s
-equipment was even less hopeful. It was a
-case for a specialist; and the specialist turned
-up at the opportune moment in the person of
-Mr. Guy Wilmerding, who had ridden over from
-Whitlow to see how the Ocoee experiment was
-progressing.</p>
-
-<p>His coming was hailed with acclamations by
-the two amateurs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By Jove, Wilmerding, you&#8217;re just in time to
-save us from strait-jackets and a padded cell!&#8221;
-Tregarvon exclaimed. &#8220;What kind of rock do
-you have in this region that will make a drill
-point look like that?&#8221; showing the C. C. &amp; I.
-superintendent one of the blunted cutters.</p>
-
-<p>Wilmerding scrutinized the dulled point carefully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;None of the native rock ought to do that,&#8221;
-he demurred. &#8220;This is a poor piece of steel,
-isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is one of the four cutters we have been
-using ever since we began. Three of them have
-gone that way, and the fourth is mulling in the
-hole now with only a few more minutes to live.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>&#8220;That&#8217;s queer. I can&#8217;t imagine what you&#8217;ve
-hit that would dub the points like this. Let me
-see the stuff you&#8217;ve been taking out with the
-sand pump.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The little heap of finely powdered cuttings
-was exhibited. Wilmerding examined them with
-the eye of an expert, rubbing some of the cuttings
-between his thumb and finger.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pebbles,&#8221; he said definitely; &#8220;white quartz
-pebbles embedded in the sandstone&mdash;&#8216;pudding,&#8217;
-the miners call it. You&#8217;ve hit a streak of this
-conglomerate, and sometimes it is as hard as
-blue blazes. Still, I have never seen any of it
-that was hard enough to smash a drill like that,&#8221;
-he added reflectively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are the doctor,&#8221; Carfax suggested.
-&#8220;What is the needed medicine?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is nothing to do but to keep on hammering
-away at it,&#8221; was the reply. &#8220;If you
-shift your location, the probabilities are that
-you would run into the same stratum again.
-When you go prying into Mother Earth&#8217;s secrets,
-you have to take what she sends and be thankful
-it&#8217;s no worse.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s cup of objurgation overflowed
-again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That means Rucker to go to Chattanooga<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-with the cutter points, and more delay. We
-haven&#8217;t any tool-making facilities here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess this is where I come in,&#8221; said Wilmerding,
-with prompt generosity. &#8220;We have
-a well-equipped plant at Whitlow, and a blacksmith
-who is out of sight on drill-tempering.
-Load your man and the points into your motor-car
-and shoot them up to us. We&#8217;ll try to keep
-you going.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s ill temper vanished like the dew
-on a summer morning. &#8220;You are certainly an
-enemy of a hitherto unsuspected variety!&#8221; he
-declared. &#8220;We&#8217;ve been having a good bit of
-trouble, first and last; some of it bearing all the
-earmarks of design on somebody&#8217;s part. Do
-you know for a while I thought you might be
-inspiring it? That was before Carfax discovered
-you personally, of course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Wilmerding&#8217;s laugh was good-naturedly derisive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope you didn&#8217;t think so small of Consolidated
-Coal as to suspect it of popping at
-you with a boy&#8217;s whip!&#8221; he retorted. &#8220;By and
-by, when you find your coal and meet us in the
-open market, we may have to buy you or smash
-you. But it will be done in the good, old-fashioned
-commercial way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We shall be there when you put up the large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-come-off-the-perch bluff,&#8221; Carfax thrust in gently.
-&#8220;But in the meantime, somebody <i>is</i> popping at
-us with the boy&#8217;s whip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who?&mdash;for a guess?&#8221; asked the Whitlow
-superintendent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah!&#8221; said Carfax, in the same gentle tone,
-&#8220;I have a thousand dollars somewhere about
-my belongings that would be delighted to blow
-itself against the real answer to that question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you have no clue?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax smiled. &#8220;A dozen of them, more or
-less. But they all have a way of coming out by
-the roots when we begin to pull on them ever
-so cautiously.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are calling me the enemy, but that
-doesn&#8217;t count until the real fight opens up,&#8221;
-said Wilmerding. &#8220;If any suggestion of mine
-will help while you are clawing for a foothold....
-By the way, that reminds me: I made an analysis
-of your coals the other day. Thaxter didn&#8217;t have
-one, didn&#8217;t seem to know anything definite
-about the Ocoee.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; queried Tregarvon. &#8220;Do you agree
-with Captain Duncan?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If your two veins are not one and the same,
-they ought to be. I couldn&#8217;t sift out the slightest
-difference between the two specimens.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>There was some further talk about the characteristics,
-analytical and otherwise, of the Ocoee
-coal, and Wilmerding stayed long enough to see
-the fourth and last drill point withdrawn from
-the hole. The cutter, like its predecessors, was
-a mechanical ruin; and Wilmerding again made
-the proffer of the Whitlow repair-plant. Tregarvon
-promised to send Rucker and the burrs up
-from Coalville in the morning, and the young
-superintendent climbed upon his nag and rode
-away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tools up, men!&#8221; Tregarvon called to the
-drilling squad, when Wilmerding had disappeared
-among the trees. &#8220;We&#8217;ll call it a day;
-and to-morrow you may all go on the track-repairing
-with Tryon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker was busying himself about the machinery
-after the laborers had gone, and as yet
-he had said nothing about wishing to be relieved
-from the night-watching. But it was clear
-that a man who put in full time during the day
-could scarcely be expected to sleep with one eye
-open at night. Moreover, if Rucker were to
-start in the morning for Whitlow with the drills,
-it would be necessary for him to sleep at Coalville.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is your programme for to-night?&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-asked Carfax, as he walked with Tregarvon to
-the tool-house. &#8220;I suppose you&#8217;ll send Rucker
-down for the early start to Whitlow. You&#8217;ll
-hardly care to leave things up here without a
-watchman, will you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at the present stage of the game,&#8221; was
-the prompt reply. &#8220;You may go down in the
-car with Rucker, and I&#8217;ll stay here for the night.
-I&#8217;d like to see some of these queer happenings for
-myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can beat that plan,&#8221; Carfax put in. &#8220;You&#8217;ve
-forgotten that we have an invitation to Highmount
-for dinner this evening. Mrs. Caswell
-gave it, and I accepted for both of us. We&#8217;ll go
-down and dress, and come back in the car, leaving
-Rucker to stand watch here while we do the
-social act. Later, Rucker can come for us, trundling
-us over here, first, and himself and the drills
-to Coalville afterward. How will that answer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon demurred upon two counts. &#8220;You
-mean that you&#8217;ll sit up with me? You don&#8217;t
-have to play night-watchman to this sick project
-of mine, Poictiers. Besides, I don&#8217;t care to go
-to the Highmount faculty dinner. More than
-that, you ought to be the last man in the world
-to put me in for it. I&#8217;ve already wasted too
-much time in that way, and you know it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>&#8220;In the present instance I&#8217;ve promised for
-you, and I guess you&#8217;ll have to go,&#8221; said Carfax
-quietly. &#8220;And as for my sitting up with
-you afterward, that&#8217;s a part of the game. I&#8217;m
-immensely interested in skulls and things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And thus, without further argument, it was
-decided.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIII<br />
-
-
-<small>The Burnt Child</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE dinner in the president&#8217;s dining-room at
-Highmount College was anything but formal.
-By this time the two young men from the
-North were on a footing which lacked little of
-the household relation, Mrs. Caswell having said
-hospitably, more than once, that their plates
-were always laid at the faculty table.</p>
-
-<p>Quite naturally, the Ocoee experiment came
-in for a share of the table-talk, and in this field
-Tregarvon let Carfax do most of the ploughing.
-For one reason, Miss Richardia had changed
-her place and was sitting on the other side of
-the golden one; and for another, his own companion
-was the French teacher, who persisted
-in talking, and making him talk, of things trans-atlantic
-and Parisian.</p>
-
-<p>Later, however, he was tempted&mdash;and fell.
-The night was too cool for the veranda, and the
-after-dinner dispersal was to the music-room.
-Richardia played, and for a time Tregarvon sat
-beside Miss Farron and said &#8220;Yes&#8221; and &#8220;No,&#8221;
-as the occasion demanded, coming always afterward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-to a rapt and regretful contemplation of
-the pearl of great price on the piano-bench.</p>
-
-<p>Being an artist to her finger-tips, Miss Birrell
-at the piano became a breaker of hearts by just
-so much more as the mask of self-consciousness
-fell away, leaving the true art soul free to express
-itself in the musician&#8217;s ecstasy of detachment.
-In such moments Tregarvon saw her as
-the embodied spirit of all that was most desirable
-in the world of women; gazed spellbound, sinned,
-repented, and sinned again; calling himself hard
-names in one breath, and rhapsodizing deliriously
-over the supernal charm of her in the next.</p>
-
-<p>Again and again he told himself in caustic
-self-derision that his infatuation was merely the
-result of propinquity&mdash;the nearness of Richardia
-coupled with the remoteness of Elizabeth. But
-as often as he pleaded this excuse, the merciless
-inner and final court of appeals assured him that
-the evasion was but the adding of self-deception
-to unfaithfulness, and insisted upon a restatement
-of the humiliating facts: that he had promised
-to marry a woman whom he did not love,
-when he knew he did not love her; and that he
-was now adding to this baseness by admitting
-his love for another.</p>
-
-<p>This restatement of the case was dinning itself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-into his ears for the hundredth time while
-he was saying &#8220;Yes&#8221; and &#8220;No&#8221; to the pretty
-assistant in mathematics, and praying in his
-more lucid intervals that Rucker might come
-early with the motor-car and so forestall any
-chance of deeper mirings. But Rucker was apparently
-in no hurry. Miss Richardia played
-until she was tired; Madame Fortier and Miss
-Farron excused themselves and went to their
-duties in the dormitories; Hartridge and Miss
-Longstreet went to brave the chill of the evening
-in a pacing constitutional on the veranda; and
-the group in the music-room was cut down to
-the Caswells, their guests, and Miss Birrell.</p>
-
-<p>At this conjuncture Tregarvon saw that Carfax
-was about to add insult to injury by leaving
-him alone with Richardia. The president was
-talking about some improvements he wished to
-make in the school gymnasium: would Mr.
-Carfax be good enough to look the plans over
-and give a country schoolmaster the benefit of
-his advice? Tregarvon turned to the nearest
-window to watch for the headlamps of the expected
-auto. They were not yet in sight; and
-when the silence behind him gave token that
-Carfax and the Caswells had gone, he knew that
-he had been basely deserted.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>Miss Richardia was still at the piano, letting
-her fingers run in delicate little harmonies up and
-down the keyboard. Tregarvon meant to keep
-his distance, but she drew him so irresistibly
-that he was beside her before he realized that
-he was once more breaking all the good resolutions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t go just yet,&#8221; he pleaded, when she
-looked around, saw that the others were gone,
-and made as if she would rise. Then he added:
-&#8220;It isn&#8217;t my fault this time: I didn&#8217;t wish to
-come, but Poictiers had accepted for me. You
-mustn&#8217;t punish me when I don&#8217;t deserve it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him with the air of detachment
-which he had always found more trying
-than her sharpest accusations.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why should I punish you at all? Hasn&#8217;t
-your conscience been doing that much for you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t!&#8221; he begged again. &#8220;Now that it is
-all over, I am going to tell you that I have been
-a liar and a hypocrite.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stopped him with a quick little gesture of
-dismay.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t spoil it all now&mdash;just because
-we happen to be alone together for a minute or
-two. When are you going home to marry Miss
-Wardwell?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>&#8220;You are perfectly merciless,&#8221; he complained.
-&#8220;Must we talk about Elizabeth?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ask your conscience,&#8221; she retorted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My conscience is busy and doesn&#8217;t want to
-be disturbed. One would think you had been
-born and bred in New England!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wasn&#8217;t; I was born on this mountain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He sat down in the nearest chair and tried to
-remember that he was talking to the woman who
-was as good as promised to Poictiers Carfax.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know,&#8221; he offered; &#8220;in a rambling old
-house with a groved lawn. It has a box-bordered
-carriage drive, and a big, pillared veranda fronting
-the west.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; when have you ever seen Westwood
-House?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps I haven&#8217;t seen it; perhaps I am only
-imagining how it ought to look. But the name
-&#8216;Westwood&#8217; is familiar enough. It is written all
-over the Ocoee maps.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her smile, on any other lips, would have had
-more than a hint of bitterness in it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose we ought to be proud of the distinction.
-The printing of the home name on the
-maps was the only return my father ever had
-for what he did for Mr. Parker. But, of course,
-you know all about that.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>&#8220;Not so much as I&#8217;d like to know. I have
-understood that your father was a heavy investor
-in the original Ocoee company, and that Parker
-contrived to give him the hot end of things in
-the reorganization.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is all true.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It makes me feel as if I had been caught
-stealing sheep,&#8221; he volunteered. &#8220;Ethically, I
-suppose the Ocoee doesn&#8217;t belong to me at all,
-though I hope it is clear to everybody that neither
-I nor my father had any part in the crookedness.
-So far as that goes, my father never knew anything
-about the early history of the mine; and
-neither did I before I came down here. How does
-your father feel about it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It did not strike him at the moment as being
-particularly significant that she did not answer
-the question categorically.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Those things are all past and gone,&#8221; she
-said half-absently. And then: &#8220;I wish you
-might meet my father; you and Mr. Carfax.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mention of Carfax&#8217;s name was as salt to
-a fresh wound.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve changed your mind about Poictiers,
-haven&#8217;t you?&#8221; he said, and he tried to make the
-saying of it entirely judicial. &#8220;You made fun
-of him at first, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>&#8220;Not of him, but of some of the things that
-he said and did,&#8221; she corrected quickly. &#8220;And
-that was only because I didn&#8217;t know him; because
-I was so stupid as not to recognize the
-real man under the transparent little mask of
-affectation that he delights in holding up between
-himself and all the rest of the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon made a loud call upon his magnanimity,
-and concurred heartily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is the finest there is, Richardia. I&mdash;I
-hope he will be able to make you as happy as
-you deserve to be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the moment he was puzzled. Sheer maiden
-modesty might have accounted for the blush, but
-why should the slate-blue eyes grow suspiciously
-bright, as with tears?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then he has told you?&#8221; She had turned
-away from him and there was a little catch in
-her voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. It broke my heart, Richardia&mdash;which
-shows you how far I had gone on the road to depravity.
-Poictiers said to me once that I was
-playing the dog in the manger, and so I was.
-There was no excuse, of course; there never is
-an excuse for dishonor. But you were heart and
-soul and conscience to me, and I seemed to need
-you so much more than anybody else ever could.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-I can say all this without blame now, can&#8217;t I?
-You are going to marry Poictiers, and I am going
-to marry Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had turned farther away, as if to conceal
-emotions too profound to be shared. At first
-he thought she was crying, and wondered why.
-Then it was borne in upon him that she was
-laughing, and he became instantly and hotly resentful.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you are laughing at me and my little lunacy,
-it is all right,&#8221; he exploded. &#8220;But if it&#8217;s at
-Poictiers&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When she let him see her face again it was
-perfectly straight, but there were twin imps of
-mockery dancing in the eyes of desire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Between you and Mr. Carfax it is hard for
-a poor country mouse to find breathing space,&#8221;
-she asserted. &#8220;Am I to understand that you
-are trying to congratulate me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon frowned heavily. &#8220;No; Poictiers
-is the one to be congratulated&mdash;if you were not
-laughing at him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wasn&#8217;t,&#8221; she denied promptly. &#8220;He is much
-too splendid to be laughed at. Don&#8217;t criticise
-the word; it is the only one that fits him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you were laughing at me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>&#8220;At what I said, then? that is just as cruel.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why will you insist upon being so quarrelsome?
-I was laughing because I couldn&#8217;t help
-it. Let us talk about something else; about your
-mine. Have you been having any more of the
-mysterious trouble?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; it is one thing after another. You
-heard what Poictiers was telling at the table
-this evening. He made it sound like hard luck,
-but it isn&#8217;t luck; it&#8217;s design. Some one is making
-the trouble for us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who would do such a thing as that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For a long time we were totally in the dark.
-But now we know the man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Richardia had the translucent complexion
-that harmonizes perfectly with cloudy
-blue eyes and masses of light-brown hair brightened
-by touches of warmer tints; hence there
-was no telltale pink to vanish at the command
-of sudden emotion. Yet Tregarvon saw she was
-startled, and that the exciting cause was quick-springing
-anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have seen him?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rucker, the machinist, has.&#8221; Tregarvon was
-always making good resolutions about not talking
-too much, and always breaking them. It
-had been no part of his intention to refer to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-incriminating incident in which Richardia herself
-figured as one of the two actors, but the inexpedient
-thing was said and he could only hope
-that Richardia would not ask for more.</p>
-
-<p>She was looking away again when she said:
-&#8220;Now that you know, I suppose you will defend
-your rights?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Take legal steps, you mean? I don&#8217;t wish
-to do that, if it can be avoided.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; anything but that!&#8221; she pleaded in low
-tones. &#8220;You must remember the provocation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t give the provocation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; but you are associated, in a way, with
-those who did. You have inherited a legacy of
-ill will.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I might be able to understand that, if the
-man who is making the trouble were one of the
-ignorant natives. But he is not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she agreed half-absently; &#8220;he is not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you know who it is?&#8221; said Tregarvon,
-again permitting himself to say one of the things
-which might better have been left unsaid.</p>
-
-<p>She nodded slowly. &#8220;I&mdash;I am afraid I do.
-And I am going to plead for him, if you will let
-me. There are mitigating circumstances&mdash;prejudices
-against all Northerners <i>as</i> Northerners.
-You can&#8217;t understand that, because the North<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-didn&#8217;t suffer as the South did in the war between
-the States&mdash;at least, not in the same way. And
-the South has suffered bitterly since the war;
-from such men as Mr. Parker. There was a disposition
-on our part to let bygones be bygones,
-after the great struggle; but a few unprincipled
-promoters have done much to keep the old sectional
-animosities alive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was regarding her thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are wise beyond your years and your
-sex,&#8221; he said soberly. &#8220;What do you think I
-ought to do to this anachronistic gentleman who
-is visiting the sins of other people upon my poor
-head?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can only beg of you to be broad-minded
-and charitable and slow to anger for the sake of
-all concerned&mdash;for my sake, if you must put it
-upon narrower ground.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this appeal, the earnestness of which could
-not be questioned, Tregarvon was frankly puzzled.
-A little earlier in the adventure he would
-not have been surprised to find Richardia Birrell
-pleading for Hartridge; but now, with Carfax
-apparently elbowing the professor aside in
-the sentimental field, there seemed to be less
-reason for the plea, unless pure friendship might
-account for it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>&#8220;I shall put it wholly upon &#8216;narrower ground,&#8217;
-as you call it,&#8221; he maintained. &#8220;If you tell me
-that you care enough for the man you are
-pleading for to ask me to spare him for your
-sake&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Care enough?&#8221; she exclaimed, wide-eyed. &#8220;I
-should be singularly inhuman if I didn&#8217;t care!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As in a flash of revealing lightning Tregarvon
-saw and thought he understood. It was not
-Hartridge for whom she was interceding; the
-professor of mathematics was not the man who
-had driven with her to the glade on the night
-of strange happenings&mdash;who had stood with her
-in the shadow of the drill derrick, shaking his
-fist at the inanimate symbol of the renewed
-Ocoee activities. The moving spirit in all the
-enmities and antagonisms was her father!</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the thing seemed unbelievable.
-That a man who had formerly been a judge and
-a champion of the law should become a feudist,
-carrying his vindictiveness over from those who
-had defrauded him to the defrauders&#8217; innocent
-successor, appeared blankly incredible. Yet Tregarvon
-remembered that the South still held many
-archaic well-springs of thought and action&mdash;he
-had to fight anachronisms daily in his laborers&mdash;and
-that the older generation was not to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-judged by the standards of the new. Judge Birrell
-had felt the heel of the invader, not only
-in the great conflict between the States, but
-afterward, when the invader came as a friend
-and robbed him in the name of business.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had little time in which to determine
-what he ought to say; time for nothing but
-a sudden and loyal resolve not to fail Richardia
-in her moment of need. Voices in the hall warned
-him that Carfax and the Caswells were returning,
-and at the same moment he heard the honk
-of the motor announcing Rucker&#8217;s approach. He
-was upon his feet when he said: &#8220;You have told
-me something that I didn&#8217;t know&mdash;didn&#8217;t suspect.
-I can scarcely believe it yet. But you
-need have no fears for anything that I shall do.
-You mustn&#8217;t worry for a single moment. It will
-all come out right in the end.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had his reward in a quick little grasp of the
-hand, in eyes filling this time with real tears, and
-in a low-toned outpouring of gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I knew you would say that,&#8221; she avouched.
-&#8220;It is what you have taught me to expect of
-you. I am doing all I can to&mdash;to bring about a
-better understanding, and if you will only be
-patient and wait a little while&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax and the two Caswells were entering the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-music-room, and Tregarvon turned quickly and
-made a pretense of rearranging the music on the
-piano desk. The small diversion gave him a
-chance for another whispered word of assurance.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve been advertising myself to you as all kinds
-of a graceless wretch, but now I&#8217;ll show you
-that I can rise to the occasion. Don&#8217;t be afraid:
-there will be no scandal&mdash;no tragedy, so far as
-you and yours are concerned.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She caught instantly at the qualification.
-&#8220;Then there are others?&#8221; she queried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One other, at least. And after what you have
-just told me I am quite sure he is acting entirely
-upon his own responsibility. I&#8217;ll tell you more
-about him some other time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was already taking leave, and Tregarvon
-joined him. The host and hostess went no
-farther than the door with the departing guests,
-and Miss Richardia remained in the music-room.
-At the veranda steps there was a little delay
-while Rucker was doing something to the motor.
-In the waiting interval Tregarvon found himself
-answering a question of Hartridge&#8217;s about the
-progress of the test-drilling, the professor having
-outstayed his art-teacher companion in their retreat
-to the open air.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Tregarvon, &#8220;we are not getting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-along as well as we might. There seems to be
-a curious obstructive fatality dogging us. If
-you were in the chair of psychology instead of
-that of mathematics, we might give you a very
-handsome little problem to work on, Mr. Hartridge.
-I wonder if you would attack it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mild-eyed professor&#8217;s smile was blandly
-incommunicative.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t expect any sympathy from
-me,&#8221; he returned genially. &#8220;The proverb tells
-us specifically that the burnt child dreads the
-fire; but it doesn&#8217;t add the corollary, which is
-equally true, and as old as human nature&mdash;namely,
-that the burnt child experiences an unholy
-joy when his playmate attempts to pick
-up the same hot nail.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah?&#8221; said Tregarvon. And then: &#8220;I had
-forgotten, if, indeed, I ever knew. You were
-one of the original stockholders in the Ocoee?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To the extent of my entire savings account;
-which was a mere drop in the promoter&#8217;s bucket,
-after all. Nevertheless, I can still be magnanimous
-enough to wish you all success.&#8221; Then,
-abruptly: &#8220;You have a delightful night for your
-drive to Coalville. I could almost envy you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon did not undeceive him about the
-destination of the drive; for good and sufficient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-reasons it did not seem necessary to tell Hartridge
-that the drilling plant would have two
-watchers that night, instead of none. With a
-word of leave-taking he joined Carfax in the
-tonneau seat, and the yellow car rolled away
-down the drive, with Rucker at the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>It was less than an eighth of a mile from the
-college gates to the point where the glade road
-turned to the left out of the downward pike,
-and when Rucker would have taken the left-hand
-road, Tregarvon made him stop the car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We can walk in from here, Billy,&#8221; he explained,
-and the two volunteer watchers got out
-to do it while the car, lightened of two-thirds
-of its load, coasted noiselessly on down the steep
-mountain road and out of sight around the
-first curve.</p>
-
-<p>On the short walk over to the drilling plant
-Tregarvon spoke but once, and that was to say:
-&#8220;Your guess about Hartridge was right, Poictiers.
-He was one of the native crowd which
-was pinched out in the first reorganization of the
-Ocoee.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did Richardia tell you that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; he told me himself, just as we were
-leaving. And he is still sore about it, though he
-tried to turn it off as a joke.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>&#8220;Um,&#8221; said Carfax reflectively. &#8220;If he is the
-man who is putting a finger into your pie, we&#8217;ll
-be likely to see him within the next half-hour
-or so, don&#8217;t you think? He supposes we are on
-the road to Coalville, and he knows that Rucker
-is driving. Which presumably leaves the plant
-unguarded. What will you do if we should happen
-to catch him red-handed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That remains to be seen,&#8221; said Tregarvon
-moodily. &#8220;We&#8217;ll cross that bridge when we come
-to it.&#8221; And for the remainder of the walk he
-was silent; it being no part of his intention to
-tell Carfax that Richardia&#8217;s father was the one
-who, arguing from conclusions which seemed to
-be well-founded in inference, if not in fact, was
-most likely to be caught red-handed.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIV<br />
-
-
-<small>The Logic of Fact</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">UPON their arrival at the drilling plant the
-two young men who had been Mrs. Caswell&#8217;s
-dinner-guests made a dressing-room of the
-small tool shanty and changed quickly to their
-working clothes; after which they sat upon the
-door-step to smoke in sober silence, each busy
-with his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>For Tregarvon the talk with Richardia had
-wrenched the point of view violently aside, adding
-new perplexities and fresh discouragement.
-Richardia&#8217;s apparent fear that her father was
-responsible for the obstacles which had been
-thrown in the way of the test-drilling was a thing
-to be believed only because Richardia&#8217;s plea could
-apparently have no other meaning. Being alien
-to the South and a townlander, the Philadelphian
-found it difficult to understand the attitude of a
-man who would make a personal matter of an
-ancient business defeat, carrying his animosity
-over from the real offender to an innocent third
-party. But seemingly&mdash;since Richardia&#8217;s word
-was not to be doubted&mdash;the fact remained.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>Tregarvon saw at once that the Ocoee experiment
-was made vastly less hopeful by the discovery
-to which Richardia had led him. Though
-he had never met Judge Birrell, Coalville gossip
-had done the fiery old recluse ample justice.
-For the loungers at Tait&#8217;s store the judge figured
-as a venerable survival of the <i>ancien r&eacute;gime</i>; of
-the good old times when the great landed proprietors
-ruled their small kingdoms with an iron
-rod; and were coincidentally and in the meliorating
-sense of the word, kindly and generous tyrants
-to all and sundry. Tregarvon had heard enough
-to assure him that the sentiment of the entire
-countryside would be with Judge Birrell in any
-cause he might see fit to champion; but apart
-from this, the one insurmountable bar to any
-defensive reprisals on his own part lay in Richardia&#8217;s
-appeal. Tregarvon felt that the appeal,
-and his yielding thereto, had effectually tied his
-hands, and he was still sufficiently infatuated to
-be glad. Carfax might marry Richardia and endow
-her with his millions; but her greatest debt
-would still be to the man who had refused to
-defend himself at her father&#8217;s expense.</p>
-
-<p>Back of the dismaying discovery which had
-changed the point of view, there was other food
-for reflection. When he had ventured to hope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-that Carfax might make her happy, why had
-Richardia laughed? The query led to the recognition
-of another impression, given often when he
-was with her, and as often slurred over and dismissed
-when it came to be analyzed. Not the
-least of her charms for him was her crystal-clear
-straightforwardness. Nevertheless, there had been
-times when he had been made to feel that behind
-the frankness there were reservations; times
-when he had been given fleeting glimpses of an
-inner Richardia hiding behind the slate-blue eyes
-and whimsically mocking him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope the good Mrs. Caswell&#8217;s dinner is not
-disagreeing with you,&#8221; Carfax broke in, in the
-midst of the analyzing abstraction; and Tregarvon
-came back to things present with a jerk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; he denied. &#8220;I was just thinking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better not think too much after a hearty
-meal. It&#8217;s bad for the digestion,&#8221; was the gentle
-rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon grunted. &#8220;You didn&#8217;t leave out
-anything but the name. I can&#8217;t help thinking
-of her, Poictiers. It&#8217;s no disloyalty to you, or
-to Elizabeth. You had no business to leave me
-alone with her when Doctor Caswell asked you
-to go and look over the gymnasium things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax chuckled softly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>&#8220;You are a wild ass of the plains, Vance. It
-is borne in upon me that I shall have to marry
-her out of hand to bring you to your senses.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The quicker the better,&#8221; said Tregarvon
-gloomily. &#8220;There is no use in prolonging the
-agony.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you&#8217;ll admit that it is an agony?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t joke about it, Poictiers. I have made
-the one crowning blunder that spoils a man&#8217;s
-life. Don&#8217;t look at me that way. I&#8217;m not going
-to be either a fool or a scoundrel. I shall marry
-Elizabeth and try to make her as happy as I
-can; but it will be without prejudice to the fact
-that I didn&#8217;t know what love was when I promised
-her. I can imagine just how brutal that sounds
-to you, but it&#8217;s the truth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The truth is always rather brutal, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;
-Then the golden youth permitted himself a word
-that he rarely used. &#8220;I&#8217;m damned sorry for
-Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I told you once before, you needn&#8217;t be,&#8221;
-Tregarvon snapped back. &#8220;There is absolutely
-no question of sentiment between us, and there
-has never been. You&#8217;d appreciate that if you
-should read her letters to me; letters in answer
-to my babblings about Richardia. If Elizabeth
-had a spark of sentiment in her she would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-sent me packing long ago. I&#8217;ve told her pretty
-nearly everything there was to tell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you have. That is one of your
-amiable weaknesses&mdash;to tell some woman, any
-woman who happens to be within reach, a lot of
-things that no woman ought to be told. You
-deserve all that is coming to you, Vance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose I do,&#8221; Tregarvon admitted; and
-beyond this the silence came to its own again.
-After a time, Carfax suggested quizzically that
-the ghosts might be too bashful to come out
-while there were two able-bodied watchers in
-sight; and at that they went inside to find seats
-on a coil of rope opposite the open door. Before
-long, the interior darkness began to make Tregarvon
-sleepy and he had quite lost himself
-when a touch of Carfax&#8217;s hand aroused him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look steadily at the big oak just beyond the
-engine&mdash;the one where we found the tripod
-marks,&#8221; was the whispered injunction. &#8220;Do
-you see anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon rubbed the sleep out of his eyes
-and stared hard at the oak. &#8220;Nothing doing,&#8221;
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, there is,&#8221; Carfax asserted. &#8220;There is
-a man behind that tree. I saw him just before
-I shook you awake.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>&#8220;Piffle!&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;That oak isn&#8217;t
-big enough to hide a man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just the same, he is there!&#8221; retorted Carfax,
-still in a whisper. Then: &#8220;I suppose it didn&#8217;t occur
-to you that we might need something more
-persuasive than our bare hands up here to-night,
-did it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; and we shan&#8217;t.&#8221; Tregarvon was suddenly
-reminded of his promise to Richardia that
-there should be no tragedies. &#8220;What we can&#8217;t
-handle peaceably, we&#8217;ll let go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; you&#8217;re the doctor,&#8221; said the golden
-youth mildly. &#8220;Nevertheless, if I had a gun I&#8217;d
-go out and capture that fellow who is hiding behind
-the tree.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Still nervous, are you?&#8221; Tregarvon put in.
-&#8220;You are dreaming, Poictiers. There isn&#8217;t any
-one there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, again,&#8221; was the serene reply.
-&#8220;Have it that way, if you like. Only don&#8217;t forget
-to keep your eye on the tree.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That was the beginning of a patient watch
-which was maintained for a full quarter of an
-hour. The night was perfectly still; there was
-not wind enough to rustle the browning leaves
-of the oaks or to whisper in the pines. Afar off,
-the little screech-owl whose haunts had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-invaded by the drilling plant lifted up his voice
-in shrill chatterings, but there were no other
-sounds to break the silence. Once during the
-watchful vigil Tregarvon thought he saw something
-stirring among the trees on the farther
-side of the glade, and his fingers closed upon
-Carfax&#8217;s arm. But when he looked again the
-shadows were undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is tremendously exciting,&#8221; Carfax commented
-finally, in gentle irony. &#8220;If I weren&#8217;t
-morally certain that I saw a man dodge behind
-that tree a little while ago, I&#8217;d fall asleep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do it anyway,&#8221; Tregarvon suggested. &#8220;I&#8217;ll
-stand watch, and call you when your turn comes.
-Take Rucker&#8217;s cot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you really mean it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure I do. Turn in and take your forty winks.
-If anything seems likely to happen, I&#8217;ll let you
-know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I believe I&#8217;ll take you at your word.
-I haven&#8217;t been so sleepy since the year before
-Noah built the ark of gopherwood. If Mrs.
-Caswell wasn&#8217;t as far above suspicion as the
-angels of light, I might suspect her of having
-put something into the black coffee.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later Tregarvon was sitting
-alone on the rope coil, rubbing his eyes and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-wishing that he might decently follow Carfax&#8217;s
-example. The very act of staring at the moonlit
-glade hypnotized him, the more since there
-was nothing unusual to be seen. With the view
-through the open door becoming hazy and startlingly
-distinct by turns, he struggled manfully
-against the rising tide of somnolence, nodding,
-and recovering himself with a jerk when he
-realized that the tide was submerging him. But
-out of one of the nodding moments he came
-with a violent start that instantly banished all
-thoughts of sleep. The little screech-owl had
-ceased complaining, and the arousing sound had
-been the distinct clink of metal upon stone.</p>
-
-<p>When he looked he saw that the time for action
-had come. Standing fairly in the midst of
-the small clearing, the drill derrick was struck
-out boldly in the white moonlight, with every
-outline and detail sharply distinguishable. In
-the square of cleaned rock surface marked off
-by the four legs of the derrick frame Tregarvon
-saw a man crouching. The clinking noise was
-repeated and the watcher at the door faced about
-and felt his way in the inner darkness to the bed
-in the corner of the tool-room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wake up, Poictiers!&#8221; he called in low tones;
-&#8220;the play has begun!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>Carfax sat up promptly and asked but a moment
-for the finding of himself. &#8220;I&#8217;m all here,&#8221;
-he said. &#8220;What&#8217;s doing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For answer Tregarvon led him to the door and
-pointed to the square of bared bed-rock under
-the derrick frame. There was a man there, without
-doubt, but now he was standing up and was
-apparently examining something which lay in the
-palm of his hand. The sudden rush of the two
-from the tool shanty was quite evidently a surprise
-for the intruder, but he made no attempt
-to escape. So far from it, he lifted his soft hat
-politely and said: &#8220;Good evening again, gentlemen.
-You took me completely by surprise&mdash;as
-perhaps you meant to. I was quite sure that
-you were both safely in bed in Coalville by this
-time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Carfax very gently. &#8220;We have
-not been in Coalville at all: we have been here,
-waiting, quite patiently for&mdash;you, Mr. Hartridge.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was kind,&#8221; said Hartridge affably.
-&#8220;And, now that your patient waiting has been
-duly rewarded?&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now that we have caught you we shall ask
-you to solve that little problem in psychology
-for us,&#8221; put in Tregarvon. &#8220;We&#8217;d like to know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-what it is that you have just been dropping into
-that drill-hole.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And if I assure you that I have been putting
-nothing into your drill-hole, what then, Mr.
-Tregarvon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In that case I shall ask Carfax to see that
-you don&#8217;t run away while I ascertain for myself,&#8221;
-was the firm rejoinder; and a careful dip of
-the long cleaning spoon into the test-hole brought
-up a half-dozen small metallic objects; cubes cut
-from a bar of tool-steel they appeared to be.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon handled the cubes and passed them
-on to Carfax.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We owe you something for a day lost and
-four drill points all but ruined, Mr. Hartridge,&#8221;
-he said rather grimly, adding: &#8220;But we&#8217;ll credit
-your account with this present failure to make
-us do it all over again to-morrow. Would you
-mind telling us in so many words what your object
-has been&mdash;or still is, perhaps?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor&#8217;s smile was imperturbably bland.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure you wouldn&#8217;t be so harsh as to put
-me on the witness-stand in my own defense,&#8221; he
-said, still amiable. &#8220;Especially since you have
-no evidence of anything worse than a neighborly
-call at, perhaps, a somewhat unseasonable hour.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this Carfax came quite close and he forgot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-to lisp when he said: &#8220;Mr. Hartridge, may I
-ask you to remove your overcoat for a moment?
-The night is a bit chilly, I know, but&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The tone of the request was gentle enough but
-there was a quality in it that made the suggestion
-a demand. The professor slipped out of the
-coat, quaintly quoting Scripture for the ready
-compliance. &#8220;&#8216;If any man ... take away thy
-coat, let him have thy cloak, also.&#8217; Anything
-to oblige a friend, Mr. Carfax.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax took the surrendered coat and, feeling
-in the right-hand pocket, drew out one of the
-little steel cubes; quite evidently the one which
-Hartridge had had in his hand at the moment
-of surprises.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you; that is all,&#8221; said the searcher,
-returning the coat, or rather holding it thoughtfully
-while Hartridge put it on. And then:
-&#8220;You will hardly deny that we have sufficient
-evidence now, I take it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor of mathematics spread his hands
-as one who has done his best and is only regretful
-that he can do no more.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let us assume that the case has gone to the
-jury: what is the verdict, gentlemen?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are asking what we mean to do?&#8221; Tregarvon
-demanded.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>&#8220;That is it, precisely. What can you do?&mdash;drag
-me before the nearest justice of the peace
-on a charge of malicious mischief? You would
-scarcely wish to disturb the tranquillity of an old
-and honored institution of learning like Highmount
-College by such a proceeding as that,
-would you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon could not help smiling at the audacity
-of the man, and the New Yorker laughed
-outright.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have a most excellent quality of nerve,
-Mr. Hartridge,&#8221; was Carfax&#8217;s tribute to the
-audacity. &#8220;As you suggest, our field is rather
-limited. You are perfectly well aware of the
-fact that Highmount and its hospitality stand
-as the only barrier between us and social starvation.
-Let us try to discover a <i>modus vivendi</i>.
-The verdict is: &#8216;Guilty, with a recommendation
-to mercy.&#8217; We are willing to give any man&#8217;s
-sense of humor a chance to redeem itself. You
-quoted Scripture at me a moment ago, let me
-return the compliment: &#8216;Go in peace, and sin
-no more.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor drew himself up, smiling genially
-and lifting his hat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thank you, gentlemen; you are very considerate,&#8221;
-he returned in gentle irony. After<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-which he walked away, pausing at the edge of
-the glade to lift his hat again.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax drew a long breath when the tall, black-coated
-figure was lost under the tree shadows.
-Then he turned upon his companion:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to say, &#8216;I told you so,&#8217; Vance,
-because I think you came around to my point
-of view some little time ago. What is the motive&mdash;Hartridge&#8217;s
-motive? Is it merely impish
-humor? Or does it go deeper than that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was busily engaged in putting two
-and two together to make the inevitable four.
-The schoolmaster was in love with Richardia
-Birrell; the Philadelphian&#8217;s first visit to Highmount
-had made this perfectly plain: could it
-be possible that Hartridge was acting as Judge
-Birrell&#8217;s agent in the obstacle-raising? And, if
-so, did Richardia know it?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stay here a few minutes, Poictiers,&#8221; he directed.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m going to follow him and see if he
-goes straight back to Highmount.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Joy go with you,&#8221; said Carfax; and when he
-was left alone he went to sit on the step of the
-tool-house to smoke while he waited.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XV<br />
-
-
-<small>Mammy Ann&#8217;s Grave</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CARFAX was smoking his third cigarette
-when Tregarvon returned from spying upon
-the retreating professor and sat down in sober
-silence upon the door-step.</p>
-
-<p>The smoker waited patiently for some little
-time before he said suggestively: &#8220;I hope you
-didn&#8217;t have your walk for nothing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I saw all I needed to see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hartridge went to the college?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose so; he was headed that way when
-I turned back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax waited again, and when nothing further
-was forthcoming: &#8220;It&#8217;s a remarkably beautiful
-night, isn&#8217;t it? Did you ever see a handsomer
-moon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t make me talk!&#8221; was the irritable rejoinder.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ll be sorry for it if you do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Try me and see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, then&mdash;if you will have it: there was a
-witness to our little comedy out there under the
-derrick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some one who came with Hartridge?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>&#8220;I guess so. Some one who went back with
-him, at any rate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who was it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hate to tell you, Poictiers. It was&mdash;it was
-the woman you are going to marry; Richardia
-Birrell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see why you need be so desperately
-gloomy because it happened to be Richardia.
-As I remarked a moment ago, the night is jewel
-fine, and I don&#8217;t wonder that she found it hard
-to stay indoors. And as to my rights in the
-matter, I am far from denying her the privilege
-of walking abroad with so old a friend as Mr.
-William W. Hartridge.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are trying to make a jest of it, as you
-do of everything,&#8221; was the crabbed retort. &#8220;Don&#8217;t
-you see what it means?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must confess that I don&#8217;t see anything especially
-catastrophic about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t? Why, good heavens, man!
-it means that Richardia knows what Hartridge
-has been doing. I won&#8217;t admit yet that she is
-a party to it; but she <i>knows</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Place aux dames</i>,&#8221; said Carfax cheerfully.
-&#8220;We&#8217;ll give her the benefit of the doubt; it&#8217;s
-our clear duty&mdash;or, at least, it is mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>&#8220;No, I&#8217;ll be hanged if we do!&#8221; Tregarvon
-growled. &#8220;There isn&#8217;t even a doubt where she
-is concerned!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax threw the half-burnt cigarette away and
-lighted another.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your tone is that of the still deeply infatuated
-lover. Must we again come back to that phase
-of it?&#8221; he inquired, in the tone of the long-suffering
-but still amiable bystander.</p>
-
-<p>The man beside him took plenty of time to
-consider. But when he opened the flood-gates
-there was a torrent of self-accusings to pour
-out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m a beast, a cad, the cheapest of cheap
-skates, Poictiers!&mdash;anything you like to call me.
-It hasn&#8217;t touched Richardia, but it has gone all
-sorts of despicable distances with me. When you
-told me the other night that you had proposed
-to her, I could have murdered you. And just
-now, when I saw her walking arm in arm with
-Hartridge, I wanted to run amuck and destroy
-him. I&#8217;m not trying to excuse myself when I
-say that I didn&#8217;t go down without a struggle.
-I did make some kind of a fight at first: I even
-went so far as to tell Richardia all about Elizabeth.
-But it didn&#8217;t do any good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile was out of the depths of wisdom,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-and it was not visible above the horizon
-for the penitent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was great,&#8221; he said, referring to the
-forlorn-hope confession of the engagement. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t believe I could have done that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, there is nothing coming to me on that
-score,&#8221; Tregarvon objected, carrying self-abnegation
-to the limit. &#8220;I couldn&#8217;t help telling
-her; not because it was the honest thing to do,
-but because I should have burst into inconsequent
-little shards long ago if I hadn&#8217;t told her
-everything I knew.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she has been encouraging this little idiosyncrasy
-of yours?&#8221; Carfax asked tentatively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not on your life! She has been doing everything
-that an angel out of heaven could do to
-smash me back into my place; to show me how
-many different kinds of an idiot I was making
-of myself. No longer ago than this evening,
-when you went off with the Caswells and left me
-in the lurch, the first thing she did was to ask me
-when I was going home to marry Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in Tregarvon&#8217;s knowing of
-him, Carfax appeared to be losing his temper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;A beast, a cad, and the cheapest of cheap
-skates,&#8217;&#8221; he repeated carefully. &#8220;They are your
-own words, and they will all apply to you if you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-don&#8217;t tell Elizabeth all and more than you have
-just told me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is the millstone grind of it!&#8221; groaned
-the sinner. &#8220;If I should tell her how far it has
-gone with me, it would be tantamount to asking
-her to make me a present of myself, with the
-Uncle Byrd millions thrown in for a <i>lagniappe</i>. I
-suppose I&#8217;ve got it to do, now, but I&#8217;d cheerfully
-accept the alternative of walking into old Brother
-Daniel&#8217;s den of lions.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Y-e-s, I should think you would,&#8221; was the
-drawling comment. &#8220;Any man who would make
-a football of the happiness of such a woman as
-Elizabeth Wardwell&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hold on,&#8221; Tregarvon cut in, sobering suddenly.
-&#8220;Get up and walk on me, if that is what
-you think is coming to me; but don&#8217;t mangle
-me with a cold iron. I&#8217;m out of it all around.
-If Richardia doesn&#8217;t marry you, she&#8217;ll marry
-Hartridge; and when I tell Elizabeth, as I&#8217;ve
-got to, that will be the end of things with her.
-You mustn&#8217;t hit a man when he is down. It&#8217;s
-wicked.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Everything goes&mdash;between friends,&#8221; said Carfax,
-who could never take the trouble to put his
-displeasure into any permanent form. &#8220;It does
-look as if you were up against it, before and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-behind. Far be it from me to break the bruised
-reed, or to quench the smoking flax.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, confound you for a Job&#8217;s comforter!&#8221;
-rasped Tregarvon, breaking out afresh. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-got to believe in people&mdash;I&#8217;m built that way;
-and if I could think for a moment that Richardia
-is Hartridge&#8217;s accomplice in this contemptible
-trickery of his&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, if you could?&#8221; prompted the comforter,
-after the pause had grown overlong.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I could, I&#8217;d lose faith in my own good
-intentions,&#8221; finished Tregarvon, whose stock of
-comparisons was running low. &#8220;Still,&#8221; he went
-on, talking now because he was started and could
-not stop, &#8220;still it&#8217;s against me, Poictiers; the
-whole world is against me. In that same talk in
-the music-room this evening&mdash;while you were
-away with the Caswells&mdash;Richardia was anxious
-about these happenings of ours; afraid somebody
-would get hurt; in fact, she made me promise not
-to hurt anybody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Meaning Professor William Wilberforce Hartridge,
-M.A., Vanderbilt?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; er&mdash;that is, I don&#8217;t think she meant
-him.&#8221; Tregarvon was not yet ready to tell Carfax
-that he was well assured that her fear was for
-her father; though she had not bound him to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-secrecy, he felt that what she had said had been
-spoken in confidence.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax got up from his cramped sitting on the
-door-step, stretched, yawned, and looked at his
-watch, holding the dial up to the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ten minutes past eleven,&#8221; he announced.
-&#8220;Do we turn in and sleep a few lines? Or is it
-to be a continuous performance&mdash;like those that
-the vaudeville people advertise?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go inside and finish your nap,&#8221; Tregarvon
-directed, filling and lighting his pipe. &#8220;I&#8217;m not
-sleepy now; don&#8217;t know as I ever shall be again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think the curtain has been rung down
-for to-night?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d say so, wouldn&#8217;t you? The star has
-gone home and has probably gone to bed. If he
-should get up and walk in his sleep, I&#8217;ll call
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax hung upon the threshold. &#8220;Better call
-me, anyhow, after I&#8217;ve had another forty winks
-or so, so you can take your turn. People have to
-sleep, you know&mdash;even after a funeral.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You go to bed!&#8221; was the gruff command;
-and Tregarvon began a monotonous sentry beat
-up and down before the tool-house. But a minute
-later he thrust his face in at the little square window
-to say: &#8220;Asleep yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>&#8220;My Heavens, no!&#8221; returned a querulous voice
-in the inner darkness. &#8220;Do you take me for an
-auto-hypnotist?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have just developed a notion, and it is beginning
-to gnaw me,&#8221; explained the sentinel on
-duty. &#8220;What if the man who was on his knees
-at the test-hole when I went to waken you wasn&#8217;t
-Hartridge, after all?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, good Lord!&#8221; complained the voice.
-&#8220;Are you trying to drag somebody else into it?&mdash;when
-the character cast is already full and running
-over, and all the supernumeraries have been
-tagged and labelled? Turn the notion out of
-doors; tread on it; break its back with a stick!
-We caught Hartridge with the goods on him,
-didn&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; but&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing much: only now that I come to think
-of it, I seem to remember that the man I saw
-dropping things into the hole wasn&#8217;t wearing
-Hartridge&#8217;s kind of a hat.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, granny! Go on and do your little
-sentry go. Your head is muddled and you want
-to pass the muddle on to me. I&#8217;m asleep, I tell
-you&mdash;sound asleep! I don&#8217;t hear a word you are
-saying.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>Tregarvon gave it up; not the lately developed
-notion, which grew rather more insistent the
-longer he thought about it, but the attempt to
-interest Carfax. During the lonely two-hour
-watch which followed he had time to go reflectively
-over the events of the night, to set them in
-orderly array, and to let the unconsidered minor
-happenings fit into their places and weigh as they
-would.</p>
-
-<p>The process straightened out a few of the
-tangles, or it seemed to. Richardia&#8217;s concern,
-expressed by her fear that violence might grow
-out of the antagonisms, was undoubtedly for her
-father. Also, it was plain that up to the moment
-of confidences she had not suspected Hartridge of
-being her father&#8217;s agent; it being a fair presumption
-that she would have spoken of the professor
-if she had. Having got that far, Tregarvon began
-to ask himself if Hartridge was the only one
-actively involved. In at least two instances the
-schoolmaster might fairly be held exempt. It
-was still incredible that the man who had come
-to the Coalville headquarters as a guest had deliberately
-plotted to have his host&#8217;s motor-car
-wrecked on its return from Highmount. By the
-same token, it was difficult to imagine the professor
-of mathematics in the r&ocirc;le of the sardonic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-practical joker who had shocked Rucker with a
-resin-filled skull, dug, doubtless, out of the old
-burying-ground.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the murderous attempt at
-wrecking the car and the grim joke on Rucker
-fitted the mountain-baron-henchman hypothesis
-most accurately; as did the fact, if it were a fact,
-that there were two persons concerned in the
-recent episode of the hardened steel cubes. There
-had been time, during the arousing of Carfax, for
-one man to disappear and for another to take his
-place; in which case it seemed evident that
-Hartridge had stood his ground merely to cover
-the retreat of the other man.</p>
-
-<p>The puzzle promised to give a coherent hint
-pointing to its solution while Tregarvon was thinking
-it out and fitting the pieces together; and so
-long as the mental effort continued to feed the
-fire of wakefulness he was all that an alert sentinel
-should be. But after the various suppositions
-had been properly labelled and docketed
-and pigeonholed the physical reaction came, and
-drowsiness sat upon his shoulders, riding him like
-an Old Man of the Sea.</p>
-
-<p>For a time he fought manfully, keeping up
-the struggle until he had exhausted every device
-he could think of and yielding only when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-found himself actually falling asleep as he walked.
-The alternative to leaving the plant without a
-watchman was to call Carfax, and this he finally
-concluded to do. Groping his way blindly into
-the dark interior of the tool-shack, he stumbled
-over the spare coil of rope, sat down upon it for a
-momentary rest, and in the flitting of a bat&#8217;s
-wing was past help.</p>
-
-<p>When he opened his eyes again the high-riding
-moon had swung far into the west, the glade was
-bathed in a ghostly flood of gray shadow, and
-Carfax was shaking him gently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another act on,&#8221; whispered the impromptu
-call-boy; &#8220;no speaking parts out, as yet&mdash;only
-pantomime. But it is worth sitting up to see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon, still sodden with sleep, suffered Carfax
-to lead him to the outlook window. In the
-gray shadows he presently made out the figure of
-another intruder. Within the area of the sunken
-graves a man, old and black, if the uncertain
-light could be trusted, was squatting on the ground
-and rocking himself back and forth, his swaying
-body keeping time with the measure of a
-weird, crooning melody. From time to time, he
-would stop the swaying movement to take a
-small white object from a basket at his side.
-These objects he appeared to be arranging in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-some sort of a figure on the ground to the accompaniment
-of the droning incantation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How long has he been there?&#8221; Tregarvon
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just a little while,&#8221; was the low-toned reply.
-&#8220;I awoke about half an hour ago, and when I
-looked out, the moon was going over to the other
-edge of the world, and everything was quiet. A
-little later the basket man came; just appeared,
-you know, as if he had materialized out of the
-shadows. When I first noticed him he was doing
-his little song and dance, as you see him now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what <i>is</i> the &#8216;song and dance,&#8217; as you call
-it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Write your guess on one side of a sheet of
-paper and send it to the puzzle editor,&#8221; chuckled
-Carfax, adding: &#8220;If we had begun doing that at
-first, the editor would have a choice collection
-by this time, don&#8217;t you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been making a few more guesses,&#8221;
-Tregarvon offered. &#8220;I was coming in to unload
-them on you when my eyes went shut. What
-time is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About two o&#8217;clock&mdash;the real witching hour.
-I want to go home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go out and tell the old conjurer yonder; perhaps
-he may have a magic square of carpet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-in his basket,&#8221; suggested Tregarvon. Then:
-&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t the wild and weird atmosphere of this
-heritage of mine get on your nerves to the queen&#8217;s
-taste? Something doing all the time. I&#8217;m going
-to put a notice on the derrick frame: &#8216;Don&#8217;t
-shoot the stunt-setter; he is doing the best he
-can.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Sh! what is the old &#8216;ghost doctor&#8217; up to
-now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The droning chant had ceased and the old
-negro was crouching or kneeling at one end of
-the oblong figure traced by the enclosing row of
-white objects. The silence was profound; so
-complete that the snapping of a twig coming suddenly
-shattered it like the report of a pistol.
-Both of the watchers started at the sound, but
-the kneeling negro seemed not to have heard it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What was that?&#8221; whispered Carfax.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m guessing once more: the obi-devil, possibly,
-coming in answer to the old medicine-man&#8217;s
-prayers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guess again!&#8221; Carfax thrust in excitedly.
-&#8220;Look this way&mdash;get a line on the corner of the
-derrick frame and follow it over into the woods.
-Do you see him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon said &#8220;Yes,&#8221; and began to grope for
-a weapon. A man, hatless and with a handkerchief<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-bound about his head, was edging his way
-cautiously out of the undergrowth. In the hollow
-of his left arm he carried a gun, and his advance
-was like that of the deer-stalking hunter.
-With the derrick frame intervening it was to be
-inferred that he did not see the negro.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Somebody pot-hunting for us, this time?&#8221;
-queried Carfax, under his breath; but Tregarvon
-pressed his arm for silence. The cautious approach
-was not in the direction of the tool shanty;
-it was toward the engine of the drilling installation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is the fellow we want to surround,&#8221;
-Tregarvon whispered. &#8220;If he had a hat on, I&#8217;d
-swear he was the man I saw kneeling under the
-derrick&mdash;before he made his drop-out and left
-Hartridge to throw dust for him! By Jove! he
-acts as if he were scared!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The exclamation was not unwarranted. The
-man with the gun was creeping toward the portable
-engine, watchful and alert, starting at every
-whisper of the night air in the pines and exhibiting
-all the outward signs of an inward tension
-which was ready to snap and recoil in panic.</p>
-
-<p>When he passed out of sight behind the derrick,
-Carfax would have led the charge; but Tregarvon
-restrained him. &#8220;Hold on,&#8221; he advised.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-&#8220;We may as well wait and find out what he means
-to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man was creeping on hands and knees
-when he came in sight again, and the gun had
-been left behind. When he stood up he was at
-the smoke-stack end of the engine-boiler; and a
-moment further along the two watchers made out
-that he was unscrewing the fastenings of the iron
-door which gave access to the smoke-box and the
-flues. They waited until he had the door unfastened;
-saw him swing it open by slow inchings;
-saw him thrust an arm into the sooty depths of
-the smoke-box.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Now!</i>&#8221; Tregarvon commanded, setting the
-pace for the charge; but panic was before them.
-Just as the man was withdrawing his arm a deep
-groan shuddered upon the stillness. With a
-cry that was like the snarl of a cornered animal,
-the man leaped up and flung out his arms as if to
-ward a blow. At that the huddled figure kneeling
-among the sunken graves groaned again, following
-the groan with a terrified, &#8220;<i>Oh</i>, my
-Lordy!&#8221; when he saw the man at the boiler
-head.</p>
-
-<p>That was sufficient. At the spot where the
-man with a handkerchief about his head had
-stood clutching the air there was a sudden void,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-and the noise of his crashing retreat through the
-undergrowth had died away before Tregarvon
-and Carfax could give chase.</p>
-
-<p>They captured the &#8220;ghost doctor,&#8221; however,
-and were not greatly surprised when the old negro
-turned out to be Uncle William. His night
-wandering to the mountain top was sufficiently
-explained when he pointed to the sunken grave
-ringed about with bits of broken china.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dah&#8217;s whah my ol&#8217; &#8217;ooman is, marstehs; yas,
-suh; right dah&#8217;s whah dey bury huh. Dat
-triflin&#8217; niggah, Sam, from de ol&#8217; place, come erlong
-down de mounting day befo&#8217; yistidday, an&#8217; he
-say you-all gemman is a-trompin&#8217; &#8217;round an&#8217;
-mashin&#8217; up t&#8217;ings in de ol&#8217; buryin&#8217;-ground. I
-know dat ain&#8217; so, but I says to mahse&#8217;f, &#8216;Willyum,
-yo&#8217; gwine right up dah and put dem li&#8217;l
-grabestones you been a-savin&#8217; &#8217;round Mammy
-Ann; den Marsteh Tregarbin ain&#8217; gwine &#8217;sturb
-nuffin&#8217; belongin&#8217; ter you.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Tregarvon soberly. &#8220;You may be
-sure we shan&#8217;t disturb your wife&#8217;s grave&mdash;or any
-of the others, if we can help it. I didn&#8217;t know,
-until after we had begun work here, that this
-open place was a burying-ground. Now tell me;
-do you know who that man was who stood there
-by the engine and made motions at you?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>&#8220;I &#8217;spec&#8217; dat wuz de ol&#8217; debbil, hese&#8217;f, marsteh.
-Couldn&#8217;t a-been nobody else; no, suh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What makes you think it was the devil, Uncle
-William?&#8221; Carfax wanted to know.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Cause he go off, <i>bing!</i> in a puff o&#8217; yaller
-smoke when I say &#8216;<i>Oh</i>, my Lordy!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had been groping purposefully in
-the old man&#8217;s explanation to determine if it held
-any of the missing puzzle pieces.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You say Sam, from the &#8216;old place&#8217; told you
-we were working here, Uncle William; who is
-Sam, and where is the &#8216;old place&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sam, he&#8217;s dat triflin&#8217; no-&#8217;count niggah what
-Marsteh Judge keep for stable niggah&mdash;when
-dey ain&#8217; nuffin in de stable &#8217;ceppin&#8217; de ol&#8217; dapple-gray
-dat&#8217;s a heap older&#8217;n what I is, <i>hyuh, hyuh!</i>
-But de ol&#8217; Marsteh Judge ain&#8217; gwine tu&#8217;n nobody
-off&#8217;n de ol&#8217; place whilst dar&#8217;s a rind o&#8217; bacon lef&#8217;
-in de gre&#8217;t house; no, suh; he ain&#8217; gwine do
-dat!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point that Tregarvon sprang his
-small trap.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why did he turn you off, Uncle William?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who, me? No, suh&mdash;I&mdash;Miss Dick, she&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all right; never mind, Uncle William,&#8221;
-Tregarvon hastened to say. &#8220;Now we&#8217;ll undertake
-to keep the devil away while you go on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-setting your tombstones. I&#8217;m sorry we had to
-break in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dey&#8217;s all sot, yas, suh; dat&#8217;s de bes&#8217; I kin do
-for ol&#8217; Mammy Ann. I&#8217;s gwine tromp off down
-de mounting ag&#8217;in, now. Mus&#8217; be gettin&#8217; might&#8217;
-nigh de ol&#8217; man&#8217;s bedtime; yas, suh; it sholy
-am dat. I&#8217;s sayin&#8217; good night to you-all; an&#8217;
-t&#8217;ank yo&#8217; kin&#8217;ly, marstehs.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After the old negro had shuffled away on a
-short-cut through the wood in the direction of
-the pike, the two young men took up the affair
-of the moment, which was to ascertain what the
-man with the bandaged head had been doing to
-the engine of the drilling plant. The smoke-box
-door was standing open, as he had left it,
-and Tregarvon struck a match and held it in the
-small sooty cavern. What he saw made him
-withdraw the match suddenly and blow it out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did it bite you?&#8221; asked Carfax, genially
-quizzical.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s rejoinder was not in words.
-Thrusting an arm into the smoke-box he drew
-out a paper-wrapped cylinder with a capped fuse
-buried in one end of it, passing the find to Carfax
-with the remark: &#8220;I fancy we can stay
-awake until daybreak on the strength of that,
-don&#8217;t you think, Poictiers?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>&#8220;Dynamite!&#8221; gasped Carfax, holding the cartridge
-gingerly between thumb and finger and at
-arm&#8217;s length.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, dynamite. It was poked into one of
-the flues with the business end toward the fire-box,
-and it made no account of Rucker, who
-would be the one to fire up the boiler before
-breakfast the day after to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say, by Jove, Vance! this thing is getting
-serious!&#8221; exclaimed the golden youth, forgetting
-even the slight hint of a lisp. &#8220;We&#8217;ll have to
-&#8216;take measures,&#8217; as my father used to say. Come
-on over to the shanty and we&#8217;ll get busy. I am
-in the same condition you said you were, a while
-back: I&#8217;m not sleepy now&mdash;don&#8217;t know as I
-ever shall be again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The talk on the door-step of the tool-house
-was prolonged far past Tregarvon&#8217;s recounting
-of the suppositions pieced together in the period
-of his lonely sentry go. But it came back to
-the suppositions in the end, with Carfax checking
-off the probabilities on his finger-tips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So it figures out about this way,&#8221; he said,
-not too cheerfully. &#8220;We have Judge Birrell as
-Lord High Executioner to a couple of receivers
-of stolen goods&mdash;always without his daughter&#8217;s
-approval or consent, as a matter of course&mdash;and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-Professor Hartridge as his able deputy in the
-field. Then there is this skulking rascal of a
-dynamite-planter, who acts under orders, or possibly
-exceeds them now and then; and he seems
-to be the only one of the lot that we can satisfactorily
-pinch&mdash;when we shall be lucky enough
-to catch him. Uncle William isn&#8217;t in it, is he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon shook his head gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have been wrestling with that,&#8221; he confessed.
-&#8220;He seems more than trustworthy.
-But he is evidently an old house servant of the
-judge&#8217;s, and he was sent straight to me from
-Westwood. That is beyond question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As a spy?&mdash;perish the thought!&#8221; ranted Carfax,
-carefully concealing his earnestness with an
-overlaying of extravagance, as his habit was.
-&#8220;With the memory of Uncle William&#8217;s unapproachable
-dinners in my mind&mdash;or mouth&mdash;I&#8217;ll
-defend him to the last gasp.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is negligible,&#8221; said Tregarvon briefly.
-&#8220;But this dynamiting emissary of Hartridge&#8217;s,
-or the judge&#8217;s, isn&#8217;t. We must contrive to trap
-him in some way. If we don&#8217;t, he will fool around
-until he hurts somebody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yea, verily,&#8221; Carfax laughed. &#8220;Any guesses
-coming to you?&mdash;as to who he is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One small one; and it wouldn&#8217;t be worth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-mentioning if it didn&#8217;t fit in with some of the
-others. You saw that he was bareheaded?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And that he was wearing a handkerchief or
-a bandage of some sort instead of a hat?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Another &#8216;yes&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, the day before yesterday the man
-we&#8217;ve been calling &#8216;Morgan&#8217; was hurt by the
-falling walking-beam and had to have his head
-wrapped up in about the same way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; but Sherlock Holmes wouldn&#8217;t
-stop with that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Neither do I. Tryon told me a little tale two
-days ago that possibly forges the connecting
-link. We know that both Morgan and Sill are
-McNabbs, and that for some reason of their
-own they dropped the surname when they hired
-out to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; Carfax approved. &#8220;The plot thickens.
-Can&#8217;t you stir in a little more stiffening?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;With the help of Tryon&#8217;s story, I can. It
-seems that these men are, or have been, moonshiners&mdash;breakers
-of the revenue laws. Some
-years ago the revenue officers raided their secret
-still, which was hidden somewhere in the Pocket,
-and arrested these two, with a number of others.
-Morgan McNabb and his brother were booked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-for the penitentiary; would have gone there if
-Judge Birrell hadn&#8217;t come out of his retirement
-and fought for them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was slowly filling the short pipe he had
-borrowed from his companion. &#8220;I begin to see
-daylight,&#8221; he said. &#8220;What was the judge&#8217;s
-motive?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A sort of clan loyalty, Tryon says. The
-McNabbs live on his land; they are &#8216;his people&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Um,&#8221; was the thoughtful comment. &#8220;And
-because the judge defends them, they take up
-the cudgels for him. We have to-morrow&mdash;or
-rather to-day&mdash;before us, with nothing especial
-to do; since Rucker will hardly be back with
-the drills before afternoon. Shall we telegraph
-to Hesterville for the sheriff, borrow Tait&#8217;s team,
-and make a party call upon the man with the
-bandaged head?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That would be rather too summary, wouldn&#8217;t
-it?&#8221; Tregarvon objected. &#8220;We may be well
-convinced, ourselves, but we have no direct
-evidence. Neither of us could go on the stand
-and swear that the man we saw at the boiler-head
-was Morgan McNabb.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; that is so. Past that, since I have
-asked the judge&#8217;s daughter to consider me as
-a possible husband&mdash;&#8221; Carfax had called up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-the cherubic smile, but it had the opposite of a
-mollifying effect upon the objector.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t harp on that part of it any more than
-you have to,&#8221; was the morose interruption.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was going to say that the arrest of Morgan
-McNabb, just at this critical turn in the tide of
-affairs, might make it embarrassing for the judge;
-only you wouldn&#8217;t let me finish,&#8221; said Carfax,
-with great meekness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are going to call on him?&#8221; demanded
-Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Since he is Richardia&#8217;s father, I don&#8217;t see
-how I can well avoid it. To-morrow&mdash;or, I
-should say, to-day&mdash;is Friday, and I thought
-I&#8217;d ask Richardia to let me drive her over to
-Westwood House&mdash;if you&#8217;ll lend me the motor-wagon
-after Rucker gets back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon rose and stood half-menacingly over
-the friend of his youth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I thought you were only playing with
-her,&#8221; he grated; but instead of saying what he
-would do in that case, he turned abruptly and
-went into the tool-house to fling himself down
-upon the cot, leaving Carfax to continue the
-night-watch or to abandon it, as he might choose.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XVI<br />
-
-
-<small>A Friend at Need</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WITH the object-lessons of the night of
-visitations to emphasize the need for
-vigilance, the two young men, discussing the
-situation in the gray dawn, agreed that the
-drilling plant must not be left unguarded during
-the Friday of enforced idleness, or at any other
-time. Accordingly, soon after sunrise, Carfax
-set out to walk down the mountain for the purpose
-of sending Tryon and a man or two of the
-track gang up to relieve Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>This arrangement left the owner of the Ocoee
-to do sentry duty alone until Tryon should
-come&mdash;a duty which he scamped ingloriously
-by sitting upon the door-step of the tool-shack
-and promptly falling asleep.</p>
-
-<p>It was a brusque &#8220;Hello!&#8221; that awakened
-him, and he sprang up with a start to find a
-round-faced, pursy little man in pepper-and-salt
-garmentings and mouse-colored driving-gloves
-standing before him. A horse and buggy
-motionless in the edge of the glade accounted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-for the manner of the visitor&#8217;s coming, but not
-for its object. Tregarvon took a good look at
-the stranger before he committed himself, even
-to a greeting. The round face, with its twinkling
-eyes, double chin, and the little patches of closely
-cropped side-whisker, was altogether reassuring;
-it not only beamed good-nature, it fairly shone
-with an irresistible kindliness. Tregarvon, gathering
-his scattered wits as he could, said: &#8220;Good
-morning; it&#8217;s a fine morning for a drive through
-the woods.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The little man added another layer of geniality
-to his smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a fine morning, also, for a nap in the
-sunshine,&#8221; he reciprocated. &#8220;Do you belong
-to the out-of-door sleepers&mdash;the &#8216;simple-lifers&#8217;&mdash;Mr.
-Tregarvon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not permanently,&#8221; laughed Tregarvon;
-&#8220;though I must confess that I am so simple as
-not to be able to recall your name.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good, dev&#8217;lish good!&#8221; chuckled the visitor.
-&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t have turned it more neatly myself,
-&#8217;pon my word! I&#8217;m Thaxter; Wilmerding&#8217;s
-bookkeeper at Whitlow. One of my fads is to
-take a drive before breakfast. Excellent habit,
-Mr. Tregarvon; I can recommend it most highly.
-Gives you an appetite like a coal-heaver. Speaking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-of coal&mdash;how are you getting along taking
-soundings on the old Ocoee? Have you hit it
-yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not yet,&#8221; Tregarvon admitted, warming to
-the little man&#8217;s friendly interest. &#8220;But I am
-still living in hopes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Thaxter pursed his lips in a way to make
-them match the general effect of rotundity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mighty mean thing to say to a man before
-breakfast&mdash;you haven&#8217;t breakfasted yet, I dare
-say&mdash;but you are butting your head against a
-stone wall, Mr. Tregarvon. Haven&#8217;t they told
-you that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If your &#8216;they&#8217; refers to the Coalville gossips,
-I have been duly warned. They told me, with
-all the variations, before I&#8217;d had time to climb
-the mountain on my first exploring expedition.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just so; but not specifically, I suppose.
-You should have come to me. While I am an
-employee of the C. C. &amp; I. Company, my pay-roll
-connection wouldn&#8217;t have kept me from doing
-you a good turn. And I could have given you
-chapter, page, and verse.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the moment Tregarvon lost sight of the
-fact that Wilmerding had reported his bookkeeper
-totally barren of Ocoee information. So
-he said: &#8220;Possibly you will do it now, Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-Thaxter. We are mere babes in the wood, Carfax
-and I, needing a guardian angel pretty severely,
-if we are to believe what other people say
-of us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have certainly been needing a little
-friendly counsel from some one who was in a
-position to know what he was talking about.
-You&#8217;ll never find your coal up here, Mr. Tregarvon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is what they all say; but they don&#8217;t
-tell us precisely why we shan&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; said the kindly one, shaking his head
-in deprecation. &#8220;Human nature is the same
-everywhere. Tait could have told you, or Tryon,
-or Walters; all of them who have lived here long
-enough. But you had money and were willing
-to spend it. It would have been killing the
-golden-egged goose to have driven you away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon grinned. &#8220;Thank you for trying
-to break it gently to me, Mr. Thaxter; but I am
-braced for it now. Hurl it in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They could have told you that this test-boring
-experiment of yours has been tried before,
-all over the mountain top. I presume I could
-show you a dozen holes, if they are not all filled
-up with wash and hidden under the leaves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was thinking hard.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>&#8220;Does Captain Duncan know this?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should suppose so; he ought to know it.
-The testing was done by the New Ocoee Coal
-Company, and it may have timed itself during
-the summer that Duncan spent in the West.
-Come to think, I believe it did. You advised
-with him, of course; surely he didn&#8217;t encourage
-you to spend money on the property, did he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I am obliged to confess that he did not.
-On the contrary, he advised me not to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The little man&#8217;s smile became benignantly
-tolerant. &#8220;You young men are like Mr. Kipling&#8217;s
-puppy at times; you <i>will</i> chew soap, knowing
-perfectly well that it is soap.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s answering laugh admitted the
-justness of the charge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Possibly some of us like the flavor of soap,&#8221;
-he retorted. &#8220;There is no accounting for the
-depravity of some tastes, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, well,&#8221; said the visitor, with the air of
-one who is far too wise to combat the vagaries
-of youth, &#8220;go on and have your fling. It is
-harmless enough. If you can afford to buy a
-little amusement in this way, why shouldn&#8217;t
-you do it? It won&#8217;t hurt you, and it is a Godsend
-to Tait and the poor devils on your pay-roll
-while it lasts.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>&#8220;But if I can&#8217;t afford it?&#8221; suggested Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah; that is another matter. From what
-Wilmerding has let fall, I have been assuming
-that you and Mr. Carfax desired the experience
-and the fun of it rather than any possible money
-gain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The money side of it may not appeal to Carfax;
-but it does to me, very forcibly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Still, you are throwing good money after
-bad in putting down these test-holes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon shrugged his shoulders. &#8220;What
-would you?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;I inherited the Ocoee,
-and it is up to me to make something out of it,
-if I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The round-bodied bookkeeper laughed until he
-shook like a bowl of jelly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is very evident, Mr. Tregarvon, that you
-were born in the purple. If you wish to make
-money out of the Ocoee, why don&#8217;t you sell it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I should first have to find a purchaser,
-and before I could find a purchaser&mdash;I should
-think&mdash;it would be a condition precedent that I
-should find the coal. It resolves itself into the
-vicious circle, as you see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Thaxter smote his gloved hands together
-softly and appeared to be debating a nice point<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-with himself. When he spoke again his manner
-had lost the touch of brisk impersonality.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pardon me if I seem to crowd the mourners,&#8221;
-he apologized, &#8220;but it strikes me that this is a
-matter in which the good-natured bystander may
-quite properly take a hand. Is it possible that
-you haven&#8217;t been told of the offer made by our
-people to your father?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is more than possible; it is a fact.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am truly astonished! Your lawyers must
-know of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There has never been any mention of it made
-to me. What was the offer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I remember correctly, it was one hundred
-thousand dollars for all the titles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you!&#8221; exclaimed Tregarvon triumphantly.
-&#8220;That is the best news I&#8217;ve heard in
-many a day. If your company ever made any
-such an offer as that, it proves conclusively that
-there is coal in the property, somewhere.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The bookkeeper shook his round head in evident
-dismay.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear, dear!&#8221; he lamented; &#8220;I was afraid you
-might jump at some such conclusion as that, and
-it puts me in a rather awkward position. As I
-have said, I am only a pay-roll man in Consolidated
-Coal; I&#8217;m not even one of its many superintendents.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-Yet, as man to man, perhaps I may
-venture to tell you just why the C. C. &amp; I. might
-still be willing to pay you the price named, though
-in telling you I may be betraying an official
-secret. You probably know that your property
-line on the north abuts on the Whitlow lands
-about an eighth of a mile from your tramway?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very good. Now we have a vein of coal
-quite near this joint boundary; not a very thick
-vein, but one which could be made to pay for
-working if we could send the coal down over
-your tramway, and coke it in your old ovens at
-Coalville, but which would not pay if we should
-be obliged to build a new tramway to get at it.
-That is the whole thing in a nutshell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You say that this offer of a hundred thousand
-for the Ocoee was once made to my father? It&#8217;s
-odd that I had never heard of it. Was it in any
-sense a standing offer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was at the time, and I think it still is,
-though there has been no talk of it latterly, so
-far as I know. But since the reasons for making
-it still exist, I should imagine that you would
-stand a good chance of reviving it if you should
-care to do so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I only had a little breakfast in me!&#8221; Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-protested half-jokingly. &#8220;I&#8217;m too hungry
-to talk hundred-thousand-dollar deals with you
-with any assurance that an empty stomach isn&#8217;t
-making me flighty, Mr. Thaxter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The bookkeeper laughed pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are your men coming over from the
-tramhead,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Give them your orders,
-and then let me drive you down to Coalville to
-your breakfast. Perhaps you&#8217;ll be willing to
-give me a bite, too, and in that case I shall have
-the pleasure of meeting Mr. Carfax again. I
-didn&#8217;t more than half get acquainted with him
-the day he drove up to Whitlow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are certainly the jolliest lot of commercial
-pirates a man ever had to fight&mdash;you people
-up at the C. C. &amp; I.,&#8221; said Tregarvon, after he
-had climbed into the buggy with Thaxter and the
-spirited black horse was flinging the soft sand of
-the wood road from his hoofs. &#8220;First, Wilmerding
-comes to the rescue; and now you are trying
-to give us a lift. It&#8217;s heart-warming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thaxter&#8217;s rejoinder had just the requisite touch
-of friendly solicitude in it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you meant what you said a few moments
-ago, about the financial aspect of the&mdash;of
-your experiment? A hundred thousand dollars
-would be worth considering?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>&#8220;That amount would look as big as a hundred
-thousand cart-wheels to me, just now,&#8221; Tregarvon
-confided. &#8220;My father is dead, as I suppose
-you know, and there have been family misfortunes
-big enough to sink a ship. A hundred thousand
-would give us a fresh start in the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then we must certainly try to get it for you,&#8221;
-was the affable rejoinder; and from this on, the
-spirited horse demanded Thaxter&#8217;s undivided attention,
-so pointedly that the bookkeeper did not
-even seem to see Professor Hartridge when the
-buggy whirled past that gentleman as he was
-returning from his morning walk down the pike.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was waiting breakfast on Tregarvon
-when the black horse came to a stand at the door
-of the Ocoee office-building. The young millionaire
-remembered Thaxter perfectly, and seemed
-to be glad to renew his acquaintance with the
-&#8220;Brother Cheeryble.&#8221; Yet it was Carfax&#8217;s judicious
-applying of the brakes at the breakfast-table
-conference of three that kept Tregarvon
-from committing himself too definitely in the
-matter of bargain and sale.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the talk over the ham and eggs
-pushed the business affair considerably farther
-along on the road to a tentative conclusion. Before
-he took his leave to continue his return drive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-to Whitlow, Thaxter was authorized to communicate
-by wire with the New York headquarters of
-Consolidated Coal, and, without betraying any
-confidences, to ascertain if the offer of one hundred
-thousand dollars for the Ocoee properties
-still held good.</p>
-
-<p>After Thaxter had taken his departure, and the
-two young experimenters had threshed the new
-prospect out to its final straw, the wakeful night
-came in for its revenges, and they slept through
-the forenoon. Rucker did not return from Whitlow
-with the car and the repointed drills until long
-after the noon meal; and when he came he found
-his two employers waiting impatiently for him&mdash;or
-rather for the car. The reason for the impatience
-was a note from Miss Richardia sent down
-by the college mail-carrier early in the afternoon;
-a brief message addressed to both, begging them
-to come to Highmount at the earliest possible
-moment: urgency only; no hint of what had
-happened or was due to happen.</p>
-
-<p>They made the ascent of the mountain as
-rapidly as the big touring-car could measure the
-distance, and were met at the door of the administration
-building of the college, not by Miss
-Birrell, but by Professor Hartridge, who led them
-into the visitors&#8217; parlor and calmly informed them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-that Miss Richardia had driven to Westwood
-House with her father shortly after luncheon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By Jove, now!&#8221; lisped Carfax; &#8220;that&#8217;s rather
-curious, don&#8217;t you know!&#8221; And Tregarvon was
-quite speechless.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Curious that Miss Birrell should ask you to
-come up here, and then run away?&#8221; said Hartridge.
-&#8220;It was a little ruse of mine, and Miss
-Richardia is altogether blameless. I wished very
-much to see you both, and I was afraid you might
-be foolish enough to disregard an invitation
-bearing my name. So I took Miss Richardia
-into my confidence, and she very obligingly wrote
-the note which, I assume, has brought you here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax snapped his fingers and laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Upon what footing do we stand with you,
-Mr. Hartridge?&mdash;upon that of yesterday at
-dinner-time or upon that of a later hour, when
-I had the pleasure of helping you on with your
-overcoat?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t presume to say, Mr. Carfax;
-you must make your own attitude. But if that
-attitude should be inimical, I must still beg you
-to believe that I have decoyed you up here to
-do you a kindness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was still smiling affably. &#8220;Is it Virgil
-who puts it into the mouth of one of his characters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-to say that we should beware of the Greeks
-bringing gifts, professor? You will pardon us
-if we seem a bit suspicious, won&#8217;t you? But
-this&#8221;&mdash;he held up the small cube of hardened
-steel which he happened to have in his pocket&mdash;&#8220;this
-is so completely convincing, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mild-eyed mathematician waved the evidence
-aside as a thing of small moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now that you have had time to consider,
-I am sure you absolve me from the charge of
-having tampered with your drill-hole,&#8221; he deprecated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We do,&#8221; said Carfax. &#8220;All you did was to
-cover the retreat of the man who really did the
-tampering. But that is sufficient to make us&mdash;er&mdash;a
-bit cautious, as you might say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge smiled in his turn. &#8220;You are basing
-your caution upon a small specimen of the
-metal commercially known as steel which you
-chanced to find in my pocket,&#8221; he remarked.
-&#8220;Let us disregard the bit of steel for the time
-being, if you please. If you should happen to
-lose it, it could be very easily replaced; but&#8221;&mdash;he
-turned short upon Tregarvon&mdash;&#8220;you can&#8217;t
-replace the Ocoee if you allow Mr. Thaxter to
-persuade you to sell it to Consolidated Coal,
-Mr. Tregarvon.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>&#8220;What&#8217;s that?&#8221; exclaimed the Ocoee owner,
-starting from his chair; and Carfax fell back
-upon his strongest expletive, &#8220;By Jove!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge appeared to be entirely at ease now.
-He seated himself and crossed his long legs comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are puzzled to account for my friendly
-interest?&mdash;after last night?&#8221; he inquired. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t blame you, and I am only sorry that I
-cannot explain more fully. But I may say this:
-if you part with the Ocoee properties for any such
-sum as Mr. Thaxter has doubtless offered you,
-you will regret it as long as you live.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax got his breath sufficiently after a time
-to say: &#8220;May&mdash;may we venture to ask how
-you know what Mr. Thaxter has offered?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly. The offer of one hundred thousand
-dollars for the lands, titles, and mineral
-rights of the property is no secret&mdash;or at least
-it was not during Mr. Tregarvon&#8217;s father&#8217;s lifetime.
-I am merely assuming that Thaxter has
-not increased it; and I am also assuming that a
-renewal of the offer was the reason for his early
-morning drive with Mr. Tregarvon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you say Vance will be sorry if he accepts
-the offer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do; most decidedly.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>Carfax leaned forward and held up an accusing
-finger.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you know, of your own knowledge,
-that there is a workable vein of coal on the property,
-Mr. Hartridge,&#8221; he snapped.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That, my dear sir, is an assumption which
-I must decline to confirm.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nevertheless, it is true. And here is another
-to go with it: <i>you know where that vein can
-be found!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge smiled again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are, constructively at least, my guest,
-Mr. Carfax; I should be unpardonably rude if
-I were to contradict you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax glanced aside at Tregarvon, and Tregarvon
-returned the glance as one who sees the
-shore from the crest of a tossing wave, but has
-no hope of reaching it. After a little pause
-Carfax renewed the attack.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is a most extraordinary situation, don&#8217;t
-you think, Mr. Hartridge?&#8221; he began mildly.
-&#8220;Would a definite quantity of the thing known
-commercially as money tend to relieve it in any
-way?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor&#8217;s answer was prompt and decisive.
-&#8220;You are assuming that I have information
-to sell? I have not.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>Carfax countered, quickly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then why have you just given us this pointer
-on Consolidated Coal? You profess to be willing
-to help us and you refuse to help us in one
-and the same breath.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, if you are going into motives, my dear
-sir, that is, indeed, a very deep subject. It
-would hardly be profitable to discuss it, even
-academically. Life, the really human variety
-of life, is full of paradoxes. You are wondering
-why the man from whom, a few hours ago, you
-took that small cube of steel, is now apparently
-trying to save you from loss. Call it one of the
-human paradoxes, if you will; only don&#8217;t sell
-to Consolidated Coal for a paltry hundred thousand
-dollars a property upon which more than
-three or four times that amount has been spent.
-This is what I enticed you up here to say to
-you; and having said it&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hold on,&#8221; Carfax interposed. &#8220;We have
-met some curious varieties of the genus enemy
-in this forgotten corner of the world, and you
-will pardon me if I say that you are not the least
-remarkable specimen, Mr. Hartridge. We are
-thankful for the pointer, and much more thankful
-for the assurance you have given us that we
-are not fishing in a barren pond. We&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>The professor had risen and was moving toward
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have given you no such specific assurance,&#8221;
-he denied.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Tregarvon, getting upon his feet
-and putting in a word for himself. &#8220;You may
-congratulate yourself upon your discretion. None
-the less, we shall continue to work on our problem,
-Mr. Hartridge, until we have found the
-value of &#8216;<i>pi</i>&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was a centre shot, visibly and palpably
-piercing the bull&#8217;s-eye. A blow would scarcely
-have disconcerted the schoolmaster more effectively.
-Yet he recovered instantly, had blandly
-excused himself upon the plea of pressing laboratory
-work, and was bowing himself out at
-the door, when he fired the return shot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have set yourselves an impossible task,
-gentlemen,&#8221; he offered mildly. &#8220;You forget
-that the value of &#8216;<i>pi</i>&#8217; has never yet been exactly
-ascertained.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what do you make of it all?&#8221; Tregarvon
-asked, when the yellow car was rolling smoothly
-down the mountain pike on the return to Coalville.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing; except a disappointment for Mr.
-Thaxter,&#8221; was Carfax&#8217;s reply.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>&#8220;Thaxter; yes. Do you know, Poictiers, I&#8217;m
-beginning to smell brimstone in <i>his</i> clothes, now.
-Wilmerding told us definitely, if you remember,
-that Thaxter gave him to understand that he
-didn&#8217;t have any data on the Ocoee; didn&#8217;t know
-anything remotely concerning it. There is a lie
-out, somewhere.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Which doesn&#8217;t matter now, thanks to Mr.
-William Wilberforce Hartridge, the man of mixed
-motives,&#8221; said Carfax definitively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think, on the strength of Hartridge&#8217;s
-warning, that I shouldn&#8217;t sell to Consolidated
-Coal?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was driving the car and he let the
-brakes out until the machine was dropping down
-the grade like a stone falling from a height.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not in a thousand years!&#8221; he said.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XVII<br />
-
-
-<small>An Anticlimax</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">BRIGHT and early on the Saturday morning
-the two young men, with the repointed drill
-bits in the car, drove to the mountain top,
-carrying Rucker&#8217;s breakfast in a basket generously
-filled by Mrs. Tryon. They found the
-mechanician, who had resumed his job of night-watching,
-already up and stirring, with the engine
-fired and ready for starting, and there were
-no disturbances to report.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did a little stunt of my own,&#8221; Rucker explained
-with a grin, showing a concealed wire
-which ran all around the glade and led to the
-tool-house. &#8220;Yesterday, up at Whitlow, I fished
-an electric bell out of the scrap heap, and last
-night, before I went to bed, I rigged it so that if
-anybody come monkeyin&#8217; &#8217;round, it&#8217;d ring and
-wake me up. I guess there wa&#8217;n&#8217;t any ghost-walkin&#8217;.
-The bell didn&#8217;t ring, and everything
-was all shipshape this mornin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Soon after this the drilling was resumed, not,
-however, until after the hole had been carefully
-washed and swabbed out. Tregarvon did not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-take any of his men into his confidence to the extent
-of explaining the reason for the extra care,
-but during the swabbing process he stood aside
-and looked on, watchful to detect any sign of
-guilty knowledge on the part of his helpers. Particularly
-he studied the face of the younger
-McNabb, the one who had been hurt still being
-absent. The effort went for nothing. If isolation
-has been sparing of gifts to the native of the
-southern Appalachians, it has at least given him
-a face that no man can read. The bushy-bearded
-Sawyer, the head driller, was the only one who
-commented upon the hole-cleaning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hit don&#8217;t look t&#8217; me like thar was anything
-more &#8217;n the drill dust to be warshed out,&#8221; he
-grumbled, when the swab came up clean; and to
-prove it he rubbed some of the powdered rock
-cuttings between his thumb and finger.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s better to be sure than sorry,&#8221; said Tregarvon.
-&#8220;If we know that the hole is clean to
-begin with, we&#8217;re that much ahead.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In due course of time the engine was started,
-the drill lowered, and the churning was resumed.
-Very shortly it became evident that the steel was
-cutting again at the usual rate, and Tregarvon&#8217;s
-spirits rose accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you know, Poictiers, I believe we are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-going to &#8216;prove up&#8217; right here on this spot?&#8221; he
-predicted, after the work was well under way
-and they had gone to sit on the tool-house step.
-&#8220;The indications all point for us. Here is where
-the most determined fight has been made to stop
-us; here is where we find Hartridge&#8217;s hieroglyphics
-on the trees; and right here, if you&#8217;ll remark
-it, is where Mr. Onias Thaxter hunts me
-up to make me a blanket offer for my landholdings.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A little more time will tell the story,&#8221; Carfax
-suggested. &#8220;By noon, if it doesn&#8217;t strike any
-more bones, the drill ought to be down to the
-coal, if there is any coal here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With hope trotting cheerfully on ahead, the
-forenoon became a period of exciting suspense.
-Each time the drill was withdrawn the cuttings
-were examined eagerly. The rock was showing
-all the characteristics of the former borings: fine
-sandstone, coarse sandstone, some little conglomerate,
-and, just before the noon hour, the
-shales which commonly overlie the coal in the
-Cumberland region.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re coming to it!&#8221; Tregarvon exulted,
-when the washings which came up in the churning
-began to show black. &#8220;Eighteen inches more,
-and we&#8217;ll know whether we live or die!&#8221; And he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-carefully made a chalk-mark on the drill so that
-they might determine when the critical depth was
-reached.</p>
-
-<p>As in the previous tests, the steel sank rapidly
-in the vein of coal. At a foot of additional
-depth the washings were still coming up black.
-At sixteen inches there was no change. Sighting
-across a derrick brace, Tregarvon watched the
-chalk-mark with the blood racing in his veins.
-With each plunge of the heavy steel drill his
-hopes rose higher. Already he was anticipating
-a future which, if it should lack some of the ecstasies,
-would still have a sufficiency of the great
-emollient&mdash;money. With a fortune of his own,
-the impossible situation which had grown out of
-the Uncle Byrd legacy would be alleviated, and
-he saw himself deeding his half of the legacy
-irrevocably over to Elizabeth. The pride wound
-thus healed, the broken bones of sentiment might
-be allowed to knit as they would. Doubtless,
-in time, the knitting process would accomplish
-itself, and possibly without leaving him a hopeless
-cripple. Judging from the past, Elizabeth would
-not expect much; and even if he should be obliged
-to limp a little she would probably never notice it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Eighteen inches!&#8221; he called out to Carfax,
-&#8220;and she&#8217;s still bringing up the black-diamond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-dust! Get ready to blow the hewgag and beat
-the tom-tom. We&#8217;re in it, this time!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Easy!&#8221; Carfax cautioned. &#8220;Don&#8217;t let your
-hopes soar too high. Maybe the top vein runs
-a little thicker at this point than it did in the
-others. Call it that, anyway, until you&#8217;re cocksure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke the power went off. Tregarvon
-jerked his watch from his pocket and stifled a
-hard word. It was noon, and the men were knocking
-off work on the dot, quite as nonchalantly as
-if the fate of empires were not hanging upon the
-result of a few more turns of the machinery.
-Tregarvon tramped across to the tool-house with
-Carfax, a sudden weariness making his feet heavy
-as lead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the workman of it!&#8221; he gritted. &#8220;If
-the world were coming to an end in the next five
-minutes, they&#8217;d stop to eat!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax permitted himself a subdued chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are beautifully on edge,&#8221; he asserted.
-&#8220;A few inches more may mean a lot to you, but
-it&#8217;s all in the day&#8217;s work for the men. They&#8217;re
-not going to get rich out of your coal mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They had brought some of Uncle William&#8217;s
-biscuits and cold chicken for the midday snack,
-and Carfax went to the motor-car, which had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-been left standing in the wood road, for the
-basket. When he returned, Tregarvon was pacing
-back and forth impatiently before the tool-house
-door, and Rucker was sitting on the step,
-eating his luncheon. Carfax carried the basket
-inside, and they made a table of the coil of rope.
-While they were picking the chicken bones, the
-mechanician spoke again of a matter that he had
-mentioned once or twice before.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m beefin&#8217; ag&#8217;in about that boiler, Mr. Tregarvon,&#8221;
-he began, between workman mouthfuls
-of Mrs. Tryon&#8217;s corn bread. &#8220;She ain&#8217;t much,
-just as I told you at first; and draggin&#8217; her &#8217;round
-over this mountain hain&#8217;t helped her none. She&#8217;s
-leakin&#8217; like a sieve at the fire-box end of her
-flues, right now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s hoping that this is the last hole we&#8217;ll
-have to drill with it, Billy,&#8221; said Tregarvon cheerfully.
-&#8220;I bought it second-hand, and the Chattanooga
-junk man put one over on me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He sure did,&#8221; Rucker returned with a grin.
-&#8220;She&#8217;s rotten. Every time the pop-valve goes
-off it makes me jump. One o&#8217; these days&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The interruption was a blatant roar from the
-boiler in question. Rucker had prudently shut
-the drafts and had left the fire-door open, or he
-thought he had, but still the pressure had crept<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-up, until now the safety-valve was relieving it.
-Through the open door of the tool-shack the two
-at the rope-coil table could see the plant, with
-the plume of escaping steam rising to the height
-of the tree-tops. As usual during the noon hour,
-there was not a man of the gang in sight. Tregarvon
-had early learned that a part of the country
-laborer&#8217;s reticence expressed itself in a dislike
-to eat under the boss&#8217;s eye. At the stopping of
-the machinery the drill-gang would scatter in the
-wood, each man to his fallen log.</p>
-
-<p>The roar of the safety-valve continuing, and
-seeming to increase in stridency rather than to
-diminish, Tregarvon leaned forward to shout in
-Rucker&#8217;s ear:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you sure you left the fire-box door open,
-Billy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mechanician struggled to his feet. &#8220;I
-thought I was, but I&#8217;ll go see. She&#8217;s howlin&#8217;
-a little bit too loud to suit me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The words were scarcely out of his mouth
-when the earthquake crash came. With a sound
-that was oddly like the tearing of a hundred
-saws through dry timber, followed by a reverberating
-thunderclap, the boiler and engine
-vanished in a thick cloud of steam, and the air
-was filled with flying missiles. One piece of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-boiler tore the heart out of the sheltering oak-tree;
-another fragment ripped a corner from the
-tool-house; a third mowed a swath through a
-thicket of young pines.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon and Carfax were both up and out
-before the nimbus cloud of steam had blown
-aside, and their first thought was for their men.
-Rucker had escaped only by a hair&#8217;s-breadth.
-The twisted fire-box sheet which had knocked
-a corner out of the small building had passed so
-close that the wind of it had bowled him over.
-Tregarvon left Carfax to help the machinist to
-his feet, and ran shouting across the glade. The
-drill gang answered and came hurrying in, a
-man at a time. When all were accounted for,
-the material loss was inventoried. It was total,
-so far as it went. The engine and boiler were
-reduced to a tangled heap of scrap; one end of
-the drill beam was shattered, and one leg of the
-derrick had suffered loss.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment Tregarvon was torn by conflicting
-emotions; a huge thankfulness that no
-life had been lost and bitter disappointment
-that the catastrophe had come at the instant
-when all the doubts as to the value of the Ocoee
-were to be either confirmed or swept away. He
-held himself together long enough to tell the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-men that they might go home&mdash;that there would
-be nothing more done until a new power-plant
-could be bought; but when Rucker had gone
-out to the wood road to see if the yellow car
-had been hit, and the disappointed one was
-left alone with Carfax, the flood-gates gave
-way.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t it enough to make an angel out of the
-blue heavens swear himself black in the face,
-Poictiers?&#8221; he raged. &#8220;Just on the very edge
-of things&mdash;just as we were going to find out,
-once for all, what this cursed mountain is going
-to do to us&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One thing at a time,&#8221; Carfax broke in soothingly.
-&#8220;The wrecked engine isn&#8217;t fatal&mdash;not by
-many parasangs: it came just in the nick of
-time, when I was wondering what under the sun
-I should do with the dividend draft that I got
-in the mail yesterday. Take a fresh grip on
-yourself and remember that you have a good
-bit to be thankful for. If your men had been
-sitting around on the job to eat their dinners,
-as laborers do up North, there&#8217;d be another
-story to tell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I know; but think of it&mdash;it will be days
-and maybe weeks before we can get a new power-plant
-installed, and all that time we&#8217;ll be hanging,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-like Mahomet&#8217;s coffin, between heaven and
-earth; won&#8217;t know any more than we do now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker had come back to report that the motor-car
-had escaped as by a miracle. A square yard
-of the boiler shell had been hurled over it to fall
-accurately in the middle of the road a rod or
-two farther on. While he was telling about it,
-a goodly portion of the faculty of Highmount
-College, followed by a bevy of young women,
-came upon the scene. Doctor Caswell was heading
-the column of reconnaissance, and Hartridge
-also was with it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear me!&#8221; exclaimed the president, coming
-up breathless; &#8220;we are all so glad to find you
-alive! What has happened?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon pointed to the tangled mass of
-wreckage. &#8220;Our boiler blew up. It was old,
-and I suppose we were carrying too much pressure.
-Luckily, it happened while the men were
-eating, and there was no one near enough to be
-hurt. I thought of you people at once. It must
-have made racket enough to make you think the
-end of the world was coming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was frightful!&#8221; said Miss Farron. &#8220;The
-windows rattled and&mdash;&#8221; but here her voice was
-lost in the chorus of excited exclamations pitching
-themselves in many keys as the young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-women picked their way over to the wreck and
-viewed the remains.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is well, sometimes, to be born both lucky
-and rich,&#8221; Hartridge commented gravely, when
-his turn came. &#8220;The material loss is serious
-enough, of course; but you ought to be thankful
-that no lives were lost. Were you near enough
-at the time to see the explosion?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We were sitting in the tool-house eating our
-luncheon,&#8221; Carfax explained, &#8220;and Rucker was
-just outside. We had been speaking of the
-boiler a moment before. We were all three looking
-at it, I think, when it went up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Caswell had taken his wife over to assist
-in the sight-seeing, but Hartridge lingered behind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Happening in broad daylight, this way,
-with three of you looking on, I suppose you are
-well assured that it was a pure accident?&#8221; he
-suggested quietly.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon left the answer to Carfax, who made
-it promptly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As you say, we are not able, this time, to
-blame any one but ourselves. The boiler was
-old, and our mechanic had told us that it was
-not altogether safe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have been drilling to-day?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>Carfax nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May I ask if you found anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon turned away and busied himself
-examining the rent in the corner of the tool
-shanty. Carfax called up the cherubic smile
-for the inquiring professor and said: &#8220;What if
-I should tell you that we have found our bonanza,
-Mr. Hartridge?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge glanced at the drill, which was still
-standing in the test-hole, and shook his head.
-&#8220;I should say that you are merely talking for
-effect,&#8221; he smiled back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we have found the coal,&#8221; Carfax persisted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have found the upper measure, the same
-as you have in all the other trials. Beneath it,
-you will find your sandstone dike again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you sure of that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite sure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But we have already reached a depth of more
-than eighteen inches, and the drill was still in
-coal when we shut down for the noon stop.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is quite immaterial,&#8221; was the cool-voiced
-reply. &#8220;The measures vary in thickness,
-though not greatly. Geology is one of my small
-side-lines, Mr. Carfax, and I have made a study
-of this particular region, largely as a pastime.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>The sight-seers were straggling back, and Tregarvon
-was explaining to a group of breathless
-maidens just where he had been sitting with
-Carfax at the moment of catastrophes, and how
-Rucker had been knocked down by the wind of
-the fragment which had struck the corner of the
-tool-shed. Carfax saw his opportunity preparing
-to take its leave and he smiled, level-eyed,
-at Hartridge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are still on the obstructive hand, aren&#8217;t
-you?&#8221; he threw in. &#8220;Even now, you would
-like to discourage us if you could.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor of mathematics and other things
-was turning away to join the others, but he
-paused for a low-toned rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I neither deny nor affirm, Mr. Carfax. But
-I may say this much: if I were in your shoes, or
-Mr. Tregarvon&#8217;s, I shouldn&#8217;t call to-day&#8217;s disaster
-a pure accident&mdash;until I could prove it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And with that he turned his back and began
-to talk to the art teacher.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>Evolutionary</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">INTENT upon the swift purchase of another
-power-plant, Tregarvon caught an afternoon
-freight on the branch railroad, made a late train
-on the main line, and was obliged to spend the
-Sunday in Chattanooga, with little to console him
-save the thought that he would be on hand to
-transact business with the machinery merchants
-bright and early Monday morning.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sad Sunday, weatherwise, with a
-chill autumn rain sweeping the streets of the
-battle-field city, and the crest of Lookout Mountain
-veiled in cloud. Tregarvon had made a few
-business acquaintances in town on previous purchasing
-expeditions, but there were no familiar
-faces in the hotel; nothing to lighten the monotony
-of a dreary day of enforced idleness.</p>
-
-<p>In such circumstances impatience becomes a
-rat to gnaw the vitals. The suspense, the tormenting
-uncertainty which he had left behind
-him in the unfinished test-hole on the summit of
-Mount Pisgah, would have been hard to endure
-even in a whirlwind of work; and upon a day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-when he could neither work nor play he was in
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>After the noon meal, which figured as &#8220;Luncheon&#8221;
-on the hotel bill of fare, and was, in point
-of fact, a heavy and dispiriting midday dinner,
-he braved the elements and went in a closed
-sight-seeing car to the Chickamauga battle-field.
-The drive proved to be a damp test of endurance,
-and he brought nothing back from it better than
-a memory of rain-sodden fields and forest; of
-endless colonnades of gray, ghostly monuments,
-a majority of them assuring the beholder in letters
-of granite that here the Ohio troops fought nobly;
-of parkings of ancient cannon, the guns pointing
-in so many different directions that no human
-being could guess which way the battle had run;
-of the droning singsong of the chauffeur pouring
-his explanation patter into the reversed megaphone
-for the benefit of his few fares.</p>
-
-<p>The return to the hotel was merely a change
-from outdoor dreariness to indoor. The lobby
-was a gathering-ground for a scattering of disgruntled
-tourists, who had used their battle-field
-stop-over privilege only to find themselves marooned
-by the weather. Tregarvon smoked in
-solitary misery for what remained of the afternoon,
-and past the evening meal, begged some of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-the hotel stationery, and wrote a letter to Elizabeth
-Wardwell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is a sin and a shame to write you after such
-a day as I&#8217;ve been wearing out here,&#8221; he began,
-&#8220;but you know my weakness for afflicting other
-people&mdash;for unloading my woes upon the nearest
-pair of sympathetic shoulders. Your shoulders
-have always been that; and sometimes I wonder
-that you can still stand up straight and queenly,
-as you do, after having carried so many of my
-burdens.&#8221; Here followed an account of the events
-of the exciting Saturday forenoon, and he tried,
-as well as the written words would serve, to transmit
-some picture of the boiler explosion, tagged
-with an attempt to portray the tenterhooks of
-suspense upon which the disaster had impaled
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see where it leaves me,&#8221; he went on;
-&#8220;still in the air as to whether the Ocoee is something
-or nothing. For a few little minutes, after
-the drill had passed the eighteen-inch dead-line,
-I saw rose-colored, saw my chance to provide
-for the home-folks, and to ignore forever and a
-day, the Uncle Byrd legacy. But now I am no
-better assured than I was before we began drilling;
-and, to make it more interesting, Hartridge happened
-along after the explosion&mdash;the whole college<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-turned out and came tramping over through
-the wood to see what had broken loose&mdash;and he
-says the sandstone dike is still under us. We
-shan&#8217;t know positively, of course, until we can
-get a new engine, and haul it by inches up the
-mountain, and drag it into place and set it going;
-and by that time I shall be a raving maniac.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In all this new trouble, Poictiers has been all
-that you&#8217;d expect him to be; a friend to tie to.
-He doesn&#8217;t lend me money; he simply tosses me
-his purse. I have his last dividend check in my
-pocket at this present moment, and I&#8217;m to cash
-it to-morrow morning to pay for the new engine.
-I suppose I needn&#8217;t say that I should have been
-out of the fight down here long ago if he hadn&#8217;t
-joined me and given me a checking account.
-He is pure gold, Elizabeth; and yet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;The gap represents a good half-hour, my dear
-cousin, in which I have been sitting here at this
-dinky little table in the hotel writing-room, trying
-to screw my courage to the sticking-place.
-What I have to tell you concerns four people,
-and you are one of the four. I&#8217;ve written you
-a lot about Richardia Birrell&mdash;she&#8217;s another one
-of the four&mdash;in the past few weeks, and I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-been assuring myself all along that I have been
-telling you all there was to tell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That isn&#8217;t strictly true, Elizabeth. There
-was a thing that I wouldn&#8217;t admit, even to myself;
-but I had to admit it three days ago when
-Poictiers told me that he had asked Richardia to
-be his wife. I knew then what Richardia had
-done to me, and for a bad half-hour I&mdash;well, I&#8217;m
-not going into details; it is enough to say that
-I&#8217;m not fit to be your door-mat, Betha, dear&mdash;nor
-Poictiers Carfax&#8217;s, for that matter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What can I say for myself more than I have
-said a hundred times in the past? Nothing, I
-imagine; I&#8217;m simply hopeless where the eternal
-feminine is concerned. You&#8217;ve known it ever
-since we went to school together, and you&#8217;ve
-promised to marry me in spite of the knowledge.
-I shall not be a faithless husband, my dear&mdash;I
-know I shan&#8217;t be that; and this last and most
-humiliating lapse could never have amounted
-to anything, anyway, even if Poictiers had not
-slammed the door in my face. But it is your
-right to know about it; to know that for some
-few days or hours or minutes, as the case may
-be, I was daffy, foolish, a simpleton from the
-idiotic wards, with a slant toward depravity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see now what an incredible friend Poictiers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-is. I&#8217;ve never thought of him as a marrying
-man, and I could swear, even now, that he
-isn&#8217;t in love with Richardia&mdash;though I don&#8217;t
-quite see how any free man with live blood in
-him could help being. Let that go: Poictiers has
-killed my temptation for me. He has asked Richardia
-to marry him, and he and she are good
-enough for each other&mdash;which is the highest
-praise I can offer to either. Poictiers will get a
-wife who could make any man happy; and Richardia
-will be able to restore the Birrell fortunes,
-which, as you have doubtless gathered from my
-earlier letters, are pretty sadly in need of a rich
-marriage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This leaves us two to face things as they are
-as best we can, Elizabeth. After what I have
-written down in this letter, can you still care
-enough for me, and for the conventions and the
-wishes of the families on both sides, to&mdash;not to
-forgive me; I&#8217;m not going to ask that&mdash;but to
-take me just as I am, and let things go on as
-before? I shan&#8217;t blame you in the least if you
-can&#8217;t, you know; but if it must come to a break
-between us, you must let me be the one to make
-the break. By all right and reason the Uncle
-Byrd legacy is yours; and whatever happens, I
-promise you I shall never touch a penny of it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>&#8220;Good night, my dear. My love for you is
-precisely the same as it has always been. The
-madness which Richardia Birrell was stirring up
-in me was something entirely different, and no
-doubt everybody would say it was worlds less
-worthy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had a bad habit of not reading his
-letters after they were written and signed, and
-he did not break the habit now. Folding, sealing,
-and addressing his confession, he went to the
-lobby to mail it. Thanks to the rainy Sunday,
-the hotel mail-box was stuffed to repletion with
-week-end missives, and Tregarvon, after trying in
-vain to wedge his own through the slit, exemplified
-his careless habit by leaving it on top of the box
-with the newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the evening there were other additions
-made to the overflow newspaper mail, and some
-one, still more careless than the Philadelphian,
-displaced the letter, which fell, unnoted, to the
-floor. Here, during the small hours, one of the
-sweepers found it; and since some muddy boot
-heel had defaced the postage-stamp, and all but
-obliterated the address, the sweeper passed his
-find on to the night clerk. At this point another
-phase of Tregarvon&#8217;s heedlessness came to the
-fore. He had neglected to put his own name and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-address in the corner of the envelope, hence the
-clerk had no means of identifying the sender.
-Being a young man of resource, he enclosed the
-letter, just as it was, in a larger envelope, copying,
-or trying to copy, the address. But the marring
-boot heel had done its work too thoroughly. The
-Philadelphia street number was entirely effaced;
-and &#8220;Miss Elizabeth Wardwell&#8221; became, in the
-night clerk&#8217;s transcription, &#8220;Miss Eliza Bell
-Woodwell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was astir early on the Monday
-morning, was fortunate enough to be able to purchase
-the new power-plant without waiting to
-have it shipped in from some Northern supply
-house, hustled busily until he had seen his purchase
-entrained for Coalville, and took the afternoon
-local for his return. As often happened,
-the local was late, and he found Carfax waiting
-dinner for him when he dropped off on the office-building
-side of the train at the home station.</p>
-
-<p>Over Uncle William&#8217;s chicken gumbo the talk
-ran easily upon the business affair. Tregarvon
-had driven a rather good bargain on the new
-engine, and was inclined to expatiate upon it.
-In reality, however, he was trying to postpone
-the moment when Carfax should begin to talk
-of the more intimate things. That moment came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-with the pipe-filling before the cheerful wood-fire,
-after Uncle William had cleared the table and
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;After you left, Saturday, I took Hartridge&#8217;s
-hint and went into the explosion details a little
-deeper,&#8221; said Carfax. &#8220;Rucker stayed with me
-and lent me his mechanical wit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is the verdict?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is the Scotch verdict: &#8216;Not proven,&#8217;&#8221; was
-the thoughtful rejoinder. &#8220;Knowing, as we do,
-that at least one attempt was made to dynamite
-the boiler, I may have been oversuspicious.
-In such circumstances the judicial frame of mind
-is hard to attain. Rucker swears he left the
-furnace-door open when we stopped at noon.
-When we found the front sheet of the boiler three
-or four hundred yards away in the woods, the
-door was shut and latched.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That proves nothing,&#8221; Tregarvon said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; anything might happen to a door, or to
-anything else, in a hurry trip of that kind. On
-the other hand, it would have been a very easy
-matter for some one to have sneaked up on the
-farther side of the engine while we were eating.
-And Rucker insists that only the closed door
-could have accounted for the sudden rise in pressure
-which caused the explosion.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>&#8220;We&#8217;ll never know,&#8221; was Tregarvon&#8217;s comment.
-&#8220;But why Hartridge should shield our obstacle-thrower
-at one time, and try to set us on to him
-at another, is beyond me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax smiled soberly. &#8220;Mr. William W.
-Hartridge appears to be a unique. I had the
-pleasure of meeting him again, socially, no longer
-ago than yesterday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You spent the Sunday at Highmount?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I did better than that. Wilmerding was
-down from Whitlow, and I found that he knows
-Judge Birrell familiarly and well. I took my
-courage in my hand, borrowed your beast of a
-car, and Wilmerding and I drove to Westwood
-House in the rain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So you have met Richardia&#8217;s father?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have; and a finer old citizen doesn&#8217;t exist.
-That suspicion of yours that he may be inspiring
-the fight on us is all bosh. He isn&#8217;t at all the
-kind of man to knife an enemy in the dark. He
-is a poem on the Old South, Vance; a whole
-heart-breaking epic. His manners would put a
-Chesterfield to shame; and you can see at once
-where Richardia gets her keen little mind. The
-judge was disposed to place me in the Parker
-class at first&mdash;quite naturally; I could see that
-plainly enough&mdash;that, and his prejudice against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-all things Northern. But I was there as the
-friend of his friend Wilmerding, and that settled
-it. A Bedouin chief couldn&#8217;t have been more
-hospitable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You told him you were going to marry Richardia?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, dear, no; you mustn&#8217;t hurry things that
-way!&#8221; laughed the golden one. &#8220;You simply
-<i>can&#8217;t</i> hurry them, you know, with a man like
-Judge Birrell. But I flatter myself that I made
-good in the try-out. Hartridge was there, with
-Miss Farron&mdash;though I can&#8217;t imagine how they
-got over from Highmount in the rain&mdash;so there
-was quite a house-party of us. At dinner-time
-it was raining harder than ever, and the judge
-wouldn&#8217;t hear to our going, though I had the
-top up on the car, and, of course, offered to take
-Hartridge and Miss Farron back to the college.
-So we all stayed to dinner. That dinner would
-have broken your heart, Vance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because it showed in a thousand little ways
-what the family has been, and what it has now
-come to. The china was S&egrave;vres, but much of it
-was chipped and broken, and hardly any two
-pieces were alike. The table-cloth had once been
-somebody&#8217;s pride, but it had been laundered and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-darned until it was like a piece of old lace. The
-silver was evidently an heirloom, and it was so
-worn with much polishing that you could scarcely
-make out the engraving. We had chicken&mdash;I
-imagine nobody in the South ever gets so poor
-that he can&#8217;t have chicken&mdash;but the luxuries were
-conspicuous by their absence. Do you know what
-I think, Vance? I believe that the Westwood
-House cash assets are measured exactly by the
-size of Richardia&#8217;s Highmount salary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shouldn&#8217;t wonder,&#8221; said Tregarvon, keenly
-sympathetic. &#8220;Richardia has given me to understand
-that there is a lot of mountain land, which
-is practically valueless now that the tan-bark
-timber has all been cut off; but there is nothing
-to bring an income.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wilmerding has told me something of the
-judge&#8217;s involvement with the original Ocoee promoters,
-and the struggle he made to keep his
-name good after he and his friends had been
-frozen out,&#8221; Carfax resumed. &#8220;He had recommended
-the scheme to a good many others, and
-when the smash came, he stripped himself bare
-to make good the losses of his friends, withholding
-nothing but a little money he had put
-aside for Richardia&#8217;s musical education.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon nodded. &#8220;That explains something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-that Richardia said to me one time when we were
-talking about people marrying and settling down;
-she said, in that perfectly straightforward way of
-hers, that she would like to marry, but that she
-was in debt, and couldn&#8217;t marry until after she
-had earned enough money to pay herself out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She has said something of the same nature
-to me,&#8221; Carfax admitted. &#8220;But it seems that
-there were other troubles besides the property
-losses. The judge had a son, a year or so older
-than Richardia. He was a school-boy at the time
-of the big smash, but was old enough, Wilmerding
-says, to be hot-headed and a bit wild and
-ungovernable. Parker, the promoter, was foolish
-enough to show up here again, after the <i>d&eacute;b&acirc;cle</i>;
-and this boy actually tried to kill him; emptied
-a pistol at him, winged him with one of the shots,
-and then ran away. He has never been heard
-from since.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is all new to me,&#8221; Tregarvon commented.
-&#8220;I didn&#8217;t know Richardia had a brother.
-She has never spoken of him to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wilmerding says nobody ever speaks of
-him,&#8221; Carfax went on. &#8220;Parker was vindictive,
-and pushed the assault case. A grand jury
-found a true bill against young Birrell, and a
-warrant was issued for his arrest. He couldn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-be found; has never been found. His son&#8217;s disappearance,
-and the struggle to keep faith with
-his friends, made the judge what he is now, a
-proud, broken-spirited old hermit who is carrying
-the heaviest burden a father can bear&mdash;the
-disgrace of a son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Disgrace?&#8221; echoed Tregarvon. &#8220;It&#8217;s hardly
-that, is it? Haven&#8217;t we been taught that it is
-a part of the Southern code that a son should
-shoot his father&#8217;s betrayer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes; that part of it was all right. The
-disgrace was in showing the white feather by
-running away; in not staying to face the consequences.
-As a matter of fact, I don&#8217;t suppose
-there would have been any consequences. Any
-jury that could have been impanelled in this
-vicinity at that particular time would have acquitted
-the boy. The cowardly streak is what
-broke the judge&#8217;s heart.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This story of the boy opens up a bit of new
-ground,&#8221; said Tregarvon musingly. &#8220;I wonder
-if Richardia doesn&#8217;t know where he is? She
-has given me the impression, more than once,
-that she has a deep-buried trouble of some sort&mdash;a
-trouble that she never shares with anybody.
-Haven&#8217;t you had the same notion?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax shook his head.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>&#8220;She doesn&#8217;t need to go that far afield to find
-her troubles. The wrecked family fortunes, and
-a broken old man to shield and comfort and
-care for on a music teacher&#8217;s wages, are enough
-to fill all the requirements, I should imagine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Surely. But as to the money hardship ...
-you&#8217;ll be able to change all that, Poictiers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax rose, knocked the ashes from his pipe,
-and slowly refilled it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have come to see things in their right
-light, at last, have you?&#8221; he inquired at the end
-of the little interval of silence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Partly. There is only one light in which they
-can be seen. I had no shadow of right to fall in
-love with Richardia.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait a minute,&#8221; said Carfax in his gentlest
-tone. &#8220;Are you sure it was real? You know,
-you have had so many of these&mdash;er&mdash;these little
-erotic explosions in the past&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know,&#8221; was the humble admission. &#8220;But
-this was different. You may say that the difference
-lay in the fact that it was forbidden,
-and point me to the moral twist&mdash;as old as the
-race&mdash;that makes the forbidden thing figure as
-the one thing altogether desirable. Doubtless I
-have the twist, in common with other men: but
-the difference remains.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>&#8220;You have written to Elizabeth?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I wrote last night at the hotel in Chattanooga.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope you said all you ought to say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I tried conscientiously to do just that, Poictiers.
-I&#8217;ll confess now that I didn&#8217;t begin to see
-how dastardly it would look when it was written
-out in black on white. But I didn&#8217;t spare myself
-in the least.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What kind of an answer do you expect?&#8221;
-Carfax had sat down again and his face was
-turned away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Honestly, I don&#8217;t know. Every word that
-I have ever told you about the lack of sentiment
-between us is true: and yet ... well, Elizabeth
-is a woman, after all, Poictiers. Even in a relationship
-as unsentimental as ours has been there
-are limitations&mdash;there must be limitations.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was gazing now into the heart of the
-dying fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If the case were reversed, Vance, what would
-your answer be?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon gave a short laugh. &#8220;I can&#8217;t imagine
-the reversal,&#8221; he parried. &#8220;Elizabeth is one of
-those splendid, serene, <i>&eacute;lev&eacute;</i> women who go through
-life without ever knowing the meaning of a grand
-passion.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>&#8220;Still, you haven&#8217;t answered my question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not afraid to answer it. If Elizabeth
-had told me, even before I met Richardia, that
-she had&mdash; Oh, piffle! it&#8217;s no use; I can&#8217;t imagine
-it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a long time Carfax said nothing. But
-when the final whiff had been drawn from the
-bedtime pipes, he ventured a small request.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been butting in on your affairs so long
-that it has come to be a habit, Vance,&#8221; he said,
-with his quaint smile. &#8220;When you hear from
-Elizabeth, will you tell me what she says?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon, who had been thinking of many
-things during the speechless interval, answered
-on the impulse of the moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course; I&#8217;ll let you read the letter, if you
-care to. Why shouldn&#8217;t I? There&#8217;s your candle
-on the mantel, when you want it. I&#8217;m going to
-bed.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIX<br />
-
-
-<small>The Human Equation</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON the Tuesday after Tregarvon&#8217;s return
-to Coalville the arrival of the new equipment
-was the signal for a brisk renewal of the
-activities. Tregarvon had spent the day scouring
-the valley for men and teams, and by
-Wednesday morning he had a small army at his
-command. Many hands made light work, and
-by noon the machinery was unloaded, and all
-was ready for the beginning of the toilsome haul
-up the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you know how you are going to
-do it,&#8221; Carfax remarked, dallying over his luncheon
-in the office-building dining-room while
-Tregarvon was hastily bolting his meal as fast as
-Uncle William could serve it. &#8220;Where did you
-learn? The university didn&#8217;t teach you, I&#8217;m
-sure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Experience,&#8221; mumbled the working-man. &#8220;I
-learned the trade getting the other boiler and
-engine up the hill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was apparently in a reflective mood.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-&#8220;This rough-and-tumble game down here is making
-a different man of you,&#8221; he offered. &#8220;Don&#8217;t
-you realize the change?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve never been afraid of work, if that is what
-you mean.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I know; but the kind of work that
-implies the wearing of corduroys and a flannel
-shirt, and builds horny lumps on the palms of
-your hands, and makes you talk to a mule in
-the only language a mule understands&mdash;I never
-used to dream it of you in the old days, Vance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I work for the same reason that other men do&mdash;because
-it&#8217;s up to me. This would be a damned
-lazy world if necessity didn&#8217;t crack the whip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There it is again,&#8221; Carfax smiled; &#8220;you even
-let bits of the mule language come to the table
-with you. It runs in my mind that Elizabeth
-is going to have her hands full recivilizing you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps she won&#8217;t care to. Quite likely she
-won&#8217;t need to. If the Ocoee should turn out to
-be a real mine with a dividend attachment, it
-is altogether probable that I shall become again
-what I have been heretofore&mdash;an ornament to
-polite society and a wart on the body economic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax shook his head as one who refuses to
-be convinced.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That will never happen in the wide, wide<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-world, my dear Vance. We may go around, but
-we never go back. I have heard you spoken of,
-in times past, as a woman&#8217;s man: you&#8217;ll never be
-that again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is the kindest thing you&#8217;ve said in a
-week,&#8221; Tregarvon averred. Whereupon he bolted
-the final mouthful and left the prophet to his own
-devices.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat later, Carfax joined the working
-party&mdash;but only as an onlooker. The engine was
-mounted on heavy trucks, and a string of twelve
-mule-spans was inching it up the mountain pike
-to an accompaniment of cracking whips and much
-profanity. Tregarvon was in the thick of it, and
-the young purse-holder stood aside and tried to
-realize that this sweating, bullying gang boss and
-man-of-all-work was the light-hearted <i>fl&acirc;neur</i> of
-whom his best friends had predicted nothing
-either very good or very bad, and certainly nothing
-strenuous. Carfax was given to nice weighings
-and measurings of the human atom, and he
-wondered if the roughing-out process owed anything
-to sentimental reactions. Disappointments
-are rude tonics to some natures, and defeat in
-one field may be the germ of victory in another.
-Being a good friend, he proceeded to administer
-an additional dose of the tonic, dragging Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-aside while the mules were catching their
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I like your nerve,&#8221; he began, with the drawl
-more than usually pronounced. &#8220;You are taking
-up the entire road with your beastly contrivances.
-How am I going to get past all this clutter with
-the motor-car, I&#8217;d like to know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s your lookout,&#8221; growled the man-of-all-work.
-&#8220;The road is mine while I&#8217;m using it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I have an engagement,&#8221; was the mild
-protest. &#8220;I&#8217;m to take Richardia out for a drive
-after three o&#8217;clock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I can&#8217;t help that, can I? You&#8217;ve got
-all the time there is for your courting, and then
-some. My job is to get this engine up the mountain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax chuckled softly. &#8220;In another minute
-or so you&#8217;ll be mistaking me for one of the mules.
-I suppose I can take the other road, from Hesterville;
-but as likely as not it will make me late&mdash;it&#8217;s
-such a long way around.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t you send a note up by one of Tryon&#8217;s
-boys explaining the situation?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, my dear Vance! Can it be possible that
-you are suggesting that I should break an engagement
-with a young lady?&mdash;you who just a few
-weeks ago would have broken your neck to&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>&#8220;Cut it out,&#8221; was the gruff interruption. &#8220;I&#8217;m
-busy now, and you are delaying the game. Tag
-along behind us when you are ready to drive up,
-and we&#8217;ll make room for you if we can.&#8221; Then
-to his farmer helpers: &#8220;Now, then&mdash;are you
-fellows going to let those mules rest all day?
-Push &#8217;em into the collars and let&#8217;s go somewhere!
-<i>Hi!</i> you fellows up ahead&mdash;straighten out those
-leaders!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The cherubic smile was at its shining best when
-Carfax turned away and sauntered back toward
-the coke-ovens. Human atoms are among the
-most interesting things in the world, once the
-study of them has passed the elementary stages.
-Carfax, deep in the contemplation of the subject,
-had reached the ovens themselves before he saw
-two men coming toward him, stopping at each
-stoke-door to allow the taller of the two to go on
-his hands and knees to inspect the cavern-like
-interiors. Carfax recognized the shorter of the
-pair at once. It was Thaxter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Carfax, shake hands with Mr. Thirlwall,
-our consulting engineer&mdash;or rather, you&#8217;d better
-not, because his hands are dirty: Mr. Thirlwall,
-this is Mr. Poictiers Carfax, Mr. Tregarvon&#8217;s
-friend and financial backer.&#8221; Thus the bookkeeper,
-when Carfax came up.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>Carfax acknowledged the introduction and
-shook hands with the tall man, in spite of the
-warning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Delighted,&#8221; he murmured; &#8220;always delighted
-to meet any friend of Mr. Thaxter&#8217;s. Tregarvon
-is up the road a bit, wrestling with a transportation
-problem. Shall I send for him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thaxter negatived the suggestion at once. &#8220;It
-isn&#8217;t at all necessary to take him away from his
-work,&#8221; he protested genially. &#8220;Mr. Thirlwall
-was with us for the day, and we thought we would
-run down and have a look at your coking-plant.
-It&#8217;s in rather bad repair, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Now what Carfax did not know about coking-plants
-would have filled volumes, but he was
-careful not to betray his ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are years of service in these old ovens
-yet,&#8221; he asserted confidently. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you think
-so, Mr. Thirlwall? But as to that, we should
-expect to put them in good repair if any one
-wished to buy them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Tregarvon is still in the mind to sell?&#8221;
-queried the round-faced bookkeeper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Candidly, Vance doesn&#8217;t know his own mind
-from one day to another,&#8221; said Carfax, parrying
-nimbly. &#8220;But I guess we are all that way, more
-or less; up one day and down the next.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>The tall engineer smiled because it seemed obvious
-that he was expected to. &#8220;You have been
-having some more bad luck up on the mountain,
-so Mr. Thaxter tells me,&#8221; he put in. &#8220;It seems
-rather a pity that you and your friend won&#8217;t take
-the word of those who know, and stop throwing
-good money away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is a pity, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; Carfax concurred heartily.
-&#8220;But if we didn&#8217;t spend money in this way,
-heaven only knows in what other foolish enterprise
-we might be investing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is a new power-plant you are hauling
-up the hill?&#8221; the engineer inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Brand-new,&#8221; boasted Tregarvon&#8217;s proxy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The purchase doesn&#8217;t look as if you were intending
-to stop throwing the money away,&#8221; said
-Thirlwall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that is entirely as it may happen,&#8221; Carfax
-countered cheerfully. &#8220;You know the bankrupt
-always puts up the best front he can when
-he finds himself coming to the jumping-off place.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope you and Mr. Tregarvon are not trying
-to run a bluff on anything so unimpressible as
-Consolidated Coal,&#8221; laughed Thaxter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Much obliged for the hint,&#8221; returned the
-golden youth, accurately matching the bookkeeper&#8217;s
-laugh. &#8220;I give you my word, we hadn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-thought of that. Would it astonish you beyond
-measure if we should?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t try it,&#8221; the engineer advised. &#8220;We
-have excellent records of every acre of coal land
-in this region, with all the data; thickness of
-veins, their placement, and so on. You can&#8217;t
-very well run a bluff when the other fellow knows
-every card in your hand, Mr. Carfax.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is so,&#8221; Carfax yielded gracefully. &#8220;You
-people have the age on us, in both meanings of
-the word. Have you heard anything from New
-York, Mr. Thaxter?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing positive, as yet; there has scarcely
-been time. But I believe Mr. Thirlwall has been
-asked to make a report on the present condition
-of the equipment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The engineer confirmed the supposition with
-a nod, and Carfax said: &#8220;Tregarvon will be glad
-to show you everything he has, I&#8217;m sure. Will
-you make the inspection to-day?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thirlwall looked at his watch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can hardly spare the time this afternoon,&#8221;
-he demurred. &#8220;Besides, if I know anything
-about such things, Mr. Tregarvon wouldn&#8217;t care
-to leave his machinery blocking a public road
-while he was showing us around.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had learned all he wished to know, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-now he became urgently hospitable. Wouldn&#8217;t
-the visitors stop and rest awhile in the office-building?
-True, there was little to offer in the
-way of refreshment, but the old negro cook could
-make a passable pot of tea. To all of this, Thaxter
-made excuses for both and said they must be
-driving back to Whitlow.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax let them go, apparently with the greatest
-reluctance, walking with them to the post
-where Thaxter&#8217;s horse was hitched. But after
-the natty side-bar buggy had disappeared over
-the small rise in the northward road, he smiled
-like an angelic understudy of the villain in a play.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much, you didn&#8217;t drive down here to tell
-us that our coke-ovens are out of repair, Mr.
-Thaxter!&#8221; he derided joyously, apostrophizing
-the vanished bookkeeper. &#8220;You came to see if
-it were really true that we had bought a new engine
-and were going on with the game! And you
-are jolly well welcome to all that you found out!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At a little past two o&#8217;clock, Carfax, driving the
-yellow car, tailed in behind the machinery procession
-on the mountain road. Tregarvon had
-been having good luck and was correspondingly
-jubilant; but the sight of Carfax going to keep an
-appointment with Richardia Birrell gave him
-another set back.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>&#8220;That&#8217;s right; go on and enjoy yourself,&#8221; he
-grumbled sourly, as Carfax came up to edge his
-way past the obstructing raffle of teams and machinery.
-&#8220;If you knew how to chock a wheel or
-handle a pinch-bar, I&#8217;d pull you out of that joy
-wagon and set you at work. Since you don&#8217;t,
-you&#8217;d better trundle along and get out of our
-way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall tell Miss Richardia that I left you in a
-heavenly temper,&#8221; threatened the gentle mocker
-in the driving-seat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The less you say about me in that quarter,
-the better,&#8221; was the surly rejoinder; and with
-that, Tregarvon began to shout again at his teamsters.</p>
-
-<p>In due time Carfax negotiated his passage and
-the yellow car disappeared in the direction of
-Highmount. But the sting was left behind, and
-Tregarvon drank deep from the opium cup of
-fierce labor without being able to purchase blessed
-oblivion. Jagged thoughts came uppermost; repinings
-as old as mankind; as venerable, at least,
-as that prehistoric day when the first friend took
-it upon himself to smite his brother into the
-straight and narrow path.</p>
-
-<p>Why must civilized man, alone of all sentient
-beings, be burdened with that inconsiderate thing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-called conscience? The bird of the air, the beast
-of the field, was free to choose its mate; the savage
-stood aside only when some bigger savage
-compelled him. Environment and the stress of
-the moment have shaping influences mighty in
-proportion to the strenuosities. Tregarvon, fighting
-for the up-hill inches with a load a ton or so
-heavier than his pulling power, became immune
-to the gentler leadings. Why should a promise,
-made to a woman who had taken it serenely as a
-conventional matter of course, stand in the way
-of a passion so vital that it laid hold upon the
-very well-springs of life? Why should he stand
-aside and let Carfax, under a fantastic sense of
-duty, mar three lives, or possibly four, in a foolish
-attempt to preserve the conventional unities?</p>
-
-<p>The materialistic afternoon had done its worst
-for Tregarvon by the time Tryon&#8217;s boy, who had
-been stationed on ahead to give warning of the
-approach of descending teams, waved his hat as
-a signal that some one was driving down the
-mountain. The moment was inauspicious. A
-pulling-rope had just broken; the heavy load of
-machinery was stalled in a crooked bend in the
-road, and was for the time immovable. Tregarvon
-yelped out a string of orders to his helpers,
-and then went on past the tangle of mules and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-rope tackle to meet the descending vehicle.
-Being in the proper frame of mind, he swore
-crabbedly to the world at large when he saw that
-it was his own car, with Carfax at the wheel,
-Richardia in the mechanician&#8217;s seat, and the tonneau
-thickly packed with young women from
-Highmount.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t pass,&#8221; was his curt denial of the
-right of way when Carfax slowed to a stop. &#8220;We
-have just broken a tackle, and everything is all
-balled up. Couldn&#8217;t you find any other road to
-drive on?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax laughed and turned to his seat-mate.
-&#8220;You see how inhospitable he really is when he
-isn&#8217;t parading his company manners.&#8221; Then to
-the young women behind him: &#8220;Mr. Tregarvon
-won&#8217;t let us drive down, but if you young ladies
-would care to see the wheels go round at a moment
-when, as it seems, they have just stopped going
-round, we can walk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was an instant chorus of walking votes,
-and Carfax got out to open the tonneau door.
-Tregarvon stood aside, scowling as any working-boss
-might when his difficulties are about to be
-made a raree-show for the frivolous. Miss Richardia
-slipped out of the mechanician&#8217;s seat on
-her own side of the car, unassisted, but when the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-sight-seeing contingent marshalled itself for the
-descent into the tangle, she did not join it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are not going with the others?&#8221; said Tregarvon
-ungraciously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are enough of them for you to be spiteful
-at, without adding me to the number,&#8221; she
-returned, adding: &#8220;Besides, I wanted to speak
-to you. It was I who asked Mr. Carfax to drive
-down here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had come around to his side of the car and
-he looked her squarely in the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be careful what you say to me to-day, Richardia:
-I am not the same man that I was a few
-days ago.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Boo!</i>&#8221; she said, with the little grimace that
-always set his blood afire; &#8220;you make me shivery
-when you look and talk that way. I came to try
-to help you&mdash;not to be frozen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say it,&#8221; he commanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How can I, when you won&#8217;t let me? I have
-a piece of news for you&mdash;something that I imagine
-you&#8217;d like to know. Have you written to Miss
-Wardwell lately?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; Sunday night in Chattanooga.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And this is Wednesday: have you had a
-reply?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; not yet. What is your news?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>&#8220;I was just wondering whether I&#8217;d better not
-keep it to myself, after all. Mr. Carfax said you
-were in a bad temper, but he didn&#8217;t tell me that
-you were utterly impossible.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s scowl deepened.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Impossible? Of course, I am impossible.
-What would you expect, in the circumstances?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this, she smiled up at him and said: &#8220;I&#8217;m
-beginning to be a little deaf now&mdash;charitably
-deaf.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t need charity,&#8221; he broke out hotly.
-&#8220;All I need is a chance to fight for my own hand.
-Tell me one thing: have you promised to marry
-Poictiers yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you any right to ask me such a question
-as that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have; the best right in the world: you know
-I have.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She met his half-angry, half-passionate gaze
-calmly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know that you are about to make a shipwreck
-of your better self,&#8221; she averred. Then:
-&#8220;Don&#8217;t you know that there are some things that
-are hard for a woman to forgive&mdash;or, having forgiven
-them, to forget?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am in no mood to split hairs with you
-to-day,&#8221; he grated. &#8220;You are thinking of Elizabeth:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-she knows already what she will have to
-forgive. I told her in the letter I wrote Sunday
-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head sorrowfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are tearing the anchors loose, one by
-one. Will nothing make you realize what you
-are doing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What would you have me do? It has come
-to that, Richardia: I don&#8217;t care for anything else.
-A little further along, you may be another man&#8217;s
-wife, and I may be another woman&#8217;s husband;
-but it will make no difference&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Don&#8217;t!</i>&#8221; she cried sharply; and then, before
-he could add another word, she had left him and
-was walking down the road to meet the tonneau
-party which was stringing along on its return to
-the car, with Carfax in the lead.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon tramped moodily away when Carfax
-began to help his charges into the car, going
-back to the tangle which Tryon had finally contrived
-to straighten out. Taking over the command,
-he flung himself once more into the work,
-but the fine fire was gone, and when evening came
-and the machinery truck was left blocked at the
-roadside to wait for another day, he trudged back
-to Coalville at the tail of the mule cavalcade,
-sodden with weariness.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>Carfax had not returned when Uncle William
-served dinner, and Tregarvon ate alone, morosely
-thankful for the solitude. Afterward he went
-directly to his room on the second floor; and Carfax,
-coming in a little after nine o&#8217;clock, had no
-chance to tell him of Thaxter&#8217;s visit and its probable
-object.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XX<br />
-
-
-<small>Limitations</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">DAY following day in the conflict with steepness
-on the mountain road, Tregarvon
-toiled early and late, breakfasting before Carfax
-was visible, eating at midday out of a basket
-brought to the scene of the activities by Uncle
-William, and missing the golden youth two evenings
-in succession by reason of Carfax&#8217;s continued
-popularity at Highmount.</p>
-
-<p>Such sacrifices to the morose deities of materialism
-bring their own revenges. By the Friday
-evening, when the new engine and boiler had been
-dragged painfully up the final ascent and had been
-halted for the night at a point nearly opposite
-the college campus, Tregarvon had become a
-bitter man-driver and was facing the consequences
-in a strike on the part of his farmer helpers.</p>
-
-<p>John Teppenpaw, a husky young Wehatcheean
-from the farther side of the valley who had brought
-four of the best-pulling beasts to the job, was the
-first to raise the standard of revolt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ef you-all &#8217;ll thess pay me off, I reckon I won&#8217;t
-come back no more,&#8221; Teppenpaw announced,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-after he had thrown the trace-chains over the
-backs of his mules for the descent of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that?&mdash;what the devil is the matter
-with <i>you</i>?&#8221; Tregarvon snapped viciously. &#8220;Aren&#8217;t
-you getting enough money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Money ain&#8217;t the onliest thing ther&#8217; is in this
-world,&#8221; was the sullen retort. &#8220;I ain&#8217;t allowin&#8217;
-to let no man hire me to take his cussin&#8217; and
-swearin&#8217; and browbeatin&#8217;. I got a li&#8217;l piece o&#8217;
-land and a few head o&#8217; stock o&#8217; my own, and I
-allow I don&#8217;t <i>haf</i> to!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I reckon that&#8217;s about the size of it f&#8217;r me,
-too,&#8221; put in Jeff Daggett, who was Teppenpaw&#8217;s
-nearest neighbor on the north; and from this the
-fire of resentment spread so rapidly that the
-strike became unanimous, passing at once beyond
-any hope of arbitration.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re quitting on me before the job&#8217;s finished?&#8221;
-raged Tregarvon. &#8220;You are a lot of
-bally idiots! The money you are getting for this
-haul is more than any one of you will see from
-now to Christmas! Are you a pack of silly women
-that you can&#8217;t stand a little man-sized talk from
-a boss?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s jist hit,&#8221; said Daggett. &#8220;Looks like
-you-all was used to rippin&#8217; and tearin&#8217; at them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-no-account furriners up No&#8217;th that ain&#8217;t got
-nothin&#8217;, and don&#8217;t know enough to raise a terruction
-when you cuss &#8217;em out. We-all ain&#8217;t nuther
-niggers n&#8217;r furriners. I&#8217;ll take my pay and quit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon became heavily sarcastic. &#8220;Is this
-your way of telling me that you want more
-money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bickler, the oldest man in the squad, made
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I reckon you-all ain&#8217;t got money enough to
-make us-all come back f&#8217;r another day like what
-this&#8217;n has been, Mr. Tregarvon. You&#8217;ve got a
-heap to l&#8217;arn ef ye allow to stay down yere in old
-Tennessee and get white men to work f&#8217;r ye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quit, then, and be damned to you!&#8221; Tregarvon
-exploded. &#8220;Show up at the office in Coalville
-to-morrow morning before I leave, and you&#8217;ll
-get your pay. I don&#8217;t carry your money around
-with me in my pocket.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To a clattering of hoofs and a jingling of trace-chains
-the cavalcade moved off down the pike,
-leaving the deserted boss standing beside the
-stranded machinery truck. Tregarvon knew very
-well that by another day the story of the strike
-and its cause would be passed from lip to ear
-throughout the length and breadth of the Wehatchee,
-and there would be no hope of recruiting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-another gang among the farmers. The half-mile
-of sandy wood road still remained to be traversed,
-and without the teams the load could be moved
-only by means of a block and tackle and winch,
-manned by Tryon&#8217;s gang of track laborers; a
-process which would add other exasperating days
-of delay.</p>
-
-<p>The dusk was thickening under the trees when
-the discouraged hauling-boss took his coat from
-the truck and struggled into it preparatory to
-setting out upon the long tramp down the mountain.
-He had seen nothing of Carfax since an
-hour before noon, when the yellow car had edged
-past the road obstructions on its way up the pike.
-But now he heard the purring of a motor and
-waited.</p>
-
-<p>The car was coming down the cross-mountain
-road, and Tregarvon could see that there were
-two persons in it. Instead of turning in at the
-campus gates, it came on, and Carfax braked it
-to a stop opposite the loaded truck. &#8220;Is that
-you, Vance?&#8221; he called to the figure standing in
-the shadow of the pines.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221; Tregarvon stepped out of the shadows
-and crossed to the automobile, though the nearer
-approach was not needed to assure him that Carfax&#8217;s
-companion was Richardia Birrell.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>&#8220;You are coming along beautifully!&#8221; Carfax
-praised, speaking as one who holds himself delicately
-aloof from the toilsome details. &#8220;It&#8217;s
-great to be a working-man and able to do things.
-One day more will take you over to the drilling
-ground, won&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Half a day was all I asked, with the men and
-teams; but I am not going to have it. They have
-quit on me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A strike? What was the trouble? Weren&#8217;t
-you paying them enough?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It wasn&#8217;t a question of more money. They
-seemed to think that I ought to speak softly and
-say &#8216;mister&#8217; and &#8216;please&#8217; when I wanted them to
-get a move.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax laughed and turned to his companion
-in the other half of the driving-seat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He puts it rather&mdash;er&mdash;diplomatically, don&#8217;t
-you think?&#8221; he confided to the young woman.
-&#8220;Really, you know, his language has come to be
-something frightful!&#8221; Then to the diplomat:
-&#8220;What are you going to do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon ignored Carfax&#8217;s companion, and
-the derisive confidence to which she had made
-no reply. &#8220;If I had the nerve, I suppose I might
-kill another week dragging the thing through the
-wood by half-inches with a block and tackle and
-man-power,&#8221; he offered.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>&#8220;Dear me! And in the meantime the enemy&mdash;whoever
-he is&mdash;will be storing up ammunition
-and getting ready to efface you once more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon turned away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe I shall give &#8216;the enemy&#8217; another
-chance at me. Will you be down to dinner?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, hold on; don&#8217;t go off in a huff that way!&#8221;
-Carfax protested in mock concern. &#8220;We have
-had our little joy-ride, and I was just taking Miss
-Richardia home. Wait a minute and tell us
-how you are going to block &#8216;the enemy&#8217;s&#8217; game.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was still ignoring Miss Birrell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thaxter sent me a note this morning. Consolidated
-Coal is ready to do business with us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;With you, you mean; I am only a good-natured
-bystander. What does Mr. Thaxter
-say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in the brisk exchange of question
-and answer, Tregarvon took the silent member
-of the trio into consideration.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All this doesn&#8217;t interest Miss Richardia. I
-can talk the business matter over with you later
-on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If the music teacher had been keeping a vow
-of silence she broke it now with a little laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am interested,&#8221; she assured him; adding:
-&#8220;I hope you feel better, now that you have made
-me say it in so many words.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>Tregarvon let the small gibe go without retort.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The offer of a hundred thousand for the Ocoee
-properties has been renewed in my behalf, Thaxter
-tells me; but if I wish to avail myself of it,
-I must accept immediately.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is the keen rush?&#8221; Carfax inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is explained reasonably enough. The C. C.
-&amp; I. people are preparing to open other veins on
-their Whitlow lands to the north of the present
-mine. These plans are being held up, pending
-my decision. If I sell out to them, they will
-probably abandon these plans for the present;
-opening, instead, the south vein&mdash;the one Thaxter
-told us about&mdash;and using our tramway and coke-ovens.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax seemed to have grown suddenly reflective.
-&#8220;It rather puts you between two fires,
-doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221; he commented. &#8220;You don&#8217;t wish
-to lose your chance to sell, and you don&#8217;t wish
-to sell before you have seen what that unfinished
-hole over yonder may be going to show you.
-And if you take time to drag this power-plant
-over by hand, the golden opportunity will get by.
-The question which suggests itself to me is a very
-foolish one, no doubt. I&#8217;m asking myself how
-much the C. C. &amp; I. people paid your farmers to
-induce them to lie down on you.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>Tregarvon&#8217;s laugh was brittle. &#8220;You needn&#8217;t
-go that far. I&#8217;ll be frank enough to admit that
-I gave Daggett and his men plenty of provocation
-for the strike.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In other words, you&#8217;ve been handing them
-some of the mule talk. Shocking! But that is
-spilt milk and it can&#8217;t be gathered up now.
-What is Thaxter&#8217;s time limit?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He says in his note that he will expect to hear
-from me by Saturday, at the latest. That is to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this, Miss Richardia spoke up quickly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Does &#8216;to-morrow&#8217; mean all day to-morrow?
-Or does it mean to-morrow morning?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I should suppose I might take the day
-for it. Any option holds good up to midnight
-of its day of expiration, unless there is some proviso
-to the contrary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And how long would it take you to do all these
-things that Mr. Carfax says you would like to do
-first&mdash;before deciding?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only a few hours, if the men and teams had
-stayed with me. But as it is, it would probably
-take a week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was silence for a moment and then Carfax
-said: &#8220;Miss Richardia is trying to tell you to
-postpone your decision as long as you can, only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>
-she can&#8217;t find the words. That is my advice, too.
-One can never tell what a day may bring forth.
-Wait a minute until I can drive back to the college,
-and then I&#8217;ll take you down the hill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon stood aside while Carfax turned the
-car and sent it swiftly up to and through the
-Highmount gateway. A few minutes later the
-golden youth came sauntering back, alone and
-afoot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That blessed motor of yours has gone dippy
-again,&#8221; he announced coolly, as if the yellow car
-had lately been acquiring bad habits. &#8220;It pegged
-out just as I drove up to the Caswell door. I suppose
-I shall have to send a boy over to our shack
-after Rucker. Mrs. Caswell rises to the occasion
-and invites us both to dinner while we wait.
-What do you say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not on your life!&#8221; Tregarvon refused sourly.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m not fit company for anybody to-night. I&#8217;ll
-walk down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right: then I&#8217;ll stay and bring the car
-after Rucker has rejuvenated it. You needn&#8217;t
-sit up for me. And, by the way, that reminds me.
-There were some letters for you last night&mdash;Tait
-brought them over after you had gone to bed.
-Did you find them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I got them this morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>&#8220;Anything from&mdash;er&mdash;from Elizabeth yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not yet; no.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax hesitated a moment and then interested
-himself sympathetically&mdash;or seemed to. &#8220;I hope
-you didn&#8217;t say too much&mdash;or too little&mdash;in that
-confession of yours last Sunday night, Vance; in
-the letter you sent from Chattanooga.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why do you say that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I suppose I am, as you might say&mdash;er&mdash;well,
-I&#8217;m a sort of an accessory before the
-fact, don&#8217;t you think? I can&#8217;t forget that it
-was I who clubbed you into the proper frame of
-mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You needn&#8217;t worry; you&#8217;re safely out of it,&#8221;
-declared the confessor, with a laugh which was
-only half good-natured. &#8220;I gave you your just
-due: told her that I owed you my soul&#8217;s salvation;
-which you had safely clinched against any
-backsliding by asking Richardia to marry you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a moment there was a silence like that
-which precedes the crash of summer thunder.
-Then, in a still, small voice, Carfax said: &#8220;You
-told her that, did you? You gave her to understand
-that, right off the bat, and merely in passing,
-as it were, I had carelessly determined to
-marry your temptation out of your way? There
-was only one mistake made in your education,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>
-Vance; the person who first taught you to put
-pen to paper ought to have been instantly hanged,
-drawn and quartered. I&mdash;I&mdash;&#8221; but here, apparently,
-speech failed him, and he turned abruptly
-to walk rapidly away toward Highmount, leaving
-Tregarvon standing, half-remorseful and wholly
-bewildered, in the middle of the road.</p>
-
-<p>The bewilderment went with the too highly
-educated one a good part of the way down to
-Coalville, and it certainly would have been increased
-if he could have known that, five minutes
-after he had turned the first curve in the winding
-pike below Highmount, the car which had been
-so lately reported out of commission had been
-mysteriously restored to a state of usefulness;
-that, with a man and a woman in the driving-seat,
-it had whisked through the campus portal,
-cut a perilous quarter-circle at speed in the piked
-roadway, and had vanished in a thick cloud of
-limestone dust to the westward, leaving Mrs.
-Caswell&#8217;s dinner to wait for its return.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXI<br />
-
-
-<small>The Clansmen</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">TREGARVON turned out early in the morning
-of a Saturday, to be known afterward
-as a day of fateful happenings, largely from force
-of habit&mdash;since there was no mule cavalcade to be
-led to the Pisgah heights. As on the three previous
-mornings, he breakfasted alone. In reply
-to his inquiry, Uncle William told him that the
-motor-car was not in its shed, and the inference
-was that Carfax had spent the night as the guest
-of the Caswells.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Summa dem po&#8217; white men out yondeh on de
-po&#8217;ch a-waitin&#8217; faw you-all, Mistoo Tregarbin,&#8221;
-the old negro announced, after the solitary meal
-was despatched. &#8220;Look lak dey&#8217;s mighty grumptious
-erbout somepin, dey does.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon went to the front of the building,
-where he had established a rude excuse for an
-office, and opened the door. The farmers were
-there, waiting for their pay, and the settlement
-was made without waste of words on either side.
-But after the money had been handed out, Daggett<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>
-was moved to make peaceful overtures,
-natural kindliness having gotten the better of resentment.
-They&mdash;the farmers&mdash;had been talking
-it over among themselves, and Daggett &#8220;allowed&#8221;
-that they might have been hasty. Without prejudice
-to the fact that they objected to being sworn
-at, they would come back Monday or Tuesday
-of the following week and finish the hauling job,
-if the boss so desired.</p>
-
-<p>At this, as was most natural after a night of
-worry and disappointment, Tregarvon&#8217;s temper
-flew into shards.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not in a hundred years, you won&#8217;t!&#8221; he exploded
-wrathfully. &#8220;If I can&#8217;t move that machinery
-without your help, it may stand right
-where it is until it rots! You&#8217;ve got your money,
-and I&#8217;ve learned my lesson. We&#8217;re quits.&#8221; And
-with that he shouldered his way through the group
-and went to rally Tryon and the track gang,
-marshalling the handful of laborers for the ascent
-of the mountain in the tram-car.</p>
-
-<p>Some half-hour beyond this, the handful having
-taken a short-cut through the summit forest
-from the tramhead, Tregarvon found a sharp surprise
-awaiting him at the point on the pike where
-the truck load had been halted for the night.
-Scattered along the road or drawn up under the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-trees were a dozen or more teams of all sorts and
-descriptions&mdash;raw-boned mules in mismatched
-pairs, spans in which an ancient horse was harnessed
-with a mule or with another horse to the
-full as venerable, animals with back-bones like
-ridge-poles, others posturing as the halt, the lame,
-and the blind, and, completing the makeshifts, a
-wagon drawn by a pair of diminutive bulls. The
-drivers of this new levy were harmoniously in
-keeping with their outworn stock, decrepit wagons,
-and rope-patched harnesses; lank, sallow-faced
-mountain men of the McNabb type, with a toothless
-patriarch of the McNabb name to act as
-their spokesman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We-uns done heerd you-uns wuz a-needin&#8217;
-holp fer to pull thish-yer load thoo the woods,&#8221;
-said the aged spokesman, shrilling in a high,
-cracked voice at Tregarvon. &#8220;Me an&#8217; th&#8217; boys
-&#8217;lowed we&#8217;d drap erlong an&#8217; gin ye a h&#8217;ist. How-all
-does ye hitch on ter that thar kintraption?&#8221;
-with a thumb-jerk over his shoulder toward the
-loaded truck.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon recovered from his surprise in a rebound
-of heartfelt thankfulness. Here was manna
-from the skies, indeed. He asked no questions;
-made no ungrateful effort to pry into the whys
-and wherefores of the miracle. It was enough<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
-that the gods had relented. Treading softly
-among the adjectives, he proceeded to set his
-curiously assorted helpers, man and beast, in
-order, and the advance was begun.</p>
-
-<p>Oddly enough, the task ran smoothly, despite
-the makeshift pulling beasts and the prodigious
-inexperience of the drivers with any load so formidable
-as the engine-mounted truck. To offset
-the inexperience, there was a quiet and resolute
-willingness that was heart-warming after the exacerbating
-sullenness of the valley farmers. Tregarvon
-found that his normal good-nature had
-not been slain; it had only been pushed aside;
-discovered also that hard words may make hard
-work. Turning the new leaf handsomely, he let
-the agile old patriarch do the bossing, and thus,
-rod by rod, the sandy half-mile was traversed
-and the goal in the old burying-ground was
-reached.</p>
-
-<p>Just before noon, when the truck load had been
-pushed and pulled and inched into place in the
-glade, Carfax turned up, walking across from the
-school. His congratulations were profuse, but if
-he knew anything about the manner of the miracle-working,
-he betrayed neither himself nor the
-secret.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was certain you&#8217;d find a way out of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
-strike trouble,&#8221; he asserted blandly. &#8220;I told the
-folks at the dinner-table last evening that I had
-never seen you knocked out so completely that
-you were obliged to take the count. How did
-you do it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon shook his head. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t do it;
-it was done for me. When I came up this morning
-with Tryon and the trackmen, the teams were
-ready and waiting. Somebody had rounded them
-up for me during the night. I have been charging
-it to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s laugh was a sufficient negation of the
-charge. &#8220;Do I look it?&#8221; he demanded. &#8220;If I
-do, I can prove an <i>alibi</i>. I spent a very pleasant
-evening with the Caswells and a bunch of the
-senior girls, and I am reasonably sure that I
-didn&#8217;t walk in my sleep afterward.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did Richardia go home for the week-end, as
-usual?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She did; though she stayed and took dinner
-with us at Highmount. I drove her over to Westwood
-House in the car, later.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So the car is all right again, is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes; there wasn&#8217;t much the matter with
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tryon had taken over the bossing of the gang,
-with Rucker for his able second, and Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-was free to stand aside and talk with Carfax about
-the miracle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You say Richardia went home after dinner?&#8221;
-he queried. Then: &#8220;I can&#8217;t help thinking that
-this is her doing. These men are all mountaineers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s chuckle was frankly derisive. &#8220;That
-is mere sentiment on your part; the wish the
-father to the thought. You&#8217;d rather like to feel
-that you are indebted to her, wouldn&#8217;t you? But
-I shall have to spoil that little day-dream. She
-was with the rest of us at Highmount until after
-ten o&#8217;clock, and it must have been nearly eleven
-when I drove her over to Westwood House&mdash;much
-too late to begin any campaign of team-raising
-for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon took this apparent evidence of Miss
-Richardia&#8217;s non-complicity at its face value, but
-he was still shaking his head dubiously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t understand it, Poictiers. These
-McNabbs and their cousins might very properly
-have it in for me on the old score of the land lawsuit;
-and, as you know, we have been suspecting
-them, more or less, all along. But now they
-turn out to give me a lift, just as I am about to
-lose my grip. What&#8217;s the answer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s grin was as nearly impish as his cherubic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-semblance would permit. &#8220;Call it an attack
-of conscience,&#8221; he suggested playfully. &#8220;The
-other night we decided that it was one of the
-McNabbs who put the dynamite into the old
-boiler. Perhaps they have all had a change
-of heart, and this is their way of showing it.
-Will you be ready to go on drilling this afternoon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am afraid not. We shall have the machinery
-unloaded in another hour or so, and I can let
-these outsiders go home. But it will take the remainder
-of the day to get the engine in working
-order, so Rucker says.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How about the C. C. &amp; I. buying offer? The
-option expires with to-day, doesn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon turned quickly upon the questioner.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you advise me to take the offer, Poictiers?
-You will remember that after our talk with Hartridge
-a week ago you said I was not to sell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know; but only idiots and corpses are unable
-to change their minds. You owe it to your
-people at home not to fall between two stools.
-After all is said, a sure hundred thousand is better
-than nothing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hartridge has been working on you again,&#8221;
-said Tregarvon accusingly. &#8220;And this time he
-has taken the other tack. Isn&#8217;t that so?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>Carfax neither admitted nor denied a later talk
-with the schoolmaster. &#8220;He asserts positively
-that you will find the two thin veins again here,
-with the rock between. He ought to know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was silenced for the moment. Then
-he broke out impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got to know for myself, Poictiers. If I
-don&#8217;t stay with it long enough to prove up, I shall
-be a quitter. I&#8217;m all the other things you have
-occasionally called me, but not that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I know you are not. I was just thinking:
-if you could meet Thaxter and talk with
-him? Possibly you could get the option time
-extended for a few days. You have a good reason
-for asking&mdash;apart from the real one, which is to
-find out what this drill-hole is going to say to you.
-You might urge that you&#8217;d like to have time to
-communicate with your lawyers. Suppose we
-drive up to Whitlow this afternoon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll see,&#8221; Tregarvon conceded. &#8220;It is barely
-possible that we shall get the drill in operation
-again to-day, and in that case I shall know definitely
-what to do. Do you lunch at Highmount?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do,&#8221; laughed the golden youth. &#8220;The Caswells
-have adopted me, and I shall get square with
-them a little further along by financing the new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-gymnasium. How about paying this miracle
-gang? Have you money enough with you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t, and I was going to ask if you would
-drive down to the office and break into the safe
-for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can do better than that,&#8221; said the money-finder,
-producing a thick roll of bank-notes.
-&#8220;Money is the one thing I&#8217;m rotten with. I must
-go back and report for luncheon now, but I&#8217;ll be
-over again later on, and we can decide about the
-trip to Whitlow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A short time after Carfax&#8217;s departure, Tregarvon
-paid the mountaineers and let them go.
-Singularly enough, some of the volunteers did not
-wish to take money and had to be persuaded.
-The sums named were ridiculously small, and in
-each instance Tregarvon gave more than was
-asked, putting the larger wage on the ground of
-the value of the service to him.</p>
-
-<p>In the settlement the beneficiary of the miracle
-made an attempt to find out to whom the timely
-help was owing, but the effort spent itself against
-a dead wall of mountaineer reticence&mdash;or unknowledge.
-The McNabb patriarch had &#8220;heerd&#8221; of
-the trouble with the valley farmers through &#8220;ol&#8217;
-man Kent&#8221;; Kent had got the word from somebody
-else; and so it went, with the first cause<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-either unknown or carefully concealed. Tregarvon
-did not press too curiously for the explanation.
-It was too much like inquiring the age of the proverbial
-gift-horse.</p>
-
-<p>After the noon halt, with the glade cleared of
-the men and teams, the work of installation was
-begun. For a time it progressed handsomely.
-Rucker and Tryon were both competent foremen,
-and by three o&#8217;clock they had the engine and
-boiler shifted from the truck to its place behind
-the drill derrick, with only the steam-pipe connections
-remaining to be made.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had not yet returned, and Tregarvon
-began to wonder if he had forgotten the proposed
-Whitlow expedition. By this time it seemed altogether
-probable that the drilling could be resumed
-within an hour or two, and the mining
-gambler&#8217;s passion to stay in the game until the
-last card had been turned fought against cool-headed
-prudence for first place in the struggle
-Tregarvon was making to decide as to what he
-should do.</p>
-
-<p>If he should leave the mountain before the drilling
-began, the uncertainties would still be unresolved.
-On the other hand, if Consolidated
-Coal meant to hold him rigidly to the terms of
-the option, it became crucially necessary that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>
-should know in advance what this final drilling-test
-was going to prove. If it should prove only
-another failure, the opportunity to sell must not
-be allowed to lapse. But if the test should prove
-that he had at last discovered the workable
-mother-vein.... Tregarvon gasped at the golden
-possibility, and the offer of a paltry tenth of a
-million shrank to nothing.</p>
-
-<p>He was wishing, for the hundredth time, that
-Carfax would come and help him to decide, when
-a buggy drawn by a high-stepping black horse appeared
-among the trees on the opposite side of the
-glade. Tregarvon recognized the equipage at
-once. It was Thaxter&#8217;s, and the round-bodied
-bookkeeper was alone. The victim of indecision
-pulled himself together quickly. Chance, or the
-kindlier gods, had given him his opportunity,
-and he meant to improve it.</p>
-
-<p>Thaxter came across to the tool shanty with the
-Cheeryble smile in commission.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Still spending your good money on the kite-flying,
-are you?&#8221; he said, with a jerk of his thumb
-over his shoulder at the new power-plant. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t know as I can blame you so very much:
-I was young and enthusiastic once, myself.
-You&#8217;ve worked wonders getting that thing up
-the mountain in such a short time. Somebody<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>
-told me you were hung up with a strike, or something
-of the sort, and as it was our Saturday half-holiday,
-I thought I&#8217;d drive up and condole with
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon offered the bookkeeper a seat on the
-shanty step, saying: &#8220;We were hung up, temporarily,
-but we are getting into shape now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So I see,&#8221; returned the jovial little man; and
-for a space the talk ran upon the difficulties of
-mountain installations and the drawbacks of having
-to depend upon picked-up labor in a region
-where labor was scarce. After a time, Thaxter
-broached the option matter of his own accord.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You got my note the other day, I presume?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Promptly,&#8221; Tregarvon acknowledged. &#8220;I
-was planning to go to Whitlow this afternoon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you changed your mind?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have changed it now, since you have been
-good enough to drive up. I suppose we can talk
-here as well as in your office. I have been considering
-the offer to purchase, and on some accounts
-it is rather attractive. We all like to bet
-on a sure thing when we can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The genial go-between chuckled sagely. &#8220;And,
-on the other hand, we all like to bet upon the
-possibilities, now and then,&#8221; he thrust in. &#8220;If
-you only had any possibilities&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>Tregarvon made haste to fight away from that
-phase of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll disregard the possibilities, which I may
-believe in, and you don&#8217;t, Mr. Thaxter. This
-new power outfit was bought before I had your
-letter, and since we had it, we could hardly do less
-than to go on and install it. Let that part of it
-go, and we&#8217;ll attack the business affair. As I
-say, I have been considering Consolidated Coal&#8217;s
-offer to buy me out. Since you are buying nothing
-but the equipment, the offer is fair enough.
-But my father&#8217;s estate is concerned, and the
-option is too short. In common prudence, I
-ought to consult my lawyers, and there hasn&#8217;t
-been time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The small man shook his head regretfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;These matters are all decided for us by the
-big fellows in New York,&#8221; he explained. &#8220;In my
-letter I gave you the reasons why they have put
-the hurry speed on in this particular instance.
-It is really a very small detail to Consolidated
-Coal whether it buys you out or doesn&#8217;t buy
-you out&mdash;merely a pen-scratch in the day&#8217;s work.
-Of course, you know that, as well as I do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Tregarvon admitted. &#8220;But in spite of
-that, I am going to ask you to take it up with the
-powers again, suggesting that they give me a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>
-little more time. A few days, more or less, can
-make no difference.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This time the bookkeeper shook his head more
-firmly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should be risking my poor little job, Mr.
-Tregarvon. I am only the humblest of under-strappers
-in the big corporation, and if I should
-try to pull strings for you, some nippy chief clerk
-in the New York offices would tell me to pack my
-grip and get out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then supposing you turn the papers over to
-me and let me do my own bargaining with headquarters,&#8221;
-Tregarvon ventured.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It wouldn&#8217;t do a particle of good, as you&#8217;d
-know if you had had any dealings with the great
-corporations. These things are mere matters of
-routine, and you couldn&#8217;t break that routine with
-a sledge-hammer, Mr. Tregarvon. I&#8217;m awfully
-sorry, but I am afraid the option will have to
-stand as it was made&mdash;to expire at midnight to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had one small shot in reserve and
-the time had arrived when it must be fired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In that view of the case, Mr. Thaxter, I am
-afraid I shall have to stay out,&#8221; he said, hoping
-against hope that the shot might find its target.</p>
-
-<p>Once more Thaxter made the sign of regretful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-negation. From where he was sitting the bookkeeper
-had a fair view of the installation activities,
-and Tregarvon could not help wondering if their
-rapid progress toward completion had anything
-to do with Thaxter&#8217;s immovability. While he
-was waiting for the bluffing shot to penetrate, if
-it would, Rucker came across from the new engine,
-carrying a piece of iron pipe with a valve
-attached; carrying, also, a ferocious scowl to
-emphasize his complaint.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Them machinery guys over in Chattanooga
-is a fright!&#8221; he rapped out. &#8220;That boiler dome is
-tapped for inch-and-a-quarter pipe, and so&#8217;s the
-engine; and they&#8217;ve gone and sent us this inch-and-a-half
-throttle and pipe connection! Wot
-t&#8217; &#8217;ell am I goin&#8217; to do about that, I&#8217;d like to
-know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon grasped the new obstacle&mdash;and his
-own fierce impatience&mdash;firmly by the neck and
-refused to make a profane show of himself for
-Thaxter&#8217;s benefit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose there is only one thing to do, Billy;
-to go down to the railroad office and wire the
-machinery people to make good,&#8221; he answered
-placably. Then to Thaxter: &#8220;We have hit so
-many of these knock-outs that we are beginning
-to learn that we must take them as they come.&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-And with that, he scribbled a telegram on a leaf
-of his note-book, tore it out, and gave it to
-Rucker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is the message,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Tell Tryon
-and the men that the jig is up for to-day, and
-that I&#8217;ll be down a little later on to pay them off.
-You&#8217;d better go down yourself and send that
-wire. If you can persuade the railroad agent to
-hustle it, we may catch the machinery shop before
-it closes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thaxter sat quite silent during the dispersal of
-the working gang; did not speak again until
-after the last of the men had disappeared in the
-direction of the tramhead. Then he said: &#8220;Well,
-you are hung up until next week safely enough
-now. Your wire won&#8217;t get an answer this late
-Saturday afternoon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I suppose not,&#8221; Tregarvon agreed. &#8220;The
-order will be filled Monday, and the new throttle
-will get here Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday,
-at the pleasure of the railroad people.
-Cheerful layout, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You certainly have bad luck enough to discourage
-most young men,&#8221; said the bookkeeper,
-as one who would not withhold sympathy where
-sympathy is due. &#8220;Do you know, it simply
-grinds me to be the one to add my bit to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>
-aggregation. I&#8217;ve half a mind to take a chance
-on the thunder and lightning and ask New York
-for that extension of time for you. You might
-reasonably hope to hear from your Philadelphia
-attorneys by Monday or Tuesday, don&#8217;t you
-think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon snatched at the concession avidly.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll wire them to-night,&#8221; he promised, as if his
-decision depended entirely upon the result of
-the long-range consultation. But after Thaxter
-had driven away, excusing his haste on the plea
-that no time must be lost in reaching a telegraph
-office, Tregarvon wondered again; this time half-suspiciously.
-Why had Thaxter changed his tune
-so suddenly? Was it because he had just been
-given ocular proof that the test-drilling was again
-postponed? The more Tregarvon thought of it,
-the more plausible the assumption grew; and he
-was almost ready to call it a fact when, an hour
-later, Carfax put in an appearance with the
-motor-car.</p>
-
-<p>In a few words Tregarvon told the story of the
-afternoon&#8217;s happenings, giving the suspicion due
-standing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is only a guess, as usual,&#8221; he offered in conclusion.
-&#8220;But, in any event, the strain is off for
-the present. Thaxter will get the extension, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-in the meantime we can take our chance to draw
-a comfortable breath or two. After Rucker
-comes back, we&#8217;ll go down the hill and get ready
-to enjoy an old-fashioned restful Sunday. I don&#8217;t
-mind confessing that the strain has been getting
-next to me, Poictiers. I&#8217;m going to push the
-whole wretched tangle into the background, for
-one day, at least, and try to catch up with my
-nerve.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good medicine!&#8221; laughed the one who had
-no nerves; and Rucker returning a few minutes
-later to resume his duties as resident watchman,
-they climbed into the yellow car and Tregarvon
-took the wheel to drive to the valley.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXII<br />
-
-
-<small>Out of a Clear Sky</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE event of the day for Coalville&mdash;the arrival
-of the afternoon passenger-train from
-Chattanooga&mdash;was in the near prospect when the
-yellow car rolled down the last of the grades and
-swept a wide circle around the coke-ovens and
-past the unloading platforms.</p>
-
-<p>The train-time signs were always unmistakable.
-A little while before the hour, and always
-as if warned by some signal inaudible to alien
-ears, the loungers under Tait&#8217;s porch rose, shook
-their legs to settle wrinkled trousers, and filed
-slowly over to the railroad station. Tregarvon&#8217;s
-motor-car, no longer a nine days&#8217; wonder to the
-army of leisure, was slowing to cross the rails of
-the Ocoee siding when the station agent ran out
-of his office to wave the motorists down with a
-telegram. The message was for Carfax, and the
-agent explained that it had been delayed in transmission
-by some trouble with the wire on the
-branch line.</p>
-
-<p>While Carfax was opening the envelope, Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>
-got out and went around to see if the brakes
-had been running cool in the swift drop from the
-summit of Pisgah. For this cause he did not hear
-Carfax&#8217;s, &#8220;Ye gods and little fishes!&#8221; basing itself
-upon a glance at the delayed telegram.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Vance!&#8221; he called, turning in his place to
-see what had become of Tregarvon. But Tregarvon
-did not hear. A canopy-topped surrey,
-venerable with age and drawn by a great-boned
-horse of dapple gray, was turning out of the
-Hesterville road to cross the tracks to the station.
-Miss Richardia Birrell was holding the
-reins over the dapple gray, and in the seat beside
-her was an old man, erect, white-haired, handsome
-as an ancestral portrait.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Jehu!&#8221; said Tregarvon under his breath.
-&#8220;So that is her father. If looks count for anything,
-he is worthy of her; which is more than I
-would say for any other Tennesseean I&#8217;ve met.&#8221;
-Then Carfax&#8217;s anxious call was repeated, and
-this time Tregarvon answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not lost&mdash;only mislaid,&#8221; he returned. Then
-he saw Carfax&#8217;s face: &#8220;Why, Poictiers!&mdash;who is
-dead?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was standing up in his place, clinging
-to the steering-wheel with one hand and waving
-the telegram like a flag of distress in the other.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>&#8220;Read that!&#8221; he commanded tragically, when
-the inspector of brakes came within passing
-reach.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon glanced at the message and became,
-in his turn, a man stricken down without warning.
-The bolt was dated at Chattanooga, and it had
-been filed for sending at nine in the forenoon. It
-was addressed to Carfax, and it read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Here with papa and mamma, and the Pennsylvania
-battle-monument dedicators. If I should
-run over to Coalville with Clotilde this afternoon,
-will you and Vance put me up at the hotel and
-show me your mine? But, of course, you will.</p>
-
-<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Elizabeth.</span>&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, good heavens!&#8221; groaned Tregarvon, when
-the paralyzing effect of the announcement gave
-place to the panic of dismay; &#8220;E-Elizabeth and
-her maid?&mdash;coming here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax laughed rather wildly. &#8220;Yes; coming
-here to stop at&mdash;at the hotel!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon read the message again. &#8220;She says
-&#8216;this afternoon.&#8217; That means to-day&mdash;now&mdash;this
-minute; she&#8217;s on this train! Poictiers, if you are
-any friend of mine, you&#8217;ll climb down here and
-find a club and put me out of my misery!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>Carfax stopped laughing suddenly and sprang
-out of the car. &#8220;It&#8217;s no joke!&#8221; he snapped. &#8220;It&#8217;s
-up to us, you wild ass of the desert&mdash;do you hear?
-Stop your braying and listen to me: we&#8217;ve got
-to meet her over there on that platform just as
-if we had been watching every train for a week!
-There is the whistle: come along and invent your
-fairy-tale on the run!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They did not crowd too eagerly to the front
-when the three-car train drew up to the platform.
-There were terms to be agreed upon; things
-which might be said, and things which must not
-be said. Thus it happened that an exceedingly
-handsome young woman, in a modish travelling
-hat and a brown coat, and followed by a French
-maid bearing impedimenta, was helped from the
-car-step by the brakeman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Charge!&#8221; Carfax commanded, in a hoarse
-whisper; but before they could do it, Miss
-Richardia slipped through the ranks of the platform
-loungers, put her arms quickly about the
-handsome young woman and kissed her, with an
-&#8220;Oh, you dear thing!&#8221; to go with the affectionate
-welcome.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon saw, gasped, swallowed hard, and
-the smile of greeting which he had called up for
-the emergency turned into a shocked grin.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>&#8220;Get out in the road there and chunk me!&#8221;
-he whispered to Carfax. And then: &#8220;Poictiers,
-I&#8217;m a ruined man! They were together in the
-Boston music factory. Elizabeth has told me a
-hundred times how she chummed with a charming
-little Southerner&mdash;without naming any names!
-And I&#8217;ve been writing her&mdash;oh, I tell you, I&#8217;m a
-dead man. All you have to do now is to get a
-wreath to lay on my coffin!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll be needing the coffin if you don&#8217;t buck
-up and catch the step!&#8221; hissed Carfax. Wherewith
-he dragged his companion masterfully into
-the circle of welcomings.</p>
-
-<p>The golden youth neither gave nor received the
-kiss of greeting; and he pointedly looked another
-way when Miss Wardwell offered her cheek for
-Tregarvon&#8217;s cousinly salute. Then he found himself
-shaking hands with Richardia&#8217;s father; realized
-vaguely that the judge was taxing him reproachfully
-for not having consented to occupy
-one of the many bed-rooms at Westwood House
-the night before, instead of returning to Highmount;
-realized also that Miss Wardwell was
-rallying Tregarvon gayly upon his discomfiture
-accomplished by means of the jesting telegram.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Surely, it didn&#8217;t mislead you, too, did it,
-Poictiers?&#8221; she questioned, turning to Tregarvon&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>
-accomplice. &#8220;Vance is trying to tell me
-that you took it harder than he did.&#8221; Then she
-explained to Judge Birrell: &#8220;I sent a wire to
-these two from Chattanooga, you know, asking
-them if they could put me and Clotilde up at the
-Coalville hotel&mdash;by the way, Cousin Vance, where
-<i>is</i> the hotel?&#8221; Then again to the judge: &#8220;You
-see, I guessed, from what Richardia said in her
-last letter, that they didn&#8217;t know I was invited
-to Westwood House. Fancy it! they got the
-telegram only a few minutes ago!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon backed out of the group and fanned
-himself with his hat. There were still traces of
-the shocked grin to temper the mask of feverish
-anxiety which was slowly displacing it. Everything
-he had ever written to Elizabeth about Richardia&mdash;everything
-he had ever told Richardia
-about Elizabeth&mdash;clamored for instant recollection
-and revision in the light of the unnerving
-fact that the two of them were here on the Coalville
-platform, together, as friends of long standing.</p>
-
-<p>The train had moved on, the loungers were
-dispersing, and Miss Birrell was leading the way
-to the venerable surrey.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_328.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">&#8220;Poictiers, I&#8217;m a ruined man!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>&#8220;Mr. Carfax has promised me that he will
-drive you up to Westwood House to-morrow. I
-think you will be very sure to come, now,&#8221; she
-said, after Tregarvon had flogged himself into
-some livelier sense of the requirements of the moment.
-Then she added: &#8220;You may come as
-early as you please.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I shall be very ill to-morrow,&#8221; he returned
-gravely, as he handed her into the carriage.
-&#8220;These sudden shocks are very bad&mdash;for the
-heart.&#8221; Then, while Carfax was helping Miss
-Wardwell to the front seat with the judge: &#8220;I
-didn&#8217;t believe you could be so wicked!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not the wicked one,&#8221; was the quick retort.
-&#8220;I tried to tell you last Wednesday; that was
-why I asked Mr. Carfax to drive down to where
-you were working. But you wouldn&#8217;t let me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I am not too ill to come, you must let me
-see you first, before I&mdash;&#8221; Tregarvon was beginning;
-but Miss Richardia was not willing to be
-dragged even into the vicinity of things confidential.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hear him!&#8221; she said to Miss Wardwell; &#8220;Mr.
-Tregarvon is intimating that we have made him
-ill, between us!&#8221; Then she spoke to her father:
-&#8220;Judge Birrell, you will please command these
-two young gentlemen to report to you to-morrow
-at Westwood House&mdash;do you hear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The judge gave the invitation in due and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>
-courteous form, and Carfax accepted promptly
-for himself and for Tregarvon. After which the
-big dapple gray, mildly urged by his master,
-began to jog up and down and the age-worn surrey
-crept out of sight around the barrier rank of coke-ovens.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We might have offered to take them up in
-the motor,&#8221; said Carfax, when the afterthought
-had been given time to come to the surface.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>You</i> might have,&#8221; Tregarvon returned moodily.
-&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t trust myself to drive a wheel-barrow
-in the present state of things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was about to swing himself behind the
-wheel to drive the car over to its shed and he
-paused with a foot on the running-board.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When it comes to wrestling with the fateful
-tangles, you haven&#8217;t so much the best of me as
-you may think you have&mdash;thanks to your little
-gift of letter-writing,&#8221; he remarked darkly.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon walked across to the office-building
-while Carfax was housing the car, went to his
-room, and was visible no more until Uncle William
-called him to dinner. At table he ate like an
-ogre&mdash;a sure sign of disturbment&mdash;and refused to
-rise to any of the small conversational baits flung
-out by Carfax. But afterward, over the tobacco-jar,
-there were things to be said and he said them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>&#8220;Poictiers, I believe I&#8217;ll write my will to-night
-and let you witness it,&#8221; he began. &#8220;The easiest
-thing for me to do now is to go and offer myself
-to the chief of the bureau of tests as a candidate
-for the poison squad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Meaning that Elizabeth is here to answer your
-letter in person?&#8221; queried Carfax. &#8220;There is
-nothing so very deadly about that, is there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That remark shows how little you know
-women. I was perfectly frank with Elizabeth, as
-I told you, but of course I didn&#8217;t write as I should
-have written if I had known that she and Richardia
-were bosom friends. Now they will proceed
-to exchange confidences and compare notes&mdash;if
-they haven&#8217;t already done both in their letters
-to each other. And what the comparison will
-leave of me won&#8217;t be fit to fling to a starved
-puppy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax smoked in silence for quite some time
-before he said: &#8220;How they may stick pins into
-you, to your face or behind your back, seems a
-very inconsiderable factor in the case to me,
-Vance. The deadly part of it is that you are still
-in love&mdash;or you think you are&mdash;with Richardia
-Birrell, while you are going to marry Elizabeth
-Wardwell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; Tregarvon objected, staring gloomily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>
-into the fire; &#8220;that isn&#8217;t the worst of it. There
-is a still deeper depth: I can&#8217;t help being the one
-or doing the other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax began to show signs of becoming restive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If Elizabeth only didn&#8217;t care so much for
-you....&#8221; Then he took a new tack. &#8220;You
-didn&#8217;t tell her all you ought to have told her in
-that letter, Vance; if you had, you wouldn&#8217;t be
-dreading the actual show-down as you are now.
-Which means that you still have it to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is it, exactly,&#8221; said the dejected one.
-&#8220;And I&#8217;d much rather be shot full of holes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax took another dose of his own prescription
-of silence. Then he said: &#8220;What is going to
-come of it?&mdash;after you have made her understand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The only thing that can come of it. While I
-have insisted, and still insist, that there has never
-been any sentiment wasted between us, the fact
-remains that Elizabeth is a woman, and she isn&#8217;t
-going to sit down meekly and say, &#8216;All right,
-Vance, dear; never mind,&#8217; when I make her understand
-that I have been trying my hardest to
-make love to another woman. She has plenty of
-spirit; she can fairly set you afire with those
-brown eyes of hers when the occasion demands
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>&#8220;Well?&#8221; said Carfax.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It will be all over but the shouting, then.
-She will doubtless tell me what she thinks of me
-and break the engagement, there and then&mdash;or
-try to. But that is the one thing I can&#8217;t let her
-do, Poictiers. She needs the Uncle Byrd legacy,
-and I mustn&#8217;t let her lose it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax got up and reached for the matches and
-his bed-room candle. &#8220;No,&#8221; he said slowly; &#8220;you
-mustn&#8217;t let her lose the legacy. To a man up a
-tree it would seem that the money is about all
-she is going to salvage out of the wreck.&#8221; With
-which unkind daggering of the sinner whose sin
-had found him out, he went to bed.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXIII<br />
-
-
-<small>At Westwood House</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE autumn Sunday afternoon figured as
-the flawless half of a day of perfection,
-with the sky a vivid blue and the hardwood forest
-of the mountain top, lately touched by the first
-sharp frosts, a riot of gorgeous coloring. On the
-broad veranda of the ancient manor-house of
-Westwood the conversation, which had been desultory
-at best, languished in sympathy with the
-reposeful spell of time and place and the peaceful
-surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>With a gently worded phrase of apology to his
-daughter&#8217;s guest, the judge had pleaded an old
-man&#8217;s privilege, dragging his chair to the farther
-end of the veranda and lighting his corn-cob pipe
-in courteous isolation. Tregarvon marked the
-bit of old-fashioned chivalric deference to Elizabeth,
-and wondered how many men of his own
-generation would be as thoughtfully considerate
-of the small amenities.</p>
-
-<p>The thought was one of a series emphasizing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>
-the gross incredibility of the theory involving
-Richardia&#8217;s father in the conspiracy against the
-Ocoee. That the white-haired, ruddy-faced Chesterfield
-of Westwood House might challenge an
-antagonist, give him the choice of weapons, and
-afterward kill him unflinchingly, was easily conceivable.
-But that he would descend to the
-methods of the dynamiter or the midnight assassin
-was momently growing more and more unbelievable.</p>
-
-<p>With Elizabeth for his <i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i> in her broad-armed
-veranda chair, Tregarvon was finding it
-increasingly difficult to fix his attention upon the
-Ocoeean mysteries. For some reasons&mdash;the unfamiliar
-surroundings, the gap of absence so
-suddenly and unexpectedly bridged, or because
-there was some subtle change in her&mdash;his cousin
-was singularly reticent. While the talk remained
-general she took her part in it; but whenever it
-threatened to become a dialogue, Tregarvon was
-instantly made to feel the raising of the barrier.</p>
-
-<p>Since the guilty flee when no man pursueth,
-Tregarvon fancied he need be at no loss to account
-for Miss Wardwell&#8217;s attitude. She had
-doubtless received his confession letter&mdash;though
-no mention had been made of it&mdash;and beyond
-that, she and Richardia had in all probability<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>
-been comparing notes. He could feel the presence
-of the Damoclean sword suspended above
-his head, and was looking forward unjoyously to
-the moment when chance, or design on the part
-of Carfax and Richardia, would give Miss Wardwell
-her reproachful opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>The dreaded moment came when Miss Richardia,
-who had been discussing autumn flowers
-with Carfax, asked the golden youth if he would
-like to see her chrysanthemums and asters in the
-sheltered posy-patch in the rear of the manor-house.
-And when they were gone, Tregarvon
-was left alone with his responsibilities.</p>
-
-<p>It was Miss Wardwell who first broke the little
-silence which followed the departure of the
-flower seekers, and her manner was distinctly at
-variance with her accustomed attitude of serenity
-and self-possession; was rather the manner of
-one marching reluctantly but firmly up to the
-mouth of a loaded cannon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Were you tremendously shocked yesterday
-afternoon when you learned that I was coming?&#8221;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is no use to deny it,&#8221; he confessed bravely.
-&#8220;It was a complete surprise&mdash;as you probably
-intended it to be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I didn&#8217;t intend it&mdash;until just at the last.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-Richardia has been asking me to come down, and
-she knew a week or more ago that I was coming.
-I supposed, of course, she would tell you, and
-didn&#8217;t know that she hadn&#8217;t told you until I received
-her last letter, just as we were leaving.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You came with your father and mother?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. Pennsylvania has been building some
-monuments on the old battle-fields, and papa is
-one of the commissioners. He and mamma
-didn&#8217;t particularly wish to be bothered with me,
-I imagine, but I had to come. Have you guessed
-why, Vance?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon thought he knew the constraining
-reason very well, indeed, but he was not quite
-courageous enough to say so. Instead, he temporized,
-as a man will, postponing the instant
-when the hair-hung sword must fall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m the poorest of mind-readers,&#8221; he protested.
-&#8220;I can&#8217;t even read my own, at times.
-But I suppose you have my letter, and you thought
-it ought to be answered in person.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have had many letters from you: which
-one do you mean?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The one I wrote a week ago to-day in the
-hotel in Chattanooga.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head slowly. &#8220;No; your last
-letter was written two weeks ago, and it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-postmarked &#8216;Coalville.&#8217; I remember you said
-you were writing after Poictiers had gone to
-bed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon groaned inwardly. The thing which
-he thought had been safely done had not been
-done at all; it still remained to be done. He was
-bracing himself to take the plunge when she
-went on hurriedly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You were saying just now that you couldn&#8217;t
-read your own mind&mdash;sometimes. I wish I might
-read it now&mdash;this moment, Cousin Vance!&#8221; She
-was trying to look him fairly in the eyes and was
-not succeeding very well.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Read my mind?&mdash;heaven forbid!&#8221; he gasped.
-Then he came to his senses and tried to repair
-the terrible misstep. &#8220;You know&mdash;er&mdash;you know
-what I mean; a man&#8217;s mind is seldom fit for a&mdash;a
-good woman to look into, Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yours is, always,&#8221; she asserted loyally, and
-he winced as if she had struck him a blow. &#8220;I
-assure you I haven&#8217;t known you all my life for
-nothing, Vance. And it was because I had
-known you as no other woman ever will, that I
-was willing to try to make you happy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was wondering dumbly how much of this
-he could stand when she continued, quite calmly,
-though the brown eyes were looking past him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>&#8220;As I have said, I had to come: there is a
-crisis; and with your letters before me, I couldn&#8217;t
-write. We agreed once, you remember, to go
-around the sentimental field instead of going
-through it; but&mdash;but you haven&#8217;t been living up
-to the spirit of that agreement in your letters.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon found his handkerchief and mopped
-his face. The matchless autumn afternoon had
-grown suddenly sweltering for him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that I&#8217;ve been writing you love-letters?
-I&#8217;m a brute, Elizabeth. I&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t make it any harder for me than
-you are obliged to,&#8221; she pleaded gently. &#8220;If
-you stop me now, I shall never be able to go on.
-I have come all the way down here to say something
-to you; something that I couldn&#8217;t write,
-and a thing that every added letter of yours was
-making more difficult to say. But one word from
-you now will make it easier&mdash;if it is the right
-word. Tell me, Vance; hasn&#8217;t this separation
-proved to you that we couldn&#8217;t&mdash;that cousins
-ought not to marry?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Slowly it ground its way into his brain that
-the worst had befallen; that Elizabeth, really
-and truly in love with him, now, had guessed,
-either from his letters or from Richardia&#8217;s, the
-true state of affairs; and that womanly pride<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>
-and affection had brought her to the scene of
-action to commit martyrdom.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, by Jove!&mdash;you mustn&#8217;t, Elizabeth!&#8221; he
-broke out in a sudden access of contrition. &#8220;I
-can&#8217;t allow you to outdo me in pure generosity
-that way! And, besides, there is Uncle Byrd&#8217;s
-money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have thought of that, too,&#8221; she said, quite
-judicially. &#8220;But, Vance, dear, we must simply
-rise superior to all the mere money considerations.
-Richardia has been telling me about your prospects
-here&mdash;your mine&mdash;and your brave struggle
-to make something out of nothing. You will need
-Uncle Byrd&#8217;s money; you are needing it now.
-And I&mdash;if we&mdash;well, I shall not need it, anyhow,&#8221;
-she ended rather incoherently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Lord help me, Elizabeth!&#8221; he groaned,
-entirely ignoring the white-haired, white-mustached
-figure smoking peacefully at the farther
-end of the veranda. &#8220;I don&#8217;t deserve&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know you don&#8217;t,&#8221; she agreed instantly; &#8220;you
-deserve ... well, you deserve something quite
-different. But whatever happens, and whatever
-you say, I must do what I came here to do. I&mdash;I
-have made a discovery, Cousin Vance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course you have,&#8221; he said desperately. &#8220;I
-knew you would, sooner or later, though I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>
-tried awfully hard to make myself believe that
-there wasn&#8217;t any discovery to be made.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know: but seriously, Vance; deep down in
-your heart, you don&#8217;t really care, do you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, Elizabeth! Of course I care. And I
-have blamed myself straight through from the
-first.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, but you mustn&#8217;t do that!&#8221; she protested
-quickly. &#8220;It is all my fault, or my&mdash;no, I simply
-<i>won&#8217;t</i> call it a misfortune.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your fault?&#8221; he queried. &#8220;You mean because
-you didn&#8217;t suspect it and choke it off right
-at the beginning. But I haven&#8217;t give you a chance
-to do that, have I?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t suspect it,&#8221; she said musingly; &#8220;I
-was very far from suspecting it. It came all at
-once, like a blow, you know; and then it was too
-late to &#8216;choke it off,&#8217; as you say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man, the true man, in him rose up in its
-might to buffet him into the path of uprightness
-and straightforwardness. &#8220;No; it is not too late,
-Elizabeth,&#8221; he assured her gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it is,&#8221; she objected with pathetic earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he insisted. &#8220;We must still make good.
-Do you know what people at home will say if
-our engagement is broken now? They will say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>
-that I made it impossible for you to carry out
-Uncle Byrd&#8217;s wishes; and that I did it deliberately,
-to get the money for myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you haven&#8217;t!&#8221; she cried in wide-eyed
-astonishment. &#8220;<i>I</i> am the guilty one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. This is what I came all the way from
-Philadelphia to say to you, Vance. Do you remember,
-one time when we were trying to &#8216;galvanize,&#8217;
-I think that was the word you used, ourselves
-into the sentimental ecstasy supposed to be
-the normal condition of engaged people, I told you
-jokingly that if I ever found any one whom I
-could really lo&mdash;like better&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Elizabeth!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded, soberly and looked away from him.
-&#8220;Yes; it is true; and I had to come and tell you.
-You may despise me; it is your privilege.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon got up and took the necessary step
-to the veranda end which gave him the view
-into the rearward flower-garden. They were
-there, Carfax and Richardia, bending together
-over the chrysanthemums. When he turned back
-to face his cousin he was smiling grimly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As our cattle-ranching cousin in the West
-would say, you mustn&#8217;t &#8216;rawhide&#8217; yourself too
-severely, Elizabeth. Leaving the dollars out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>
-it&mdash;and I&#8217;ll find a way to leave them out if I have
-to throw them to the birds&mdash;I&#8217;m getting about
-what I deserve; which is the glad hand all around
-the block.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are bitter, and I can&#8217;t blame you,&#8221; she
-said, with something alarmingly like a sob at the
-catching of her breath. &#8220;But really, at the very
-bottom of it all, you don&#8217;t care so very much, do
-you, Vance?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t I? I&#8217;d be a mighty good specimen of
-the superman if I didn&#8217;t care. Who is this fellow
-who, coming after me, is preferred before
-me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I can&#8217;t tell you that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why can&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because&mdash;oh, you are perfectly savage with
-me!&mdash;because he has had no right to speak, nor
-I to listen. He hasn&#8217;t spoken; he may never
-speak. But that doesn&#8217;t make any difference.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Tregarvon wearily; &#8220;nothing makes
-any difference now. But I told you a moment
-ago not to reproach yourself too bitterly. I am
-in precisely the same sort of a boat myself,
-Elizabeth&mdash;without your good hope of getting
-ashore.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You? <i>Vance!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The grim smile came again, and he said&mdash;though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>
-rather in shame than in malice: &#8220;It hurts a little,
-doesn&#8217;t it?&mdash;when it is the other way about.
-For nearly a week I have been thinking that you
-knew. I told you all about it, you know, in the
-letter I wrote last Sunday night in Chattanooga;
-the letter which seems to have gone astray.
-That is why I was so slow in getting your meaning:
-I was looking for you to dagger me the other
-way around, you know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Wardwell was no longer embarrassed, but
-she was well-nigh tearful.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose it is one of those horridly pretty
-Southern girls in the school,&#8221; she said half-spitefully.
-&#8220;Have you&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he hastened to say; &#8220;I have been almost
-as decent as the other fellow; the fellow you
-won&#8217;t name for me. I haven&#8217;t asked her to marry
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She is going to marry a man old enough to
-be her father&mdash;if she doesn&#8217;t reconsider and
-marry a young donkey of a millionaire.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rucker, following an order which had been
-given him earlier in the day, was tooling the
-yellow car up the weed-grown carriage approach,
-coming to drive the two young men back to
-Coalville. Also, Carfax and Miss Birrell were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>
-returning from the posy-patch. Miss Wardwell
-stood up and put her hands into Tregarvon&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry and happy and miserable all in the
-same breath,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I shall be here for a
-few days. Papa and mamma are going over to
-the Shiloh battle-field after they leave Chattanooga,
-and I shall stay until they come back.
-You&#8217;ll come again, won&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was able to smile down into the brown
-eyes of beseeching. The stabbed-vanity pain was
-passing&mdash;a little.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Most certainly I shall come, as often as you
-can get me an invitation, and as my job on the
-Ocoee will permit. I don&#8217;t propose to lose my
-best cousin just because I happen to have lost a
-lot of other things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was the key-note of the cheerful tone which
-he contrived to preserve throughout the leave-takings.
-But at the car boarding he let Carfax
-have the tonneau to himself, taking the seat beside
-Rucker for the better chance it offered for a
-needed interval in which to bind up the wounds
-of the pierced <i>amour-propre</i>.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXIV<br />
-
-
-<small>The Unknown Quantity</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN the yellow motor-car, driven by
-Rucker with his customary disregard for
-speed limitations, had crossed the mountain and
-was approaching Highmount and the forking of
-the wood road leading to the old negro burying-ground,
-Tregarvon told the mechanician to stop
-and let him out. To Carfax he made plausible
-excuse: Tryon was watching at the drilling plant
-and he might have something to report. It was
-still only mid-afternoon, and Tregarvon added
-that he would walk to Coalville by way of the
-tramhead and the short-cut path.</p>
-
-<p>After the car had gone on, Tregarvon kept the
-first part of his promise, covering the half-mile
-briskly. Tryon was at his post, killing time with
-the aid of strong tobacco and a railroad man&#8217;s
-clay pipe. He had relieved Rucker at noon, in
-accordance with his orders; there had been no
-Sunday-afternoon visitors&mdash;nothing to disturb the
-peace of the day of rest.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>Tregarvon listened perfunctorily to the foreman&#8217;s
-report. His object in delaying his return
-to Coalville had been only half formed at the
-moment of car stopping, but it had nothing to do
-with checking up the day-watchman. The talk
-with Elizabeth and its astounding revelations
-had opened new vistas. With Elizabeth calmly
-proposing to marry some one else, if the some one
-else should ask her, a full half of the spur which
-had been driving him to fight the Ocoee battle
-to a finish was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Under the changed conditions the sensible thing
-to do, after all, might be to close with the coal
-trust&#8217;s offer. But before committing himself
-finally to this, he was inclined to go to Hartridge
-with a frank plea for a word of friendly advice.
-From what had transpired it was evident that the
-professor of mathematics knew much more about
-the Ocoee and its mysteries than he had as yet
-been willing to tell; and though the episode of the
-steel cubes seemed to array him definitely on the
-side of the enemy, his later warning in the matter
-of bargain and sale was unquestionably disinterested,
-if not actively amicable.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was still considering the half-formed
-resolve to appeal to Hartridge when Tryon fished
-in the pocket of his overalls and brought up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-three small cubes of metal, the exact counterparts
-of the one which Carfax had taken from the
-pocket of the schoolmaster&#8217;s overcoat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I been savin&#8217; these to show you,&#8221; said the
-foreman, handing the bits of metal to Tregarvon.
-&#8220;What-all d&#8217;you reckon they&#8217;re meant for?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon permitted the query to go unanswered.
-&#8220;Where did you find them?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the pocket of an old coat that Jim Sawyer&#8217;s
-been wearin&#8217; here on the job. It&#8217;s hangin&#8217; up in
-the tool shanty. I run out o&#8217; matches a little
-spell ago, and went to rummagin&#8217; &#8217;round to see if
-I couldn&#8217;t find some.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sawyer&#8217;s coat, eh?&#8221; said Tregarvon, struck
-suddenly alert.</p>
-
-<p>Tryon nodded soberly. &#8220;An&#8217; that ain&#8217;t all,&#8221;
-he went on. &#8220;I got a file and tried &#8217;em; they&#8217;re
-harder &#8217;n flint&mdash;been tempered till you couldn&#8217;t
-cut &#8217;em with anything softer &#8217;n an emery-wheel.
-Rucker&#8217;d been tellin&#8217; me how the drills went all
-to the bad that time when you was hung up
-before the old b&#8217;iler bu&#8217;sted. Sawyer&#8217;s got a tool-box
-in the shanty where he keeps his wrenches
-and little traps. It was locked, but I happened
-to have a key that fitted. What d&#8217;you reckon
-I found?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More of these?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>&#8220;You&#8217;ve hit it plumb centre; a tomatter can
-about half full of &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me all you know about Sawyer,&#8221; Tregarvon
-cut in concisely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What I know about him wouldn&#8217;t get him a
-job anywheres where I had the say-so. Last
-summer he was workin&#8217; for the C. C. &amp; I. at
-Whitlow&mdash;a strike-breaker. Before that he was
-doin&#8217; time at Brushy Mountain, for some sort o&#8217;
-crookedness, I dunno what. Maybe I ort to &#8217;a&#8217;
-told you this when you hired him, but I allowed
-you knowed what you was doin&#8217;, an&#8217; it wasn&#8217;t
-none o&#8217; my business. He&#8217;s a good drill boss.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was examining the bits of steel
-critically. &#8220;Tryon, I&#8217;d give something to know
-just where these came from originally,&#8221; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Maybe I might help out a little on that, too.
-I served my time in the shop before I went to
-work for the railroad. D&#8217;you know what kind o&#8217;
-steel that is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s some o&#8217; that new-fangled, high-speed tool-steel
-that you temper by heatin&#8217; it white-hot and
-coolin&#8217; it in a fan blast. Jenkins, the Whitlow
-blacksmith, was showin&#8217; me a piece of it last
-Sat&#8217;day night at Tait&#8217;s. Looked like it might &#8217;a&#8217;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>
-been cut off the same bar with these little chunks
-o&#8217; Jim Sawyer&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In other words, you believe that these bits
-were made in the Whitlow blacksmith shop?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t a-sayin&#8217; so, because I can&#8217;t prove it.
-But my boy, Tom, saw Thaxter, the Whitlow
-bookkeeper, stop his buggy in the big road two
-or three days ago whilst a man came out o&#8217; the
-bushes to talk to him. The man was Jim Sawyer.
-More &#8217;n that, there&#8217;s just natchelly only the one
-place in the Wehatchee where that steel <i>could</i>
-come from. They&#8217;ve got it at Whitlow, an&#8217; I
-don&#8217;t reckon there&#8217;s ar&#8217; another blacksmith shop
-in the valley that ever heerd tell of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tryon, you&#8217;ve done a good afternoon&#8217;s work,&#8221;
-said the master of Ocoee, dropping the three cubes
-into his pocket. &#8220;We owe all of our hard luck,
-excepting the blown-up boiler, which may have
-been due to its own rottenness, to the C. C. &amp; I.,
-with Thaxter pulling the strings and Sawyer
-doing the actual dirty work. Isn&#8217;t that the way
-you have it figured out?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s about the way it <i>ort</i> to stack up,&#8221;
-said the foreman. &#8220;But somehow it don&#8217;t gee
-all the way &#8217;round. You&#8217;d say it&#8217;s mighty near
-a dead cinch that Sawyer was the one that doped
-the drill-hole with these here slow-&#8217;em-downs;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>
-but right there the vein pinches out. Them two
-times that the walkin&#8217;-beam fell down, Sawyer
-was the man that stood the best chance o&#8217; gettin&#8217;
-his head bu&#8217;sted. Then you an&#8217; Mr. Carfax both
-saw the man that put the dannymite into the
-old b&#8217;iler, an&#8217; I hain&#8217;t heerd neither one of you
-a-sayin&#8217; it was Sawyer. You&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217; knowed him,
-wouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It wasn&#8217;t Sawyer,&#8221; said Tregarvon definitively.
-&#8220;Sawyer has a beard, and that man was
-smooth-faced.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Jes&#8217; so,&#8221; nodded the foreman. Then he drew
-his own conclusion. &#8220;I been knowin&#8217; the C. C.
-&amp; I. crowd, off an&#8217; on, ever sence they took holt
-here in the Wehatchee. I reckon they&#8217;d rough-house
-you in a holy minute if they thought that
-was the easiest way to get the best o&#8217; you in some
-business fight. I wouldn&#8217;t even put the dannymitin&#8217;
-a-past &#8217;em. But they wouldn&#8217;t go at it in
-no such a bunglesome way; n&#8217;r they wouldn&#8217;t put
-skulls in your fire-box, n&#8217;r any such fool monkeyshines
-as that. Them things don&#8217;t fit in.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again Tregarvon bestowed the meed of praise
-where praise was due.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tryon, you have a pretty level head. I am
-beginning to suspect that we made a mistake in
-not calling you in as chief detective in this muddle.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>
-But you still think that Thaxter and Sawyer
-worked the drill-dulling scheme, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ez I say, that part of it proves up toler&#8217;ble
-plain. If there was ar&#8217; reason, now, why they&#8217;d
-want to be holdin&#8217; you back for a little spell&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is a reason. They are trying to buy
-me out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now you&#8217;re talkin&#8217;!&#8221; said the foreman sagely.
-&#8220;Maybe you&#8217;ve got coal here under your feet, &#8217;r
-maybe you hain&#8217;t. <i>You</i> don&#8217;t know, yet, an&#8217;
-maybe <i>they</i> don&#8217;t know. But they&#8217;d just as soon
-you wouldn&#8217;t find out for sure whilst the dickerin&#8217;
-&#8217;s goin&#8217; on. They&#8217;d like as not call it &#8216;good
-business&#8217; to hold you up for a spell, wouldn&#8217;t
-they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite likely,&#8221; Tregarvon was glancing at his
-watch. The call upon Hartridge had now become
-a necessity, if only for apologetic and explanatory
-reasons. True, it was still possible that the
-professor had been in collusion with the planter
-of steel cubes on the night of surprises, but these
-later developments seemed to exonerate him
-handsomely. &#8220;I must go,&#8221; he told the foreman.
-&#8220;Rucker will relieve you here in time for you to
-go to your supper. If Sawyer should happen to
-turn up, just keep your own counsel about what
-we have discovered. We&#8217;ll deal with him&mdash;and
-his bosses&mdash;when the time comes.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>A few minutes beyond this, Tregarvon was
-at Highmount, inquiring for Professor Hartridge.
-The young woman who answered his ring told him
-that the professor had gone over to the McNabb
-neighborhood to see a sick child. Not wishing to
-let his opportunity escape, Tregarvon set out to
-walk through the forest, taking a path leading in
-the general direction of the sunken mountain-top
-valley known locally as the &#8220;Pocket&#8221;; this on
-the chance of meeting Hartridge and walking
-back to the school with him.</p>
-
-<p>Now it so chanced that Tregarvon had never
-visited the &#8220;Pocket,&#8221; and though he knew, from
-Carfax&#8217;s description of the locality, that it could
-not be more than a mile or two beyond Highmount,
-he was not aware that the path he had
-chosen was not the right one. Having plenty of
-other things to think about, he paid little attention
-to his surroundings until, at the end of a half-hour,
-he found that the path, which had been
-growing indistinct, had disappeared entirely,
-leaving him in a region of deep ravines with their
-slopes heavily wooded; hollows boulder-strewn, in
-which the old-growth timber stood thickly, with
-only a fallen and rotting trunk here and there
-to show where the tan-bark gatherers had slain
-some monarch of the forest for the paltry stripping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>
-of its outer skin&mdash;mute testimony to the waste of
-a nation.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until after he had covered distance
-enough, as he thought, to have taken him all the
-way across from Highmount to the western brow
-of the mountain, that he saw a man&mdash;whom he
-took to be Hartridge&mdash;sitting upon a flat stone
-in the shadow of a great boulder on the opposite
-side of a small mountain brook. Just as he was
-about to call out and make his presence known,
-the man sprang to his feet suddenly, as if in alarm,
-and whipped a weapon from his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Obeying the instinct of self-preservation in
-pure automatism, Tregarvon dropped silently behind
-the nearest boulder on his own side of the
-stream. When he looked again he saw that the
-man was not Hartridge; he was a much younger
-man; a handsome young fellow, well-built and
-athletic-looking, with nothing in his appearance
-to connect him with the mountain and its natives.
-The attitude of strained anxiety into which the
-quick leap afoot had thrown him lasted only for
-a moment. While Tregarvon looked, a warbling
-bird whistle rose shrill and clear on the windless
-air. The watcher saw the young man hastily
-pocket the pistol and heard him whistle a reply.
-Almost at the same instant the figure of a woman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-appeared at the buried up-hill heel of the great
-boulder. She stood for a moment in the yellow
-light of the westering sun, long enough for Tregarvon
-to recognize her beyond any question of
-doubt. Then she ran, slipping and sliding, down
-the leaf-carpeted hazard slope, to be caught in
-the arms of the waiting man.</p>
-
-<p>For a little time Tregarvon sat with his back to
-the sheltering boulder, trying to surround this
-latest and newest development in the maze of
-mysteries. Slowly it came to him that this was
-the explanation of Richardia&#8217;s attitude; the
-reason why she had slipped aside, masking the
-true state of affairs and rebuffing him by seeming
-to accept the attentions of Carfax. One by one
-the corroborative inferences fell into place, each
-fitting with exact nicety: Richardia&#8217;s piquant
-reticences; her half-confidences which had always
-stopped short of revealment; her little flights to
-the shelter of detachment whenever the talk
-threatened to lean toward sentiment; all these
-were signs which might have been read&mdash;which
-were plainly readable now in the light of the small
-tableau staging itself in the shadow of the great
-rock on the opposite hillside.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon peeped again. It was most obviously
-a lovers&#8217; meeting. The young man had drawn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-the judge&#8217;s daughter to a seat beside him on the
-flat stone, and he still had his arm about her.
-They were talking eagerly in low tones; Tregarvon
-could hear only a murmur of voices, but
-Richardia&#8217;s face was toward him, and in it he re-read
-his complete effacement. In a series of revealing
-flashes more of the corroborative fragments
-whisked into place; he had been blind not
-to see the pointing of certain playful allusions
-made now and then at the Caswells&#8217; dinner-table
-and aimed at the music teacher. Doubtless, to
-the small world of the mountain top, these Sunday-afternoon
-trysts in the forest were an old
-story. But why were they clandestine? The
-answer fitted itself promptly. By all accounts
-Judge Birrell was a person of shrewd prejudices;
-quite possibly he disapproved of this young man
-who had stolen his daughter&#8217;s heart; and perhaps
-the disapproval was not entirely without reason.
-Tregarvon recalled the signs of perturbation and
-the sudden pistol drawing which had preceded
-Richardia&#8217;s appearance.</p>
-
-<p>In deference to a prompting which took its
-color more from complete and hopeless chagrin
-than from any charitable scruples, Tregarvon
-squared his back against the concealing boulder
-and refused to look any more. While the pair<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-across the streamlet kept their places, it was impossible
-for him to retreat undiscovered. The
-waiting interval was not unduly long. When he
-could no longer distinguish the murmur of voices
-he ventured to peep again. The flat-stone seat
-was empty and they were gone.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had dropped behind the mountain, and
-Tregarvon was tramping soberly through the
-lengthening wood shadows toward Highmount,
-when the frock-coated figure of the professor of
-mathematics loomed suddenly in the path ahead.
-At Tregarvon&#8217;s call, Hartridge stopped and waited.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is a pleasant surprise,&#8221; said the schoolmaster,
-with his genial smile. &#8220;Are you walking
-my way?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very pointedly,&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;They told
-me at the college that you had gone to one of the
-McNabbs&#8217;, and I came out on the chance of
-meeting you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was neighborly, I&#8217;m sure,&#8221; returned the
-master of arts, catching the step. &#8220;Am I to
-infer that you are going to let me be of some
-service to you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s laugh was a trifle strained. &#8220;It&#8217;s
-a little that way,&#8221; he confessed. &#8220;But first I
-wish to say that I believe we have been doing you
-an injustice&mdash;Carfax and I.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>&#8220;About the small cube of the metal known
-commercially as steel?&#8221; was the gentle inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Precisely. I&#8217;m sorry we were not broad-minded
-enough to take your word in explanation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you have discovered the real culprit?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For answer Tregarvon briefed the story of
-Tryon&#8217;s findings.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah!&#8221; said the listener; &#8220;then my own impression
-wasn&#8217;t at fault, after all. I saw the man
-under the drill derrick: I thought it was Sawyer,
-but I couldn&#8217;t be certain. I assume you don&#8217;t
-need to be told why he did it, or who bribed him
-to do it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. For some reason best known to themselves,
-the C. C. &amp; I. people do not wish me to
-drill that test-hole in the old burying-ground.
-Do you know the reason, Professor Hartridge?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was too nearly dark for Tregarvon to see the
-quizzical smile which this query evoked, but he
-knew it was there.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are asking me as man to man, Mr.
-Tregarvon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am&mdash;just that. I have been condemning you
-unjustly, and you now have a most excellent
-chance to heap coals of fire upon my head.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are making it impossible for me to hold<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>
-malice,&#8221; was the genial response. &#8220;I wish I could
-answer your question definitely; but I cannot.
-I do <i>not</i> know why Thaxter should wish to prevent
-you from drilling that particular test-hole.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that I am not going to find the
-paying vein of coal under the old burying-ground?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am practically certain that you are not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Would you mind giving me your reasons?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are geological&mdash;and conclusive. The
-strata under the glade are precisely the same as
-those occurring at your tramhead. Moreover, if
-you will take the trouble to examine the ground
-at the foot of the cliff below your present location
-you will find the coal outcrop: a single vein, not
-over twenty inches thick. A little lower down
-you will find another, still thinner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon laughed mirthlessly. &#8220;I asked you
-for bread, and you have given me a stone,&#8221; he
-protested. &#8220;Am I to assume that Consolidated
-Coal is better informed than you are, professor?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge&#8217;s reply was guarded. &#8220;No man is
-infallible, Mr. Tregarvon. I speak only of the
-things I know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then there is a chance that, in spite of your
-geological deduction, Thaxter and the men he
-represents have more accurate data?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This time the professor&#8217;s rejoinder was fairly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>
-cryptic. &#8220;The earth holds many secrets. During
-the long interval in which the Ocoee properties
-were allowed to lie idle and uncared for, it was
-anybody&#8217;s privilege to investigate them. I am
-violating no confidence in saying that the people
-who are now trying to induce you to sell have
-made a number of surveys. They probably know
-your ground foot by foot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Once more Tregarvon found himself confronted
-by the dead wall of Hartridge&#8217;s reservations.
-That the professor was making reservations he
-did not doubt for an instant. There was still
-some bar to perfect frankness, and he seemed
-powerless to break it down. In sheer desperation
-he shunted the talk to the field of the obstacles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It seems to be conclusively proved that the
-drill-dulling is chargeable to Thaxter, acting
-through the man Sawyer,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But Tryon
-refuses to believe that the other harassings have
-been inspired by the trust.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the Highmount boundary,
-and Hartridge paused with his hand on the gate
-latch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am entirely at one with your foreman in
-that belief, Mr. Tregarvon,&#8221; he rejoined. &#8220;Now
-that we are again upon amicable terms, I may
-confess that I have been greatly interested in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>
-problem which these harassments have presented&mdash;the
-solving of problems being one of my small
-recreations. Did you leave an enemy at home
-who would be vindictive enough to follow you
-here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon shook his head. &#8220;So far as I know,
-I hadn&#8217;t an enemy in the wide world when I
-came here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you have developed one <i>in situ</i>, as it
-were, and a very unscrupulous one. Have you
-formed any theory of your own?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;None that is worth considering. At first, I
-suspected the McNabbs, fancying that their
-enmity might be a holdover on account of the
-old lawsuit about the land titles. That was before
-I knew that I had two of them working for
-me in the drill-gang. Later&mdash;I am ashamed to
-confess it&mdash;I thought that possibly Judge Birrell
-might have passed the word that I was to be
-driven out. That was a pure absurdity, of
-course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite so,&#8221; said the professor. &#8220;The judge is
-entirely incapable of doing such a thing, bitter as
-some of his prejudices are. It need not be denied
-that he was prejudiced against you at first. One
-evening, when he was driving with his daughter,
-he visited your drilling plant and was greatly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>
-incensed at finding it in the old Westwood slave
-burying-ground. But now you and Mr. Carfax
-have met him and have eaten at his table, and
-this, to a man of his characteristics, salves all
-wounds. Besides, as a matter of fact, you owe
-the help which enabled you to place your new
-power-plant directly to the judge. It was he who
-sent word to the mountain-folk to turn out with
-their teams.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You surprise me!&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;How
-did he know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge smiled amiably. &#8220;You are not
-wholly in Mr. Carfax&#8217;s confidence, it would seem.
-On the evening when you had the trouble with
-the valley farmers, he and Miss Richardia drove
-over to Westwood House in your car while we
-waited dinner for them here at the school. And
-the next morning, presto! you had your help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are guessing at this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not wholly. I have just been to the &#8216;Pocket&#8217;
-to see Sill McNabb&#8217;s little daughter, who is sick&mdash;doctoring
-people being another of my small
-recreations. When I pressed him, Sill told me
-that the order to help you came from Judge
-Birrell, and that it was put upon the score of
-common neighborliness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But the idea of helping me originated with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>
-the judge&#8217;s daughter,&#8221; Tregarvon put in soberly.
-&#8220;Why should she wish to return good for evil,
-Professor Hartridge?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This time Hartridge&#8217;s smile was less amiable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Miss Richardia&#8217;s motives are not to be questioned
-by either of us, Mr. Tregarvon. But why
-should you call her interest in your affair returning
-good for evil?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon fought away from the edge of the
-pit into which his incorrigible ingenuousness was
-about to precipitate him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, there isn&#8217;t any reason why she should
-consider me. Within the past hour I have had
-the best possible proof of that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge was silent for a moment. Then he
-said: &#8220;Mr. Tregarvon, I trust you are a gentleman
-in all that the much-misused word implies.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A man may hardly assert that of himself,&#8221; was
-the quick retort. &#8220;But why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What you have just said implies a knowledge
-of a secret which has been most carefully guarded
-by Miss Richardia&#8217;s friends. I am not in her
-confidence, but I shall take it upon myself to
-say that whatever she does is right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who is the man?&#8221; Tregarvon asked bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is a question which Miss Richardia<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
-herself will doubtless answer at the proper time.
-Until she chooses to answer it, neither you nor I
-have any right to ask it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was turning away to continue his
-walk to Coalville. But at the leave-taking instant
-he faced about for a final word.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Has it ever occurred to you, Professor Hartridge,
-that this is a hell of a world?&#8221; he asked
-gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It has&mdash;many times. Won&#8217;t you stop and
-take pot-luck with us at the faculty table? No?
-Then I wish you a pleasant walk to the valley.
-Good night.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXV<br />
-
-
-<small>The Mangling of Poictiers</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">UPON leaving Highmount, Tregarvon took
-the short-cut path down the mountain, and
-was only a few minutes late for the dinner for two
-served by Uncle William in the office dining-room
-at Coalville. Though he had plenty of thought
-material of his own to work upon, he could hardly
-help observing that Carfax ate abstractedly and
-was unusually silent. While the old negro was
-coming and going, the talk, what little there was
-of it, touched lightly upon the visit to Westwood
-House; but after the table was cleared Carfax
-got up to stand with his back to the open fire and
-the commonplaces were thrust aside.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When is it to be?&#8221; he asked abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon, who was still dallying with the
-black coffee, looked up with a crooked smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When is what to be?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know what I mean. We gave you your
-chance with Elizabeth&mdash;Miss Richardia and I.
-I hope you&#8217;re not going to tell me that you
-flunked it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>The wry smile broke into a short laugh. &#8220;Oh,
-no; I didn&#8217;t flunk it. But it&#8217;s all over, Poictiers.
-I&#8217;m down and out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was trying to light a cigarette, but the
-match went black and he did not seem to realize
-that he had no fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So your crime has found you out, has it?&#8221; he
-said, and the gentle tone seemed to accentuate
-rather than to soften the accusing assumption.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon shook his head. &#8220;It was the other
-way about. Elizabeth came down here for the express
-purpose of asking my permission to fall in
-love with some other fellow&mdash;no names named.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Wh-what!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is even so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And&mdash;and you believed her? You didn&#8217;t have
-sense enough in that thick head of yours to know
-that she was merely trying to save your face?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no; you&#8217;re off on the wrong foot altogether.
-She didn&#8217;t get that letter I wrote her from
-Chattanooga, and she hadn&#8217;t given me a chance
-to tell her about Richardia. It was perfectly
-straight. She has simply found the other man&mdash;the
-right man&mdash;and she is honest enough to say
-so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you mean to say that you didn&#8217;t tell her
-anything about your crookedness down here?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>&#8220;Oh, yes; we talked about that later on,
-though, again, there were no names named. She
-jumped to the conclusion that my &#8216;crookedness&#8217;,
-as you call it, was with one of the pretty undergraduates
-at Highmount, and I let it go at that.
-There was no use of making a bad matter worse
-by dragging Richardia&#8217;s name into it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax took a pacing turn up and down the
-room, broke it to go and stand for a full minute
-staring out of a window at Uncle William&#8217;s cook-house,
-and then faced about to say, almost pleadingly:
-&#8220;You are <i>sure</i> she meant it, Vance?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course she meant it. She wouldn&#8217;t tell
-me much about the other fellow, except to say
-that it was some one whom I knew, and who was
-too decent to try to break in while our engagement
-still held good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she&mdash;she really would give the&mdash;the
-other fellow a chance, if&mdash;if he had the nerve to
-ask for it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would be something better than &#8216;a chance&#8217;,
-I should say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again Carfax took a pacing turn, coming back
-from it to drop into the chair opposite Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Vance, <i>I</i> am the &#8216;other fellow,&#8217;&#8221; he said
-softly. &#8220;You didn&#8217;t suspect it, did you? It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>
-began last summer when we were at Lake Placid
-together. I thought it was all on my side of the
-house; I didn&#8217;t dream that she wasn&#8217;t in love
-with you in the&mdash;in the way she ought to have
-been. But&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The interruption was the entrance of a softly
-padding Uncle William, bearing a neatly tied
-packet of letters.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dey&#8217;s for dat lily-white missy fr&#8217;m de Norf
-what&#8217;s staying with Miss Dick up at de ol&#8217; place,&#8221;
-he explained. &#8220;Mistoo Tait, he brung &#8217;em over,
-an&#8217; ast would you-all gemmen please to send &#8217;em
-up when you had de chanst.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had found the wry smile again by
-the time the old negro had shuffled away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose I ought to congratulate you,
-Poictiers, but I can&#8217;t just now; I&#8217;m too new a
-widower. You&#8217;ll have to hug your happiness
-alone for the present. You&#8217;ll excuse me, won&#8217;t
-you? But, see here&mdash;how about this little side-play
-with Richardia? You&#8217;re not going to be
-allowed to play fast and loose with her&mdash;not while
-I&#8217;m here to prevent it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was absently fingering the packet of
-letters.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hold on, Vance,&#8221; he broke in, &#8220;you&#8217;ve been
-saying, all along, that this last attack of yours&mdash;with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-Richardia&mdash;was the real thing; that there
-was no sentiment between you and Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all very well,&#8221; said the attacked one,
-in a fresh thrill of self-pityings; &#8220;but I&#8217;m like
-the little kiddie who dropped his candy to reach
-for another piece and lost both. Just the same,
-it seems that you are due to get yours, too;
-you&#8217;ve proposed to one woman when you were in
-love with another. What did Richardia say to
-you when you asked her to marry you? That&#8217;s
-what I want to know now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The cherubic smile which was waiting for its
-chance in Carfax&#8217;s eyes turned slowly into an
-impish grin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As nearly as I can recall it, she said: &#8216;Most
-certainly not. Why should I?&#8217; Of course, you
-have guessed that I asked her merely to give
-you a chance to be decently loyal to Elizabeth.
-Miss Richardia took it as it was meant, and we
-have been very good friends, playing the game
-at odd moments for your benefit when you seemed
-to be needing a bit of help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes; you were very kind; you are all
-very kind. But that doesn&#8217;t mend any broken
-bridges for me now. Do you want me to tell
-you why Richardia turned you and your ridiculous
-fortune down so easily? I can, you know,&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>
-and with that he told the story of his chance surprising
-of Miss Birrell&#8217;s secret.</p>
-
-<p>Carfax heard him through patiently and did not
-seem unduly surprised at the new development.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That accounts for a good many things,&#8221; he
-commented. &#8220;I have had a feeling for some
-time that Miss Richardia had something on her
-mind&mdash;something not altogether joyous. Once
-or twice she has seemed on the verge of confiding
-in me. It&#8217;s a case of the obdurate father, isn&#8217;t
-it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose so; though Hartridge didn&#8217;t hint
-at anything of that sort.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So Hartridge knows, too, does he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They all know at Highmount, I fancy. And
-that reminds me: I&#8217;ve done it again&mdash;talked too
-much, as usual. I met Hartridge after I had seen
-the pair of them together, and we spoke of the
-love affair. Hartridge said it was Richardia&#8217;s
-secret, and that her friends had been carefully
-keeping it for her. I shouldn&#8217;t have told you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is safe enough with me, as you ought to
-know: you will be the one to go and tell it all
-over the lot,&#8221; was the unkind retort. And then:
-&#8220;These letters of Elizabeth&#8217;s; she ought to have
-them, don&#8217;t you think? Do you suppose I
-might&mdash;&mdash;?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>Tregarvon waved him away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The letters will be all the excuse you will
-need for making two calls in the same half-day.
-Take the car and go and do what you&#8217;re aching
-to do. After you have sung your little song, you
-may give Elizabeth my love and my blessing.
-No, don&#8217;t stop to talk any more; just make your
-little bow and vanish, before I get to thinking
-too pointedly of all the things you&#8217;ve done to
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax took his cue promptly, and before Tregarvon
-had finished filling his pipe the roar of the
-yellow car&#8217;s motor told him that the golden youth
-had begun his flight to the mountain top. A
-short half-hour later, at a second filling of the
-pipe, the motor roar was repeated, and while the
-solitary smoker was wondering what had brought
-Carfax back so soon, the dining-room door opened
-to admit Wilmerding.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are responsible,&#8221; said the young superintendent,
-explaining the motor-car clamor. &#8220;You
-gave me the fever, flaunting that big yellow devil
-of yours in my face, and I was obliged to go and
-buy. Want to take a little spin in the new wagon
-to see how she handles?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon pushed a chair into the fire-warmed
-semicircle for his visitor and shook his head.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>&#8220;Some other time&mdash;if you&#8217;ll be good enough to
-let the invitation hang over. To-night I&#8217;d rather
-sit here before the fire with you and have a little
-heart-to-heart talk, Wilmerding. Will you indulge
-me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; was the ready response. &#8220;The joy-ride
-can wait. Can you find me another pipe?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The pipe was found and filled, and at its lighting
-Tregarvon began without preface, giving the
-steel-cube facts as they had been developed by
-Tryon and linking them up with Thaxter&#8217;s apparently
-disinterested effort to promote the sale
-of the Ocoee to Consolidated Coal. &#8220;I&#8217;m telling
-you this, Wilmerding, because I know you&#8217;re not
-implicated,&#8221; he said in conclusion. &#8220;Also, because
-it seems no more than fair that you should
-know. I&#8217;m not specially vindictive, you understand.
-I suppose Thaxter and the men behind
-him are calling it nothing more than a bit of sharp
-practice on purely legitimate business lines.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That might do for the drill-dulling,&#8221; the
-superintendent conceded thoughtfully, &#8220;though
-I&#8217;d take pretty violent exceptions to that, if I
-were you. But doesn&#8217;t this one proved rascality
-imply the authorship of all the others?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Hartridge thinks not, and so do I. By
-a good, vigorous stretch of imagination you could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>
-call the drill-dulling something less than criminal.
-But that can&#8217;t be said of the attempt to wreck my
-motor-car, or of the risk taken of killing somebody
-by the smashing of the machinery and the planting
-of a dynamite cartridge in the engine-boiler.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While the evening lengthened they discussed
-the various phases of the mystery in all their
-bearings, and in the end Wilmerding came around
-to the Tryon-Hartridge hypothesis, namely, that
-Thaxter, unscrupulous as he may have been in
-bribing Sawyer, was not the instigator of the more
-serious barbarities.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not that I&#8217;m excusing Thaxter or the New
-York office from which he has his instructions,&#8221; he
-added. &#8220;The &#8216;Big Business&#8217; methods are all
-more or less crooked, and I&#8217;d give half of my
-salary if I didn&#8217;t have to work for an outfit that
-simply won&#8217;t fight in the open, as men ought to
-fight. Do you know, Tregarvon, I&#8217;ve been hoping
-against hope that you&#8217;d strike it, and strike it
-rich, on the Ocoee. In that case, I had made up
-my mind to ask you to hire me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I had a mine, you couldn&#8217;t ask anything
-that would please me better,&#8221; said Tregarvon,
-warming to this expression of friendly loyalty.
-&#8220;But the thing looks pretty hopeless just now.
-As I have said, Professor Hartridge knows more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>
-about the Ocoee than anybody else seems to&mdash;and
-he won&#8217;t tell all he knows. But he did assure me
-this afternoon that we are not going to find the
-big vein where we are drilling in the old burying-ground,
-and I have every reason to believe that
-he was telling the truth. That lets me out.
-Thaxter &#8217;phoned me this morning that he had got
-the option extended until to-morrow midnight. I
-stand to lose a hundred thousand dollars if I
-take the time to move the drilling plant and try
-again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Wilmerding rose to go, returning the borrowed
-pipe to its place on the mantel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a hard proposition,&#8221; he admitted. &#8220;I&#8217;m
-not going to advise you to throw up the chance
-to get the hundred thousand. But if I were in
-your shoes, I&#8217;d be just reckless enough to gamble
-another throw or two. In this talk we&#8217;ve had,
-you have convinced me of one thing, Tregarvon,
-and that is that the Ocoee has a workable vein
-somewhere in the property. Hartridge knows it,
-and Consolidated Coal knows it. And what they
-know, some other fellow can find out. You have
-twenty-four hours, and a little better, in which to
-think it over. I said I wouldn&#8217;t advise, but I
-shall: don&#8217;t close with Thaxter one minute before
-you are obliged to.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span>Tregarvon got out of his chair to shake hands
-with the departing visitor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re a man, Wilmerding, and I wish I had
-your nerve. But a couple of things have happened
-to-day&mdash;things that I can&#8217;t talk about,
-even to so good a friend as you are&mdash;and they
-have knocked me out. At the end of the ends,
-I&#8217;m afraid I shall weaken and sell out to your hog
-of a trust. It was good of you to come down and
-let me unload on you. If anything new turns
-up I&#8217;ll get you on the wire. Good night, and good
-luck to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After Wilmerding had gone, Tregarvon sat for
-another hour before the fire, smoking abstractedly
-and hardly noting the passing of time. In due
-course there was another flurry of gas-engine
-noises, and when the clamor died away, Carfax
-came in to fling himself into the chair where Wilmerding
-had been sitting.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon broke the silence morosely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well? You are not measuring up very strikingly
-with the commonly accepted idea of the
-happy lover. What&#8217;s the latest?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had taken a cork-tipped cigarette from
-his case and was absently trying to set fire to the
-wrong end of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Vance,&#8221; he said, in his gentlest tone, &#8220;you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>
-deserve to be murdered in cold blood. You told
-me that Elizabeth hadn&#8217;t gotten that frenzied
-letter you wrote her the day you were in Chattanooga.
-She hadn&#8217;t, but it was merely delayed;
-it was in that lot of forwarded mail that I took up
-to-night, and I&mdash;<i>I</i> gave it to her!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So that&#8217;s the latest, is it? Where does the
-tragedy come in?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t say another word or I shall explode!
-You have probably forgotten that you wrote her
-that I was as good as engaged to Richardia Birrell&mdash;it
-would be quite like you to forget. She excused
-herself to go and read her letters, and when
-she came back I knew that the heavens had fallen.
-Oh, no; there wasn&#8217;t any scene; she just simply
-wouldn&#8217;t give me a chance to get a word in edgewise,
-though I tried for a solid hour to make the
-chance. I&#8217;m ruined for life&mdash;and you, with your
-nimble little pen and your neat facility for telling
-all you know, and then some, <i>you</i> had to be the
-one to mangle me!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXVI<br />
-
-
-<small>Tryon&#8217;s News</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">TREGARVON awoke on the Monday morning
-with the feeling of the putative bankrupt
-who is facing his final day of grace. Before
-midnight the bargain-and-sale decision must be
-made; and he knew perfectly well that there
-would be no chance in the short interval which
-still remained of adding to the facts as they stood.
-Nevertheless, after Carfax had disappeared, walking,
-in the direction of Hesterville, Tregarvon
-plunged into the routine, entering into a wire correspondence
-with the Chattanooga machinery firm
-and trying to extort a promise that the needed
-valve and steam-pipe should be shipped without
-fail by the afternoon train.</p>
-
-<p>Since Carfax did not put in an appearance for the
-noon meal, Tregarvon ate alone. While he was
-at table Tryon came in to report. Early in the
-morning the man Sawyer had turned up at the
-drilling ground with a one-horse wagon and had
-taken his belongings, including the working-coat,
-and the tool-box, containing among other things
-the reserve supply of steel cubes. Tryon was of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span>
-the opinion that the drill boss was preparing to
-vanish, and suggested the taking of preventive
-measures. Though Sawyer would doubtless be a
-most unwilling witness, it might be needful to make
-sure that he could be found when wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon concurred mechanically, telling the
-foreman to spread an unofficial drag-net for Sawyer,
-and agreeing to swear out a warrant for the
-man&#8217;s arrest if he should attempt to run away.
-Beyond this, he sent one of the laborers up to the
-drilling-stand to give Rucker a chance to sleep;
-and, later in the afternoon, sent word to Tryon&#8217;s
-house directing the foreman to share the coming
-night-watch with the mechanician; all this also
-as a matter of routine, since, with the suspension
-of working operations, there had been no threats
-of further aggressions.</p>
-
-<p>Just before the evening meal Carfax returned
-abstracted and silent, and saying nothing as to
-the manner in which he had spent the day. Immediately
-after dinner he asked Tregarvon if he
-might have the motor-car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Going up to Westwood House to try again?&#8221;
-queried the motor-car&#8217;s owner, not too sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m no good to you here,&#8221; was the non-committal
-rejoinder; and a little later Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span>
-found himself facing the approaching crisis alone
-and still undecided.</p>
-
-<p>Thaxter had telephoned during the afternoon,
-calling attention once more to the terms of the
-offer to purchase. The message had taken the
-tone of a friendly warning. There was no hope
-of securing further delay, but the bookkeeper
-would give Tregarvon the benefit of all the time
-that remained. He would stay in his Whitlow
-office, or be within call, up to midnight, and he
-hoped that Tregarvon would be sensible and remember
-the old saw about the bird in the hand.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was remembering the canny proverb&mdash;and
-a good many other things&mdash;when he lighted
-his after-dinner pipe. Throughout the entire
-day he had been wavering and postponing the
-moment of action. One hundred thousand dollars,
-judiciously invested, would provide an income
-for his mother and sister, which, however
-far it might fall short of the former Tregarvon
-lavishnesses, would still place them securely beyond
-the hazard of want. On the other hand, a
-certain innate obstinacy, grown now to a passion
-which threatened to drive cool-blood reason to the
-wall, refused to yield.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from this, there was a question of pure
-ethics to be considered. Quite early in the attempt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span>
-to develop the Ocoee he had secretly determined,
-if his efforts should prove successful,
-to reorganize the company, taking in those who
-had suffered loss; in other words, to make restitution
-to Parker&#8217;s victims. But if the property
-should be sold to the trust there was an end of
-the generous intention, and the nail of injustice
-driven by Parker would be irrevocably clinched.</p>
-
-<p>These were some of the perplexities, but there
-was another which also demanded a hearing.
-Carfax had been most generous and loyal, spending
-not only his money but himself. But now the
-conditions were changed&mdash;or changing. Carfax
-had another interest, suddenly grown imperative.
-Would it not be most unfair to drag him still
-deeper into the discouraging fight, allowing him
-to spend more money which might never be repaid?</p>
-
-<p>At this point in the reflective probings Tregarvon
-began to argue that he must see and talk
-with Carfax again before he could decide finally
-and definitely; and he had no sooner reached this
-conclusion, and was casting about for the means
-to translate it into action, when Wilmerding appeared&mdash;a
-veritable god-in-the-machine, since he
-was driving his new car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thaxter was telling me that you&#8217;d most likely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span>
-be making him a business call this evening, and I
-thought I&#8217;d drive over and take you back in my
-car,&#8221; said the newly made motor enthusiast.
-&#8220;If I&#8217;m butting in, don&#8217;t scruple to chase me
-away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was already taking his driving-coat
-from its closet in the fireplace corner. &#8220;You
-have come precisely in the nick of time,&#8221; he returned.
-&#8220;Carfax has taken my car to drive to
-Westwood House, and I must have a few minutes&#8217;
-talk with him before I fight the final round with
-Thaxter. Will your car climb the big hill?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If it won&#8217;t, I&#8217;ll scrap it and buy another,&#8221;
-laughed the Pittsburgher; and five minutes later
-the new, high-powered roadster was storming up
-the Pisgah grades.</p>
-
-<p>Eight minutes was the time to the Highmount
-gates, and Tregarvon called it a beat, though he
-had never timed his own car over the same distance.
-Eight other minutes covered the cross-mountain
-run to the western brow; and it was not
-until Wilmerding had tooled the roadster up the
-Westwood House driveway and was parking it
-beside the yellow touring-car that Tregarvon
-began to wonder if, with Elizabeth as her guest,
-Richardia would not be breaking her school
-routine by spending her evenings at home. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span>
-that case ... but it was now too late to retreat,
-and, with Wilmerding at his elbow, he ran up
-the steps to set the old-fashioned knocker of the
-great door clanging its drumbeat through the
-echoing interiors.</p>
-
-<p>When Aunt Phyllis, the solemn-faced old negress
-who was the sole survivor of the once numerous
-household retinue, opened the drawing-room
-doors for the two callers, the judge&#8217;s daughter was
-at the piano, the judge was listening luxuriously
-in a deep, calico-covered armchair, and Carfax
-was sitting with Miss Wardwell in a window-seat
-at the farther end of the room.</p>
-
-<p>Wilmerding made his own and Tregarvon&#8217;s
-apologies when the judge got upon his feet to
-welcome the newcomers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We were taking a spin in my new car,&#8221; he explained,
-tactfully leaving Tregarvon&#8217;s errand unmentioned.
-&#8220;Of course, we couldn&#8217;t pass your
-hospitable door, Judge Birrell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, suh; most suttainly you couldn&#8217;t,&#8221; was
-the ready response. &#8220;The do-ahs of old Westwood
-House may creak a little on thei-uh hinges,
-suh, but they still swing wide enough to let the
-guest enter at his pleas-yuh. Find yo-uh places,
-gentlemen, if you please; my daughtuh is giving
-us a little music.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span>Miss Wardwell had risen, with Carfax backgrounding
-her because he was obliged to, and Tregarvon
-introduced Wilmerding as a fellow Pennsylvanian
-from the Pittsburgh end of the State.
-Elizabeth was pleasantly gracious to the young
-superintendent of coal mines, seeming to welcome
-him as in some sort a saver of situations; at least,
-so it appeared to Tregarvon. In the readjustment
-the judge sank back into the depths of his
-armchair, and Carfax surrendered his place in
-the window-seat to Wilmerding and wandered to
-another window to stand with his back to the
-room and his hands in his pockets. This was
-Tregarvon&#8217;s opportunity to say the needed word
-to the golden youth, but at its offering a sudden
-passionate impulse seized him and he crossed
-quickly to the piano alcove. &#8220;I see you have my
-nocturne,&#8221; he whispered, bending over the pianist
-and indicating the Chopin on the piano-desk;
-&#8220;please play it for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As if his masterful mood were not to be safely
-denied, her fingers fell upon the keys in the opening
-chords of the nocturne; and this was the
-beginning of what gradually grew to be an interval
-of suspended possibilities. Almost at once,
-Tregarvon realized that Richardia was playing
-only from the fingers outward&mdash;faultlessly, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span>
-mechanically; that Carfax was wandering from
-one window to another in a sort of aimless unrest;
-that Elizabeth was setting all her serene traditions
-at defiance by chatting eagerly, like an escaped
-school-girl, with Wilmerding.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes further along, when Carfax
-dragged a chair into the window recess and deliberately
-broke in upon Miss Wardwell and her
-companion, the spirit of disquietude seemed to
-seize upon the judge, also, since he wheeled his armchair
-to face the window group and did violence
-to all the Westwood House musical unities by
-joining in the low-toned conversation. This gave
-Tregarvon his excuse; and when the nocturne
-ran away at its close into delicate little improvisations,
-he spoke again in the guarded undertone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hartridge may have told you that I accidentally
-surprised your secret yesterday afternoon.
-I did, you know; but I want you to be assured
-that it is as safe with me as it is with the professor,
-or with any of your friends who know
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If he were expecting any manifestation of surprise
-it was not forthcoming. So far from it, there
-was no break in the improvisation harmonies.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some day I hope it won&#8217;t be necessary to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span>
-make a secret of it,&#8221; she replied evenly, matching
-his low tone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Does Elizabeth know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not yet. But I shall tell her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Has she told you that our engagement is
-broken?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her nod was barely perceptible.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope she told you that I didn&#8217;t break it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; she told me that, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are not saying it, but deep down in your
-heart you are telling yourself that I have got only
-what was coming to me. Isn&#8217;t that true?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The answer came from lips that were paling a
-little. &#8220;Ask yourself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It <i>is</i> true. And it is also true, perhaps, that
-I should have had this other whipping; the one
-I got yesterday afternoon when I was trying to
-meet Hartridge on his way back from the
-&#8216;Pocket.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was still keeping her face averted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t talk about that now, to any one&mdash;least
-of all, to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He bent lower to make sure that the group at
-the other end of the room should not overhear.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want to meet the man. If I stay here on
-Mount Pisgah&mdash;if I don&#8217;t throw it all up and go
-home&mdash;I mean to do what I can to help. Once I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span>
-shouldn&#8217;t have been big enough to say such a
-thing, Richardia; but&mdash;thank God&mdash;I&#8217;ve grown
-a little in the past few months. May I add that
-it is you who have shown me how to grow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She ignored the query and for the first time let
-him see her eyes: they were swimming, and there
-was a note in her voice that he had never heard
-before when she said: &#8220;You must not talk of
-giving up and going away; you are the one who
-can do the most to help when the time comes&mdash;if
-only&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A clamorous banging of the door-knocker interrupted,
-and Aunt Phyllis put her turbaned head
-into the drawing-room to say, with her fat chin
-in the air and a fine scorn in her tone: &#8220;Po&#8217; white
-man at de front do&#8217;, comed to ast faw Mistoo
-Tregarbin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon obeyed the summons rather reluctantly
-and found Tryon on the veranda. The
-foreman had been running and was short of
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d better come over&mdash;you an&#8217; Mr. Carfax,&#8221;
-he broke out hurriedly. &#8220;We&#8217;ve done caught the
-dannymiter. He was aimin&#8217; to blow us all to
-kingdom come, this time!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who is it?&#8221; Tregarvon grated.</p>
-
-<p>Tryon wagged his head mysteriously. &#8220;Hit
-ain&#8217;t Sawyer; hit&#8217;s the same skunk I been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span>
-a-suspicionin&#8217; ever sense we had that talk yisterday.
-You&#8217;ll see when you get thar&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon went back to the drawing-room,
-meaning to cut Carfax out if possible without
-giving a general alarm. But Wilmerding overheard
-his whispered explanation to Carfax and
-so did Miss Wardwell; whereupon he spoke up
-quickly, briefing the story of the Ocoee troubles,
-and adding its latest sequel. The effect upon the
-master of Westwood House was instantaneous
-and militant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that, suh? Tryin&#8217; to dynamite yo-uh
-machinery whilst you and Mistuh Carfax are
-makin&#8217; us a friendly visit heah at Westwood
-House?&#8221; he demanded, his deep voice rumbling
-in the wrath of outraged hospitality. &#8220;Richa&#8217;dia,
-daughtuh, get me my coat and hat; I&#8217;m goin&#8217; oveh
-yondeh with these young gentlemen. No, Mistuh
-Tregarvon; don&#8217;t deny me that privilege, suh;
-yo-uh bein&#8217; undeh my roof at the precise moment
-makes yo-uh quarrel <i>my</i> quarrel, suh! You&#8217;ll
-give me a seat in yo-uh steam-wagon, and&mdash;daughtuh,
-my coat and hat, immediately, if you
-please. And fetch me the old shot-gun, too, my
-deah.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>By this time Wilmerding was declaring that he
-must not be left out; and in the momentary confusion
-Tregarvon saw that the judge&#8217;s daughter,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span>
-while she was obeying her father&#8217;s commands, was
-pitiably agitated. Assuming that her anxiety
-was for her father&#8217;s safety, he ventured a word
-of assurance while she was holding the overcoat
-for the sleeves of which the judge was hastily
-fumbling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t distress yourself&mdash;we are not
-going to let your father get hurt,&#8221; he protested.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s&mdash;it&#8217;s not that!&#8221; she gasped; &#8220;it is something
-far worse.&#8221; Then, in an agonized whisper
-that he had to bend lower to hear: &#8220;This man
-they have taken; promise me that you will let
-him go before my&mdash;before any one else has seen
-him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon promised blindly, striving to ignore
-this last of the maddening mysteries in an effort
-to be wholly loyal to the woman he loved. But
-as he committed himself the difficulties in the way
-of performance suddenly magnified themselves.
-With the judge taking part in the descent upon
-the scene of the capture, how was he to be kept
-from seeing and questioning the culprit? Tregarvon
-saw that he had promised that which he
-would most probably be unable to perform, but
-in the confusion of the hurried departure there
-was no chance to add the qualifying word, and
-it was left unspoken.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXVII<br />
-
-
-<small>Cloud-Wraiths</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WITH Judge Birrell urging haste, the start
-for the burying-ground glade was made
-at once. Since Tregarvon&#8217;s car was large enough
-to hold them all, Wilmerding&#8217;s roadster was left
-behind. Carfax drove the touring-car, with Tryon
-clutching for handholds in the mechanician&#8217;s seat
-beside him. This arrangement left the broad tonneau
-seat for the other three; and the judge,
-with the gun between his knees, sat in the middle.
-When the big car shot away with its loading the
-master of Westwood was still calling down maledictions
-upon the heads of those who would besmirch
-the fair fame of the Southland by resorting
-to the methods of the assassin and the anarchist.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who are these scoundrels, Mistuh Tregarvon?&#8221;
-he demanded. &#8220;Just name me thei-uh names,
-suh!&#8221; And then, with the charming inconsistency
-of his kind: &#8220;This is a law-abiding community,
-suh, and you have wronged us by keeping
-silence so long; you have, for a fact, suh! But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span>
-now we shall vindicate ou&#8217;selves. A little taste
-of a rope and a tree limb for this grand rascal
-yo-uh men have caught will make him tell us the
-names of his confederates and accomplices; and
-then, by the Lord Harry, suh, we&#8217;ll run these
-lawbreakuhs down with the dogs and hang them
-higheh than Haman!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>During the hurried cross-mountain run Tregarvon
-wrestled manfully with the problem
-thrust upon him by Richardia Birrell&#8217;s whispered
-appeal. How was he to prevent a meeting between
-the judge and the as yet unnamed man
-whom Tryon and Rucker had captured? The
-query was still unanswered when the yellow car
-skidded and slued around the turn into the old
-wood road. Despite the promise given by a
-fair day and a measurably clear evening, the night
-had suddenly thickened, with cloud wracks flying
-low over the mountain top to wrap the forest
-in mantlings of fleecy vapor silver-shot by the
-rays of a gibbous moon, but opposing a wall
-of blank opacity to the headlamps of the car.
-Tregarvon would have welcomed help from the
-chapter of accidents, but now that they were off
-the main road there was a fair chance that the
-accident might be too destructive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Easy, Poictiers!&mdash;you&#8217;ll scrap us if you don&#8217;t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span>
-look out!&#8221; he cautioned, leaning forward to warn
-Carfax, who was boring into the cloud bank at
-reckless speed.</p>
-
-<p>The words were scarcely uttered before there
-came a crunching of dry tree limbs under the
-wheels, a hiss of escaping air, and a jolting stoppage
-of the car as the brakes were applied.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Punctured!&#8221; exclaimed the cautioner, and
-they all got out to investigate cause and consequence.
-The obstruction proved to be what it
-had seemed&mdash;the dry limb of a tree&mdash;and the result
-was a flat tire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is dead wood, and it may have fallen of its
-own accord; or it may mean that your dynamiter
-has friends who would like to delay us,&#8221; Wilmerding
-offered. &#8220;On the bare chance, hadn&#8217;t we
-better sprint along and not wait to change tires?
-Your man, Rucker, may easily be having the time
-of his life trying to hold on to his prisoner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They sprinted accordingly, the judge taking
-the dog-trot as actively as his younger pace-setters,
-and stubbornly refusing to let Tregarvon
-relieve him of the burden of the heavy deer-gun.
-So running, they came in a few minutes to the
-site of the old burying-ground, and to the door
-of the tool shanty. Rucker admitted them at
-Tregarvon&#8217;s knock and call, and his report was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span>
-brief and unenlightening. &#8220;No; nothin&#8217; doin&#8217;
-since we took him in&mdash;and the cuss won&#8217;t talk.
-But maybe you can make him loosen up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon still saw no way of keeping the judge
-out of it, and he held himself absolved from his
-promise by the sheer impossibility of doing what
-Richardia had begged him to do. The captive,
-wrist-bound with a turn or two of cord, was
-sitting hunched upon the edge of Rucker&#8217;s cot-bed.
-It was Carfax who picked up the lantern
-and flashed its light into the man&#8217;s face. &#8220;By
-Jove!&#8221; he exclaimed; &#8220;Morgan McNabb!&#8221; and
-Rucker nodded.</p>
-
-<p>Judge Birrell sat upon the spare coil of rope and
-wiped his face with his handkerchief. His hands
-were trembling and he was breathing hard, but
-the smart run from the disabled automobile might
-have accounted for these disturbances. When he
-spoke to the prisoner his tone was sternly accusing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So it&#8217;s you, is it, Mo&#8217;gan McNabb?&mdash;turnin&#8217;
-yo-uh teeth upon the hand that&#8217;s been feedin&#8217;
-you? By the Lord Harry, you make me mighty
-sorry that I once saved you from going to the
-penitentiary, where you belong! Now, then, open
-yo-uh mouth and tell these gentlemen why you
-come heah dynamitin&#8217; thei-uh machinery!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span>The mountaineer&#8217;s lips were drawn back in a
-doglike snarl.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll see &#8217;em damned befo&#8217; I&#8217;ll open my haid
-to &#8217;em, now, Judge Birrell! Lookee at this yere,&#8221;
-and he wrenched his tied hands around so that
-the judge might see.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t like the rope?&#8221; said the judge
-evenly. &#8220;Listen to me, Mo&#8217;gan; you McNabbs
-have lived on Westwood land, father and son, for
-fo&#8217; generations, and you&#8217;ll open yo-uh head to me,
-suh! What quarrel have you got with the owneh
-of the Ocoee property? Ansuh me, if you don&#8217;t
-want anotheh tu&#8217;n o&#8217; that rope taken around
-yo-uh neck, suh!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The answer was as prompt as it was disconcerting.
-&#8220;I allow I got thess the same sort o&#8217; quarrel
-ez you have, judge. Didn&#8217;t they-all steal the
-Ocoee f&#8217;om you in the first place?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s neithuh heah nor there!&#8221; was the stern
-rejoinder. &#8220;Would you give these gentlemen to
-understand that <i>I</i> am yo-uh principal in these
-scandalous outrages? See heah, Mo&#8217;gan, we all
-know that you haven&#8217;t been actin&#8217; on yo-uh own
-responsibility. Who has been puttin&#8217; you up to
-all these deviltries?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you don&#8217;t know, I reckon <i>I</i> ain&#8217;t a-goin&#8217; to
-be the one to tell you,&#8221; said the prisoner, relapsing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span>
-into his former attitude of sullenness. Then, as if
-upon a second thought: &#8220;You ask Miss Dick,
-judge; I allow <i>she</i> knows.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The little pause of consternation which this
-statement precipitated was broken by an exclamation
-from Rucker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look out yonder! Somebody&#8217;s set the leaves
-afire! My God! we left the dynamite out there!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax, who was standing beside the mechanician,
-wheeled quickly to face the open door. Out
-beyond the drill derrick a thin line of fire, driven
-by the freshening west wind and showing orange-colored
-under the mist-wraiths, was sweeping
-down upon the clearing. &#8220;Show me where you
-left the stuff!&#8221; he snapped at the mechanician,
-but even as he spoke, a fuse squibbed and the
-thunder of a terrific explosion shattered the forest
-silences, the concussion smashing the glass in the
-small square window, rocking the lightly built
-tool-house like the heaving of an earthquake, and
-bombarding it an instant later with a rain of
-falling <i>d&eacute;bris</i>. The judge, sitting upon the coil
-of rope, was not thrown down, but the five men
-who were standing were flung in a heap on the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was the first to regain his feet and
-to reach the open. The cloud mantlings had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span>
-thrust aside for the moment, but the stir was full
-of gray dust and acrid with the fumes of the explosive.
-Where the derrick and the new power-plant
-had stood there was a mass of tangled
-wreckage, and the burying-ground glade looked
-as if it had been swept by a tornado. In the wan
-moonlight Tregarvon caught a glimpse of something
-moving under the trees beyond the wreck;
-then the moving object erected itself into the
-stature of a man.</p>
-
-<p>One glance at the tall, frock-coated figure was
-enough. With a mad yell of rage, Tregarvon
-snatched the gun from the judge&#8217;s hands and
-gave chase, calling to the frock-coated man to
-stand or he would shoot. There was an instant
-of hesitation, seemingly of indecision; then the
-man turned and fled. And, as if to favor him,
-another scudding cloud settled upon the mountain top,
-burying forest and glade, the tangled
-wreck and the two runners in its fleecy depths.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon raced on for a breath-cutting space;
-guided solely by the crashing of the fugitive
-through the brier tangles and dry-leaf beds. Then
-he began to get his second wind, and again he
-shouted the command to halt. Since this seemed
-only to have the effect of hastening the thudding
-footsteps on ahead, he fired the gun, holding the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span>
-muzzle high, as he thought and intended, but apparently
-not high enough, as the dreadful sequence
-immediately indicated. For, almost exactly
-coincident with the report of the gun, there
-was a shriek, the crash of a falling body, and
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>At this the pursuer came down from the transporting
-heights of berserk rage with a shock that
-was sickening. &#8220;Oh, good Lord!&#8221; he gasped;
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve killed him!&#8221; Whereupon he flung the
-offending weapon afar and ran to confirm the
-horrifying conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>He was still running in the direction from which
-the cry had come when the curious happening
-befell. As if the solid earth had been whisked
-away from beneath his feet he found himself
-whirling through empty space; falling through
-unfathomable depths of it, it seemed, before he
-collided with another world&mdash;a world of shocks
-and coruscating pains, of beatings and bruisings,
-and presently of grateful forgetfulness.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>The Ocoee&#8217;s Answer</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN Tregarvon recovered consciousness he
-knew at once what had happened to him.
-In the blind and hurried search for the body of
-the man he had presumptively shot he had fallen
-from the cliff edge; how far was still problematical,
-but far enough, as a painful roaring in his
-ears, a tightening agony in his forehead, and a
-bruised and stiffening ankle sufficiently testified.</p>
-
-<p>His first thought was for his victim. The man
-might not have been killed outright; in which
-case he might be even now dying for the lack of
-timely help. The thought was insupportable
-and Tregarvon tried to rise. But the ankle,
-broken or twisted, he could not determine which,
-gripped him like a fanged wild beast and he fell
-back with a groan. None the less, in some way
-he must contrive to bring help. He felt in his
-pockets for matches. A heap of dry leaves furnished
-the kindling and a clear flame leaped up,
-hollowing out a small cavity of yellow light in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span>
-misty gloom. At this the fire-lighter saw that he
-was at the bottom of a deep, water-worn cleft
-opening back from the outer scarp of the cliff,
-and at right angles to it; a ravine which was little
-more than a crevice, save that it was large enough
-to have trees and shrubs growing in it.</p>
-
-<p>He knew the crevice, though he had never explored
-it. It lay at a point almost exactly half-way
-between the glade and the tramhead. Knowing
-that the sound would not carry upward and
-backward over the cliff, he did not waste his
-breath in vain shoutings. The alternative was a
-fire signal. If the cloud would but lift a little, and
-he could gather enough of the dry leaves to make a
-glow, the light would guide those who must certainly,
-by this time, be searching for him.</p>
-
-<p>This was his thought while he was nursing the
-handful of fire and adding more leaves to it. The
-blaze rose higher and the cavity in the gloom
-grew larger until it became a hemisphere, with the
-black scarp of the crevice wall for its flattened
-side. A thickly matted vine covered the face of
-the precipice, completely concealing the perpendicular
-surface upon which it climbed. At its
-roots in the crevice bottom the dry leaves were
-bedded a foot deep. Tregarvon was reaching
-painfully for the mass of fresh fuel when the fire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span>
-licked out and caught it first. There was a puff
-of dense smoke, a fierce blaze, and then the climbing
-vine took fire and was brightly outlined in a
-network of short-lived flame.</p>
-
-<p>All this was normal enough, but what followed
-was curiously abnormal. As the fire glowed hotter
-small fragments of the cliff face began to split off,
-and these fragments, falling into the burning leaf-bed,
-sprang alight with hissings and sputterings
-and much pungent smoke. Tregarvon, ignoring
-the throbbing ankle, dragged himself an agonizing
-foot or so nearer and secured one of the splintered
-fragments. <i>It was coal!</i></p>
-
-<p>Almost beside himself with excitement, he
-heaped more leaves upon the fire. By the light
-of the fresh upblaze he could make out the upper
-line of the great coal seam. It was at the height
-of a tall man&#8217;s head above the bottom of the cleft,
-well-defined, unmistakable; the roof shale of a
-vein fully six feet thick. Here, discovered in the
-moment of defeat, disaster, and woundings, was
-the Ocoee&#8217;s lavish answer to all the costly questionings.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My heavens!&#8221; gasped the discoverer; and a
-voice, apparently at his elbow, said: &#8220;Quite so;
-if the heavens may be purchased with the gifts
-of the earth. The gifts are yours, Mr. Tregarvon;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span>
-first by the right of inheritance, and now by the
-right of discovery.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon twisted himself into a sitting posture,
-gritting his teeth at the ankle&#8217;s protest and
-holding his head in his hands. At a little distance
-away sat the professor of mathematics, one long
-leg jack-knifed for a support, and the other
-stretched awkwardly upon a makeshift cushion of
-the fallen leaves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You?&#8221; Tregarvon cried. &#8220;Did you fall over
-the cliff, too?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think it was I who showed you the way,&#8221;
-Hartridge amended. &#8220;You are a very apt pupil,
-Mr. Tregarvon. I was scarcely well down here
-before you played the part of Jill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you&mdash;are you hurt?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not by your shot-gun charge, happily; but
-my leg is broken. And you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon winced. &#8220;I have a cracked skull, I
-think, and an ankle that won&#8217;t let me get up. But
-about that gunshot; I didn&#8217;t fire at you; I shot
-into the air to make you stop. Just the same, you
-gave me a quick fit of the horrors. When you
-yelled, I thought I had inadvertently killed you.
-What made you run?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor&#8217;s smile was a little rueful, and
-also a little shamefaced.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_400.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">&#8220;My heavens!&#8221; gasped the discoverer; and a voice,<br />
-apparently at his elbow, said: &#8220;Quite so.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span>&#8220;What made you chase me?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I was hot&mdash;fighting mad. I wanted
-to drag you to an accounting on the spot. I don&#8217;t
-suppose you will be foolish enough to deny that
-you set the leaf fire that caused the explosion?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Since I was near enough to be blown up myself
-such a denial might have the weight of circumstantial
-evidence to support it,&#8221; was the
-quiet reply. &#8220;But I do not make the denial.
-It was I who set the leaves afire. I shall be greatly
-relieved if you can tell me that nobody was injured.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So far as I know the dynamite didn&#8217;t kill any
-of us. But tell me, did you start that fire knowing
-that the explosion would follow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By no means. I may confess that I knew the
-dynamite had been placed; but I supposed, as the
-most ordinary matter of course, that your men
-had taken care of it when they captured their
-prisoner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then why did you light the fire?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again the quaint smile flitted across the face of
-the man who had always contrived to tell less
-than the sum total of all he knew.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Once again, Mr. Tregarvon, you are going into
-the question of motives, which is a very large
-field, indeed. Let us say that I wished to make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span>
-a diversion of some sort. Will that satisfy
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; was the blunt reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sorry; I am afraid it will have to suffice
-for the present.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s head was throbbing so painfully
-that he found it next to impossible to think
-clearly. But he would not desist.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hartridge, it has come to a show-down between
-us. I&#8217;m giving you fair warning. Once I
-did you an injustice&mdash;or thought I did&mdash;but this
-time you&#8217;ve given yourself away. When I get
-up and around again, I&#8217;m going to sift this thing
-to the ultimate bottom and somebody will be
-made to sweat blood for what has been done to-night.
-As matters stand now, you seem to be the
-man the officers will want first.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Once more the professor smiled. &#8220;And yet
-you can&#8217;t say that I have ever wittingly done
-anything to harm you,&#8221; he offered mildly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That remains to be proved,&#8221; was the angry
-retort. &#8220;Meaning to, or not meaning to, you fired
-that dynamite a little while back; and you certainly
-have never strained yourself in any effort
-to help me. You knew that this big vein was here&mdash;you
-have known it all along!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This time you are not my guest, Mr. Tregarvon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span>
-and I may contradict you without blame.
-I did not know it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then why did you carve the Greek letter <i>pi</i>
-on those two oak-trees below the glade? Or do
-you deny that, as well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is you who have found the value of <i>pi</i>,&#8221;
-said the one who was under accusation. &#8220;I am
-ashamed to confess that it baffled me. Some
-three years ago, two strange surveyors acting, as
-I learned afterward, in the interests of Consolidated
-Coal, ran many lines over this property of
-yours, which was then practically abandoned.
-I had no access to their note-books, of course, so
-I was obliged to work out my conclusions as best
-I could from their stakes. One of these conclusions
-was that the true vein would be found somewhere
-in this locality. Can you believe me thus far?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m trying to,&#8221; said Tregarvon. &#8220;Go on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is humiliating to have to acknowledge
-that, while all the line-running on the part of
-these strangers pointed to this immediate locality,
-I could never discover the outcrop. True, I
-never thought of looking in this particular crevice.
-But to preserve a record for possible future
-investigation, I made the marks on the two
-trees. The distance between the oaks, carefully
-measured and multiplied by <i>pi</i>, or three and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span>
-decimal one thousand, four hundred and sixteen,
-gives the distance around the cliff from the lower
-oak to the point somewhere below us where the
-intruding strangers drove their final stake.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon heaped more leaves upon the fire,
-which was threatening to die out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are still miles beyond my comprehension,&#8221;
-he complained moodily. &#8220;On one hand,
-you stop at nothing to prevent me from finding
-out what you have just told me, and on the other
-you make what appears to be a very worthy
-and earnest effort to keep me from flinging myself
-into the maw of Consolidated Coal. How am
-I to reconcile such things?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When you are older, Mr. Tregarvon, and come
-to know human nature a little better, you will
-apprehend the truth of that worldly wise beatitude,
-&#8216;Blessed are they who expect little, for,
-verily, they shall not be disappointed.&#8217; Consider
-a moment: you came here, the legal owner of
-the Ocoee, to be sure, and the innocent owner,
-inasmuch as your father was the unsuspecting
-purchaser of stolen goods. Yet you were none the
-less the legitimate successor of the bandit who
-had looted us. You wouldn&#8217;t expect much from
-those who had been so ruthlessly defrauded,
-would you?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span>&#8220;Since I was not even constructively to blame,
-yes,&#8221; Tregarvon insisted stubbornly. &#8220;Your
-motive went deeper than that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It did,&#8221; the professor admitted gravely. &#8220;Almost
-from the first I saw the slight chance of a
-reward, the attainment of which has been the one
-thing desirable in a rather drab-colored life, slipping
-away from me; taken away from me in sheer
-wantonness, as it seemed, since, I had been given
-to understand, you were already pledged to marry
-Miss Wardwell. It was not in human nature to
-be entirely unresentful, Mr. Tregarvon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh; so that was it?&#8221; said Tregarvon shortly.
-Then: &#8220;What I saw yesterday afternoon in the
-forest back of Westwood House seems to prove
-that I am as far out of the running as you are with
-Judge Birrell&#8217;s daughter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The professor&#8217;s face became, for the moment, a
-study in astoundment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah&mdash;yes,&#8221; he said, stumbling over the words;
-and then: &#8220;I am to infer that you didn&#8217;t recognize
-the young man whom you saw with Miss Richardia
-yesterday afternoon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; he was a stranger to me. Doesn&#8217;t the
-judge approve of him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This time the professor&#8217;s smile was rather grim.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He does not&mdash;most decidedly.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span>&#8220;But Richardia loves him; and that is enough&mdash;for
-you and for me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Assuredly she loves him&mdash;very loyally,&#8221; was
-the grave reply; and a moment later, as if the
-mention of the judge had evoked a new train of
-thought: &#8220;I am curious to know if my leaf-fire
-diversion&mdash;which had such unlooked-for and disastrous
-results&mdash;came soon enough. How much
-had Morgan McNabb confessed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon ignored the brow-wrinkling of pain
-which accompanied the question.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am beginning to believe that you are a very
-hardened criminal, Mr. Hartridge. If you know
-that McNabb had a confession to make, it follows
-that you were his accomplice.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The answer was a suppressed groan, for which
-the schoolmaster instantly apologized.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&mdash;you must forgive me if I say that I
-can&#8217;t go into the matter of culpability with you
-just now. This leg&mdash;of mine&mdash;grows a bit insistent.
-But it will be the greatest possible satisfaction
-to me if you will answer my question.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; you shall have it. Just before the
-explosion came McNabb had admitted that he
-was acting for somebody else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But he did not name the person?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The judge was trying to make him do so, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span>
-he was still refusing. The last thing he said, as
-I remember it, was something which seemed to
-implicate Miss Richardia as the one who could
-tell if she chose. Which was absurd, of course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite so,&#8221; was the low-voiced reply. &#8220;Shall
-we let the matter rest there&mdash;for the present?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was holding his head in his hands
-again. The throbbing pain was so intense that
-he could only grit his teeth and endure. When
-speech became possible he gave his answer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It may rest until I am able to take hold again.
-Then I shall make somebody pay for this night&#8217;s
-work if it takes every dollar I can dig out of the
-Ocoee for the next ten years!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Once more Hartridge bent in apparent agony
-over the broken leg. But when the paroxysm
-had passed he looked up with a face that was
-gray with a deeper suffering than that inflicted
-by the broken bone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you do; if you strike back in the spirit of
-reprisal, which seems so justifiable to you now, you
-will carry the woundings of your own vindictiveness
-to your grave, Mr. Tregarvon,&#8221; he said solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon did not comment upon the sober
-prophecy. He was heaping more leaves upon the
-fire and wondering irritably why it was taking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span>
-the rescuers so long to find them. The hammering
-agony in his head climaxed now at shorter
-intervals and the recurrences were blinding, but
-he contrived to keep the leaf glow alive until a
-welcome shout from the cliff above announced
-the presence of the searchers.</p>
-
-<p>The hauling of the two injured men out of the
-deep cleft proved to be a difficult undertaking,
-this though there were five in the rescue party,
-which included the freed McNabb. Once it was
-done, a stretcher was quickly improvised for
-Hartridge, with Rucker, Tryon, and McNabb to
-take turns as bearers; and Tregarvon made shift
-to help himself a little, with Wilmerding and Carfax
-to shoulder him on either side.</p>
-
-<p>On the slow progress back to the glade Tregarvon
-realized vaguely that his companions were
-gravely silent; and as the lagging procession issued
-from the wood he saw the cause. Rucker,
-or some one, had replaced the deflated tire and the
-motor-car had been brought upon the scene.
-The white glare of its headlamps focused upon
-the open space in front of the tool shanty. Judge
-Birrell, bowed and shrunken, was sitting upon the
-tool-house door-step with his face hidden in his
-hands; and on Rucker&#8217;s cot-bed, which had been
-placed under the light of the headlamps, lay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span>
-the body of a man covered with one of the
-blankets.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who is it?&#8221; Tregarvon muttered, leaning
-more heavily upon his helpers.</p>
-
-<p>He thought it singular that no one answered
-him, and the thought swiftly became an irritation
-too keen to be borne.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What the devil is the matter with you all?&#8221;
-he rasped, with a curious idea that he had to
-shout to make his voice heard above the deafening
-thunder of many cataracts in his brain. Then,
-as in a dream, he seemed to hear Wilmerding
-saying to Carfax, almost savagely: &#8220;Ease him
-down and we&#8217;ll carry him. Can&#8217;t you see he&#8217;s
-gone off his head?&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXIX<br />
-
-
-<small>Beyond the Gap</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was a full fortnight before the Hesterville
-physician, driven at breakneck speed to Coalville
-in Wilmerding&#8217;s roadster on the night of
-woundings, pronounced Tregarvon out of danger
-and in a fair way to recover from the broken
-head.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the lapse of time may have meant
-for others, it had little significance for the man
-who tossed and rolled in his bed in an upper room
-of the Ocoee office-building. Dim pictures there
-were of people coming and going; of grotesque
-attendants lifting him about, these sometimes
-parading as liveried Merkleys with Uncle William
-heads, or the reverse; of faces, affectionately
-sorrowful, hanging over him, now hopefully, and
-again with sharp anxiety in eyes which were never
-completely recognizable.</p>
-
-<p>But for the greater interval, what with thundering
-brain cataracts to attend to, and a thousand
-dancing lights which had to be wheeled in vanishing
-spirals, checked, stopped, and wheeled the
-other way around precisely three hundred twirls<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[411]</span>
-a minute, he was so pressed for time as not to be
-aware of the lapse of it. Hence, when he finally
-opened eyes of full consciousness upon the walls
-and ceiling of the familiar room, he was sadly out
-of touch, his latest clear recollection being of a
-cloud-banked night, of a glade in the mountain-top
-forest, and of two great white eyes of artificial
-light staring down upon a cot-bed bier supporting
-a blanketed body.</p>
-
-<p>At first he thought he was alone in the bare-walled
-upper room, but at his earliest conscious
-stirring Carfax came to stand beside the bed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s better&mdash;much better!&#8221; said the golden
-one, noting the turning-point improvement at
-once. &#8220;You certainly had us guessing, old man.
-Our only comfort has been in the fact that you
-could eat and didn&#8217;t seem to be losing too much
-flesh. Have the wheels stopped buzzing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They weren&#8217;t wheels; they were lights and
-waterfalls,&#8221; said the sick man meticulously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right; call &#8217;em anything you like, so long
-as they&#8217;re gone. We had one doctor, a specialist
-from Nashville, who gave us a fit of seasickness;
-said you&#8217;d live, and be all right physically, but
-that you would most probably never recover your
-reason. Nice cheerful prospect for the friends and
-relatives, wasn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[412]</span>&#8220;How long have I been knocked out, Poictiers?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two solid weeks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My mother and sister&mdash;has anybody written
-them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure! Elizabeth has been writing them every
-day or so. They wanted to come down, of course,
-but we decided that it wasn&#8217;t best. You were
-getting all the care you could stand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then Elizabeth hasn&#8217;t gone home?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not yet. Her father and mother have gone
-to Florida, and she has been staying on at Westwood
-House&mdash;what time she hasn&#8217;t been down
-here coddling you. She&#8217;s an angel, Vance; one
-of the kind you read about. But I mustn&#8217;t let
-you talk too much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I can&#8217;t talk, you&#8217;ll have to. Have you
-made it up with Elizabeth&mdash;about that silly side-play
-of yours with Richardia?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax&#8217;s smile began on the cherubic lines but
-it ended in a mere face-wrinkling of soberness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have had too much else to think about;
-too many little diversions, as you might say.
-But I&#8217;m hoping she isn&#8217;t going to insist upon
-making a horrible example of me for my apparent
-fickleness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Too many little diversions&#8217;,&#8221; Tregarvon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[413]</span>
-echoed. &#8220;That reminds me: I can remember
-you and the others pulling us out of the crevice&mdash;Hartridge
-and me&mdash;and after that, a stretcher
-was made for Hartridge and we used up an age or
-so getting back to the glade. Am I right, so far?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was something like that; yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And when we came into the old burying-ground
-the motor-car had been run down opposite
-the tool-house, and its headlamps made
-everything look ghastly. The judge was sitting
-on the door-step with his face hidden in his hands,
-and Rucker&#8217;s cot was standing in the open under
-the lights with a blanketed corpse lying upon it.
-Who was the dead man, Poictiers?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax shook his head. &#8220;Call it a bad dream,&#8221;
-he said soothingly. &#8220;The cracked skull was beginning
-to get in its work. You didn&#8217;t see any
-dead man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon closed his eyes wearily. &#8220;It&#8217;s passing
-strange how a little knock on the head can
-mix things. I could swear that I saw the judge
-and the dead man and the car just as I have described
-them. Let it go, and tell me about Richardia.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax seemed suddenly embarrassed. &#8220;I&mdash;I
-don&#8217;t know as there is much to tell,&#8221; he stammered.
-&#8220;She&mdash;she is well, I believe.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[414]</span>Tregarvon raised himself on an elbow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re keeping something back,&#8221; he protested.
-&#8220;Is she&mdash;is she&mdash;married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no; nothing of that sort,&#8221; was the hasty
-reply. &#8220;She has been here to see you&mdash;she and
-her father&mdash;quite often; that is, as often as possible.
-I have fetched them in the car, you know.
-They have left nothing undone that could be
-done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon still felt the presence of a reservation;
-of many of them; but he was too weak to
-fight for the clearer explication.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How is Hartridge getting along?&#8221; he asked,
-sinking back upon the pillows.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather slowly. It was a bad fracture. But
-the doctor says he won&#8217;t be a cripple.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s good. I want him to get well so that
-I can drag him into court. He set the leaf fire
-that blew us up. Did you know that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The golden youth nodded gravely. &#8220;I know a
-good many things that I didn&#8217;t know before you
-got your knockout.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bring me down to date,&#8221; said the sick man
-impatiently. &#8220;What have you done about the
-mine?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax seemed to welcome the change to the
-more material field.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[415]</span>&#8220;Any number of things,&#8221; he answered cheerfully.
-&#8220;In the first place we&mdash;the judge and I&mdash;swore
-everybody to secrecy on that Monday
-night of smashing catastrophes, and the secret
-has been kept from the world at large, and from
-Consolidated Coal in particular. The wrecked
-drilling plant has been left just as it was; your
-laboring force has been discharged; and the impression
-has been given that if you ever recovered
-your wits, you&#8217;d go straight away back to Philadelphia,
-a sadder and much wiser young man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fine!&#8221; approved the listener. &#8220;But that isn&#8217;t
-all?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not by a jugful. Two days after you were
-hurt, Wilmerding resigned from the C. C. &amp; I.
-service and disappeared. He has been North
-buying machinery and material and shipping it
-in as far as Hesterville by littles. The explanation
-given and accepted is that a new company
-has been formed to develop some coal lands in
-the Hesterville vicinity, and the C. C. &amp; I. people
-are running around in circles and uttering
-loud cries in their effort to find out where the
-lands are and who is going to develop them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good!&mdash;ripping good!&#8221; the sick man applauded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have been only waiting for you to get<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[416]</span>
-upon your feet, and we didn&#8217;t wish to give Thaxter
-and his backers any chance to tangle things
-for you in the meantime. The moment you are
-able to take hold you will find everything in train&mdash;material
-and machinery where you can rush it
-in with motor-trucks, labor all engaged, coke-burners
-from Pennsylvania ready to take the first
-train south, and all that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon doubled the pillows under his head
-and his eyes were flashing. &#8220;Poictiers, you&#8217;re a
-miracle!&#8221; he declared.</p>
-
-<p>The professional idler smiled his denial. &#8220;I
-didn&#8217;t do any of it. I merely stood aside and told
-the others to go ahead and we&#8217;d pay the bills.
-Wilmerding was fully competent to take charge
-of the business part of it, and I have retained old
-Captain Duncan for the engineering. All you
-have to do now is to rise up and say the word,
-and you&#8217;ll have a mine that will make the Whitlow
-proposition compare accurately with a last
-year&#8217;s almanac.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon closed his eyes again and kept them
-closed so long as to give the impression that he
-had fallen asleep. But when Carfax was about
-to tiptoe away the heavy-lidded eyes opened.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll build upon the foundation you have laid,
-Poictiers; you and Wilmerding and Duncan.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[417]</span>
-There are three things that I mean to do before
-I quit and go West to look for another job: to
-stand the Ocoee upon its feet as a paying proposition,
-to make provision for my mother and
-sister with a part of the property and to divide
-the remainder equitably among those who were
-frozen out in the Parker robbery, and after this
-is done to turn heaven and earth over until I
-have found and punished the man or men who
-have tried so hard to smash me. When I&#8217;ve
-squared up I&#8217;ll vanish.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax laid a hand as slender and shapely as a
-woman&#8217;s upon the hot forehead. &#8220;I&#8217;ve let you
-talk too much and you are getting the &#8216;wheels&#8217;
-again,&#8221; he said gently. &#8220;You mustn&#8217;t be vindictive;
-and there is no reason on earth why you
-should talk of throwing things up and running
-away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are good reasons for both,&#8221; was the
-stubborn insistence. &#8220;I owe it to common justice,
-no less than to myself, to dig up the criminal
-or criminals and bring them to book. If they
-should prove to be Thaxter and his backers, after
-all, the world needs the example; and if it was
-pure outlawry on the part of the McNabbs and
-Hartridge and some other scoundrel that McNabb
-wouldn&#8217;t name there is all the more reason why<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span>
-I should send for the best detectives the country
-affords and run the outlaws down. And as to
-running away after it is all over, that says itself,
-Poictiers. I couldn&#8217;t stay on here after Richardia
-is married to another man. It isn&#8217;t in human
-nature. Now go away and let me sleep. I want
-to hurry and get well, so that I can stand up and
-straighten things out.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[419]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXX<br />
-
-
-<small>A Grounded Wire</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE small world of Coalville, centring socially
-under Tait&#8217;s store porch, had its
-vivifying shock when it awoke one morning to
-find that in a single night, as one might say, the
-entire face of nature had changed for the sleepy
-little hamlet at the foot of old Pisgah. In the
-instant of transformation the Ocoee of many
-disappointments had suddenly leaped into the
-foreground as a coal discovery of unlimited possibilities;
-an army of workmen was massing to
-shift the old tramway to the new opening; motor-trucks,
-piled high with material, were trundling
-over the valley pike from Hesterville; carpenters
-were rushing up new buildings at top speed; and
-at the centre of all these stirring activities, directing
-and driving them, was the young man
-whom rumor had been bulletining as dead or dying
-in his room on the second floor of the old office-building,
-or at best destined to pass the remainder
-of his life in an asylum.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[420]</span>Taking one thing with another, the gossips at
-Tait&#8217;s found it difficult to recognize the convalescent
-Tregarvon. The brief period of his
-illness had seemed to mature him curiously; to
-make him a man of a single idea&mdash;the idea being
-to turn the Ocoee into a producing industry in
-the shortest possible time. Also, they missed
-the genial and mollifying influence of the young
-New York millionaire, who, though still nominally
-an inmate of the Ocoee headquarters building,
-spent most of his time on the mountain, presumably
-as a guest of the Caswells.</p>
-
-<p>As it chanced, the store-porch gossips were not
-the only persons who were finding a changed
-Tregarvon sitting at the desk of overlordship
-in the hastily remodelled Ocoee office-building.
-There were others, among them Barnby, travelling
-freight agent for the railroad, who had come all
-the way from his own headquarters to find out
-why the Ocoee was hauling its new material from
-Hesterville in motor-trucks.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will find the reason in the correspondence
-files of your general office,&#8221; was the curt reply of
-the Ocoee organizer. &#8220;I asked for a rate from
-Hesterville to Coalville on the material and was
-told that the shortage of cars would make it impossible
-for your road to handle the freight save<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[421]</span>
-as it might be transported a little at a time by
-the daily way-train. I don&#8217;t propose to be held
-up by a railroad company, the policy of which
-seems to be dictated by the C. C. &amp; I., Mr.
-Barnby.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Barnby was a fleshy young man with an easy
-smile, and he gave the smile its blandishing opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will have to ship your product out over
-our road when you get in operation, won&#8217;t you?&#8221;
-he asked mildly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not necessarily. We have all the capital we
-need, and if you don&#8217;t give us an equal show with
-the C. C. &amp; I. we shall build a ten-mile industrial
-track, for which we have already secured a
-right of way, to a connection with the South Central
-at Midvale. It&#8217;s up to your people. Talk
-it over with them when you go back to headquarters.
-Glad to have met you. Drop in again
-when you are going over the line. Good morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Touching this intimation that the coal trust
-had already begun a new series of impeding
-activities, speculation was rife. Some said that
-the C. C. &amp; I. would buy the new mine, lock,
-stock, and barrel, and close it; others hinted that
-the trust would put the price of coke so low that
-the new company would be bankrupted in short<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[422]</span>
-order; still others suggested that Consolidated
-Coal would conspire with the railroad and call
-Tregarvon&#8217;s bluff to build the industrial cut-off.</p>
-
-<p>Wilmerding or Duncan, or both of them, brought
-these rumors to Tregarvon, and were amazed to
-find that he refused to be either disturbed or
-greatly interested. In many ways the superintendent
-and the old Scotch engineer were discovering
-daily that they had to do with a man who
-had developed suddenly into a master of himself
-and others. The light-hearted young fellow who
-had thrown himself so joyously into the fray at
-the beginning had given place to a modern captain
-of industry, alert, strong-willed, a bit dictatorial,
-perhaps, but entirely capable.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind what the C. C. &amp; I. is doing, or
-will try to do,&#8221; he told his oddly assorted lieutenants.
-&#8220;Our job is to get the mine open and
-the ovens fired. Consolidated Coal will neither
-buy us nor break us, nor force us to build a railroad
-to Midvale. I&#8217;ll take care of all those details
-at the proper time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was on the day when the first tram loads of
-Ocoee coal were coming down the mountain to be
-dumped into the oven-filling hoppers that another
-caller discovered the new Tregarvon. Late in
-the afternoon a neat, rubber-tired buggy, drawn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[423]</span>
-by a black Hambletonian, stopped in front of the
-Ocoee office-building, and a round-bodied little
-man descended and hitched the horse.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat to his chagrin, it may be supposed,
-Mr. Onias Thaxter was allowed to cool his heels
-for a full quarter of an hour in the outer office
-before he was admitted to the presence of the new
-overlord; and the waiting was doubtless the
-harder to endure since he came bearing the olive-branch
-of peace. Tregarvon sat back in his
-chair and listened coldly while the peace branch
-was getting itself waved to an accompaniment of
-placative speech.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is no such thing as personal vindictiveness
-in business, Mr. Tregarvon,&#8221; was the summing-up
-of the Thaxter argument. &#8220;Without
-admitting it as a fact, let us assume, for the moment,
-that the man Sawyer was employed as a
-sort of scout for our people. This is a thing
-that is done every day; it&#8217;s business, and good
-business. You might do it yourself, if you had a
-competitor. We are hearing it asserted here and
-there and everywhere that you are charging us
-with a lot of outlawry with which we had nothing
-to do, and that you are going to press the charges
-in the courts. Will you pardon me if I say that
-that isn&#8217;t playing the game?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[424]</span>&#8220;You may say anything you wish to say, if
-you will only make it sufficiently brief,&#8221; was the
-discouraging rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have already made my suggestion. It must
-be evident to you that a consolidation of interests
-with us is by far the most sensible plan you can
-adopt. You can hardly hope to do business
-here, as an independent coal operator, in the heart
-of a region which we have developed. There
-would be constant friction; in the market, with
-your labor, with the transportation companies.
-I am not authorized to make a definite proposal,
-but if you will organize your new company on a
-conservative basis with a modest capitalization, I
-feel sure that our people would take you in as a
-subsidiary, share for share at par value.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you quite through?&#8221; asked the new
-Tregarvon, when the emissary paused to take
-breath. &#8220;If you are, you may have my answer
-in one word&mdash;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am sure you are deciding too hastily, and
-because you haven&#8217;t given the plan sufficient
-thought. As I have pointed out, there is no such
-thing as vindictiveness in business; but when you
-deliberately set up that standard for yourself, you
-mustn&#8217;t expect the other fellow to lie down and
-let you run the truck-wheels over him.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[425]</span>&#8220;By which you mean that if I refuse to let you
-swallow me peaceably, you will do it the other
-way?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is your own deduction&mdash;not mine,&#8221; said
-the bookkeeper in the tone of one trying to soothe
-a wayward child.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then listen to me, Mr. Thaxter. Some
-scoundrels&mdash;possibly you and your people&mdash;have
-harried me like a lot of pirates. Nothing has been
-left undone in the effort either to swindle me out
-of my property on the one hand, or to force me
-out of it on the other. But now the shoe is on
-the other foot&#8221;&mdash;he was leaning across the corner
-of the desk and emphasizing the words with a
-clenched fist beating softly upon the oak&mdash;&#8220;we
-have Sawyer where we can make him talk. We
-know that he can implicate you, individually, in
-one of the criminalities; and perhaps he can tell
-us something about the others. Mr. Thaxter, I
-am going to sift these bushwhackings to the bottom,
-and you know best whether or not you or
-the combination you represent can afford to heap
-more fuel on the fire now by fighting me in the
-manner you have suggested. That is all I have
-to say, I believe, and I shall have to ask you to
-excuse me. This is my busy day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the early evening of the fourth day after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[426]</span>
-Thaxter&#8217;s visit, Carfax made one of his infrequent
-descents of the mountain, driving a ridiculously
-high-priced car, the purchasing of which
-had been his latest extravagance. The coke-ovens
-in the long rank were aglow with the fires
-of the initial charging, and the air of the valley
-was murky with the smoke of the new industry.
-Wilmerding and Duncan were at the mine, and
-Tregarvon had just finished his dinner when Carfax
-entered the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You do turn up once in a while, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;
-said the solitary diner not too hospitably. &#8220;You&#8217;re
-late for dinner, but doubtless Uncle William can
-find you something. You will have to eat alone.
-I have some work to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax followed the worker into the front office
-and, when the lights were turned on, dropped into
-a chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want any dinner,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Or
-rather I should say, I&#8217;m due to show up at Mrs.
-Caswell&#8217;s at the proper dinner-hour.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon had a telegraph pad under his hand
-and he took time to write a brief message before
-he said, half-absently: &#8220;We keep working-men&#8217;s
-hours here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Which is a delicate way of intimating that
-I&#8217;d better go chase myself and quit bothering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">[427]</span>
-you?&#8221; put in the intruder with a gentle chuckle.
-&#8220;All right; I&#8217;ll vanish presently. But first I&#8217;d
-like to ask if you are still clinging to your fantastic
-idea of making somebody suffer for the dynamiting?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am; and I don&#8217;t see anything fantastic
-about it. A number of crimes have been committed,
-and I have no notion of compounding a
-felony by letting the perpetrators get away.
-Morgan McNabb is the key to the situation, and
-I have never understood why you and Judge
-Birrell turned him loose and gave him a chance
-to disappear. It has cost me a pretty penny to
-trace him, but I&#8217;ve got him now. He is under
-arrest in Dallas, Texas.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you are going to have him brought back
-and given the third degree?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Precisely. I have just written the telegram.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax was feeling in his pockets for his cigarette-case,
-going about it leisurely as one who
-would gain time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;McNabb is only a poor devil of a mountaineer,
-too ignorant to be held fully accountable, don&#8217;t
-you think?&#8221; he ventured at the match-lighting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That may be. But he knows the real criminal
-or criminals who employed him. I&#8217;ve been an
-easy mark all my life, Poictiers, but that is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[428]</span>
-thing of the past now. I&#8217;ve turned over a new
-leaf.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The golden youth was blowing delicate little
-smoke rings at the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So you have, and the new leaf isn&#8217;t as pleasant
-reading as some of the old ones, Vance,&#8221; he commented,
-speaking slowly and without a trace of
-the lisp. &#8220;Some of the things you are writing
-down on it are rather sordid, don&#8217;t you think?
-You are a bigger man in some ways, and a much
-smaller one in some others.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Faithful are the wounds of a friend,&#8217;&#8221;
-quoted the one under criticism with a short
-laugh. &#8220;Suppose you elucidate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will. Up to the time of your father&#8217;s death
-you were as much of a <i>fl&acirc;neur</i> as I&#8217;ve always been.
-You didn&#8217;t have to ask for your blessings; you
-merely reached out and took them&mdash;if they didn&#8217;t
-happen to be handed you on a silver platter.
-During the past few months you&#8217;ve been chucked
-up against life as it really is for the greater part
-of mankind; a fight, a frantic scramble for a
-foothold. You&#8217;ve made the fight, because you
-have the good old Cornish fighting blood in you;
-but while you have been growing on one side you
-have been shrinking on the other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go on.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">[429]</span>&#8220;Real magnanimity was one of the strongest
-and most lovable qualities of the man you&#8217;ve put
-off; you&#8217;ve lost it completely. Cheerful optimism
-was one of the other good points, and you&#8217;ve
-dropped it. Just now you are planning first to
-get square with your enemies, and next to shirk
-your responsibilities by effacing yourself. What
-have you done about the new incorporation?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have done exactly what I told you I should.
-The new company is formed, and the papers for
-the division of the capital stock are prepared.
-I am looking for Peters, the family lawyer, on
-every train, and when he comes the deal will be
-closed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You tried to tell me the other day what the
-property arrangement is to be, but I didn&#8217;t get
-it very clearly fixed in my mind,&#8221; Carfax offered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is simple. Since you say you don&#8217;t want any
-of the stock, you will be reimbursed for your cash
-advances out of the first money earned by the
-mine. The stock is to be divided, sixty per cent
-to my mother and sister and forty to Judge
-Birrell for distribution among the original minority
-stockholders who were swindled out of their
-holdings by Parker.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Parker,&#8221; said Carfax musingly. &#8220;He will
-never swindle any more. Did I tell you? I read<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">[430]</span>
-an item in the New York <i>Times</i>. Parker was
-found dead at his desk in his Broad Street office
-one day last week.&#8221; Then he came back to the
-matter in hand. &#8220;Where do you come in, in the
-property distribution?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t come in; I go out. Wilmerding and
-Duncan can operate the mine, and I shan&#8217;t be
-needed. I shall go West and try for an engineering
-job in one of the gold camps.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But not before you have had your revenge
-upon the dynamiters?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No; I shall stay long enough to see that part
-of it through to a finish.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are proving my contention very handsomely,
-don&#8217;t you think?&#8221; said the critic quietly;
-&#8220;that you are bigger in some ways and smaller in
-others? You are telling yourself that this generous
-thing you are going to do is perfectly magnanimous,
-and that you are merely raising the
-magnanimity to the <i>nth</i> power by conserving the
-ends of pure justice in the prosecution part of it,
-and by obliterating yourself afterward. But,
-really, at the bottom of it all there are two rather
-dismal motives. You want your revenge, and
-you wish to show the woman in the case that you
-can turn your back upon her without half trying.
-Isn&#8217;t that true?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">[431]</span>Tregarvon&#8217;s grin bordered upon the saturnine.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s next to impossible to resent anything you
-choose to say, Poictiers; that is your one little
-gift&mdash;to be able to flay your friends without getting
-yourself disliked. Let&#8217;s talk of something
-else. How long is Elizabeth going to stay at
-Judge Birrell&#8217;s?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This time the golden youth was able to call up
-the cherubic smile in all its glory.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not very much longer now. She, too, is going
-West.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What? Elizabeth? You don&#8217;t know her as
-well as I do. Her &#8216;West&#8217; begins and ends at the
-summit of the Alleghenies.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nevertheless, she is planning to make the
-grand tour&mdash;in a private car.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon reached suddenly across the corner
-of the table-desk and grasped the hand of many
-helpings.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is enough of the old Vance Tregarvon
-left in me to wish you all the joy there is in the
-world, Poictiers!&#8221; he exclaimed, with some touch
-of the old-time heartiness. &#8220;You two were made
-for each other; I can see it now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are quite sure there aren&#8217;t any inward
-daggerings behind that, Vance?&#8221; said the successful
-one half wistfully.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">[432]</span>&#8220;Not in the least. I&#8217;m glad. If you or Elizabeth
-had only told me at first who the other fellow
-was ... but it is all right now. How did
-you contrive to persuade her to overlook your
-bit of play-acting with Richardia?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The persuader shook his head. &#8220;That part of it
-was pretty serious. It was one of the things
-that couldn&#8217;t very well be explained in cold words.
-I think Miss Richardia has helped out some.
-She knew well enough what I did it for.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You didn&#8217;t do it for me,&#8221; Tregarvon interposed
-bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; was the quiet rejoinder. &#8220;As I
-have said before, I assumed most naturally that
-Elizabeth&#8217;s happiness was involved, and I didn&#8217;t
-propose to stand by and see you make ducks and
-drakes of it if I could help it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind; it&#8217;s all over now, and you two
-at least are in a fair way to get what is coming
-to you. How is Hartridge getting along by this
-time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quite well. He is walking with a crutch, and
-is able to hear his classes.&#8221; So much Carfax said
-in the matter-of-fact manner of one who answers
-a commonplace categorically. Then he sat up
-suddenly and snapped his fingers, and the lisping
-drawl had returned when he went on: &#8220;By Jove!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">[433]</span>
-that reminds me, don&#8217;t you know. Hartridge
-would like to see you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why does he wish to see me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax spread his hands. &#8220;My dear boy, I&#8217;m
-no mind-reader. But I&#8217;m sure it&#8217;s rather urgent.
-Will you go?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon sat frowning down upon the papers
-on the desk for a full half-minute before he looked
-up to say: &#8220;I can&#8217;t go, Poictiers. I don&#8217;t care
-especially to meet Hartridge, or to listen to the
-begging-off plea which he is probably going to
-make. He as good as told me that he was jealous,
-and was trying to get square. Besides, I haven&#8217;t
-seen Richardia since this mad-work whirl began,
-and&mdash;and it will be easier for me if I don&#8217;t see
-her again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax had his answer ready. &#8220;You&#8217;ll not
-meet Richardia at Highmount. Elizabeth is
-staying with the Caswells for a few days, and
-Richardia went home to Westwood House at
-three o&#8217;clock. I know, because I drove her in
-my car. Hartridge has his rooms in the laboratory
-building, and you needn&#8217;t show up at the
-president&#8217;s house at all if you don&#8217;t wish to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon hesitated a moment and then
-glanced at his watch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go&mdash;a little later,&#8221; he decided abruptly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">[434]</span>
-&#8220;I don&#8217;t know that I owe the professor anything
-but an action at law for helping to destroy my
-drilling plant, but I&#8217;ll give him a chance to say
-what he has to say. Now run along and keep
-your dinner engagement. I can drive up in my
-own car when I am ready.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;About what time will that be?&#8221; queried Carfax,
-hanging upon the threshold of the door of
-leave-takings. &#8220;I ought to let Hartridge know
-when to expect you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again Tregarvon looked at his watch. &#8220;Say
-eight o&#8217;clock. Will that do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perfectly, I should think.&#8221; It was the
-golden youth&#8217;s cue to disappear, but still he lingered.
-&#8220;That telegram you have just written,
-Vance; are you going to send it to-night?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon answered without looking up. &#8220;Certainly.
-And to-morrow I shall notify the sheriff
-to send a deputy after McNabb.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carfax went out, closing the door softly behind
-him. But when the big expensive motor-car had
-cut its half-circle to head toward the mountain
-pike it was brought to a stand at the railroad
-station, and the driver left it for a minute or two
-while he had speech through the ticket-window
-with Orcutt, the night telegraph operator. Daddy
-Layne, with nothing better to do, was warming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">[435]</span>
-his shins at the waiting-room stove, and though he
-listened, after the manner of his kind, he caught
-only one sentence of the low-toned talk. That
-was Orcutt&#8217;s, spoken after Layne&#8217;s keen old eyes
-had glimpsed the passing of something that looked
-like a yellow-backed bank-note through the window.
-&#8220;It&#8217;ll be as much as my job&#8217;s worth, Mr.
-Carfax, but I&#8217;ll do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A half-hour later, while Layne was dozing in a
-corner of the superheated waiting-room, Tregarvon
-came in with his message to the Dallas chief
-of police. This time there was no effort made to
-keep the talk from being overheard.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m mighty sorry, Mr. Tregarvon, but I can&#8217;t
-get it off to-night,&#8221; was the operator&#8217;s deprecatory
-protest when the message was handed in.
-&#8220;The commercial wires are grounded&mdash;been that
-way all the evening. Mighty sorry, but these
-things will happen once in a while. Yes; sure!
-first thing in the morning, if I have to put it
-through the despatcher&#8217;s office. Good night.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">[436]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXI<br />
-
-
-<small>On Pisgah&#8217;s Height</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">PROFESSOR William Wilberforce Hartridge
-was reading before the cheerful grate fire in
-his sitting-room when his visitor was brought up
-by the old negro janitor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come in, Mr. Tregarvon, and be at home,&#8221;
-he said, rising, with the aid of his crutch, for the
-welcoming, and making difficult work of it. &#8220;Draw
-your chair to the fire and be comfortable. It
-was kind of you to&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Carfax brought me your message,&#8221; Tregarvon
-interrupted, rather more brusquely than he
-meant to. &#8220;In a certain sense I suppose I am
-responsible for your present condition, and since
-you wished to see me&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, yes; but I didn&#8217;t wish to give myself the
-opportunity of reproaching you for the accident,
-I assure you,&#8221; was the deprecatory rejoinder.
-&#8220;You were not even constructively to blame for
-my cowardly legs.&#8221; Then he added, with a touch
-of na&iuml;ve humor: &#8220;I trust they have sufficiently
-learned their lesson.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">[437]</span>&#8220;You are having a pretty long siege of it,&#8221;
-Tregarvon offered, finding himself sympathizing
-where he had meant to be coldly self-contained.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Old bones,&#8221; returned the schoolmaster, with
-his quaint smile. &#8220;They haven&#8217;t knitted quite
-as rapidly as they might. But let us hope that
-there is nothing worse than broken bones in
-store for any of us. May I be very frank with
-you, Mr. Tregarvon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall set you the example. I can conceive
-of only one reason why you should wish to see
-me, Mr. Hartridge. You have been told that I
-am still determined to exact an eye for an eye in
-the matter of bringing certain criminals to justice,
-and you would like to forestall your arrest
-as an accessory. Am I right?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this the quaint smile became quizzical.
-&#8220;Partly; but only partly. Have you taken any
-steps as yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have. After a good bit of trouble and expense
-I have at last succeeded in tracing the man
-Morgan McNabb. He is under arrest in Dallas,
-Texas, and I shall have him brought back as soon
-as the necessary papers can be obtained.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And your object in bringing him back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is to make him give the name of the man who
-hired him to put the dynamite under my drilling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">[438]</span>
-plant. That man is going to the penitentiary,
-Mr. Hartridge, if any effort of mine can send him
-there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The schoolmaster removed his spectacles to
-polish them, and for a time sat staring with unshielded
-eyes into the heart of the coal fire in the
-grate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have all the precedents on your side,&#8221;
-he admitted at length. &#8220;It is your right to prosecute
-if you choose to do so. Yet I venture to
-predict that you will be exceedingly sorry if you
-bring Morgan McNabb to Tennessee and extort
-his confession&mdash;a confession which will necessarily
-be made public. Besides, there is a much easier
-way in which you can apprehend his principal.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you willing to indicate the way?&#8221; snapped
-Tregarvon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not altogether willing; no. You are at heart
-a much flintier young man than you appeared to
-be when we first met, Mr. Tregarvon. It is an
-inheritance from some one of your Cornish forebears,
-I imagine. But I have allowed myself to
-be overpersuaded. You have your car here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall ask you to drive me. Will you trust me
-that far?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon rose, smiling grimly. &#8220;I shall have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">[439]</span>
-you for my hostage. If you are about to have
-me ambushed, I shall make you share my risk.
-Do we go at once?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hartridge limped to a closet and found his overcoat,
-and Tregarvon helped him to put it on.
-Then he gave the temporary cripple an arm
-through the laboratory corridor and down the
-stair. At the steps he lifted Hartridge bodily
-into the mechanician&#8217;s seat of the car. As yet
-there had been no hint given of their destination,
-but when he took his place behind the wheel
-Tregarvon asked for driving directions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Westward, on the cross-mountain road,&#8221; was
-the brief reply, and no other word was exchanged
-until the swiftly driven machine was approaching
-the intersection of the cross-road with the west-brow
-pike. Then Hartridge said: &#8220;To your left,&#8221;
-and Tregarvon had a sudden sinking of the heart.
-A mile away he could see the lights of Westwood
-House, and a great fear rose up to unsteady his
-hand as he made the turn out of the cross-road.</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon&#8217;s fear was realized in some measure
-when, at Hartridge&#8217;s direction, the car made a
-second left-hand turn into the Westwood grounds
-and was brought to a stand before the door of the
-old mansion. &#8220;I have obeyed you blindly thus
-far,&#8221; he said, as he was lifting Hartridge out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">[440]</span>
-the car. &#8220;But now you must tell me. Is it Judge
-Birrell?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; said the schoolmaster, and Tregarvon
-helped the lame man up the steps and steadied
-him while he groped for the knocker. Before he
-could knock, the door opened silently under the
-hand of the judge&#8217;s daughter, and Tregarvon
-again gave Hartridge an arm to help him over
-the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>Though the hall was but dimly lighted he saw
-at once that there had been a pitiful change in
-Richardia. There was the shadow of a deep grief
-in her eyes when she greeted him, and the hand
-that she gave him was nerveless and cold. He
-had never seen her in black before, and that, and
-the chill of the great hall and the grave silence of
-his car companion, made him feel as if he had
-entered a house of mourning.</p>
-
-<p>Without a word in explanation the changed
-Richardia led him to the stair and signed to him
-to precede her. Tregarvon hesitated only long
-enough to see that the professor was hobbling
-away toward the lighted library. Then he stood
-aside and slipped an arm under Richardia&#8217;s.
-&#8220;They hadn&#8217;t told me you had been ill,&#8221; he said
-reproachfully; and as they went up together the
-nearness of her set his blood afire and for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">[441]</span>
-moment he forgot the scene in the deep wood
-timing itself in the Sunday afternoon of revealment.</p>
-
-<p>At the stairhead a door stood ajar, with the
-flickering light of an open fire in the room beyond
-shining through the narrow opening. With a
-quick premonition that a tragedy was about to
-be revealed, Tregarvon followed his guide into
-the room. It was a huge chamber, spacious
-enough to belittle the few pieces of old-fashioned
-furnishings, and in the great four-poster bed lay
-a young man with an arm in a sling and his
-bandaged head propped high among the pillows.
-Though the face of the sick man was haggard
-and emaciated, Tregarvon recognized it instantly.
-It was the face of the handsome young fellow
-who had kept the Sunday afternoon tryst with
-Richardia.</p>
-
-<p>It was only natural that he should be checked
-by a sudden feeling of antagonism, but before it
-could find expression it was swallowed up in an
-astoundment too great to be measured. Richardia
-had led him to the bedside and she was saying
-quietly: &#8220;Mr. Tregarvon has come, brother.
-Shall I leave him alone with you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The sick man roused himself with an effort
-that was plainly distressful. &#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">[442]</span>
-shortly. And after Richardia had gone: &#8220;I&#8217;m
-the man you&#8217;re looking for.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon dragged a chair to the bedside and
-sat down. In the rush of conflicting emotions
-one exultant fact was hammering itself into his
-brain and dominating all others: Richardia&#8217;s
-secret had not been her lover&#8217;s secret; it was her
-<i>brother&#8217;s</i>. In the turmoil of readjustment, it was
-inevitable that the generous impulses of former
-days&mdash;the days before the <i>d&eacute;b&acirc;cle</i>&mdash;should come
-swiftly to the surface.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to be here, Mr. Birrell; and that is
-entirely apart from anything you may be going
-to tell me,&#8221; he said quickly. &#8220;Are you quite sure
-you are able to talk?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got to talk; it&#8217;s up to me now. Sister
-told me a little while ago that you had caught
-Morgan McNabb; that you&#8217;re going to have
-him brought back here so that you can give him
-the third degree. I&#8217;m the man you want. Morgan
-did only what I made him do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon was beginning to understand a little.
-&#8220;Perhaps you&#8217;d better tell it all, if you feel
-equal to it,&#8221; he suggested soberly. Then he
-added: &#8220;I&#8217;m not going to be your judge, Mr.
-Birrell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The sick man rocked his head on the pillows.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">[443]</span>&#8220;You won&#8217;t understand; I couldn&#8217;t make anybody
-understand. But it&#8217;s got to be told. Do
-you know what that crook Parker did to my
-father?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; all of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it made a devil of me. I was only a
-kid then, but it seemed as if I grew to be a man
-between two days. I tried to kill Parker. Maybe
-you know that, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; I have heard about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t die; and he spent his money like
-water until he got me indicted. Then I broke
-my father&#8217;s heart by showing the yellow streak&mdash;running
-away. I&#8217;ve been hid out down in
-Arizona ever since, but I always meant to come
-back and stand the gaff some day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go on,&#8221; said Tregarvon gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t come back by the railroad. The yellow
-streak showed up again, and I dodged the
-sheriff by walking in over the mountain from
-Piketown. The McNabbs hid me out in the
-&#8216;Pocket.&#8217; They told me you were Parker&#8217;s man,
-and that you had come to finish what he&#8217;d begun.
-Afterward they told me you were making love to
-my sister, and that settled it.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">[444]</span>&#8220;I see,&#8221; said Tregarvon. Then: &#8220;Why didn&#8217;t
-you come out in the open like a man and find
-out a few things for yourself?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t. The indictment was still hanging
-over me; as it is yet. And I was crazy mad.
-I swore I&#8217;d run you out of the country or kill
-you if you didn&#8217;t go. I made Morgan McNabb
-help me. He&#8217;d been mixed up in a feud years
-ago and had ambushed a man, and I was the
-only one who knew it. I told him I&#8217;d give him
-away if he didn&#8217;t help me run you off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your sister knew you had come back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; but she didn&#8217;t know anything else.
-She thought I was afraid to show myself on account
-of the old trouble&mdash;as I was. She was
-trying to fix things so that I could come back
-here to my father and Westwood House. I did
-come, but they brought me on a stretcher. Somebody
-set the leaves afire that night in the old
-negro burying-ground, and the dynamite went off
-and caught me while I was trying to stamp the
-fire out. The jig&#8217;s up now. All you&#8217;ve got to do
-is to send for the sheriff.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon saw that it was time to intervene.
-The sick man&#8217;s breath was coming in gasps and
-his face was livid.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t try to talk any more now,&#8221; he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">[445]</span>
-said, rising and taking the thin hand that was so
-much like Richardia&#8217;s in his own. &#8220;For a good
-many reasons you have nothing to fear from me.
-Of course, you know now that I am in no sense
-Parker&#8217;s representative. So far from it, the papers
-are already drawn which will restore to your
-father and his friends the property that Parker
-stole from them. I meant to do that from the
-first, if I should be lucky enough to find the
-coal.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The grip of the thin fingers tightened upon the
-hand of reassurance. &#8220;My God!&#8221; breathed the
-prodigal, &#8220;and I&#8217;ve been trying to kill you!
-Mr. Tregarvon, can you go one step farther and&mdash;and
-turn Morgan McNabb loose? That&#8217;s
-what made me frame it up with sister and Hartridge
-and Mr. Carfax to bring you here to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;McNabb will not be brought back; I promise
-you that. Shall I send your sister up to you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not&mdash;not right now; tell her to play something;
-something low and soft that&#8217;ll make the
-devil let me alone. I want to think. I&mdash;I reckon
-I&#8217;m willing to go to the convict camps now for
-trying to square up with Parker; I reckon I
-<i>ought</i> to go!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon went out softly, closing the door
-behind him and groping his way down the stair.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">[446]</span>
-Richardia was waiting for him in the hall below,
-as he hoped she would be, and she led him across
-to the drawing-room where there were lights and
-a wood-fire purring and crackling in the big stone
-fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me,&#8221; she entreated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is nothing to tell&mdash;nothing that you
-haven&#8217;t already guessed. I am completely disarmed,
-as you knew I would be. I have assured
-your brother that he has nothing to fear from me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It has been very dreadful,&#8221; she said, moving
-aside to hold her hands out to the fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How badly was he hurt in the explosion?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So badly that it is only within the past few
-days that we have dared to hope. Mr. Carfax
-hasn&#8217;t told you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a word. Your secret has been guarded
-very carefully.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But now it is a secret no longer. If he gets
-well it will only be to face a trial for the attempt
-upon Mr. Parker&#8217;s life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing will come of that,&#8221; Tregarvon predicted
-confidently. &#8220;Parker is dead; he died
-suddenly in his New York office a few days ago.
-And no twelve Tennesseeans could ever be found
-who would convict your brother for trying to
-avenge his father&#8217;s wrongs.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">[447]</span>&#8220;We are your poor debtors&mdash;all of us,&#8221; she went
-on. &#8220;You are heaping coals of fire on our heads,
-and&mdash;and they <i>burn</i>! Of course, you know now
-that I was my brother&#8217;s accomplice?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know nothing of the sort; of course, you
-were not!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I was&mdash;in a way. All along, I feared that
-it was he who was making, or at least planning, all
-the trouble you were having. He was <i>so</i> bitter!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon nodded complete comprehension.
-&#8220;I knew you were anxious about somebody; I
-thought, at first, that it was Hartridge, and later
-that it was your father. You have had a heavy
-burden to carry; and I have been doing what I
-could to make it heavier.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You have,&#8221; she said quite frankly.</p>
-
-<p>He did not affect to misunderstand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You knew all the time that Poictiers and
-Elizabeth were held apart only by Elizabeth&#8217;s
-engagement to me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guessed it. But that didn&#8217;t excuse you for&mdash;for&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For making love to you? I know it didn&#8217;t.
-But I had my punishment the Sunday afternoon
-when you met your brother in the wood above the
-&#8216;Pocket.&#8217; I had gone out to meet Hartridge, and I
-saw you two together. I took it for granted that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">[448]</span>
-the man was your lover who, for some reason,
-couldn&#8217;t come here to Westwood House to meet
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Others took it for granted, too, and I did not
-deny it&mdash;for Richard&#8217;s sake.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is his name Richard?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes; Richard and Richardia. My father
-named us so, after a brother and sister of his own
-who were twins.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Tregarvon glanced at his watch. There were
-other things to be said&mdash;many of them, but a suddenly
-recrudescent sense of the fitness of things
-told him that the moment was unauspicious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose I&#8217;ll have to consider Hartridge and
-take him back to Highmount,&#8221; he offered. Then
-he added quite irrelevantly: &#8220;He&#8217;s in love with
-you, too. Speaking of accomplices, how much
-or how little did he have to do with the bushwhacking?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing at all. It was only on the day of
-the explosion that he learned that Richard had
-come back, and was hiding with the McNabbs
-in the &#8216;Pocket,&#8217; and heard, through Sill McNabb,
-that something was going to happen that night
-at your drilling plant. He suspected Richard at
-once, and went over to try to prevent the happening.
-Then your men caught Morgan McNabb,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">[449]</span>
-and Professor Billy hardly knew what to do. He
-guessed that Tryon had come over here after you
-and Mr. Carfax, and when you took father back
-with you he was afraid Morgan would be made to
-confess, and so make a bad matter infinitely
-worse. His idea in lighting the leaf fire was to
-give Morgan McNabb a chance to escape. Of
-course, he supposed the dynamite had been removed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It has been a tragedy of errors from the beginning,&#8221;
-said Tregarvon soberly. &#8220;But I am
-going to expiate my part of it. Has Poictiers told
-you anything about my plans?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I made them while I was lying in bed in the
-old office-building at Coalville, trying to get well
-enough to crawl out and take hold with my hands.
-It came to me then what an egregious ass I had
-made of myself, all the way round. I had blundered
-in ahead of Poictiers and didn&#8217;t have sense
-enough even to suspect it; and I had deliberately
-killed any little regard you might have had for
-me by showing myself up as a man who would
-make love to one woman while he was engaged to
-another. I was eaten up with shame, Richardia,
-and I am yet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It hurt me; I think you will never know how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">[450]</span>
-much it hurt,&#8221; she said slowly. &#8220;A man asks
-utter and absolute loyalty of the woman he
-loves.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the woman can ask no less of the man,
-you would say. That is true. I am no defender
-of the double standard; still less an apologist for
-my sex. I have only one excuse, Richardia; it
-wasn&#8217;t merely propinquity&mdash;as you and Poictiers
-seemed to think. I had never known what love
-was until I met you. Elizabeth is going to marry
-Poictiers, and you must believe me when I say that
-I think just as much of her&mdash;and in the same way&mdash;as
-I did before. But let that pass. I had found
-my coal mine, and had lost pretty nearly everything
-else, including my own self-respect. You
-were lost to me; doubly lost, as I thought then; so
-it seemed that the only thing for me to do was to
-set the Ocoee house in order, and after that was
-done to go away and try to forget.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are still meaning to go away?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. I meant to stay long enough to make
-somebody suffer for the bushwhackings, but that
-is past. I have sent for Peters, our family lawyer,
-and when he comes we shall settle the property
-affair. Three-fifths of the stock in the mine will
-go to my mother and sister, and the remainder
-will be turned over to your father to be distributed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">[451]</span>
-among the Parker victims. This is what I have
-been meaning to do all along, if I should be fortunate
-enough to discover the coal.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head. &#8220;You are reckoning without
-my father. He won&#8217;t take the money.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He must be made to take it. It is only just
-and fair. When it comes to that, you must help
-me, Richardia; for his sake and for your brother&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor Dick!&#8221; she murmured. &#8220;He needs a
-friend much more than he needs the money;
-some one who would care enough for him to stand
-by and hold him up to the best there is in him.
-There <i>is</i> good in him; you may not believe it
-now, but there is, really&mdash;lots of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can very readily believe it, since he is your
-brother and the son of your father. And he has
-proved it to-night by climbing into the breach
-for McNabb. He will have his chance on the
-Ocoee, and Wilmerding will be his friend.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then you are determined to go away?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. I owe it to you and to everybody else,
-not less than to myself. But some day, Richardia,
-after I have done penance for the sin of loving
-you before I had a right to I am coming back.
-But I had forgotten; your brother wished me to
-ask you to play for him; something that would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">[452]</span>
-drive the devil away. He said he wanted to
-think.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She went to the piano at once. Alone among the
-old-fashioned house furnishings it was modern;
-an artist&#8217;s instrument, full-toned and responsive.
-Tregarvon sank into an armchair before the
-blazing logs and gave himself up to the quiet
-ecstasies of the music-lover. From the first her
-playing had stirred him as no other chamber-music
-ever had. For a time he knew that she was
-improvising; then there were gentle themes
-from Mendelssohn, shading one into another so
-deftly that he could never mark the changes.
-And at the last there was the Chopin nocturne.</p>
-
-<p>While the closing chords of the night-song were
-still lingering in the air she came to sit in a chair
-at the opposite corner of the hearth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You played the Chopin for me; was that your
-way of telling me that I might come back some
-day, Richardia?&#8221; he asked quite humbly.</p>
-
-<p>Her hands were clasped over one knee and her
-gaze was fixed upon the blue and yellow flames
-in the great fireplace, when she said softly: &#8220;You
-are very human&mdash;and very blind; so blind that
-you haven&#8217;t seen that I have had to fight for two&mdash;for
-myself no less than for you. And there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">[453]</span>
-have been times when&mdash;when I almost <i>hated</i>
-Elizabeth!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Tregarvon blood was not sluggish; at
-least, he had never found it so before; but for
-the moment he was like a man stricken suddenly
-dumb. Then the gift of speech came back,
-laboring as it could in the turmoil of new ecstasies.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>You had to fight for two</i>; God help me, Richardia&mdash;if
-I had known that&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She rose quickly and came to stand beside his
-chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you had known it, you would have been
-the strong one, Vance, dear. I know it; I knew
-it all the time; but I&mdash;was afraid&mdash;to trust&mdash;myself.
-You are not going away, now, are you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was the sound of an opening and closing
-door and the stumping of the professor&#8217;s crutch
-on the bare floor of the hall. Tregarvon sprang
-up and took the small black-gowned figure in his
-arms.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Going away?&#8221; he broke out passionately;
-&#8220;you couldn&#8217;t drive me away with an axe! I&#8217;m
-going to stay forever, and let you make a complete
-man of me. We&#8217;ll <i>marry</i> your father&#8217;s share
-of the Ocoee back to him, and together we&#8217;ll make
-a man of your brother. There are a million other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">[454]</span>
-things to say, but Hartridge is coming to look
-for his chauffeur and I must take him back to
-Highmount. Richardia&mdash;sweetheart!... If I
-don&#8217;t wreck the car on the way it will be a miracle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Very gently she disengaged herself. &#8220;You&mdash;you
-needn&#8217;t smother a person,&#8221; she protested, with
-the quaint little grimace that he loved. And
-then: &#8220;That is father, calling me to go to brother.
-Please heap some more coals of fire and be good
-to Professor Billy&mdash;for the sake of his loyalty to
-me and mine.... Yes, daddy, dear; I&#8217;m coming.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
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-<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
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